Cambodia

Cambodia: Crusader Rowing Upstream in Cambodia

Submitted by iKNOW Politics on Wed, 2010-03-03 12:24
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Ms. Mu Sochua is a member of a new generation of women who are working their way into the political systems of countries across Asia and elsewhere, from local councils to national assemblies and cabinet positions.

A former minister of women’s affairs, she did as much as anyone to put women’s issues on the agenda of Cambodia as it emerged in the 1990s from decades of war and mass killings. But she lost her public platform in 2004 when she broke with the government, and she is now finding it as difficult to promote her ideas as it is to simply gain attention as a candidate.

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To read the complete story please visit NY Times.


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CAMBODIA: Media Still Struggling to Break Gender Barriers

Submitted by iKNOW Politics on Tue, 2009-12-22 00:12
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Although the number of media organisations have clearly increased since 1993, after the elections overseen by the United Nations Transitional Authority in Cambodia that ended decades of conflict, many Cambodians still see journalism as a 'man's world'. The Cambodian media are "still a very male-dominated industry," says Cambodia's English-language daily 'The Phnom Penh Post' editor-in-chief Seth Meixner.

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For further reading, please visit IPS News website.


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Cambodia: Cambodia’s Penal Code Aims to Silence Gov’t Critics

Submitted by iKNOW Politics on Mon, 2009-11-09 22:31
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Little of that has silenced Mu Sochua, a female parliamentarian belonging to the opposition Sam Rainsy Party. She has fired verbal salvos at the Hun Sen administration in her quest for justice. It is part of an over two-decade-long commitment to improve her war-torn country, beginning in 1991 with a fight for women’s rights.
Sochua was only 18 years old and a fresh high school graduate when the U.S. war in Vietnam spread to Cambodia in 1972, plunging a country that had remained neutral into a conflict that lasted 20 years. She left her country for an education in the West but her parents, who remained, became victims of the Khmer Rouge atrocities.

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To read the complete story please visit IPS News website.


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Cambodia: Women Linked Arms Around Cambodia’s Mu Sochua

Submitted by iKNOW Politics on Fri, 2009-08-21 03:26
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It’s monsoon season here and dawns often bring a sodden feeling and gray rain.
But on August 4, when Mu Sochua arrived at the Phnom Penh courthouse, the air crackled with intensity.
As the world knows by now, the Cambodian member of parliament and internationally-renowned leader in women’s rights was given a guilty verdict for defamation against Cambodian Prime Minister Hun Sen, leader of the majority Cambodian People’s Party.

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To read the complete article please visit Cambodia NEWS website.


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CAMBODIA: Win With Women: A Struggle for Change

Submitted by iKNOW Politics on Wed, 2009-07-15 20:28
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Poverty in Cambodia is caused by the failure of the government to combat corruption. The national budget allocated for the social sector – including health, education and rural development – is lost every year, thus putting human lives at great risk of neglect, deprivation and exposure to violence. Among the victims of neglect, deprivation and violence are women, female youths and children because of gender inequalities, discrimination and extreme forms of abuse such as sexual abuse, rape and trafficking. Victims of violence are usually deprived of justice as the process of legal action against their perpetrators is long, complicated, intimidating, and usually obstructed by a corrupt judiciary system. Impunity rate and court misconduct persist and victims receive little protection.

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To read the full article, please visit the Khmerization Website.


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Strategies for Policymakers #1 March 2009: Bringing Women into Government

Women bring important skills, attributes, and perspectives to the governance process. Few times offer policymakers as good an opportunity to increase the number of women participating in government as those windows immediately after conflicts. Those women who have successfully entered government have tended to build governance systems that are more stable and transparent, and more often accepted as legitimate by society. They have demonstrated the ability to bridge political divides, highlight women’s concerns, facilitate a consultative and participatory approach to policymaking, and press for government accountability. Despite their documented contributions, they are largely excluded.

In October 2000, the UN Security Council mandated women’s full participation in peace building in Resolution 1325. Few policymakers, however, know how to fulfill this obligation. This guide intends to provide the international community with concrete strategies to successfully bring women into government.

This publication presents case studies of Afghanistan, Cambodia, and Rwanda.

Top recommendations
These policies are proven to increase women’s participation in government (see page 4 for complete list of recommendations):

1. Demand women’s inclusion in transitional institutions, especially constitution-drafting bodies.
2. Support constitutional provisions, such as parliamentary and executive branch quotas, that guarantee women’s participation in all branches and at all levels of government.
3. Establish election mechanisms that advance women’s representation, including quotas for political parties, indirect elections, and proportional representation systems with closed ("zippered") lists, which alternate the names of male and female candidates.
4. Support electoral systems that require voters to select male and female candidates.

About the Series
Strategies for Policymakers condenses a decade of research and direct input from leading peace builders into concise recommendations for ensuring the extensive involvement of women in peace processes. Each guide consists of a set of best practices highlighting policies and programs proven to increase women’s participation, as well as stories of countries that have shown these mechanisms better involve women in all stages of the peace-building process.

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Cambodia: Mu Sochua: One of Cambodia's precious gems

Submitted by iKNOW Politics on Mon, 2009-06-01 19:56
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For 20 years, Mu Sochua has been a voice for exploited Cambodians. As the Vietnam War spread to Cambodia in 1972, the then 18-year-old was exiled, with no chance to say goodbye to her parents, who later vanished under the Khmer Rouge regime. She spent 18 years overseas, studying and working in Paris, the US and Italy and in refugee camps along the Thai–Cambodian border.

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To read the full article, please visit the The Jakarta Post Website.


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tristanti

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Submitted by tristanti on Tue, 2009-04-21 10:23

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Cambodia: The Law on The Prevention of Domestic Violence and The Protection of Victims

This law aims to establish a legal mechanism to prevent domestic violence, protect the victims and preserve the harmony within the households in the Kingdom of Cambodia.

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