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| Tele 2 has an earth
station at Prek Ho in Kandal province and utilizes two
satellite dishes and submarine fiber optic cables to reach
a staggering 220 countries around the world. The Intercontinental
celebrations were organized by Red Dot Cambodia and included
a full range production program creative concept, stage
design and choreography for the large dance program, an
art performance and a multimedia presentation. |
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Advertising
at Pochentong
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| Pochentong
Airport became even more of a modern world airport
last month with the signing of an agreement between
French Societe Concessionnaire de l'Aeroport and
Red Dot Cambodia Company Ltd. The agreement includes
an agreement with Samsung to provide television
sets inside Pochentong for airing advertising, infomercials
and entertainment programs. Under a concession agreement
dated July 6, 1995 an agreement was signed on January
14 this year, the Royal Government of Cambodia has
appointed the Societe to carry out the design, financing,
construction, operation and maintenance of Pochentong
International Airport and retained the services
of Cambodia Airport Management Services. Red
Dot is to develop video programs for
airing on the International terminal's TV sets as
well as advertising for sites within the International
terminal. |
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First
Trademark Law Passed
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| The Cambodian
National Assembly passed the first law on intellectual
property governing the registration and protection
of trademarks recently. The law is intended to help
to increase investor confidence and show member
nations of the World Trade Organization (WTO) that
the Cambodian government is serious about meeting
legislative requirements to join the WTO, according
to government officials. The draft law on trademarks
was approved along with a draft on patents by the
Council of Ministers in November last year. Since
1990s the Ministry of Commerce estimates that more
than 15,000 trademarks have been registered with
them for use in Cambodia. The country's continued
political stability and continued government efforts
to further strengthen the economy are cited as major
reasons for the increased investor confidence heralded
by the flood of trademark registrations. |
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New
Khmer Braille Program
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Once upon
a time it took weeks of painstaking work to translate
Khmer into Braille, the written language of the
blind.
Now, thanks to a new computer program developed
by a blind researcher in Thailand and adapted with
the help of Overbrook School for the Blind and non-government
organization (NGO) Krousar Thmey, it takes a fraction
of the time, allowing educational
resources to be quickly and easily translated and
opening up whole new opportunities for blind students
in Cambodia. The program, called Khmer/Braille 1.1,
came into being after Wiraman Niyomphol of Thailand's
Mahidol University created a similar program to
translate Thai text. The |
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| research needed
to adapt the program for Khmer script was funded by the
Overbrook Nippon Network on Educational Technology. It
means that Khmer text can be typed into a computer or
entered on disk and the program will automatically translate
it into the raised dots on a page that is the Braille
system. Blind and visually impaired people can then read
by touch. Krousar Thmey operates schools for the blind
in Battambang, Phnom Penh and Siem Reap. Previously, to
translate each letter of each page of any literature into
Braille, a typist had to use a grid of six dots and enter
each letter manually as a separate symbol. "Now we
can translate resources very quickly with a 95 per cent
accuracy rate, and this rate will almost certainly improve
with later versions of the program," Krousar Thmey's
Florent Combeaux said. "That means resources for
blind Khmer students will be much faster to prepare."
Krousar Thmey's ultimate aim is to integrate blind students
into school classes with non-handicapped students so they
have access to the same education and learn from the same
resources. Krousar Thmey is a non-political, non-religious,
non-profit organization dedicated to helping Cambodian
children in the three key areas of child welfare, educational
and schooling support and cultural and artistic development. |
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Artists
Doing It For Themselves
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Java Cafe
on Sihanouk Boulevard will stage an exhibition that
showcases of the products of a two-week workshop
undertaken by 35 Level I, II and III students at
the Royal University of Fine Arts (RUFA). The workshop
was conducted by British artist Sasha Constable,
who recently exhibited her own works at the FCCC.
All proceeds from work sold during the February
6 to March 3 showing, entitled Open Window
will be split evenly between the artist and RUFA
to go towards art supplies. Meanwhile, the Association
of Cambodian Artist Friends opened its own gallery
on December 28 last year, ensuring that the 100
or so members of the association now have a permanent
place to sell and showcase their work. The gallery
is located opposite the clock at Wat |
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| Phnom, Phnom Penh.
Association members include artists and teachers and older
members of the group conduct teaching courses for younger
members. It is divided into four committees traditional
drawing, art and sculpture; modern drawing and fine art;
weaving, sewing and related areas, and design. The new
gallery will open from 7am to 7.30pm daily. Art on offer
ranges from about five dollars in price up to $500 for
larger pieces. Entry is free. Association President Uth
Roeun said the center aimed to collect Khmer artists together,
to train a younger generation of Khmers in traditional
techniques and to centralize information. |
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Lobster
Price Hits Rock Bottom
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Cambodia
is famous throughout the region for its freshwater
lobsters, and now fans of the delicacy are enjoying
a rare treat the price per kilo has almost halved
from last year's.
During the last waning moon, one kilogram of river
lobster brought between 30,000 riel to 35,000(seven
to eight dollars) against some 45,000 riel (nearly
$11) in
2000. The dark of the waning moon is the period
when the crustaceans feed and are therefore most
easily caught. Farmed lobsters are a little more
expensive, with prices up to about $12 per kilo,
according to lobster vendors at Psar Thmei like
Miss Sok Srah. "I expect this trend to continue
for the rest of the season," Miss Srah. "It
is very good for me because more people can afford
lobsters so I |
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| actually sell more."
Customer Miss Pov Vannara agreed. "Because I can
buy more, I tend to buy lobsters more frequently"'
she said. The season began in November and is expected
to continue into March. Ministry of Agriculture, Forestry
and Fisheries spokespeople said the glut of lobsters has
been caused by several factors the government's on-going
crackdown on illegal fishing, a recent directive to open
formerly privately owned fishing lots in Takeo and Prey
Veng to public fishing and last year's floods, which opened
up new breeding areas to the lobsters. |
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| The new Department
of Media and Communications at the Royal University
of Phnom Penh was officially opened on January 14
by Prime Minister Hun Sen. The class actually started
in October last year, with 28 students who were
selected from a total of 1744 applicants. Classes
are in English, and the faculty employs seven Khmer
lecturers and one foreign lecturer. The new faculty
is supported by several organizations-the Konrad-Adenauer
Foundation of Germany, German Academic Exchange
Services, the German Embassy and a joint cooperative
effort by the University Ateneo de Manila of the
Philippines and Wittweida University, Germany. |
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Suite
B8, Regency Square, InterContinental Hotel, 294 Mao Tse Toung
Boulevard,
Phnom Penh, Kingdom of Cambodia.
Tel: (855) 23 213 133 Fax: (855) 23 213 033
E-mail:
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