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Celebrations
of the Khmer New Year emptied Phnom Penh's streets
as families traveled to the provinces to commemorate
the holiday in their homelands. But students in
the capital city worked hard to paint the town for
the celebration with an eclectic array of artwork.
Students of the Faculty of Fine Arts showed off
watercolor and oil paintings, sculptures, photography
and architectural works for the yearly exhibit at
their school, reminding the public that the Khmer
art culture is alive and well.
Cambodian border officials are still making
efforts to stop the illegal trade of ancient artifacts
between Cambodia and Thailand. Poipet border guards
seized almost 150 kg of artifacts, including a
Buddha statue and two temple carvings, from a
man pushing the goods hidden inside a cart last
month. The Ministry of Culture has made great
efforts to quell the flow of ancient artifacts
and accepted more than 956 pieces of confiscated
artifacts in March. They will be kept in a museum
to be built in Banteay Meanchey province.
Efforts to curb the illegal sale of pirated
movies also are being made by the Culture Ministry,
which held a meeting last month with more than
50 government officials and film industry representatives.
Officials discussed the implementation of the
copyright law passed early this year by the National
Assembly. A representative from the interministerial
Committee Against Illegal Movies and Videos urged
the movie industry to report acts of piracy. But
movie productions companies said they were worried
that it would take too long and cost too much
to order non-pirated movies from overseas.
The Ministry of Culture also has signed a renovation
contract with the Sambo Vuthy company, a local
construction firm that will execute the repairs
of the National Library. The library, which was
built in 1920, will be given a new roof and a
fresh paint job as part of the renovation project.
Once the project commences- it is waiting for
funds from the Ministry of Finance- it should
be completed within six months.
Cambodia has been made a global pioneer in the
fight to assist victims of humanitarian crises.
The UN's World Food Program chose Cambodia to
be one of "four points" on a global
compass, where a warehouse of emergency relief
supplies will be built. The Cambodian government
and World Food Program officials signed an agreement
in April permitting the UN to use warehouses 6
km outside of Phnom Penh to serve as a holding
ground from which computer equipment, fuel pumps,
generators, and small vehicles can be shipped
and received. From the Cambodian center, aid agencies
will be able to respond to humanitarian crises
anywhere in the Asian region within hours of their
outbreak. Three other warehouses will be built
in Latin America, Europe and the Middle East,
and Africa.
Another fight, this one against land mines,
is progressing with success, according to findings
from an international land mine conference held
in Phnom Penh last month. The conference reviewed
the progress several land mine-affected countries
have made in achieving goals set by the 1997 Ottawa
Treaty to Ban Land Mines. Officials said that
Cambodia had cleared the country of stockpiled
land mines, reaching a goal set by the Ottawa
convention. Now anti-land mine organizations-
including the HALO Trust, the Mine Advisory Group
and the Cambodian Mine Action Center- are working
hard to clear mines from high-impact areas by
2010. If donors continue to support Cambodia's
efforts, officials believe they can meet this
goal.
The worldwide outbreak of the potentially deadly
Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome has not terrorized
the Cambodian people, but it has threatened the
country's tourism industry. Tourism Minister Veng
Sereyvuth assured hoteliers and airline officials
in April that the Cambodian tourism sector was
working as smooth as ever and that visitors could
be confident in the preventative measures being
taken by the Ministry of Health to protect the
country from a potential outbreak of the disease.
He said the SARS war is worse than the war in
Iraq, since people are afraid to fly. The numbers
of visitors to Cambodia has dropped 40 percent
compared to last year's figures, and the country,
like neighboring countries, could see an even
greater decline. Now it is up to the global community
to prove its strength in the face of adversity.
A World of Treasure is waiting to be discovered
here in Cambodia. Staying at home is certainly
no way to discover anything. Welcome to Cambodia.
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