Thursday, 4 March 2010

The Phnom Penh Post News in Brief


via CAAI News Media

Golf course set to open

Thursday, 04 March 2010 15:00 Soeun Say

A US$25 million golf course at Grand Phnom Penh International City will open next month, a company representative told the Post Wednesday. Nine holes of the 18-hole course are set to open in April, according to GPPIC sales manager Teng Rithy. The golf course has been designed by Nicklaus Design and is set to cover 70 hectares at the centre of the 260-hectare satellite city. Construction of the course began in October 2008 covering 35 hectares of the site. The site has been developed by Indonesian firm Ciputra and Cambodia’s YLP Group.

Crunch telcos meeting

Thursday, 04 March 2010 15:00 Ellie Dyer

CONTROVERSIAL issues within the telecoms sector will be on the agenda for a meeting between the government and private sector to be held Tuesday, an industry executive said Wednesday. Representatives from Internet service providers (ISPs) and other leading telecoms firms are set to attend the public-private sector working group meeting, to be chaired by Minister of Economy and Finance Keat Chhon. Radio-frequency licencing and Internet interconnections are on the agenda, the executive said. The government revoked two operating licences in January after it was pointed out that a total of nine overlapped.

Land Dispute: Meeting set for row in Mondulkiri

Thursday, 04 March 2010 15:03 Chhay Channyda

Land Dispute

Ethnic Phnong villagers in Mondulkiri province’s Bousraa commune say they will accompany nine representatives to a meeting with commune officials today to discuss their conflict with two rubber companies – Socfin KCD and the Dak Lak Rubber Company – which are clearing land for plantations in the area. “I’m not afraid of going there. I will stand firm even though our land has been grabbed,” said villager By Deng, 44, adding that she would bring documents relating to the dispute to the meeting. Chhim Savuth, a project coordinator for Cambodian Centre for Human Rights, said on Wednesday that the summons was intended to “intimidate” the villagers, adding that the meeting was unnecessary following a public forum on the issue last month that was attended by lawmakers, commune officials, villagers and company representatives. Khaou Phallaboth, chairman of Socfin KCD’s board of directors, said the company received a licence to develop more than 2,000 hectares in the commune. “We come to develop and work with the people because we are the real investors,” he said.

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