Angkor Wat temple in Cambodia

Angkor Wat is a temple complex in Cambodia and the largest religious monument in the world, on a site measuring 162.6 hectares (1,626,000 m2; 402 acres).

Kep twon in Cambodia

Kep is a seaside resort area in Cambodia and includes the small town of the same name which is the capital of Kep Province.

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01 October, 2009

Forty dead as Typhoon Ketsana batters Vietnam

Vietnam battled rising floodwaters yesterday from typhoon that has cut a destructive path through Southeast Asia and Killed about 300 people. Thailand was mobilizing troops to provide humanitarian assistance in anticipation of flood from Typhoon Ketsana, which first struck the Philippine at the weekend killing 246 people. Vietnamese government report said 40 people were killed by Ketsana, which swept into Vietnam late on Tuesday.

Weather reports said that by late afternoon yesterday river in Vietnam’s Quang Nam province could reach a level last seen in 1964...

Floodwaters submersing some old house in Vietnam’s Hoi An city, a Unesco-recognized World Heritage site, where people had to move around by boat. The typhoon spared most of Daklak, Vietnam’s top coffee-growing province, and officials were still assessing coffee and rubber trees in Gai Lai, the third l-largest coffee grow, State-run Vietnam Television said.

The rain dumped on the Central Highland coffee belt could delay the start of the next coffee harvest y up to 10 day but exports would not affected, trade r said. The region hit by Ketsana lies far north of Vietnam’s Mekong Delta rice basket. (cambodia daily)

Dozen dead by Typhoon Ketsana

At least 12 are dead and dozens injured after Typhon Ketsana slammed into northern parts of Cambodia yesterday morning, leaving in its wake downed trees, flooded villagers and hundreds of destroyed homes.

Eight people were killed instantly in Kompong Thom province Tuesday night when the storm razed their homes. The storm was very strong and quick. The villagers could not prepare to leave their houses on time...

More than 50 soliders and policemen have been dispatched by provincial authorities to Sandan district to help move villagers from flooded areas.

In additional to the nine killed in Kompong Thom, a cave-in house killed one more in Siem Reap province. In Ratanakiri Province, the body of two villagers who went missing Tuesday was discovered yesterday morning. And one was died in Kaleng commune after being struck by falling tree.

They really need shelters, tents, safe drinking water, food items. More than 100 houses have been reported destroyed and 400 badly damaged by heavy winds in Kompong Thom alone.

Typhone Ketsana, whick has wreaked havoc across Southeast Asia over the past week that killing dozens in Vietnam and hundreds in the Philippine.

Nevertheless, the effect of Ketsana’s flash flooding will linger for some time. Villagers in Ratanakiri were stunned by how quickly the water rose. The rain alone can not cause the water to rise this quickly, this cause suspected Vietnam had opened floodgates on its uprise dam.

Sited from: Cambodia Daily

The full measure of Ketsana’s wrath




Typhoon Ketsana has cut a devastating swathe through Southeast Asia, leaving hundreds dead and millions more injured, homeless or lacking basic resources.

The trail of destruction began in the Philippines, which bore the brunt of the storm Saturday when a month’s worth of rain fell in just nine hours...

Described as the heaviest rainfall to hit the country in 40 years, Ketsana plunged 80 percent of the capital Manila under water. At least 246 people were killed, with a further 2.2 million directly affected. At least 375,000 people have been forced into evacuation camps, stretching the country’s emergency relief capabilities to their limits. By Sunday, wind speeds had reached 180 km/h and 48 centimetres of rain was recorded in a 24-hour period.

On Tuesday, Ketsana landed in Vietnam. More than 55 people died and a further 11 are still missing. Six coastal provinces were evacuated, an operation involving almost 170,000 people. The city of Hoi An, a UNESCO World Heritage site, remained under 3 metres of water Wednesday. Local officials compared it with a disaster that killed hundreds along the country’s central coast a decade ago.

World Vision reported that 5,800 houses had collapsed, with another 163,000 stripped of their roofs. Some 20,000 hectares of agricultural land have been flooded, according to government officials.

On Tuesday evening, the storm collided with Cambodia, killing at least 11 people and forcing thousands of families to flee their homes to escape the rising floodwaters.

By Wednesday, the typhoon had lost some of its strength and was downgraded to a tropical storm as it continued to push on into Laos. No deaths had been reported as of last night, but flooding had left some areas along the Sekong River awash in up to a metre of water. Two villages in Sekong province were completely submerged.

Sourced by: Phnom Penh Post

Ketsana leaves trail of dead in north, central provinces




TYPHOON Ketsana slammed into Cambodia with devastating force Tuesday night, killing at least 11 people and leaving thousands more injured or homeless as 145km/h winds and heavy rain lashed the Kingdom.

The tail end of the storm, which has killed hundreds of people since it smashed into the Philippines on Saturday, was the most severe ever to lash Cambodia, experts said.

“This is the first time that we have seen such a storm,” said Seth Vannareth, director of the Department of Meteorology at the Ministry of Water Resources and Meteorology.

Disaster officials confirmed on Wednesday that nine were killed and 35 injured in central Cambodia, while two died in the northeast. The death toll is expected to rise, with reports of more fatalities continuing to emerge across the country last night.

Kampong Thom province bore the brunt of the disaster. At least nine people were crushed to death when their homes collapsed on Tuesday night, said Chea Cheat, chief of the local Red Cross office.

In one incident, five members of one family – spanning three generations – died in Teak Mileang, a village in the Sandan district of Kampong Thom province. A 39-year-old woman, her mother, 15-year-old daughter, 14-year-old son and a baby were killed almost instantly when the roof of their house caved in. Only the husband, who was hunting in the forest when the storm struck, survived.

“The family died because they were in the house to shelter themselves from the rain,” said Sin Chea, a relative, who said he barely escaped with his own life. “I was sitting under my house when the storm hit. When the storm came, I ran away. That’s why I survived. Fifteen minutes later, my house was destroyed.”

A neighbour who witnessed the tragedy compared it to the horrors of Cambodia’s bloody civil war. Meas Sophea, 38, said: “My neighbours are all dead and our houses have been destroyed, just as they were during the civil war.” After seeing the storm destroy her neighbours’ home, she fled to the pagoda but suffered a broken leg when it, too, collapsed. “When I saw [my neighbours’] bloodstains on the ground, I ran out of my house to the pagoda, but then the pagoda also fell down,” she said.

Pang Phot, a police officer, said the storm struck quickly. “It was raining heavily and people could not flee their homes because the wind hit immediately,” he said. “I have never seen such a strong wind in my life. It punched the village immediately. It shocked us. Many wooden houses were immediately blown away and many others collapsed to the ground.”

In addition to the official death toll, three more people were reported dead in Siem Reap province, deputy Governor Bun Tharith said. One man was killed in Angkor Thom district when his house collapsed while he slept. Another died when he fell from his fishing boat in Chikrei district. Details of the third death could not be confirmed last night. Severe flooding was also reported in Siem Reap, where the river reached dangerous levels.

By Wednesday, the typhoon was downgraded to a tropical storm. Although the worst of Ketsana is now over, the final death toll is yet to come, officials say.

“We have still not had reports from some districts,” said Ly Samreth, chief of cabinet for Siem Reap province, noting that many people in his province were caught out by the storm depite repeated warnings – including one from Prime Minister Hun Sen – last week. “Cambodian people weren’t prepared for Ketsana despite the forecast,” he said.

A Cambodia Red Cross (CRC) official confirmed that the storm had taken some villages by surprise. “We already informed the local villagers to be careful, but they seemed not to pay much attention on the issue, and when the storm occurred, it damaged a lot of properties,” said Neth Sophanna, the CRC’s vice director of disaster management.

“We have not yet counted the number of families affected. We are still investigating further to evaluate the scope of the damages.”

Sourced by: Phnom Penh Post

Flood in Siem Reap Province

The flood in Siem Reap Province

30 September, 2009

Siem Reap Airlines set to resume on all routes






SIEM Reap Airways will resume international flights – as well as the domestic Phnom Penh-Siem Reap route – when it relaunches, most likely next month, a government aviation official said Sunday.

Sinn Chansereyvutha, director of the department of policy planning at the State Secretariat of Civil Aviation (SSCA), said that the airline would again fly to Thailand, Vietnam and Hong Kong.

The airline started flying to Ho Chi Minh City in late October before it grounded all international flights from December 1 following a European Union ban imposed after an audit by the International Civil Aviation Organisation found Cambodia in breach of 107 standards.

As the only Cambodian airline at the time, it therefore decided to suspend flights, Terry Alton, Siem Reap Airways general manager, previously told the Post. He was unavailable for further comment Sunday.

“We do not have any more reasons to suspend Siem Reap Airways flights … because the company already has the necessary documents and has fulfilled technical requirements,” said Sinn Chansereyvutha, adding that the government had approved a new two-year licence for the airline.
“We believe that Siem Reap Airways will start its official flights by November,” he said.

News of the return of the troubled airline comes after the Cambodian government chose not to renew the licence for its owner, Bangkok Airways, to fly the Phnom Penh-Siem Reap route from October 25, a decision it announced to travel agents the same day, according to a company
statement. It did not give any further details on the suspension of its flights on the route in the announcement.

The government said the decision was made on the basis that Bangkok Airways had only been granted the route due to the suspension of Siem Reap Airways flights last year.

New national carrier Cambodia Angkor Air started the same domestic route at the end of July, and it now looks certain that two domestic carriers will compete on the Siem Reap-Phnom Penh route from the end of next month at the latest.

Relaunch date still unclear
Sinn Chansereyvutha said the exact restart date for Siem Reap Airways would depend on when the carrier was ready to fly again.

The airline had not posted news of its relaunch on its Web site by late Sunday.

Meanwhile, Bangkok Airways will increase the fuel surcharge on its international flights to and from Cambodia from October 1, it said in announcement, from US$15 to $20 per one-way flight. The airline said it would keep the fuel surcharge for domestic flights in the Kingdom at $12 per ticket from the same date until it stops flying between Phnom Penh and Siem Reap.

The last flight on the route is scheduled to fly from the capital at 12:35pm on October 24.

Sourced by:Phnom Penh Post

9-year-old boy killed by hornets in Kampot

A 9-year-old boy died in a Kampot province hospital Sunday, five days after he was stung more than 30 times by hornets, Teuk Chhou district Governor Se Da said on Tuesday.

Ou Ban and his mother Touch Mao were travelling along a road in Samroang village, Chum Kriel commune, when they passed a palm tree supporting a hornet’s nest, Se Da said.

A strong gust of wind sent the nest crashing to the ground, releasing a swarm of angry hornets that promptly attacked the boy, his mother and a group of nearby children.

Most of the children escaped after suffering only one or two stings, but Ou Ban bore the brunt of the attack. His mother sustained three stings...

“Children here often provoke the hornets by shooting stones and slingshots at their nests, but this is the first time that hornets have killed anyone in my district,” Se Da said.

Strangest death
Chum Kriel commune chief Hay Seng said Tuesday that the boy was taken to the Kampot provincial hospital in critical condition shortly after the incident, but despite trying for five days, doctors at the hospital failed in their efforts to save his life.

“The doctors tried hard to save him, but his condition was very serious,” Hay Seng said. “Just two or three stings from this type of hornet can cause fever for several days, and this boy was stung more than 30 times.”

Hay Seng said Ou Ban was due to be cremated Tuesday evening, and that the boy’s family and friends were still in shock after the strangest death in the village’s recent history.

29 September, 2009

Cambodia gouvement alerts about storm Ketsana

Cambodian government issued an alerted letter about storm Ketsana that will hit Cambodia from 29-30 September 2009. It was reported around 100 deaths in Philippines, this morning the storm have been reported moving to Vietnam and estimated arrive in Cambodia at 01:00 of 29 September 2009.Those provinces of Cambodian northeast: Mondulkiri, Rattanakiri, Kratie, Steung Treng, Kampong Cham and Kampong Thom will hit first on the 29 September 2009 and it will continue to effect to all provinces around Tonle Sap on 30 September 2009: Kampong Cham, Kampong Chhnang, Pursat, Battambong, Pailin, Banteay Meanchey, Siem Reap, Preah Vihear, Udor Meanchey and Kampong Thom.

So people in Cambodia especialy people that live in provinces above must be carefull with it and take are everything.

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