close
KISUMU: A man throws a stone on a burnt car as supporters of Kenya’s opposition party National Super Alliance (NASA) demonstrate in Kisumu yesterday after Kenya’s Supreme Court dismissed two petitions to overturn the country’s October 26 presidential election re-run, validating the poll victory of Kenyatta. — AFP
KISUMU: A man throws a stone on a burnt car as supporters of Kenya’s opposition party National Super Alliance (NASA) demonstrate in Kisumu yesterday after Kenya’s Supreme Court dismissed two petitions to overturn the country’s October 26 presidential election re-run, validating the poll victory of Kenyatta. — AFP

Kenyan Supreme Court upholds Kenyatta's presidential victory

‘Every province has Chinese investors’

SIHANOUKVILLE: Watching Chinese money flow into his home city of Sihanoukville, Cambodian linguist Um Keangseng opened a language school to meet the growing demand for Mandarin lessons. Sihanoukville has been the biggest recipient of Chinese investment into Cambodia, where President Xi Jinping will arrive Thursday. “Every province has Chinese investors,” said Um Keangseng, who founded his school a decade ago to address the market for skilled communicators. “There are Chinese businesses everywhere,” he said, to the point where “Chinese and English are both equally important”.

Um Keangseng’s Tai Zhong No.2 School has more than 400 part-time students, from elementary to college age, learning Mandarin—the world’s most spoken first language. The 39-year-old grew up learning Chinese from his grandparents, migrants from Guangdong province. “People used to laugh at us,” he said, believing Chinese was not as useful as English, French or Thai. Now many of his former students have gone into business with the Chinese, to work in their companies or even become investors themselves.

SIHANOUKVILLE: This aerial view shows the site of the under construction luxury seafront shopping resort ‘Peninsula Bay’ in Sihanoukville. - AFP
SIHANOUKVILLE: This aerial view shows the site of the under construction luxury seafront shopping resort ‘Peninsula Bay’ in Sihanoukville. - AFP

‘Unstoppable rise’

While Um Keangseng displayed characters on a computer screen, student Ouk Sok Heng carefully practiced the stroke order. The 18-year-old has never set foot in China but has ambitions to continue his IT studies at a Chinese university. “In the future, I want to do business with Chinese people. It will be easy (to earn money) if I can speak Chinese,” he said. The port city of Sihanoukville is packed with Chinese-owned and run casinos, hotels, restaurants and factories which have opened in recent years. Um Keangseng said his small nation relies on foreign countries—“especially China”—with language being an important aspect “to develop our country together”.

Mandarin skills open up opportunities in the city, such as receptionist jobs, said student Kok Ravy. “If we don’t speak Chinese, it will be difficult for us,” said the 21-year-old. Analyst Ou Virak hopes Cambodians will be able to diversify their language skills, without forgetting their roots and identity. “I would want us to entrench ourselves in the Khmer language and the Khmer culture,” he said.

But parents are increasingly sending their children to Mandarin lessons to boost their prospects, he said, and because of a “notion of the... unstoppable rise of China”. - AFP

Chronic or non-communicable diseases - namely cardiovascular diseases, cancer, chronic respiratory illnesses and diabetes - are among the leading causes of death globally. These conditions, which develop over long periods, are responsible for over 6...
Water and froth or origin and image are expressions that all aim to sensitize man to the truth of life. The life of each one of us is an asset — an asset that reflects the truth of our existence and its purpose — and an image, like the reflectio...
MORE STORIES