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Investment in Cambodian tourism reaches $354 mln in half year

Investment in Cambodian tourism reaches $354 mln in half year

Source: Xinhua

The investment in Cambodia’s tourism reached to about 354 million U.S. dollars in the first six months of this year and is a leading field that got the most investment, the local media said on Tuesday.

“Council for Development of Cambodia (CDC) approved about 1.22 billion U.S. dollars investment projects totally from private companies and 354 million U.S. dollars of the total is on tourism investment project,” the khmer language newspaper Rasmei Kampuchea quoted the document from CDC as saying.

Agricultural field stands second row after tourism with 323 million U.S. dollars and next field is industry with 303 million U.S. dollars.

In total, Cambodia received 53 investment projects for the first half year and tourism field attracted seven projects, while agri-industry has 12 projects, garment industry with 14 projects and three in energy projects.

If we consider on the projects for the first six month of this year, it increases four projects but the investment capital went down about 3.2 billion U.S. dollars compared with the same period of last year, it said, adding that for first six month of last year, Cambodia yielded with 49 investment projects with about 4.43billion U.S. dollar.

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French company to invest $250 million for resort development in Ream

Friday, June 13, 2008
Everyday.com.kh
Translated from Khmer by Socheata

The Ream Resort French company plan to invest $250 million in the Ream area in Sihanoukville. The investment plan was presented by Alain Dupuis, president of the Ream Resort, to Hun Sen during a meeting on 12 June in (Hun Sen’s fortress in) Takhmao. Alain Dupuis told Hun Sen that his company will build the resort in Ream, at a cost of $250 million, and it will include a 5-star hotel, a town, lodging, golf course, beaches, and watercrafts, etc… Alain Dupuis said that this plan will start in the next dry season, and the project will be completed in 2010. Hun Sen welcomed the development plan and he asked the company to work with the Council for Development of Cambodia (CDC) for this investment to become successful.

Source: KI-Media

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South Korean investor to build 52-story skyscraper in Phnom Penh

PHNOM PENH, Jun 12, 2008 (Xinhua) — South Korean investors will hold ground-breaking ceremony here next week for its 52-story skyscraper, the tallest building currently designed for Cambodia, said English-Khmer language newspaper the Mekong Times Friday.


GS Engineering and Construction, the largest real estate developer in South Korea, will take four years to complete the project near the Tonle Bassac River, the paper quoted Mu Hion Woo, its chief of business division in Cambodia, as saying.


The project will include a 52-story office block, a 32-story residential block, an international school and a shopping mall, he said.


“Which country has the most experience in developing satellite cities? The answer is South Korea. There are probably four or five such cities near Seoul,” he told the paper.

“But for us, it is business on one hand and a contribution to the development of Cambodia on the other. If you want to see the potential of Cambodia, you can see it in this project,” he added.


Currently, a second South Korean real estate developer is constructing a 42-story skyscraper of comprehensive functions in downtown Phnom Penh and a third one developing a satellite city in the suburb.


When all South Korean projects were accomplished, the skyline of the capital would be totally renewed, as it is now dominated by buildings only four- or five-storey high.

Source: (Xinhua)

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French company to invest $250 mln to develop resort in Cambodia

A French-financed company will invest $250 million to develop the Ream area in Cambodia’s port city of Sihanoukville into a resort, according to Ieng Sophallet, assistant to Prime Minister Hun Sen, Friday.

Alain Dupuis, French citizen and director of the Ream Resort Development Company, met with Hun Sen Thursday to find support from the government for his project, he added. Khmer-language newspaper the Rsamei Kampuchea Friday quoted Alain as telling the premier that his company will construct five-star hotels, other accommodation facilities, golf course, leisure places along the beach and motor-boat sporting project for tourists in the Ream region.

The premier welcomed the investment and requested the company to work with the Council for Development of Cambodia to achieve success, it added. Construction of the project will start in late 2008 and be finished in 2010. Sihanoukville is Cambodia’s major sight-seeing destination. Sandy beach and clean sea used to attract tens of thousands of travelers annually.

Source: http://www.bbj.hu/main/news_40560_french+company+to+invest+%2524250+mln+to+develop+resort+in+cambodia.html

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Top Cambodian phone firm in $150 mln Alcatel deal

PHNOM PENH, Sept 6 (Reuters) – Mobitel, Cambodia’s largest mobile phone company, has agreed to buy $150 million of equipment from French communications giant Alcatel-Lucent to expand its network into the countryside.

Alcatel said the equipment was part of a four-year plan to expand mobile services ranging from voice to video streaming to the Internet to more than 3 million subscribers across the war-scarred Southeast Asian nation.

Mobitel has the lion’s share of Cambodia’s 1.5 million mobile subscribers, although growth has been so rapid its network has encountered capacity problems in the last two years.

Industry officials say the mobile phone market is growing at 40 percent a year in Cambodia, a nation of 14 million people with an average annual per capita income of $500.

Mobitel is a joint Swedish-Cambodian venture. Other operators are owned by Thai or Malaysian companies.

Source: http://asia.news.yahoo.com/070906/3/37hbw.html

 

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Cambodia seeks investors for economic expansion

 

 

Wednesday, September 05, 2007

PHNOM PENH: Cambodia’s private sector met Tuesday with government officials for talks on the future of the economy, with a clear call from businesses for the country to seek more foreign investment.

The underlying point from business leaders was that investment must be encouraged, even if that meant loosening controls in sectors on which the government has historically kept a firm grip.

Chief among these is the country’s real estate market, which in the past few years has enjoyed an unprecedented boom as land prices soar and dozens of building projects get underway in the capital.

Business people have urged the government to deepen its investment base by opening property ownership to foreigners for the first time — a measure that many expect could dump tens of millions of dollars into the economy and spur on greater industrial growth.

Under the current rules, foreign property investments must be made in the name of a Cambodian national, and many are unwilling to risk losing their assets to unscrupulous local partners.

While Cambodia’s investment law was amended in 2005 to allow foreign ownership of permanent fixtures, the legislation has yet to be implemented and the initiative has floundered.

“This is already a sector of the economy that is dynamic, but foreign ownership of apartments, condominiums and other such structures on the land will help spur further economic growth,” said Bretton Sciaroni, an American lawyer who serves as the chairman of the International Business Club.

“Such a regulatory development will provide a dramatic indication that Cambodia has an investor-friendly environment,” he added.

After decades of turmoil, Cambodia has emerged as a rising economy in the region — posting an average of 11 percent growth over the past three years on the back of strong tourism and garment sectors.

But these economic pillars are by no means insulated from growing regional competition, and officials said moves must be made to protect the gains made over nearly a decade of rapid expansion.

Cambodia’s 2.5 billion-dollar textile industry has posted double-digit export growth year-on-year and employs some 350,000 workers, making it the country’s largest industrial operation.

But it also continues to be buffeted by labour disputes which will become especially critical next year when restrictions against Chinese garment exports expire, forcing Cambodia into greater competition with this Asian giant.

“In short, there are too many unions,” said Van Sou Ieng of the Garment Manufacturers Association of Cambodia (GMAC), urging greater government regulation of the more than 1,000 workers’ groups.

Illegal strikes, sometimes as many as two a day, and repercussions against workers who do not walk off the job are also endemic, he told government leaders.

“The frequency of these occurrences … is becoming alarming, and if left unattended and unresolved, they will destroy Cambodia’s reputation for attracting and maintaining investors,” he said.

The tourism sector, which has also enjoyed significant yearly growth, must also adapt if it is to attract both visitors and investors, business leaders said.

Already, several private companies have been granted licenses to develop Cambodia’s islands off its southern coast as the country tries to scale up its resort offerings.

Officials Tuesday also mooted for the first time the revival of a national air carrier that is hoped to take advantage of growing regional tourism.

The country’s last national carrier, Royal Air Cambodge, was shuttered in 2001 after running up losses of 30 million dollars.

Domestic air routes are expected to prove vital to developing some of Cambodia’s more remote locations, as well as encouraging travelers to seek sights beyond the famed Angkor temples in northwest Cambodia, which remain its most popular tourist draw.

“National carriers are an important tool for promoting destination tourism for any country,” said Ho Vandy, president of the Cambodian Association of Travel Agents. afp

Source: http://www.dailytimes.com.pk

 

 

 

 

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Cambodia urged to allow foreign ownership of property

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File photo shows Cambodian workers at a building site in Phnom Penh. Cambodia’s private sector Tuesday urged the government to allow foreign ownership of certain properties like apartments or factories, saying a liberalised real estate market would spur economic growth.

PHNOM PENH (AFP) — Cambodia’s private sector Tuesday urged the government to allow foreign ownership of certain properties like apartments or factories, saying a liberalised real estate market would spur economic growth.

Under the current rules, foreign property investments must be made in the name of a Cambodian national, and many are unwilling to risk losing their assets to unscrupulous local partners.

While Cambodia’s investment law was amended in 2005 to allow foreign ownership of permanent fixtures, the legislation has yet to be implemented and the initiative has floundered.

“There are several reasons for urgent action,” said Bretton Sciaroni, an American lawyer who serves as the chairman of the International Business Club and was speaking Tuesday at a meeting between the private sector and government.

The measure would further develop Cambodia’s real estate market, taking advantage of a current boom and making the country competitive with its neighbours, which allow foreigners to own apartments or condominiums.

Vast new building projects have bloomed in the past few years, including a number of sprawling satellite cities worth billions of dollars that when constructed will radically alter the face of the capital.

“This is already a sector of the economy that is dynamic, but foreign ownership of apartments, condominiums and other such structures on the land will help spur further economic growth,” Sciaroni said.

“Such a regulatory development will provide a dramatic indication that Cambodia has an investor-friendly environment,” he added.

After decades of turmoil, Cambodia has emerged as a rising economy in the region — posting an average of 11 percent growth over the past three years on the back of strong tourism and garment sectors.

But officials warn that the country, which still relies on international aid for half of its annual budget, must diversify by seeking more varied foreign investments.

“There are other sectors we are trying to encourage, but we have to find out what are the sectors where we can be competitive,” Commerce Minister Cham Prasidh told AFP in an interview last week.

“If we try to produce the same thing as Thailand or Malaysia, it will be very difficult,” he added.

Source: http://afp.google.com/article/ALeqM5jl4G46zbEYLEDmiyTJaZbVmhyQtA

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Investors Push Cambodia on Real Estate

Investors Push Cambodia on Real Estate

 Tuesday September 4, 6:45 am ET

 

Investors Push Cambodia to Allow Foreign Ownership of Buildings, Condominiums

PHNOM PENH, Cambodia (AP) — Foreign investors pushed the Cambodian government Tuesday to allow foreign ownership of buildings, apartments and condominiums, saying such a step is important to advance the country’s economic growth.

“It will help further develop the real estate market in Cambodia,” said Bretton Sciaroni, an American lawyer, in a speech at a government forum Tuesday.

Sciaroni was representing a group of investors in a regular meeting with the government to discuss the investment climate and the difficulties of doing business in Cambodia.

He noted that real estate is already a dynamic sector in Cambodia. “But foreign ownership of apartments, condominiums and other such structures on the land will help spur future economic growth,” he said.

The Cambodian constitution prohibits foreign ownership of land but doesn’t explicitly ban foreigners from owning buildings.

Two years ago, the government amended a land law with the aim of allowing foreign ownership of such permanent fixtures.

But since then, the government has not issued any implementing regulation on the amendment, leaving lending institutions uncertain about investing in Cambodian real estates, Sciaroni said.

Sciaroni cited the examples of Singapore, Thailand, Malaysia, Indonesia and the Philippines, which all permit foreign ownership of apartments and condominiums.

“Cambodia not only has a chance to match our competitors, but depending on how the regulation is written, we can actually offer more favorable terms than our competitors in the region,” he said.

Prime Minister Hun Sen made no commitment to the appeal at the meeting Tuesday, saying the issue must be thoroughly studied.

Hun Sen added that only the constitutional council, the highest body with power to interpret Cambodian law, can rule on the regulation regarding foreign ownership of property.

 

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Cambodian Laws

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Investment Law in Cambodia

Click here on Law on Investment to see the original text.

 

 

THE NATIONAL ASSEMBLY

Kingdom of Cambodia

Law on the Investment OF THE KINGDOM OF CAMBODIA

 

§§§ This law is adopted by the National Assembly in Phnom Penh

on August 4, 1994 during the extraordinary session of the first legislature) §§§

 

 

Chapter I

Chapter II

Chapter III

Chapter IV

Chapter V

Chapter VI

Chapter VII

Chapter VIII

Chapter IX

General provisions

Council for the Development of Cambodia

Investment procedures

Investment Guarantees

Investment incentives

Land Ownership and use

Employment practices

Disputes and dissolution

Final provisions

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Download the whole text in Word Document more info..

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