HONORARY
DOCTORAL DEGREE
RECIPIENTS IN
2007
His Excellency
Tea Banh
His Excellency
Tea Banh
was born on 5
November 1945,
in Koh Kong
Province, where
he grew up.
After joining
the Royal
Cambodian Armed
Forces, he was
rapidly
promoted,
becoming a
Commander of a
platoon in Koh
Kong Province in
1962, and then
Commander of a
company in 1969.
In 1973, he was
appointed
Military
Commander of Koh
Kong Province
and also
Director of
Training.
Thereafter, he
rose to become
Deputy Chief of
the General
Staff in charge
of
Telecommunications
and the Air
Force in 1979;
and then
Deputy-Minister
of National
Defense in
charge of
Telecommunications
and the Air
Force in 1980.
In 1982, he was
appointed
Minister of
Communications,
Transport and
Posts, a
position which
he retained when
he was appointed
Vice Chairman of
the Council of
Ministers in
1984, although
he subsequently
moved to become
Minister of
National Defense
in 1987.
In 1988, he was
elected as a
Member of
Parliament for
Siem Reap
Province, a seat
he has held ever
since. He also
served as Deputy
Minister of
National Defense
in the
Provisional
Government and,
thereafter, as
Co-Minister of
National
Defense. During
the period
1994-1995, he
also held the
post of
Co-Deputy
Commander-in-Chief
of the National
Armed Forces.
He continued to
serve as
Co-Minister of
National Defense
after the 1998
elections, and
was also
appointed as a
Senior Minister.
He retained his
Defense
portfolio after
the 2003
elections, when
he was also
given the post
of Deputy Prime
Minister. He
still holds
these two
positions in the
Royal Government
of Cambodia.
H.E. Tea Banh is
being conferred
an Honorary
Doctorate in
Military Science
by the
University of
Cambodia. His
citation reads:
o
He has made
significant
contributions to
the functioning
of the Royal
Cambodian Armed
Forces.
o
He has thus
helped to foster
the development
of peace and
security, and
thereby to set
Cambodia on the
road to law and
order and
economic
development.
o
He has
contributed
positively to
military reform
and the
promotion of
civil-military
relations in
Cambodia.
o
He has also
helped Cambodia
to maintain its
territorial
integrity,
independence and
sovereignty.
His Excellency
Cham Prasidh
His Excellency
Cham Prasidh
was born on May
15, 1951 in
Phnom Penh. He
obtained a
Bachelor’s
degree in
Commerce, and
another in
Economics, from
the University
of Phnom Penh in
1973. Over the
period
1980-1985, he
held various
posts in the
Ministry of
Foreign Affairs,
before becoming
a Vice Minister
at the Prime
Minister’s
Office in 1987.
He was appointed
Minister of
Commerce in 1994
and a Member of
the Central
Committee of the
Cambodian
People's Party,
posts which he
has retained
ever since. He
was elected as a
Member of
Parliament for
Siem Reap
Constituency in
1998, and
re-elected in
2003. After his
re-election, he
was also
appointed as a
Senior Minister
in 2004.
As Minister of
Commerce, he
played a key
role as Chief
Negotiator for
Cambodia's
Accession to the
World Trade
Organization (WTO)
over the period
1995-2004. He is
also Cambodia's
Economic
Minister to
ASEAN (since
July 1999) and
to ASEM (since
August 2005).
Other positions
include being
Vice-Chairman of
the Cambodian
Steering
Committee for
the
Ayeyawadee-Chao
Praya-Mekong
Economic
Cooperation
Strategy (ACMECS)
programs;
Minister in
charge of the
Greater Mekong
Sub-region (GMS)
programs;
Minister in
charge of both
the
Cambodia-Laos-Vietnam
(CLV) and the
Cambodia-Laos-Thailand
(CLT)
Development
Triangle
programs;
Chairman of the
Cambodia-Thailand
Joint Trade
Committee;
Chairman of the
Public-Private
Sector Working
Group on Export
Processing and
Trade
Facilitation;
Chairman of the
Inter-Ministerial
Steering
Committee on the
Integrated
Framework for
Trade-related
Technical
Assistance and
Mainstreaming
Trade Strategy
for Poverty
Alleviation;
Chairman of the
Inter-Ministerial
Coordinating
Committee on
Intellectual
Property Rights;
Chairman of the
Export Quotas
Management
Committee;
Chairman of the
Inter-Ministerial
Coordinating
Committee on
Quality Control
of Goods and
Services;
Chairman of the
Committee for
the Reception
and Distribution
of Foreign
Assistance; Vice
Chairman of the
Council for the
Development of
Cambodia (CDC)
in charge of
Foreign Direct
Investments;
Chairman of the
Inter-Ministerial
Committee for
the Organization
and
Participation of
Cambodia to
International
Fairs; Vice
Chairman of the
Steering
Committee for
Private Sector
Development cum
Chairman of the
Sub-Steering
Committee on
Trade
Facilitation.
H.E. Cham
Prasidh is being
conferred an
Honorary
Doctorate in
Trade and
Economic
Integration by
the University
of Cambodia. His
citation reads:
o
He has promoted
commercial and
economic ties
between Cambodia
and the region,
and also the
rest of the
world.
o
He has
facilitated the
influx of
investments into
Cambodia from
elsewhere,
including from
the region.
o
He has
substantially
contributed to
the economic
development of
Cambodia and
thus to poverty
reduction and
the well-being
of the Cambodian
people.
o
He has led
Cambodia to
become a member
of the World
Trade
Organization.
His Excellency
Koji Omi
His Excellency
Koji Omi
was born on
December 14,
1932, in Gunma
Prefecture. He
graduated in
1956 with a
degree in
Commerce from
Hitotsubashi
University, and
proceeded to
join the
Ministry of
International
Trade and
Industry (MITI).
During his time
at MITI, he
served as Consul
at the Consulate
General of Japan
in New York
between 1970 and
1974; and, after
his return to
Japan, as
Director of the
General Affairs
Division of the
Director-General's
Secretariat of
the Science and
Technology
Agency between
1979 and 1981
and, the
following year,
Director-General
of the Guidance
Department of
MITI's Small and
Medium
Enterprise
Agency.
He left MITI in
1982 to enter
politics, and
was elected to
the House of
Representatives
for the Kita
Kanto
proportional
representation
bloc at the end
of 1983, a seat
he has retained
ever since. He
served as
Parliamentary
Vice-Minister
for Finance
between February
and December
1990;
Director-General
of the Research
Bureau of the
Liberal
Democratic Party
(LDP), November
1991 until
December 1992;
Director of the
LDP Commerce and
Industry
Division,
December 1992
until August
1993; Director
of the LDP
Science and
Technology
Policy Division,
August 1993
until July 1994;
LDP Deputy
Secretary-General,
July 1994 until
January 1995;
Chairman of the
House of
Representatives
Committee on
Finance, January
1995 until
September 1995;
Director of the
House of
Representatives
Special
Committee on
Financial Issues
and Related
Matters, April
1996 until
October 1996;
and Deputy
Chairman of the
LDP Policy
Research
Council,
November 1996
until September
1997.
In September
1997, he was
appointed
Minister of
State for
Economic
Planning in the
Second Hashimoto
Cabinet, a
position which
he held until
July 1998.
Thereafter, he
was appointed in
August 1998 as
Director-General
of the LDP
Election Bureau
(a post he held
until October
1999) and as
Acting Chairman
of the LDP
Research
Commission to
Promote Research
and Establish a
Nation of
Innovative
Science and
Technology and
to Promote
Research and
Development on
Information and
Telecommunications.
In September
1998, he was
appointed as
Deputy Chairman
of the LDP
Research
Commission on
the Tax System.
He became Acting
Chairman of the
LDP Party
Organization
Headquarters and
Director of the
Interest Group
Policy Division
in October 1999,
before taking up
the post of LDP
Acting
Secretary-General
in June 2000.
With the
formation of the
First Koizumi
Cabinet in April
2001, he was
appointed
Minister of
State for
Okinawa and
Northern
Territories
Affairs and
Minister of
State for
Science and
Technology
Policy, posts
which he held
until September
2002.
Thereafter, he
moved to become
Chairman of the
LDP Research
Commission to
Promote Research
and Establish a
Nation of
Innovative
Science and
Technology in
October 2002;
Deputy Chairman
of the LDP
General Council
in October 2004;
and Chairman of
the LDP Research
Commission on
Oil, Resources
and Energy in
November 2005.
In the Abe
Cabinet, he held
the post of
Minister of
Finance from
September 2006
until August
2007.
H.E. Omi is
Founder and
Chairman of the
Science and
Technology in
Society
Forum, which has
held annual
meetings since
2004 to promote
discussion about
issues related
to the
accelerating
evolution of
scientific and
technological
developments and
their
applications.
H.E. Koji Omi is
being conferred
an Honorary
Doctorate in
Public Service
by the
University of
Cambodia. His
citation reads:
o
He has promoted
international
trade between
Japan and the
rest of the
world
o
He has promoted
an international
dialogue on the
changing roles
of science and
technology and
their impacts on
social
development
o
He has thus
helped to ease
the stresses and
strains of
regional and
global
development.
Mr. Yohei
Sasakawa
Mr. Yohei
Sasakawa
was born in
Tokyo in 1939.
After graduating
in 1961 with a
Bachelor of Arts
in Political
Science and
Economics from
Meiji
University, he
spent two
decades managing
a pioneering
information
technology
company.
Then, in 1981,
he moved to
become a Trustee
of the Nippon
Foundation,
founded by his
father in 1962
as the Japan
Shipbuilding
Industry
Promotion
Foundation.
After a period
in 1988 as
Acting
President, he
became President
of the
Foundation
between 1989 and
2005. Since
2005, he has
served as
Chairman of the
Nippon
Foundation.
Funded by 3.3%
of the proceeds
of betting on
Japanese
motorboat
racing, the
Nippon
Foundation has
had an annual
budget of
between 35
billion yen to
86 billion yen
in recent years.
Its activities
can be divided
into three basic
areas: Overseas
Cooperative
Assistance,
Maritime
Development, and
Domestic Social
Welfare and
Volunteer
Support.
Through the
Sasakawa
Memorial Health
Foundation, the
Foundation has
worked with the
World Health
Organization
(WHO) to cure
leprosy and its
social ills. The
Foundation’s
support from
1996 on has
allowed the free
ministration of
needed drugs
world-wide, so
that more than
14 million
people have been
cured: whereas
leprosy affected
122 nations in
1985, it is
found in only
nine today. In
recognition of
his dedicated
efforts, the WHO
has appointed
Yohei Sasakawa
as its Goodwill
Ambassador for
Leprosy
Elimination.
Another offshoot
of the Nippon
Foundation, the
Sasakawa Peace
Foundation, was
established in
1986 for the
promotion of
international
cooperation and
understanding.
One of its
projects is the
Sasakawa
Pan-Asia Fund
(including the
Sasakawa
Southeast Asia
Cooperation
Fund), which was
created in 1992
to provide
financial
assistance for
education,
agriculture,
policy-making
and human
networking in
the region, and
thereby promote
adjustment to
rapid social
change. There
are many
projects in
Cambodia which
have received
funds, including
Primary School
Building
Projects since
1993, enhancing
distance
learning in
rural schools,
scholarship
programmes for
teacher
trainees, the
purchase of an
ultrasonic echo
scanner for the
maternity ward
and other drugs
and equipment
for the
Municipal
Hospital in
Phnom Penh, the
Cambodia School
of Prosthetics
and Orthotics,
the Disability
Action Council,
the Association
of the Blind and
the Overbrook
School for the
Blind,
programmes to
improve the
livelihoods of
smallholder
upland farmers,
media
development
assistance, the
compilation of
legal textbooks
and the
promotion of
political
dialogue.
An important
global project
of the Nippon
Foundation has
been the
Sasakawa Young
Leaders
Fellowship Fund
(SYLFF): a
program to
encourage the
development of
tomorrow’s
intellectual
leaders by
giving
outstanding
graduate
students
fellowships to
do a Master’s or
doctoral degree
at a selected
university.
Since it was
started in 1987,
it has given $1
million
endowments to
more than 60
universities in
about 40
countries. The
aim is to help
the best and
brightest
students with
strong
leadership
potential, and
regardless of
their
background, so
that they can
better develop
as responsible
citizens who can
consider social
issues
analytically but
fairly, devise
solutions for
local and
regional
problems, and
participate
effectively in
their country’s
efforts to
engage the
global
community.
Mr. Yohei
Sasakawa has
received many
honours,
including
honorary degrees
and
professorships,
as a result of
his
philanthropic
work: these
include the
award, in 2003,
of the National
Construction
Medal and the
Officier de
l’Ordre Royal du
Monisaraphon by
Cambodia.
Mr. Yohei
Sasakawa is
being conferred
an Honorary
Doctorate in
Humanity by the
University of
Cambodia. His
citation reads:
o
He has sought to
improve the
lives of many of
the poor and
disadvantaged in
the developing
world.
o
He has sought to
prepare
potential
leaders of
society in the
developing world
for their future
roles as guides
and
trend-setters.
o
He has been a
good friend of
the people of
Cambodia in
their time of
need.
Dr. Richard E.
Dyck
Dr. Richard E.
Dyck
was born in
California in
April, 1945. He
received his
B.A. from
California State
University at
Fresno in 1967;
after studies at
various Japanese
universities, he
completed his
Master's (1973)
and Ph.D. (1975)
degrees at
Harvard
University on
regional studies
related to Japan
and research and
development in
the Japanese
electronics
industry. He
stayed on at
Harvard for a
brief period as
an Assistant
Professor,
before going on
to a similar
position at Ohio
State University
for brief period
in 1976.
Thereafter, he
moved out of
academia to
become Director
of Far East
Trade and
Development of
the State of
Ohio in Japan
until 1978,
before doing a
four-year stint
as Director of
East Asian
Operations for
the Specialty
Materials
Division of
General
Electric.
In 1982, he
moved to
Teradyne, Inc.,
a US
manufacturer of
automatic test
equipment
systems and
high-speed
connectors for
the electronics
industry, as
Chairman and
Representative
Director of
Teradyne-Japan.
In 1988, he was
also appointed
as a Vice
President and
Officer of
Teradyne, Inc.
Then, in 1999,
after acquiring
the Japanese
operations of
the backplane
high-speed
connection
systems business
from Teradyne,
he co-founded
and became
President of
TCS-Japan KK and
East Asia
Connector
Services, Ltd.
(Shanghai),
positions he has
retained ever
since. Since
their inception,
TCS-Japan and
East Asia
Connector
Services, Ltd.
have seen their
product lines
expand to
include a wide
variety of
connectors and
backplanes, with
state-of-the art
factories in
Yokohama (Japan)
and Shanghai
(China), and
procurement
networks which
span the globe.
Applications
include
telecommunications
equipment, data
communications
equipment,
medical
equipment,
industrial
controllers and
automatic test
equipment, with
customers
including
Toshiba, NEC,
Hitachi,
Matsushita,
Yokogawa Denki,
Teradyne,
Shibasoku,
Mitsubishi
Electric, and
Fujitsu.
Dr. Dyck has
been a member of
both the
Japanese Prime
Minister's
Council on
De-regulation
and Foreign
Investment and
the Advisory
Committee of the
Japan External
Trade
Organization
(JETRO) since
1999. He has
played a role as
an advisor to US
ambassadors in
Japan and, in
2001, he was
appointed by the
President of the
United States as
a member of the
Japan-US
Friendship
Commission, an
independent
federal agency
which supports
programs of
training,
education and
information
management to
help prepare
Americans to
meet the
challenges and
opportunities in
the their
relations with
Japan. He is
also a Visiting
Researcher at
the Institute of
Pacific
Relations of
Waseda
University. In
addition, he has
held various
posts with the
Semiconductor
Equipment and
Material
Industry
Association
(SEMI; a global
trade
association in
the
semiconductor
industry); and
serves on
several
corporate and
non-profit
boards,
including Laser
Front
Technologies KK,
Starbridge KK,
the Tokyo
Philharmonic,
the Sasakawa
Peace
Foundation,
Nishimachi
International
School and
Children’s
Express – Japan.
He is also a
member of the
Board of
Trustees of the
Sasakawa Peace
Foundation.
Furthermore, Dr.
Dyck frequently
comes to
Cambodia where
he helps support
orphanages,
schools and
other projects,
including a
telemedicine
program that
connects rural
doctors in
Cambodia with
physicians in
the United
States
In recognition
of his
contributions to
the facilitating
of greater
cultural
awareness and
business
relationships
between the
Japanese and US,
Dr. Dyck has
received several
awards: in 1999,
he received a
citation from
Prime Minister
Keizo Obuchi of
Japan for his
contributions to
international
business
relations;
whilst, in 2006,
he was the
eighth annual
recipient of the
Bob Graham Award
for outstanding
contributions to
the
semiconductor
industry.
Dr. Dyck is
being conferred
an Honorary
Doctorate in
Humanity by the
University of
Cambodia. His
citation reads:
o
He has helped to
boost the
economic
development of
the region as a
developer and
manufacturer of
advanced
electronics
systems.
o
He has sought to
build up
economic and
other ties
between Japan
and the United
States, which
are essential
for regional and
global stability
o
He has
generously
contributed his
time and
resources to the
aid of the poor
in Cambodia.