Soon  Cambodia  will  be  selected in to  the  Guiness  world  record    as
the most   corruption  country  on the planet  which   thank  to  Hun Sen 's
team  .  However   Polpot   was  already  selected   that why  Hun Sen
also    want  to be selected   as well  !

On 8/25/08, Ông-thu N <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
>  Hun Chea, a nephew of Cambodia's prime minster, was speeding along a busy
> downtown street a few days ago when he ran down a man on a motorbike.
>
> Phnom Penh's streets are teeming with motorbikes, hundreds of them,
> criss-crossing busy traffic without seeming to look or care where they are
> going. Collisions are inevitable. But that's not the point of this story.
>
> Hun was tearing down the street at high speed when he hit the biker,
> witnesses reported, and his car ripped off an arm and a leg. The biker, Sam
> Sabo, was killed. Hun began to drive off, but running over the motorbike had
> shredded a tire. He had to pull over, so there he sat in his big black
> Cadillac Escalade SUV.
>
> Now, listen to how the Phnom Penh Post newspaper described the events that
> followed.
>
> "Numerous traffic police were seen avoiding the accident scene, but armed
> military police arrived. They removed the SUV's license plates and comforted
> Hun Chea" while Sam Sabo lay bleeding to death in the street. A military
> policeman was overheard telling Hun: "'Don't worry. It wasn't your mistake.
> It was the motorbike driver's mistake.'" A few days later, Hun gave the dead
> man's family $4,000 in hush money, the paper reported. Case closed.
>
> It's no secret that Cambodia is thoroughly corrupt. As an indirect result,
> the rich and the powerful can commit, well, murder and face few if any
> repercussions.
>
> A primary rule of foreign correspondence is to avoid applying the values of
> your own country on the nation you are covering. But then, some events
> appear so outrageous that the rule does not apply.
>
> Police actually removed the car's license plates, to conceal the driver's
> identity? So I asked Khieu Kanarith, Cambodia's information minister, about
> the case. He fumbled about for a moment and then explained, "I understand he
> had his wife in the car, and I don't think he was paying attention to what
> he was doing." OK, but the police removed the license plates? Khieu had to
> think about that for a moment but finally managed to say, "You try to cover
> the plates because it's harder to sell a car if it's been in an accident."
> As a reporter, sometimes it's hard to keep a straight face. But then, being
> Cambodia's information minister is a tough job.
>
> Later I asked Joseph Mussomeli, the U.S. ambassador, about this, and he
> shook his head.
>
> "This goes to the whole culture of impunity here. Who you are, who you
> know, is more important than following the law. And the police are too
> intimidated, too deferential, to the wealthy and powerful." Why else would
> the traffic police assertively avoid the scene of the accident, even with a
> dying man lying in the street? They knew full well that the owner of a
> Cadillac Escalade SUV in this exceedingly poor country is quite likely to be
> well connected.
>
> Impunity is a word that comes up over and over in Cambodia.
>
> Last month, two men speeding by on a motorbike shot and killed Khim Sambor
> and his 21-year-old son as they walked down the street. Khim was a reporter
> for Khmer Conscience, an opposition newspaper, and not surprisingly the
> paper had been writing critically about the government.
>
> No one has been arrested. That is true for dozens of apparent contract
> killings in recent years just like that one. No one has proved that
> government officials are behind them. But then, why else would the police
> make no effort to solve any of these crimes? Cambodia has come a long way in
> the last several years. Phnom Penh is teeming with tourists. The economy is
> growing. The nation has been stable for more than a decade now, which is no
> small accomplishment.
>
> Over the years, I have worked in many corrupt states — Iraq, Sudan,
> Afghanistan, among others. But in none of them is the corruption so
> pervasive, even pandemic. Prime Minister Hun Sen just won re-election to a
> new five-year term. For a decade, the United States and many other countries
> have been pressing him to pass a comprehensive anti-corruption law. Hun
> continually promises but never delivers.
>
> Cambodians deserve better. If Cambodia hopes to join the ranks of the
> world's prosperous and respected nations, it must enact — and enforce — an
> anti-corruption law. With that, in time, the shiny mantle of impunity
> resting softly on the shoulders of the rich and well-connected will begin to
> fall away.
>
>
> >
>

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