illegal logging in the day light continues with the blessing of the us aids ?

From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]: [EMAIL PROTECTED]: SMILES & US$24 million for economic 
development : AMERICA -VIETNAM-CAMBODIA 2008Date: Mon, 15 Sep 2008 09:42:27 
-0700




AMERICA -VIETNAM-CAMBODIA  2008.
AS OF TODAY SEPTEMBER 13 2008,CAMBODIA AS UN MEMBER , REMAINS OCCUPIED BY 
ANOTHER UN MEMBER THAT IS VIETNAM from 1979-2008 through the cpp/hun sen 
regime.against 10 UN resolutions , not respected despite the call from the US 
president , President Reagan.
 
THE FACTS ARE:
10 UN RESOLUTIONS, (1979-1988) VOTED BY 116 UN MEMBER COUNTRIES ,CALL VIETNAM 
TO CEASE HER OCCUPATION OF CAMBODIA & REMOVE ALL HER TROOPS FROM THE COUNTRY 
ARE NOT RESPECTED.   
America calls Vietnam to restore Cambodia Independence .
President Reagan's address to the 43d Session of the United Nations General 
Assembly in New York, New York . September 26, 1988. "Mr. Secretary-General, 
there are new hopes for Cambodia, a nation whose freedom and independence we 
seek just as avidly as we sought the freedom and independence of Afghanistan. 
We urge the rapid removal of all Vietnamese troops ...." 
WE,THE CAMBODIAN,WE ARE CALLING TO
 U.S. Deputy Secretary of State John Negroponte TO HELP RESOLVE THIS PROBLEM 
WITH VIETNAM IN ORDER TO RESTORE INDEPENDENCE TO CAMBODIA IN COMPIANCE TO THE 
SPIRITS OF US PRESIDENT REAGAN AND THE 10 UN RESOLUTIONS.

Toasting good time in Phnom Penh ... with an autocratic ruler who was a former 
Khmer Rouge soldier 


Cambodian Prime Minister Hun Sen (R) toasts with U.S. Deputy Secretary of State 
John D. Negroponte after attending a meeting to sign agreements with the U.S. 
at the Ministry of Foreign Affairs in Phnom Penh September 15, 2008. The U.S. 
Government and the Royal Government of Cambodia signed a four-year bilateral 
agreement that will see the U.S. provide $26 million in funding to support 
Cambodian priorities in economic growth, according to a U.S embassy press 
release. REUTERS/Chor SokuntheaCambodian Prime Minister Hun Sen (L) shakes hand 
with U.S. Deputy Secretary of State John D. Negroponte before a meeting to sign 
agreements with the U.S. at the Ministry of Foreign Affairs in Phnom Penh 
September 15, 2008. The U.S. Government and the Royal Government of Cambodia 
signed a four-year bilateral agreement that will see the U.S. provide $26 
million in funding to support Cambodian priorities in economic growth, 
according to a U.S embassy press release. REUTERS/Chor SokuntheaCambodia's 
Prime Minister Hun Sen, second left, talks to the journalists after witnessing 
a signing ceremony with U.S. Deputy Secretary of State John Negroponte in 
Cambodia, in Phnom Penh, Cambodia, Monday, Sept. 15, 2008. The United States 
has decided to help fund the Cambodian genocide tribunal's work in putting 
former Khmer Rouge leaders on trial, a government official said Monday. (AP 
Photo/Heng Sinith)
Click to Read More...



 


US$24 million for economic development And Monday, September 15, 2008

US diplomat tours Cambodia's famed Angkor temples 

Sunday, September 14, 2008The Associated Press
PHNOM PENH, Cambodia: U.S. Deputy Secretary of State John Negroponte toured 
centuries-old Angkor temples in northwestern Cambodia on Sunday as he began a 
three-day visit to the Southeast Asian nation, an embassy official 
said.Negroponte was scheduled to arrive in the capital, Phnom Penh, on Monday 
to hold talks with Cambodian officials, including Foreign Minister Hor Namhong, 
U.S. Embassy spokesman John Johnson said.The deputy secretary of state was also 
expected to attend the signing of an agreement under which the United States 
will provide US$24 million for economic development projects in Cambodia, the 
embassy said in a statement.Negroponte's visit is the latest sign of improved 
relations between the two countries.Last year, the United States lifted a 
decade-old ban on direct aid to the Cambodian government. Washington cut off 
direct funding to Cambodian government projects in 1997 after Prime Minister 
Hun Sen ousted Prince Norodom Ranariddh, then his co-premier, in a coup.Before 
the ban was lifted, U.S. aid to impoverished Cambodia was mostly channeled to 
projects implemented by private groups.The U.S. has also recently resumed 
non-lethal military aid to Cambodia. Last week, the aircraft carrier USS 
Abraham Lincoln hosted a rare tour for a group of Cambodian military and 
government officials as it passed through the region on its way home from Iraq.



 

Early X'mas for Hun Sen: Negroponte brings in a $24 million gift to the Hun Sen 
gov't 

Cambodian economy gets an additional US$ 24 million bonanza 13-09-2008 Cambodge 
Soir Hebdo in EnglishClick here to read the article in French
The American government announced a donation to help Cambodian economic 
development. The Agreement will be signed during John Negroponte’s visit.Erin 
Soto, USAID mission director and Sok An, the Deputy Prime Minister and Minister 
of the Council of Ministers of Cambodia, will sign an agreement for US$ 26 
million on behalf of their respective countries on Monday September 15. The 
ceremony will be presided over by John Negroponte, the US Deputy Secretary of 
State and Hun Sen, the Prime Minister of Cambodia. This amount aims at 
strengthening and developing the Cambodian economy. The US, through their 
Agency for International Development (USAID) will inject US$ 24 million, 
whereas the Cambodian government will commit US$ 2 million.A four-year long 
agreement, it will facilitate growth. The USAID project for micro-companies and 
small and medium companies will be strengthened and enlarged to the private 
sector. The public domain will be included in the programme to guarantee a 
conducive background for companies and businesses.USAID, in 2008, plans a US$ 
57.5 million budget distributed through different programmes.
 



U.S. Deputy Secretary of State John Negroponte , left, greets with Vietnamese 
Prime Minister Nguyen Tan Dung, right, at the Government Office in 
Hanoi,Vietnam, Thursday, Sept. 11, 2008. (AP Photo/Chitose Suzuki)U.S. diplomat 
revisits a fast-changing Vietnam Friday, September 12, 2008The Associated Press
HANOI, Vietnam: The second-highest-ranking U.S. diplomat, back for the first 
time since the Vietnam War, said Friday that he was impressed by the pace of 
economic change in the country and its good will toward its former foe.Deputy 
Secretary of State John Negroponte urged Vietnam to increase political freedom 
and improve its legal system but said the two sides have developed a "close 
partnership" that the United States would like to deepen."I'm very optimistic 
about the future of our relationship," Negroponte said during a press briefing 
in Hanoi on Friday morning.Negroponte worked at the U.S. embassy in the former 
Saigon, now Ho Chi Minh City, during the Vietnam War. This is his first trip 
back to Vietnam since 1973.Even though the two sides fought a "bitter and 
difficult" war, Negroponte said, "on both sides, there seems to be a tremendous 
amount of good will."He praised Vietnam's economic growth, which has averaged 
roughly 7 percent a year for the last decade, describing it as an "economic 
miracle" that had lifted millions of Vietnamese out of poverty.Negroponte's is 
the most recent in a series of high-level visits between the two countries. 
U.S. President George W. Bush and Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice visited 
Hanoi in 2006, and Prime Minister Nguyen Tan Dung visited Washington in 
June.Negroponte met with Dung in Hanoi on Thursday, as well as the education 
minister, the foreign minister and various other officials. He is planning to 
meet Friday and Saturday with business leaders in Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam's 
southern business hub, before visiting neighboring Cambodia.He said he had 
raised the issue of human rights in all his meetings, but did not raise 
specific cases.Negroponte spoke just two days after Vietnam sentenced an 
Internet writer and activist to 30 months in prison for tax fraud.Human Rights 
Watch issued a statement decrying the verdict against Nguyen Hoang Hai, calling 
it part of a "crackdown on democracy activists in Vietnam."Hai, whose pen name 
is Dieu Cay, has criticized Vietnam's government for its handling of a dispute 
with China over the Spratly and Paracel islands, located in an area of the 
South China Sea believed to contain rich oil and gas reserves.

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