DO NOT BELIEVE THIS INDIVIDUAL  [EMAIL PROTECTED] MUST THINK ALWAYS THAT A 
VIETNAMESE REMAINS A VIETNAMESE :
AND THE VIETNAMESE CHARACTER as described in this book as : " THIEF, LIAR : 
BOOK " GIAI PHONG " by T Terzani describes a Vietnamese as THIEF, A LIAR, A 
KILLER, A DECEIVER , a sleeper ..... I enjoy the song but I never forget this 
.PRESIDENT REAGAN INSISTS THROUGH 10 UN RESOLUTIONS1. that the KR regime must 
not allowed to come back to power in Cambodia2. that Vietnam cease her 
occupation of Cambodia followed by total withdrawal of Viet troops from 
Cambodia.AS OF TODAY CAMBODIA REMAINS OCCUPIED BY VIETNAM AGAINST THE 10 UN 
RESOLUTIONS CALLING VIETNAM TO QUIT , BUT NOT RESPECTED .



Date: Wed, 17 Sep 2008 00:36:01 -0700From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]: [EMAIL 
PROTECTED]: Re: Cambodia’s ethnic Vietnamese cross the border to go to school
When I visited the border towns in Vietnam-Cambodia border, local people go in 
and out freely without the necessary document like us.  the oppositions and 
many cambodian ultra nationalists often claim millions of Viets in cambodia 
what they actually mean, is 600.  just like their claim one million vote lost 
in Phnom Penh where population just over a million and according to Sam Rainsy 
pollster Chau Bury, is 90 percent Viet and Chinese, the constituents of the 
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: 





Cambodia’s ethnic Vietnamese cross the border to go to school

22:35' 07/09/2008 (GMT+7) 









Ethnic Vietnamese primary school pupils living in Cambodia cross the border 
into Viet Nam to go to school.VietNamNet Bridge - Schools in Khanh An Commune, 
An Phu District, An Giang Province are welcoming hundreds of new 
Vietnamese-Cambodian students from Kan Dal Province, Cambodia this academic 
year.
The majority of the students hail from Pec Chay Commune, Koh Thum District, 
Cambodia, where many ethnic Vietnamese are living.
Khanh An Commune’s Primary School B has more than 600 Vietnamese-Cambodian 
students, according to principal Nguyen Tan Tai. All of the school’s new first 
graders are Vietnamese-Cambodian.
Vietnamese-Cambodians made up 60 per cent of Khanh An Commune’s Primary School 
A’s 930 students, said principal Nguyen Thi Sanh.
According to Le Van Be, Khanh An Secondary School principal, 30 per cent of the 
800 new students this year live in Cambodia.
More and more of Khanh An Commune’s student body is Vietnamese-Cambodian 
because many cannot afford to send their children to schools in Cambodia.
The Vietnamese-Cambodian students’ parents, many of whom are illiterate, also 
hope their children learn to both read and write their mother tongue.
Thus, many of these overseas Vietnamese cross the border into Viet Nam to take 
their children to school every day.
Bui Minh Hung of Koh Thum District, Cambodia sells fish at An Giang Province’s 
Khanh Binh border gate, and brings his child to a Khanh An school every day. 
After all his stock is sold, he takes his child home at 12 a.m.
Despite a difficult commute, Nguyen Thi Xuan of Koh Thum District, Cambodia 
still makes her children to go to school in Viet Nam so they would speak 
Vietnamese.
Educational authorities in An Giang Province are assisting Vietnamese-Cambodian 
students to go to school by waiving school infrastructure fees and giving gifts.
For preparation of this school year, Khanh An Commune Primary School A gave 
away 878 packages of school bags and other classroom necessities worth 
VND100,000 (US$6) each.
Residents at the border also help out the students by ferrying them across the 
river for free.
Thanks to local authorities and residents’ help, many overseas Vietnamese 
students have beat the odds to succeed. For example, Le Duy Phuong, Nguyen Van 
Lanh and Diep Hoai An, all former Vietnamese-Cambodian high school students, 
have gone on to university.
Danh Thi My Non, a Vietnamese-Cambodian An Phu High School alum, just entered 
her junior year at An Giang University, said her vice principal Ngo Thai Can.
Nguyen Quang Tuu of Koh Thum District’s Vietnamese Association said many ethnic 
Vietnamese in Cambodia were happy their children could learn their mother 
tongue and keep some Vietnamese cultural traits.
(Source: VNS)


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