CLASH OF CHINESE CULTURE & Khmer Angkor Wath culture. Chinese culture of 
cheating & bribery brought to Cambodia 1955-2008.
 Khmer culture teaches us all : do not steal, do not lie But Chinese introduced 
to Cambodia from 1955-2008 are sophisticated in cheating practices and systems 
such as : -smugllings -cheating, -robbings, -Taxes evasion and -bribery. With 
no respect to the Khmer culture, they are promoting evil undertakings in the 
land : a.Bribery, corruption of the Cambodian officials, b.Slavery, Human 
trafficking, c.robbery, d.smugglings, e. drug smuggling and drug consumption, 
f. drinking, and gamblings ,sex industry g. forced prostitution etc The Chinese 
investors and Vietnamese invaders are thieves and have destroyed the country, 
the Khmer Culture with their culture of using : drug , heroin, drinking alcohol 
,prostitution, sex with children under 18 years old (Mao Tse Toung 's Daoism ), 
gambling, smuggling of all products, land grabbing, bribery, corruption of 
Cambodian Officials, racial discrimination...thus they are inflicting a 
permanent suffering to the entire Cambodian population with no end. The Chinese 
culture have transformed in 10 years 1993-2006 the Cambodian society in this 
evil way: - 100 000 cambodian girls under age are victims and are prostitutes 
of the Chinese sex industry producing 120 000 victims , as aid/hiv diseases - 
200 000 Cambodian men,women,children sold as slaves, beggars , human organ, 
forced prostitutes (180 000 ) to Thailand, and 20 000 to Malaysia & abroad. - 
The 300 Chinese garment factories in Kandal and Phnom Penh employ 270 000 
illegal Vietnamese settlers ..... -Malay Chinese and other have destroyed 
Cambodian forest with illegal loggings -Thai Chinese have promoted the 
consumption of Heroin, amphetamine Yama-Yaba through the Teng Bunma group and 
other ...... -The Communist Chinese have destroyed Cambodia with bribery to 
King Sihanouk: Bury
Wednesday, September 17, 2008

Impunity reigns for armed, drunken men 



A Phnom Penh beer garden - proprietors say that armed bodyguards pose a risk to 
staff and customers alike. (Eleanor Ainge Roy)Wednesday, 17 September 
2008Written by Chrann Chamroeun and Eleanor Ainge Roy The Phnom Penh Post
The fatal shooting of a 21-year-old woman in a Kandal beer garden throws new 
light on the impunity of bodyguardsTHE once-bustling Floating Beer Garden and 
Restaurant in Kandal province's Kien Svay district is now a quiet, dejected 
place. The road leading to the small establishment is muddy after the recent 
rains, and water drips from the low, over-hanging trees making the air rank and 
cloying.Two weeks ago, the Floating Beer Garden was the site of a brutal 
shooting that left 21-year-old Sor Samphoa dead.The alleged killer, an 
intoxicated Royal Cambodian Armed Forces major moonlighting as a bodyguard, has 
not faced any criminal charges. "Sor Samphoa worked at a factory near 
Pochentong Airport, and she had never been to my restaurant before," said Leang 
Davy, owner of the Floating Beer Garden and Restaurant, talking about the night 
of the shooting."It was a fun night, lots of joking. It had just began to rain 
and Sor Samphoa said, ‘We need some plants to dispel the rain'," she said."The 
RCAF major was drunk, and he took out his gun and said, ‘No! You just need to 
shoot into the sky'," Leang Davy added."Everyone was laughing and playing 
around. He put his gun down on the table and it went off - shooting Sor 
Samphos. I was panic-struck and very, very scared."Sor Samphos died that night, 
and her body was taken to a nearby pagoda.The major was briefly arrested, but 
after paying the dead woman's family US$2,700 in compensation, he was 
released.Leang Davy said she will now attempt to keep bodyguards out of her 
restaurant because she is wary of trouble.
"There are many instances ... when bodyguards have used their guns while 
drinking in groups in beer gardens and karaoke bars." "All the businesses 
around here have suffered because of the shooting. I try to keep the bodyguards 
out, but sometimes they conceal their guns in their pockets. From now on I 
think I will just tell them that the bar is full," she said.Continuing 
impunity? Ou Virak, director of the Cambodian Centre for Human Rights, is not 
surprised at the light treatment received by the major."There are many 
instances I can recall when bodyguards have used their guns while drinking in 
groups at beer gardens or karaoke bars," he said."They are never held 
responsible before the law. They pay compensation, and then they are released 
as free men. As a result, the perpetrators are not afraid of the consequences 
of such a crime."But Hin Bunheang, Prime Minister Hun Sen's chief of 
bodyguards, told the Post that he does "not excuse any bodyguards who use their 
guns in the wrong way to kill or injure people".He added these people should be 
arrested and dealt with by the court system.Ministry of Interior Under 
Secretary of State Srun Vong Vannak said that while he knows of bodyguards who 
use their guns recklessly, none of them are present in the ministry's forces, 
which are rigorously trained and disciplined.None are allowed to keep their 
weapons after their missions."Our government and Hun Sen pay attention to 
protect the safety of the people by not allowing bodyguards to use their guns 
whenever they want," Srun Vong Vannak said. "If they do, they will be arrested 
and punished by law."Troublesome clientsDespite such assurances, multiple Phnom 
Penh beer garden owners interviewed by the Post last week said that dealing 
with bodyguards is a delicate business because they have the potential to cause 
many problems for bar owners and are often aggressive or demanding."We have 
four security personnel who work here, and they check every person that comes 
in the door. But sometimes [the bodyguards] hide their guns, and we cannot 
demand to search every inch of them," said one beer garden owner who declined 
to be named."When a man like this comes in, we all know he is a risky customer, 
and we must treat him like a king. The staff here are like my family, and I am 
scared for them when someone like that is around," the owner added.Cheng 
Solyda, 35, a local NGO worker who often goes to beer gardens with his 
co-workers and friends, said that when a bodyguard is present at a bar everyone 
becomes uncomfortable and scared. "The government must make more of an effort 
to crack down on illegal gun users and firmly punish those who do wrong. They 
are a serious threat to society."Another beer garden owner said the worst 
violence tends to occur once customers have left the beer garden and are 
wandering the streets armed and drunk."It is a risk once my employees leave the 
beer garden," said the owner."But I can only try to protect them at work."Am 
Sam Ath, a monitor at the Cambodian rights group Licadho, said cases of 
bodyguard impunity cannot continue to go unpunished."Civil compensation is 
good, but the persecutor must also stand before the courts, whether the murder 
was intentional or not," he said.
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