Chea Leang is SOK AN'S NIECE?
EITHER HIS WIFE IS A VIETNAMESE OR HIMSELF IS A VIETNAMESE.
BECAUSE CHEA LEANG IS A VIETNAMESE .
NEW LESSON 
 
 
Wednesday, December 24, 2008

[Hun Sen is] willing to have a trial - but only as long as it's a symbolic 
trial and it doesn't come within a mile of anyone he wants to protect 
 

 Chea Leang seen here on this picture ,the so called "CAMBODIAN" CO-PROSECUTOR, 
is a Vietnamese woman   


Phnom Penh (Cambodia) 20 November 2006. Co-prosecutors Robert Petit talked to 
Chea Leang(a Vietnamese posing as "Cambodian" co-prosecutor) during the plenary 
session of judges for the KR Tribunal (Photo: John Vink/Magnum) 

Tribunal Prosecutors Differ on Added Suspects 


Chea Leang(a Vietnamese posing as "Cambodian" co-prosecutor)Tribunal judges 
will determine whether more suspects should be investigated.
 
MS CHEA LEANG WHO IS A VIETNAMESE HAS THIS PUZZLE.
HOW COULD SHE MANIPULATE TO MAKE A VIETNAMESE CALLED DUCH PROSECUTE AS "KHMER 
ROUGE " FROM THE CAMBODIAN STOCK?
 
WHILE DUCH IS A REAL VIETNAMESE WEARING THE LABEL "KHMER ROUGE" LIKE ANOTHER 
VIETNAMESE HOR NAM HONG WEARING THE LABEL FORMER KHMER ROUGE AS WELL?
 

VIETNAMESE CALLED DUCH : The picture was of Comrade Duch, the former head of 
Tuol Sleng prison.There, during the four years of Khmer Rouge rule, 17,000 men, 
women and children were interrogated and tortured. Then they were killed, their 
bodies tossed into mass graves. 
Tuesday, 18 November 2008By Philippa Fogarty BBC News 
 
 
 
     
 

 

we must understand the behavior and character of a Vietnamese. 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 ..... "
 
a VIETNAMESE ,Hor Namhong said :  



By Keo NimolRadio Free Asia28th November, 2008Mr. Hor Namhong (pictured)(A 
VIETNAMESE COMMUNIST ) , Cambodia’s Deputy PM and Foreign Minister, said on 
28th of November that the current political turmoils in Thailand could affect 
border talks and the demarcation works to be carried out in December.
 Mme Men San An ( a Vietnamese in this picture ) as deputy Prime Minister of 
the "Cambodia " govt Deputy Prime Ministers Men Sam An(A VIETNAMESE ), Nhek Bun 
Chhay and Keat Chhon.
 
 
KHIEU KANHARITH IS A VIETNAMESE 
CHEAM YEIP IS A VIETNAMESE 
CHAN SARUN IS A VIETNAMESE 
THEY HAVE CREATED PROBLEMS IN CAMBODIA.


Radio Free Asia By Huy Vannak27th November, 2008
 



The courtroom at Cambodia's Extraordinary Chambers may see its first trial next 
year. (Photo by: Tracey Shelton)Court casts wide net, but at what cost? 
Wednesday, 24 December 2008Written by Cat Barton The Phnom Penh Post
NEXT in the dock CASE ONE 

Duch aka Kaing Guk Eav, former head of S-21 prison, charged with crimes against 
humanity and war crimes. His trial is expected early next year. CASE TWO

Ieng Sary former KR foreign minister 
Ieng Thirith former minister of social action. 
Khieu Samphan former head of state 
Nuon Chea Pol Pot's top lieutenant 
The Khmer Rouge tribunal is seeking to broaden its investigations with a second 
submission, but with the Cambodian prosecutor already hestitant, critics ask: 
'What will the govt do?'WITH the Cambodian co-prosecutor resisting a proposed 
investigation into six more potential suspects at the Kingdom's war crimes 
court, critics warn the appearance of government interference could destroy the 
UN-backed tribunal's legitimacy.Many senior government posts are occupied by 
former Khmer Rouge cadre, and experts say the government fears that a wider 
roundup could expose senior officials to scrutiny."The more the tribunal starts 
to spread its net, the more it will get close to people who are close to the 
powerholders today," said Philip Short, historian and author of Pol Pot: 
Anatomy of a Nightmare."Hun Sen doesn't want that - and that is why his 
government has been dragging its feet for so long," he added.At the centre of 
the controversy is Cambodian co-prosecutor Chea Leang, who was appointed by the 
Cambodian government and, according to a 2006 article in the International 
Justice Tribune, is Deputy Prime Minister Sok An's niece. Five senior Khmer 
Rouge leaders believed to be the architects of the regime's brutal policies are 
in detention at the court: former head of state Khieu Samphan; foreign affairs 
minister Ieng Sary and his wife, Ieng Thirith, the regime's first lady; S-21 
head Duch; and Pol Pot's chief lieutenant, Nuon Chea.A second batch of suspects 
would require the court to move further down the regime's hierarchy - something 
Hun Sen's government has long resisted."The Hun Sen government, for obvious 
reasons, wants to keep the list of accused to a handful of highly symbolic and 
high-profile Khmer Rouge figures who have [had] nothing whatever to do with the 
present government or previous governments in which Hun Sen has been a player," 
Short told the Post via email Monday."Hun Sen himself was a KR deputy 
regimental commander. Sure, it was a low-ranking post - and when he realised he 
was in danger, he fled.But he was part of the KR, and he remained part of the 
KR until 1977. By that time, lots of abominable things had happened," Short 
added.Senate President Chea Sim was formerly a Khmer Rouge district chief, 
while president of the National Assembly, Heng Samrin, was a Khmer Rouge 
division commander, which is "a relatively important post"."Keat Chhon was 
minister of state in Pol Pot's office when Pol Pot was prime minister. Does he 
really bear no responsibility for the actions of a regime of which he was a 
government minister?" Short asked.Despite their previous roles, however, no 
evidence has ever surfaced that any of the country's current senior leaders 
were responsible for crimes committed during the regime.Why spread the net 
wider? "People come to court to hear who killed their father, who ordered their 
sister to be raped or why was he transferred," said the court's international 
co-prosecutor Robert Petit in an interview Monday, discussing the very personal 
level on which victims view war crimes tribunals."When it is people [in the 
dock] who are deemed to be architects of one of those conflicts, they generally 
go away disappointed as they haven't heard that explanation," he added.Duch's 
case, which likely will be the first to be heard early next year, has been 
separated from the other four detainees - all senior KR leaders - who 
collectively make up the second case. When the trials of the senior leaders 
begin, the court may skirt the finer details of the Khmer Rouge's crimes, 
instead focusing on proving a link between the senior leaders in the dock and 
the atrocities in question."You seldom find that memo, ‘Please kill everyone, 
signed, Me'," Petit said."The issues in these cases are usually the linkage 
between the crime base and the suspects. Whereas, if you go down the food 
chain, you are more close to the crime base, more close to the actual carrying 
out of orders and the actual responsibility, the direct committing or direct 
responsibility - and that helps people understand a little bit better what 
happened."But Youk Chhang, director of the Documentation Center of Cambodia 
(DC-Cam), expressed concern that the court, which has already blown its 
original budget and timeframe, could be overstretched by new cases, which could 
jeopardise the progress it has already made."The credibility of the 
[Extraordinary Chambers] depends on the trials of the five defendants who are 
now in its hands," Youk Chhang said."The victims want to know from the ECCC ... 
when will the trials be taking place. Without completing this important stage 
of the process, it will be difficult to discuss other investigations. In fact, 
it would generate negative effects on the current proceedings," he said.Despite 
a recent fundraising drive, the Cambodian side of the court, failing further 
contributions, will run out of money in March 2009, court officials say. The UN 
side of the court will follow suit in May, according to court spokesman Reach 
Sambath. He added, however, that the court was "confident and optimistic" that 
further funds would be found.Government interference? Experts are wondering 
whether the government would dare seek to use Chea Leang to block the proposed 
further investigations."I suspect they wouldn't be happy and would do what they 
could," said David Chandler, historian and author of History of Cambodia."What 
they can do is clearly formidable, or we would have had this trial months, if 
not years ago," he told the Post via email Sunday.Such government meddling 
would destroy the court's legitimacy, according to Open Society Justice 
Initiative's executive director, James Goldston."Tragically, the United 
Nations-backed court in Phnom Penh investigating and prosecuting those most 
responsible for the Khmer Rouge's crimes in Cambodia is at risk of doing just 
that," he wrote in a Wall Street Journal opinion piece published December 
14.Blocking the second set of prosecutions could exacerbate allegations that 
the co-prosecutor is acting at the behest of the Cambodian government."[Hun Sen 
is] willing to have a trial - but only as long as it's a symbollic trial and it 
doesn't come within a mile of anyone he wants to protect," said Short.



 

 
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