CAMBODIA OCCUPIED BY VIETNAM 1979-2008. A REMINDER :UN Passes Strong Resolution 
on Cambodia Human Rights Abuses 
Feb. 27, 1982 : UN Commission on Human Rights meeting in Geneva adopted a 
resolution condemning Vietnam’s occupation of Cambodia as a violation of 
Cambodian human rights. The vote was 28 in favor, 8 against, and 5 
abstentions.Oct. 28, 1982 The UN General Assembly adopted a resolution 
A/RES/37/6 calling for the immediate withdrawal of all foreign troops from 
Cambodia.
 
Tuesday, December 30, 2008

EXILED TO CAMBODIA: Toehold on a new life 


Second in a three-part series12/29/2008By Greg Mellen, Staff WriterLong Beach 
Press Telegram (California, USA)

Tuy Sobil, aka KK, keeps an eye on break dancers at Korsang, a center for 
returnees in Phnom Penh. KK teaches break and hip-hop dancing to street kids in 
Tiny Toones, a group he created. In addition to dancing, the organization 
teaches English, Khmer and lessons in other life skills. (Jeff Gritchen / Staff 
Photographer)
Drug users huddle in an abandoned building as they smoke yama, a form of 
crystal meth, and strip copper from electronic fixtures to sell in the Boueng 
Trabek area of Phnom Penh. The slum, among others, is frequented by 
drug-addicted exiles and those with mental illnesses. (Jeff Gritchen / Staff 
Photographer)PHNOM PENH, Cambodia -- Where the paved portion of Street 123 
turns to dirt in the back streets of Phnom Penh seems like the end of the earth.
Charlie, a Cambodian returnee and former gang member from Oakland, shoots up 
heroin with a clean needle from Korsang s needle exchange in Boueng Trabek. 
(Jeff Gritchen / Staff Photographer)

From: [email protected]: [email protected]: 
[email protected]; [email protected]; [email protected]; 
[email protected]; [email protected]; [email protected]: THE 
FBI WAS DUPED BY THE HOK LUNDI POLICE IN 2005 OR 2006 AND HERE ARE THE 
CONSEQUNECESDate: Mon, 29 Dec 2008 06:27:11 -0800

WHEN THE KING OF CAMBODIA BECOMES A VIETNAMESE PUPPET KING LIKE SIHAMONI AND 
HIS FATHER SIHANOUK. WHILE CAMBODIA REMAINS OCCUPIED BY VIETNAM 1979-2008 .   
THIS OCCURS :Phally Rin, raised in the United States but born in Cambodia, was 
deported there in April.  A REMINDER :UN Passes Strong Resolution on Cambodia 
Human Rights Abuses 
Feb. 27, 1982 : UN Commission on Human Rights meeting in Geneva adopted a 
resolution condemning Vietnam’s occupation of Cambodia as a violation of 
Cambodian human rights. The vote was 28 in favor, 8 against, and 5 
abstentions.Oct. 28, 1982 The UN General Assembly adopted a resolution 
A/RES/37/6 calling for the immediate withdrawal of all foreign troops from 
Cambodia. HERE ARE THE FACTS THAT SHOW THE EVIDENCE OF THE CAMBODIAN KING AS 
PARTNER IN CRIME WITH THE VIETNAMESE OCCUPIERS: CAMBODIA OCCUPIED BY VIETNAM 
1979-2008CONSEQUENCES :  WE HAVE HOR NAM HONG A VIETNAMESE AS DEPUTY PRIME 
MINISTER & MINISTER OF FOREIGN AFFAIRS OF THE PUPPET KING SIHAMONI.WE SEE CHEA 
LEANG A VIETNAMESE WOMAN  APPOINTED AS "CAMBODIAN" CO-PROSECUTOR HEREWE ALSO 
KNOW THAT HOR NAM HONG HAS APPOINTED A VIETNAMESE WOMAN AS "CAMBODIAN " 
AMBASSADOR TO THAILAND .  THE VIETNAMESE HOR NAM HONG IS APPOINTED AS FOREIGN 
MINISTER OF CAMBODIA. 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Deputy Prime Ministers Men Sam An(A VIETNAMESE ), Nhek Bun Chhay and Keat 
Chhon. 
 
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.

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
THE CONSEQUENCES OF THE HOK LUNDI DELEGATION TO AMERICA, TO FEED  THE FBI FOR 
THE  ARREST OF THE CAMBODIAN , NOT THE VIETNAMESE COMING TO AMERICA THROUGH 
FALSE DOCUMENTATION ISSUED BY THE HOK LUNDI POLICE 1993-2008 IS STRIKING HERE.
 
THE CAMBODIAN GO HOME BUT THE ILLEGAL VIETNAMESE SETTLERS USING THE FALSE 
PASSEPORTS, BIRTH CERTIFICATE, WITH FAKE CAMBODIAN NAMES AND ID , ISSUED BY HOK 
LUNDI'S POLICE FROM 1993-2008 ARE VIEWED BY THE FBI AS GENUINE ? AND THE LIVE 
IN LONG BEACH AREA BY 10 000 ?
 
THE FBI SEEMS TO FORGET THAT ALL THE SO CALLED "CAMBODIAN" OFFICIALS INCLUDING 
THE POLICE ARE OVER 90% VIETNAMESE ADMINISTRATORS. 
Exiled to Cambodia 

First in a three-part series12/28/2008By Greg Mellen, Staff WriterLong Beach 
Press Telegram (California, USA)
LONG BEACH - For the first few months afterward, whenever the doorbell rang, 
5-year-old Dieon Rin rushed to answer yelling, "It's Daddy! Daddy's home!"But 
it never was Daddy. Never will be. The truth is something even Dieon's mother 
has been unable to grasp, much less explain to her son - Daddy can never come 
home again.The father, Phally Rin, was deported to Cambodia in April for a 
crime committed more than a decade earlier.Under U.S. law, he is permanently 
barred from returning to this country.Veasana Ath was a carefree young man. He 
wasn't a bad kid, just easily swayed by friends. His older sister, Sophea, 
would scold him and say he'd wind up in trouble one day.
Phally Rin, raised in the United States but born in Cambodia, was deported 
there in April.Neither realized how right she was.After being convicted of 
residential burglary in early 2004, Ath was put on a plane in December of that 
year and sent to Cambodia.Rin and Ath are part of a growing number of 
Cambodian-American men who have been deported from the United States to the 
impoverished land of their birth.Before deportation, the two had little or no 
connection to their 'homeland.' They fled the ravages of the Cambodian genocide 
with their families as young children.They were raised and schooled in the U.S. 
and yet, from now on, they are forever Cambodian, with no hope of returning to 
their families and the land where they were raised, but not born.Rin and Ath 
are just two of 189 Cambodian- Americans deported for a variety of crimes, 
ranging from murder and rape to lesser offenses like burglary and crimes 
committed long ago.According to Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) data 
on removals in 2008, of more than 111,000 criminal removals, 30 percent were 
for "dangerous drugs" and17 percent were for violent crimes. The rest were for 
a range of lesser crimes, including traffic offenses.Nationally, an estimated 
1,700 Cambodian-Americans are under deportation orders and can be rounded up at 
any time. Another 1,700 may be eligible for deportation but have not been 
charged. Many live in Long Beach, which has the nation's largest population of 
Cambodian refugees.
Solony Kong and her sons were forcibly parted from her husband in April, when 
he was deported to Cambodia for a crime he committed as a youth. Kong says her 
younger son has been unable to understand that his father, forever barred from 
the United States, won t be able to return home. (Jeff Gritchen/Staff 
Photographer)Overall, nearly 350,000 aliens were deported in 2008, the majority 
to Latin America.Innocents sufferThe families of Rin and Ath are the innocents 
caught in the aftermath of laws passed in 1996 that changed U.S. deportation 
policy and have resulted in a staggering increase in removals of immigrants, 
who became eligible for deportation when Congress expanded the list of 
deportable crimes.ICE has ramped up its efforts to snare criminal aliens by 
working more closely with prisons and jails to identify incarcerated 
noncitizens.
The Ath family, which gathered years ago in a Thai refugee camp, has been torn 
by the deportation of Veasana Ath, who was found guilty of burglary in 2004. 
Ath has no relatives in Cambodia now.It is a strategy endorsed by many in 
Congress."I would suggest that anything that is a felony, any behavior that 
causes someone to be convicted, is a good reason to deport them," says Rep. 
Dana Rohrabacher, R-Huntington Beach, whose district includes portions of 
coastal Long Beach.Rep. Laura Richardson, D-Long Beach, did not respond to 
several interview requests.The Human Rights Watch estimates the deportation of 
legal immigrants has separated 1.6 million children and adults.In Long Beach, a 
large number of Cambodians have been expelled. Their family members, many of 
them American citizens, are the collateral damage.Suely Ngouy, the executive 
director of Khmer Girls In Action, which is involved in immigrant and refugee 
rights issues, says deportation has ripped a swath through the local Cambodian 
community, and crushed an already fragile segment of the population.
After the deportation, Dieon Rin kept expecting his daddy to show up at the 
family's door."It has devastated families emotionally," says Ngouy, who knows 
many affected families. "It takes away a son, a daughter, a sibling that has 
kept together the fabric of what little stability exists."Since Ath's 
deportation, his mother has had a series of health problems, including minor 
strokes, that the family attributes to stress.Kim Hok, 61, doesn't speak much 
English. But as she listens to the family talk about Veasana, she understands 
enough. Her eyes fill with tears. She excuses herself from the room and rises 
unsteadily. The only sound is her cane clicking on the tile floor.For many 
families, the shame they feel over deportation leaves them suffering in silence 
and fear.Tuy Sobil, a former Crips gang member convicted of armed robbery and 
deported to Cambodia, has become a success story in Phnom Penh. He has turned 
around his criminal life and now runs a successful nonprofit called Tiny Toones 
that helps children from the slums through break dancing, of all things.Despite 
his turnaround and newfound celebrity, Tuy's parents turn down requests for 
interviews."It's just too hard for them," says Dabson Tuy, Sobil's 
brother.Horrors revisitedMost Cambodian families are refugees from the genocide 
perpetrated by the Khmer Rouge in the late 1970 s that claimed about 2 million 
lives. Most saw family members, friends, children and adults removed by a 
ruthless government. They fled to escape that."We came here because of U.S. 
intervention and involvement (in our country)," Ngouy says.The damage is 
extensive, she adds - retraumatization from the removals, deepening of poverty 
from the loss of wage earners and additional mental health problems, such as 
depression."To have to go through this exhausts what little resources they have 
to survive and it's affecting the second generation that is supposed to be the 
hope," Ngouy says.To her, the longer-term outcome has been to retard the growth 
of the overall community, because younger Cambodians see little hope and 
opportunity after witnessing their parents' struggles.Lekha Khin, the 
brother-in-law of Ath, says he lost 50 to 60 family members in the genocide and 
is one of the few left. It dismays him that the United States is now tearing 
his family apart."The government, they don't feel nothing," Khin says.Sakhoun 
Yim, Rin's mother, says she dragged her family for a week through rice paddies 
and minefields to escape the holocaust before reaching a refugee camp.In 1997, 
Yim watched in horror from her porch in central Long Beach as her youngest son, 
Simona Rin, was shot in the back by a drive-by shooter as he was going to play 
basketball. A 16-year-old at Wilson High, Simona was described by as a "model 
kid," with no gang history.Yim lost another son, Akhara Rin, to street violence 
in Lowell, Mass., in 1993, and a grandson, Kerry Ya, was fatally shot at a 
friend's house in Long Beach in 2003.And now she has lost Phally."I hurt so bad 
in my heart," she says in a choking voice. "I have two kids killed here. I 
don't want to live any more. I want they kill me."Admittedly, many 
Cambodian-American deportees led violent lives, spent long stretches in jail 
and were members of notorious gangs. Several we met in Cambodia said the U.S. 
has been right to deport them.Still the one-size-fits-all justice that can 
treat a petty one-time criminal like Ath the same as a career gangster has many 
deportation-reform advocates dumbfounded."The laws are not only cruel in their 
rigidity, they are senseless," said Alison Parker, a senior researcher for 
Human Rights Watch in a report for that organization. "How do you explain to a 
child that her father has been sent thousands of miles away and can never come 
home simply because he forged a check?"Ghosts of crimes pastIn 1989 as a 
teenager, Rin was in a friend's car in Massachusetts. When the teens were 
pulled over, a gun was found in the car and Rin did 18 months in state and INS 
custody on the gun charge.He was ordered removed, although it meant little 
because Cambodia did not accept U.S. deportees.Rin stayed out of trouble after 
the arrest and moved with his family to California.Federal law changed in 1996, 
in the wake of the first bombing of the World Trade Center and widespread 
demands for immigration reform.As part of the overhaul, a long list of crimes 
was added that made legal immigrants eligible for deportation, including crimes 
predating the law, such as Phally's gun charge. In 2002, Cambodia signed an 
agreement with the U.S. to accept deportable aliens.Without knowing it, Rin had 
become deportable.In 2004, neighbors called police during a domestic dispute in 
which Rin struck his wife, Solonly Kong. After being charged with spousal 
battery, Rin learned he was eligible for removal for the 15-year-old gun 
charge.In 2007, Rin was fitted him with an ankle bracelet to monitor his 
movements and ordered to report regularly to immigration offices."They just put 
it on his ankle and said, 'Maybe in two years we'll let you go,"' Kong recalls. 
"They just lied."Four years later, Rin was put on a plane to Cambodia.Kong says 
Rin was the ideal husband, who stayed home and tended to his family."He make 
one mistake," she said in halting English. "If he was a bad guy, I don't feel 
this way. But he was always working seven days to support his family, even if 
he have an ache he did not stop. Any kind of job he would work."Dieon is not 
the only child who is struggling without a father. Kong says she has a 
15-year-old son from a previous relationship, who is "out of control" without 
the influence of a stepfather.Kong feels lost and confused. She wants to join 
her husband in Cambodia after her oldest son finishes high school, but doesn't 
know how they would survive or what that would do to Dieon.She wonders if Rin 
might be allowed to return one day."If he could come back in 10 years, I would 
wait," she says wistfully.She asks if he can immigrate to Canada or Australia. 
She has no idea.In the meantime, she calls Rin almost daily in Cambodia. Most 
of the conversations end in tears."Sometimes I go to places we would always go 
and I cry," Kong says.She sees young families. She sees fathers with their sons 
and it all crashes in on her."That's why I don't want to go anywhere," she 
says. "I think I cannot live without him."Kong says Dieon cries all the time 
for his daddy."I don't know what to tell him," she says through translation. 
"He's too young to understand that Daddy can't come back."The last time Dieon 
saw his father, Rin was at a detention facility in Los Angeles. Dieon was 
weeping and kicking at the door, demanding that immigration officials let his 
daddy go.Kong says she told Dieon his father had to go far away for work. She 
says when Dieon talked to his father, he pleaded with Rin to come back."He was 
saying 'I don't need any toys, Daddy, just please come home,"' Kong 
remembers.Now Dieon often refuses to talk to his father on the phone because he 
thinks Daddy doesn't want to live with him.No more tomorrowsAth thought there 
was always tomorrow. While his older siblings worked hard, built businesses, 
went on to higher education and got jobs in government and private industry, 
Ath drifted through life.His older siblings became citizens, but Ath never got 
around to it. Now, he never will.It was stupidity that landed Ath in jail, then 
a series of legal missteps and ignorance that got him deported.As Ath tells the 
story, he gave a friend a ride to the home of the friend's ex-girlfriend. She 
wasn't home, but while Ath waited in the car the friend stole her car keys. A 
neighbor recorded Ath's license plate.Ashamed and embarrassed, Ath never told 
his family. A public defender negotiated a plea for a one-year sentence, of 
which Ath only had to serve a few months in county jail.Possible immigration 
consequences never came up. Ath was transferred to ICE custody after serving 
his sentence and unwittingly signed documents, written in Khmer, accepting his 
removal.Ath was released and thought if he changed his ways and proved he was 
responsible he would be allowed to stay in the U.S."I got a job and I worked 
every day," Ath says.One day, however, ICE agents appeared at Ath's home, 
cuffed him and soon he was on a chartered flight with other deportees to 
Cambodia.Life has been harsh and lonely in Cambodia, Ath says. At first he hung 
out with other American deportees, but tired of being ostracized. Now he says 
he spends his time alone.When Ath first arrived in Cambodia, he found work but 
later gave up the job because co-workers who were Cambodian nationals harassed 
him, defaced his locker and slashed the tires to his bike.After being 
unemployed for three years and existing off what money his family can spare, 
Ath says he recently found a job at a hotel. He is in his probationary period 
with the company.The loneliness is one of the hardest parts for Ath, who has no 
relatives in Cambodia and misses his family."I just want a chance at least to 
visit my family," Ath says.Sophea, 34, is able to keep a cool exterior when 
talking to reporters about her brother. But as she is walking to them to the 
gate of her home, the facade cracks."I'm just so mad at him for doing this to 
our family," she says, rubbing her eyes with the back of her hand.TUESDAY: Some 
deportees to Cambodia find redemption, others despair and death.
 

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