Congratulations !
 
But Cambodia remains occupied by Vietnam 1979-2009 through the CPP/Hun Sen/Heng 
Samrin/Chea Sim /Hanoi regime.
 
THE CPP AS PARTY IS TAKEN AN OATH OF LOYALTY TO HO CHI MINH AND VIETNAM 
COMMUNIST , NOT TO KING SIHANOUK, OR KING SIHAMONI,CAMBODIA AND THE CAMBODIAN 
PEOPLE.
 
Here is the Oath of loyalty made by Heng Samarin to Ho Chi Minh and the 
Communists ....
HENG SAMRIN made this : OATH OF LOYALTY TO HO CHI MINH
""Our people would like to pay respect and express profound gratitude to 
Chairman Ho Chi Minh, founder of the ICP, who had left a brilliant example of 
the precious patrotic spirit and clear-sighted international solidarity—an 
invincible force no power can destroy-to the next generations."
This means the CPP as party is loyal to Vietnam, Hanoi to Ho Chi Minh, not to 
Cambodia and the Khmer Monarchy.
 
So what is the LOYALTY of your NEW Democratic Movement ?
THE Change?
 
Let me remind you all , that in America , the President elected Obama will 
swear to protect ,defend the US CONSTITUTION , not to be loyal to any person .
 
In Cambodia , the entire CPP party is loyal to Ho Chi Minh and his doctrine and 
Vietnam 
 
So what is yours ?
Do not forget that Cambodia remains occupied by Vietnam 1979-2009.
Here are the facts :
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. 


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 ...."
 
 
THE KHMER MONARCHS COLLABORATION WITH THE VIETNAMESE INVADERS HAVE THESE 
CONSEQUENCES
 

A.HOR NAM HONG IS "CAMBODIAN" MINISTER OF FOREIGN AFFAIR , HE IS A VIETNAMESE.
B.HIS AMBASSADOR SENT TO THAILAND IS A WOMAN NAMED " MRS . YOU AY " . SHE IS A 
VIETNAMESE WOMAN
C.Mr. Benson Samay, defence attorney for the cruise, on the cruise ship IS A 
VIETNAMESE .
D.Mr. Chheang Vun, Chairman of Parliamentary Committee on Foreign Affairs and 
International Co-operation,IS A VIETNAMESE (former "Cambodian" envoy sent at UN 
Office in Geneva Switzerland to represent Cambodia by Hor Nam Hong recently )

LOOK TO THIS LABEL ?
A CAMBODIAN POLICE  means  A VIETNAMESE HERE
A VIETNAMESE RUNNING THE POLICE IN CAMBODIA with a fake name Choun Narin  .
 

Street scenes from Phnom Penh 


A pair of street children play near three-wheeled pedicabs in Phnom Penh, 
Cambodia Thursday, Jan. 8, 2009. As the global economy is expected to slow, 
impoverished nations such as Cambodia are expected to feel the effects. (AP 
Photo/David Longstreath)A hree wheeled pedicab driver sleeps in his taxi near 
Victory Monument in Phnom Penh, Cambodia Thursday, Jan. 8, 2009. As the global 
is expected to slow in 2009, impoverished nations such as Cambodia are sure to 
feel the effects. (AP Photo/David Longstreath)
 LOOK TO THE LABEL : a Vietnamese with a fake Cambodian name : Choun narin .
 
VIETNAM INVASION & OCCUPATION OF CAMBODIA : 1979-2009Over 30 years, under 
Vietnam rule of Cambodia, Cambodian youth are denied minimum of education, 
jobs, and  that result in suicide, robbery, CRIMES ACROSS CAMBODIA EVERYDAY , 
due to hunger, injustice, and unemployment.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.
 SUCH AS THESE :Nov. 14, 1979 The UN General Assembly adopts a resolution 
A/RES/34/22 calling for the immediate withdrawal of all foreign troops from 
Cambodia. The vote is 91-21 with 29 abstentions.Oct. 21, 1986 The UN General 
Assembly adopted a resolution A/RES/41/6, by vote of 116-21 with 13 
abstentions, calling for a withdrawal of Vietnamese forces from Cambodia.
 
THOSE CAMBODIAN ELITE AND VARIOUS PARTIES WHO JOIN THE CPP , TO BE THE 
VIETNAMESE INVADERS SERVANTS ,DO NOT REALIZE THAT THEY ARE BETRAYING THE 
CAMBODIAN PEOPLE , BECAUSE THE CPP PARTY IS SET TO BE LOYAL TO HO CHI MINH AND 
VIETNAM IN VIOLATION OF THE UN CHARTER .
 
 
Bury 
.
 

 



From: [email protected]: [email protected]: 
Cambodian opposition: SRP and HRP give birth to the Democratic Movement for 
ChangeDate: Fri, 16 Jan 2009 06:47:07 -0500




Cambodian opposition: SRP and HRP give birth to the Democratic Movement for 
Change
Filed in News, SRP on Jan.15, 2009


The idea of an alliance between the Sam Rainsy Party (SRP) and the Human Rights 
Party (HRP) in Cambodia slowly but surely reached the successful shores of 
completion. The presidents of both parties, Sam Rainsy and Kem Sokha, signed on 
Thursday January 15th a common declaration officially establishing the 
“Democratic Movement for Change”, sealed with a frenetic handshake and a mutual 
smile. In Kem Sokha’s own words, this “historic” moment was welcomed with 
profuse applause by elected representatives and campaigners from both 
opposition political formations gathered for the occasion at the SRP 
headquarters. From now on, the candidates will stand for election under one 
name but insisted their Movement was in no way the merging of their respective 
parties.
The idea of a Movement had been ripening for a whileWhen they registered their 
formations at the Cambodian National Election Committee (NEC) before the July 
2008 legislative elections, the issue was raised. They eventually decided to 
stand for election as two different parties. After the July 27th 2008 
elections, which confirmed the domination of Prime Minister Hun Sen’s Cambodian 
People’s Party (CPP) on the Cambodian political scene, SRP and HRP leaders, 
together with representatives of the FUNCINPEC and Norodom Ranariddh Party 
(NRP), presented a united front in their protest against the election results. 
A long crusade of denunciation ensued, but Sam Rainsy and Kem Sokha soon found 
themselves alone in the equation and battling side by side for their common 
cause.
Since then, they often aligned themselves with each other’s ideas without 
however setting up any official rapprochement between their parties. On 
December 18th, Kem Sokha, back from a trip to North America, expressed his wish 
for the creation of the alliance they had mentioned many times before. The 
principle of the alliance seemed more or less established since on September 
17th 2008, both parties had set up a technical committee in charge of laying 
the foundations for their union, composed of representatives from both 
formations.
Initiating change with a view to change societyThe new “Democratic Movement for 
Change”, as its name suggests, aims at gathering “true democratic forces” with 
the continuous goal of operating “change in the Cambodian society”, Kem Sokha 
explained in an introduction to the press conference called for the occasion. 
“The creation of this Movement will allow citizens to make their choice more 
easily in future elections, and it is a response to a request made by our 
fellow-citizens”, he added.
Sam Rainsy, answering a question formulated by Mam Sonando, director of Radio 
Beehive (FM 105) who was in the audience among other journalists, publicly 
thanked him for having encouraged, very early, both parties to unite. To Mam 
Sonando’s question on whether the formations had thought over the conditions of 
their alliance to prevent a potential separation in the future, the SRP 
president replied that discussions on that subject had started the very day 
after the legislative elections. “After the elections, we both made the same 
observation: time had come to change the direction of the country, and besides 
it is currently a trend in democratic countries. As a consequence we will 
elaborate a joint list to stand for the 2012 communal elections and the next 
legislative elections in 2013. I am convinced that other political formations 
will join our alliance”, he said, hopeful.
SRP / HRP? Who will hold the reins?But what about the allocation of tasks and 
the roles of each within the Movement? The crowd of journalists was dying to 
receive an answer, but Sam Rainsy shrugged it off, insisting that “what matters 
is change”. “Cambodia and the Khmer people need change. And for democratic 
change to happen, the people must have a new choice!”, he maintained.
Neither of them set conditions on the way responsibilities will be allocated. 
“We do not need to do that. We will not compete, and rivalries between our 
parties will not matter much. If any competition there is, it will then be with 
another party. The goal is to have more influence than that party… [...] In a 
word, anyone will be entitled to be a candidate to the position of Prime 
Minister or president of the Movement, as long as these persons respect the 
principles of the Movement”, Sam Rainsy detailed.
Kem Sokha agreed with his political partner: “The problem is not there. What we 
want is to serve the interest of the nation and Khmer citizens. If we need 
power, it is democratic power we are talking about! Our Movement has a solid 
foundation and a position which is far from being inconsistent. We are not 
affiliated to any other Cambodian political party and we do not depend on any 
foreign group. [...] We will not argue about power, but we will act on behalf 
of the Democratic Movement for Change, not on behalf of the SRP or the HRP.”
“Should disagreements arise, this will not mean that we have become enemies. 
Unity will prevail, it is a principle!”, Kem Sokha asserted. As for Sam Rainsy, 
no concern to be raised on that matter either. He gave as an example the case 
of the United States: “Before being elected president, Barack Obama was Hillary 
Clinton’s rival. But after the elections, he offered her the position of 
Secretary of State [the equivalent of a Minister of Foreign Affairs] and even 
kept the Minister of Defence from G. W. Bush’s government!”
Perspectives on the long runSam Rainsy claimed he believed in the longevity of 
their Movement, “which must hold on at least until we meet our goal: achieving 
democratic change”. In a merely concealed reference to difficulties encountered 
by the FUNCINPEC and its alliances with the CPP, he promised that the 
Democratic Movement for Change would not be weakened by petty internal quarrels 
“like other parties” suffered in 1998 and 2003. He did not fail to have a dig 
at “some” who chose to rally to the ruling party in exchange for good job 
positions and money.
The SRP and the HRP will continue discussing issues to detail in depth the new 
structure of the alliance. Sam Rainsy already foresees good results in the next 
election polls since “as it was the case in the United States, people always 
need change”. As a reminder, the SRP won 26 seats in the National Assembly and 
the HRP, 3, in the last legislative elections, out of a total of 123 MP seats. 
Kem Sokha, for his part, also nourishes “great hopes” for the next polls. 
“Here, we have already gathered strength and responded to a wish expressed by 
many citizens. Now, we still have to fight for free and fair elections”, he 
declared, before calling SRP and HRP activists to “work hand in hand as from 
today”.
Besides, to those who might question the legality of their alliance, both 
leaders said their action was part of a “legal, peaceful and democratic frame”. 
They called intellectuals in the country, Khmer citizens from Cambodia and 
abroad and other campaigners from other parties potentially tempted to take 
part in the adventure, to join the new alliance, because “the time has come to 
speak with one voice”.
 
Tags: News, SRP
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Joint Statement by Sam Rainsy Party (SRP) and Human Rights Party (HRP)
Filed in Announcements, News on Jan.15, 2009


Tags: Announcements, News
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Opposition Parties Sign Into Alliance
Filed in News, SRP on Jan.15, 2009

By Heng Reaksmey, VOA KhmerPhnom Penh, 15 January, 2009The Human Rights and Sam 
Rainsy parties officially signed into an opposition coalition movement, saying 
they were confident they would be able to defeat the ruling party in upcoming 
elections by pushing for changes in national election regulations.
Government spokesman Khieu Kanharith said he was not surprised by the move, but 
said he doubted the two parties together would defeat Prime Minister Hun Sen’s 
Cambodian People’s Party.
The new coalition, called the Political Democratic Movement for Change, was 
signed by party leaders Kem Sokha and Sam Rainsy Thursday morning.
“Today is a historic day for the Cambodian people, and it is the time for the 
people to decide to change the leader in Cambodia,” Kem Sokha told reporters. 
“We will follow democracy and respect the rule of law and counter corruption.”
The movement so far does not have an organizational structure, and technical 
details would be discussed later, Kem Sokha said.
“We had a plan to form this movement a long time ago,” Sam Rainsy told 
reporters Thursday. “We appeal to students, civil servants and all people to 
join with us for change in Cambodia.”
The leaders publicly urged activists from both parties across the country to 
work together and prepare for commune elections in 2012 and national elections 
the year after._________________________________________________________________
Windows Live™: Keep your life in sync.
http://windowslive.com/explore?ocid=TXT_TAGLM_WL_t1_allup_explore_012009
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