TO ALL KHMER ,
 
READ THIS.
 
Friday, January 16, 2009

Traffickers prey on Cambodian men 
It is an issue that needs urgent attention," said Lim Tith, national project 
coordinator for the United Nations' Inter-Agency Project on Human Trafficking, 
or Uniap, in Phnom Penh. "It really is a kind of descent into hell."Kept at sea 
sometimes for years, these men, who have typically paid to be smuggled into 
Thailand with the promise of good factory jobs, are often treated brutally, 
subjected to beatings and even death for any attempted escape.(1)
 
 
 
WE HAVE NO KHMER TO DEFEND KHMER IN THAILAND.
WHY ?
 
IN CAMBODIA OCCUPIED BY VIETNAM IN VIOLATION OF THE 10 UN RESOLUTIONS, AND WITH 
THE COLLAROATION OF KING SIHAMONI WITH THE VIETNAMESE INVADERS, THIS PROBLEMS 
REMAINS UNRESOLVED BECAUSE OF THIS UNFORTUNATE DECISIONS MADE BY THE KHMER KING.
 
HE APPOINTS A VIETNAMESE HOR NAM HONG AS MINISTER OF "CAMBODIA" FOREIGN 
MINISTER , HE IN TURN HAS APPOINTED , A VIETNAMESE WOMAN AS "CAMBODIA" 
AMBASSADOR TO THAILAND.
BOTH VIETNAMESE DO NOT REPRESENT OR DEFEND THE KHMER INTERESTS IN THAILAND.
 
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 WOMANMr. 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 .
 
who defend the Khmer at home and abroad ?
The Vietnamese ?
 
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.
What did the Khmer ancestor do in the case of Vietnamese occupation ?
 
1820 Khmer revolt. 
Resentment with the Vietnamizing process, harsh rule and forced labor leads to 
a Khmer revolt against the Vietnamese occupiers. The rebels, lead by a monk 
named Kai, slaughter Vietnamese residents in eastern Cambodia before being 
subdued by superior forces sent by the Vietnamese governor in the south. 
 
 
Bury
 
 
 
 
 
 
====================================================
(1) READING MATERIAL 
 
 
 
Friday, January 16, 2009

Traffickers prey on Cambodian men 
It is an issue that needs urgent attention," said Lim Tith, national project 
coordinator for the United Nations' Inter-Agency Project on Human Trafficking, 
or Uniap, in Phnom Penh. "It really is a kind of descent into hell."Kept at sea 
sometimes for years, these men, who have typically paid to be smuggled into 
Thailand with the promise of good factory jobs, are often treated brutally, 
subjected to beatings and even death for any attempted escape.
 
 
 
 


Thursday, January 15, 2009 By Jon GorvettInternational Herald Tribune (Paris, 
France)
POPOK, Cambodia: "They killed one crewman for something very simple," said 
Thung Yeap. "He just wanted to go home. He kept asking. So in the end, the 
captain shot him dead."Thung Yeap is one of the lucky survivors of a journey 
that starts in some of Cambodia's poorest villages and sometimes ends, fatally, 
in the waters of the South China Sea.According to local law enforcers and 
international agencies, hundreds like Thung Yeap, mostly Cambodian farmers, 
have fallen victim in recent years to traffickers who turn them over to crews 
on Thai fishing boats, where they work without pay and often at gunpoint."It is 
an issue that needs urgent attention," said Lim Tith, national project 
coordinator for the United Nations' Inter-Agency Project on Human Trafficking, 
or Uniap, in Phnom Penh. "It really is a kind of descent into hell."Kept at sea 
sometimes for years, these men, who have typically paid to be smuggled into 
Thailand with the promise of good factory jobs, are often treated brutally, 
subjected to beatings and even death for any attempted escape.Until recently 
their plight fell under the radar of regional law enforcement agencies. Far 
from shore, the abuse they suffer evades detection, and legal jurisdiction is 
murky. The victims themselves have often hesitated to seek help, fearing they 
could be prosecuted as illegal immigrants.Only in the past year have Thailand 
and Cambodia expanded trafficking laws written to protect women and children 
who were sold or tricked into prostitution or other forms of forced labor to 
explicitly include men. The hope is that men who find themselves in another 
country as a result of trafficking will be more likely to approach the 
authorities and be given assistance, because they will be recognized as victims 
rather than illegal migrants.Cambodia and Malaysia also recently signed a 
memorandum of understanding on combating trafficking, as many of the Thai 
fishing boats operate in Malaysian waters.Thung Yeap was able to return home to 
Popok village in Kampong Thom Province last month because he escaped when his 
fishing boat made a rare stop in port in Sarawak, in the Malaysian part of the 
island of Borneo. The Malaysian authorities detained him as an illegal 
immigrant before sending him back to Cambodia.He and Dorn Chenda, who is from 
Steung Saen village in Kampong Thom, ended up in the same detention center in 
Sarawak, and Uniap worked with the Cambodian human rights group Licadho to have 
them repatriated to Cambodia.Kampong Thom is one of the country's poorest 
districts, blighted until just 10 years ago by fighting between Cambodian 
government troops and Khmer Rouge guerrillas."People live hand to mouth round 
here," said Prak Phanna, village headman of Anlong Kranh, a village near Popok. 
"We used to make some money cutting and burning trees for charcoal, but the 
government made this illegal recently, so we have nothing. I'd say most people 
maybe make $20 to $30 a month around here. So, when the young men can't make 
ends meet, they go to Thailand."Chorn Theong Ly, also from Anlong Kranh, was 
among them."One day a middleman came to our village," he recalled. "He said he 
would take us to Thailand, where we could have an easy life, working in 
factories. He said we'd earn 4,000 baht a month there," an amount equal to 
$115. "So, we each paid him 3,000 to smuggle us across the border."What 
followed was a nightmare."When we got to Thailand we were taken to a house in 
Samut Prakan" - a seaside province south of Bangkok - "and locked up there. We 
began to realize then that something was wrong. At 4 a.m. they came for us, the 
traffickers, and took us straight to the boats. It was then we realized we had 
been sold to a fishing captain. And by then it was too late to act."Forced to 
work under the supervision of an armed Thai crew, the Cambodians - some of whom 
had never been afloat before - suffered terribly."We were all seasick, and I 
remember vomiting blood," said Chorn Theong Ly. "The captain beat me, too, 
using an octopus tentacle as a whip. I was beaten almost unconscious. I also 
saw other crew members killed, twice - one shot, the other beaten to death, 
when he refused to work."The promised wages never arrived."After four months at 
sea," said Dorn Chenda. "I started demanding my wages. They told me they had 
sent them to my wife back in Cambodia. But it turned out they'd never paid her 
a penny."The boats typically operate out of ports like the one in Samut 
Prakan."That is one place where there are many houses where the traffickers can 
lock up the new arrivals," said Manfred Hornung, monitoring consultant with 
Licadho. "They are brought there illegally, so have no papers, and are totally 
at the mercy of the traffickers."The Thai police say they are aware of the 
practice but say that enforcement is difficult."When some do escape, they 
usually don't want to talk to the police," said Lieutenant Colonel Thakoon 
Nimsombun of the Thai Justice Ministry's Department of Special Investigations 
Anti-Trafficking Center, often referred to as DSI. "When they go back to 
Cambodia, they just disappear, and it's difficult to find them again."Lisa 
Rende Taylor, chief technical adviser at the Bangkok office of Uniap, said that 
until the anti-trafficking laws were extended to cover men, there was little 
incentive for victims to cooperate."In one case, when a boat had put out to sea 
and run out of gas, many of the trafficked crew had died, with the bodies 
thrown overboard," she said. "When the boat was finally brought back to port, 
there was a big question as to what law to prosecute them under. The crew were 
classed as illegal immigrants, so how could they testify without being 
arrested?"Another problem, said Police Colonel Akarapol Punyopashtambha of the 
DSI, "When the crimes are committed, they are out at sea, and there are a lot 
of jurisdictional problems there. They may be at sea for years, too, so it's 
hard to get to them."Meanwhile, in Kampong Thom, the survivors of this ordeal 
at sea are now trying to come to terms with their experience."We were always 
thinking of escaping," recalled Thung Yeap. "There was no way, though. We were 
powerless. The sea itself was our prison."


 
 

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