Dear Pou,

 

How to expect justice from the same band of worldwide organized crime? Some 
decades back these people have fully supported Vietcong and Khmer rouge and 
brought these criminals to power. Now they continue to endure the Khmer rouge 
regime in Cambodia in detriment of innocent people who unfortunately have 
neither possibility nor resource to fight and liberate themselves from these 
criminals but miserably submit to them. 

 

The ECCC is organized to judge only the crime khmer rouge committed in S21 
known as prison of khmer rouge of polpot clan against the khmer rouge yuon 
clan. This trial looks much more yuons revenge over polpot for revolting 
against yuon direction and control than a trial to judge crimes of khmer rouge. 
It is not question of justice nor respect of people who are victims of just the 
atrocious ignoble crime. All are good for yuon clan ECCC (yellow as white) to 
jump over duc to victimize yuons and so to justify yuon invading of Cambodia. 

 

These criminals did have sense of worse ignoble criminals run in their blood. 
Live for crime and die for their crimes, enjoy of it and proud to be.. 



http://amekhmer.free.fr/khcrucial-event/sihanouk-crime/1cambogeno1.html 

 

  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: KULEN MONOROM 
  To: [email protected] ; [email protected] ; [email protected] ; 
[email protected] ; [email protected] ; [email protected] ; CAMBODIAN 
VETERANS ; [email protected] ; [email protected] ; [email protected] 
; [email protected] ; [email protected] ; [email protected] ; 
[email protected] ; [email protected] ; [email protected] ; 
[email protected] ; [email protected] ; [email protected] ; 
[email protected] ; [email protected] ; [email protected] ; 
[email protected] ; [email protected] ; [email protected] ; 
[email protected] ; [email protected] ; [email protected] ; 
[email protected] ; [email protected] ; [email protected] ; [email protected] ; MOAN 
PREUK ; [email protected] ; [email protected] ; 
[email protected] ; [email protected] ; [email protected] ; 
[email protected] ; [email protected] ; [email protected] ; 
[email protected] ; [email protected] ; [email protected] ; 
[email protected] ; [email protected] ; [email protected] ; [email protected] 
; [email protected] ; [email protected] ; [email protected] 
  Sent: Tuesday, June 30, 2009 3:59 AM
  Subject: Fwd: The Answer to open Cambodian's Eye


  Ladies and Gentlemen,

  Lok Doctor Peangmeth, may God bless you and your family always.

  I hope the return of HM Ex-king on July 9th 2009 will encourage him 
voluntarily with HM queen Monique to walk into the ECCC as he was promise to 
the French news paper in the past.  In this way the time and the money could be 
save for the ECCC.  The justice  for the victims of the Khmer  Rouge era may 
look a little bit more brighter, don't  you think?

  Goodbye for now Doctor, please keep open the eyes of good Khmer whose are 
living around the world and also the world democracy countries to help Cambodia 
one more time.

  May God protect Cambodia from YUON swallowing.

  Regards,

  Kulen  Monorom
  (the rice farmer's son)

    




------------------------------------------------------------------------------
  From: New Khmer Leader <[email protected]>
  To: camdisc <[email protected]>; camdisc <[email protected]>; 
camnews <[email protected]>; camnews <[email protected]>; 
angkoriansociety <[email protected]>; 
[email protected]; [email protected]; 
[email protected]; [email protected]; [email protected]; 
[email protected]; [email protected]
  Sent: Tuesday, 30 June, 2009 12:21:49 AM
  Subject: Fwd: The Answer to open Cambodian's Eye




  ---------- Forwarded message ----------
  From: Serey Ratha SOURN <[email protected]>
  Date: Mon, Jun 29, 2009 at 7:19 AM
  Subject: The Answer to open Cambodian's Eye
  To: [email protected]



  Dear All,

  Please read Question & Answer that Phnom Penh Post interviews Dr. Gaffar 
belove, it's geart answer and meaning full to open Cambodian's eye.

        A view from the outside      
        Written by SEBASTIAN STRANGIO     
        Monday, 29 June 2009  

        Former resistance fighter Abdul Gaffar Peang-Meth talks about his past 
and Cambodia's state of affairs in the post-Khmer Rouge era.
         Photo by: PHOTO SUPPLIED 
        Abdul Gaffar Peang-Meth, once a resistance fighter during the 1980s, 
now teaches at the University of Guam. 

        Educated in the United States in the 1960s and 1970s, Abdul Gaffar 
Peang-Meth returned to Cambodia in 1980 to join the Khmer People's National 
Liberation Front (KPNLF) - one of the three factions resisting the Vietnamese 
occupation during the 1980s. After unsuccessfully running for election with the 
Liberal Democratic Party in 1993, he returned to academic life and now teaches 
political science at the University of Guam. In an interview with the Post, he 
reflects on his time in the resistance and the current state of Cambodian 
politics.

        Many of your old colleagues from the Khmer People's National Liberation 
Front (KPNLF) are still living in Cambodia today. What made you decide to leave 
the country permanently? 
        "Permanently" is an eternity, contrary to what Lord Buddha teaches: 
There's no such thing.  Cambodians should live in Cambodia, and I respect the 
different reasons my ex-KPNLF colleagues have made to do so.  My heart goes out 
to those who have no choice but to endure oppression. Whether under the Khmer 
monarchy, the Khmer Republic or the KPNLF, I believe unless a person is 
permitted and encouraged to think freely and critically, to innovate, to 
develop to his or her full potential, no endeavor s/he is involved in, whether 
commercial or political, is going to succeed.  I don't see Phnom Penh's sky as 
hospitable to my way of thinking.  Anyone can help the nation from anywhere.


------------------------------------------------------------------------

            A CHIEF EXECUTIVE WHO HOLDS EXECUTIVE, leGISLATIVE AND JUDICIAL 
POWERS IS A TYRANT AND AN OPPRESSOR.


------------------------------------------------------------------------

        From your vantage point overseas, how do you see the current trajectory 
of Cambodia's development?
        There's no question that Cambodia today, with more roads, bridges, 
modern buildings, is more appealing than under the Khmer Rouge.  But the rich 
get richer while nearly half of the population lives below the poverty level, 
and many live off the city's dumping grounds. The current regime's disdainful 
lack of good governance hurts the people most, and points to one direction: an 
authoritarian one-party rule legitimised by elections, which the international 
community had dubbed below international standard, but foreign donors let pass. 
 How many fewer threats, how much less intimidation make the elections "more 
free and fair"? Does a government that sells natural resources for private 
gain, evicts the weak and underprivileged from their homes and land for 
development by the wealthy, employs lawsuits against its citizens and lifts the 
immunity of lawmakers whose words and opinions aren't in agreement with it, 
represent progress toward a more democratic future? A chief executive who holds 
executive, legislative, and judicial powers is a tyrant and an oppressor.      

        How do you perceive the role of the international community in 
Cambodia? 
        The role of the international community and the donor countries should 
be to ensure the implementation of the 1991 Paris Accords on Cambodia - in 
which the world invested $2 billion. It's their failure to implement the 
stipulations in the accords that has led to Cambodia's current situation.  They 
cannot hope to build a sustainable economy and a democratic system in Cambodia 
by turning a blind eye to abuses of power and rampant corruption, when by so 
doing  the current one-party rule is allowed to become further entrenched.
           
        Do you think the Khmer Rouge tribunal - in light of corruption 
allegations - can bring justice to Cambodian survivors of the KR regime?
        There cannot be justice, nor national reconciliation and healing, when 
responsibility for the brutality visited upon an estimated 1.7 million victims 
is assigned to only five officials while several thousand other perpetrators 
are walking free today.  Unless the victims are satisfied that the accused have 
been accorded their due, the KRT is just a sham and talk of judicial corruption 
is a distraction. Some Cambodians have challenged the world community to 
establish a witness protection program to allow living witnesses to appear and 
talk freely and without fear.

        You come from a Cham family that was closely involved in Democrat Party 
politics in pre-revolutionary Cambodia. How did this experience inform your 
political views?
        My father socialised me politically beginning in my elementary school 
days to democratic principles and concepts. He introduced me to some figures in 
the Democratic Party such as Pach Chhoeun and Svay So.  I read the 
Pracheatheptei (Democrat) newspaper,  attended political campaign rallies. 
Personal and national experiences also shaped my political views. When my 
parents' financial fortunes crumbled, our house was sold to then Siem Reap 
governor  Dap Chhuon, who allowed us to stay in the lower level of the house.  

        But Dap Chhuon, who was implicated in a plot with South Vietnamese 
officers against the royal government, was shot and killed and Lon Nol's 
soldiers surrounded the house, placing us under house arrest.  The morning 
after, our residence was searched. Old copies of the Pracheatheptei and a copy 
of the Pracheachon (The People) newspaper in the house were confiscated, and we 
were instructed to read only the ruling party's Sangkum newspaper. That 
experience has affected me throughout my life.

        What led you to support Lon Nol's Khmer Republican Regime during the 
early 1970s? 
        Being Cambodian-born of Cham descent has caused me to be particularly 
sensitive to the regional Vietnamisation and annexation of territories by 
Vietnam. When the Communist Vietnamese forces occupied some 3,500 square 
kilometres of Khmer soil from the northeast down to the sea in the south as 
sanctuary from the war with the free South Vietnamese and their American 
allies, Cambodia's neutrality was violated and my support for those who rose up 
against the Vietnamese forces on Khmer soil was natural.  It may have been 
foolish for a Khmer David to confront the Vietnamese Goliath at a time when the 
Americans were looking for a way to disengage, but opting to trade national 
territorial sovereignty and territorial integrity because the political wind 
appeared to favour the Communists was not in the nation's interest.  Khmers who 
stood opposed to the Vietnamese occupying forces espoused republican ideals. In 
March 1970 many who took on the republican cause, many who gave their lives in 
that struggle, did so not because of personal allegiance to [coup leaders] Lon 
Nol or [Prince] Sirik Matak, but because they believed in democratic principles.

        Whatever happened to the "republican era"?  Life evolves, political 
pendulums swing.  There is no history, someone said, only interpreters of 
historical events. For different reasons, old supporters of republicanism have 
been silent. But there are young Khmers today who believe in the republican 
ideals, appreciate and recognise the work of those who have died for human 
integrity and republicanism. Some young Khmers have picked up the flag of 
republicanism and are moving forward. I supported the republican ideals and 
still do.   

        Why did you join the KPNLF after the fall of the Khmer Rouge?
        I seek a meaningful life through serving a cause in which I believe. 
The KPNLF was created in 1979 to oppose the Maoist Khmer Rouge's return to 
power and to oblige the Vietnamese to withdraw from Khmer land. After the 
collapse of the Khmer Republic in 1975 and news of death and destruction by the 
Khmer Rouge emerged, I and a group of Khmer nationalists in America's East 
Coast formed an anti-Khmer Rouge committee. I wrote articles, translated 
articles into Khmer and English and mimeographed the bulletins for 
distribution.  The bulletin, called Conscience, became Cambodian Appeal and 
after the KPNLF was proclaimed, I joined the group in the field, followed by 
some colleagues. 

        INTERVIEW BY SEBASTIAN STRANGIO  



  -- 
  SOURN SEREY RATHA
  Chief Mission of CACJE 
  Website: www.cacje.net Webblog: http://cacje-news.blogspot.com




------------------------------------------------------------------------------
  Access Yahoo!7 Mail on your mobile. Anytime. Anywhere. Show me how.
  


--~--~---------~--~----~------------~-------~--~----~
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"Cambodia Discussion (CAMDISC) - www.cambodia.org" group.
This is an unmoderated forum. Please refrain from using foul language. 
Thank you for your understanding. Peace among us and in Cambodia.

To post to this group, send email to [email protected]
To unsubscribe from this group, send email to 
[email protected]
For more options, visit this group at http://groups.google.com/group/camdisc
Learn more - http://www.cambodia.org
-~----------~----~----~----~------~----~------~--~---

Reply via email to