THE KHMER ROUGE ARE COMMUNISTS AND THE PRESENT ONE ,THE CPP IS OF THE VIETNAMESE COMMUNIST INSTALLED BY GENERAL VAN TIEN DUNG IN 1979.
HENG SAMRIN,CHEA SIM, LATER HUN SEN ARE KHMER ROUGE AND VIETNAMESE COMMUNISTS PUPPETS. Dec. 25, 1978 Invasion of Cambodia. Some 100,000 Vietnamese with 20,000 KUFNS troops, under the direction of Gen. Van Tien Dung, launch an invasion of Cambodia Jan. 8, 1979 The Kampuchean People's Revolutionary Council (KPRC), head by Heng Samrin was set up as a provisional govt. to run the country. Heng Samrin'S OATH OF ALLEGIANCE TO HO CHI MINH ,VIETNAM : ""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 oath of allegiance to Ho chi Minh allows the CPP to bring Vietnamese invaders & illegal Vietnamese settlers to run Cambodia as of today. 200 000 Vietnamese troops remains in Cambodia hiding in the 19 Vietnamese associations across Cambodia and through the CPP army/police militia and Officials of the "Cambodian" government of Hun Sen/Heng Samrin/Chea Sim from 1978-2009. 1.Gen.Van Tien Dung, launch an invasion of Cambodia Dec 25 1978 2.IT CONFIRMS BY THIS BOOK : on the behavior and character of a Vietnamese. BOOK " GIAI PHONG " by T Terzani. It describes a Vietnamese as THIEF, A LIAR, A KILLER, A DECEIVER , a sleeper ...... > Date: Thu, 9 Jul 2009 18:02:44 -0700 > Subject: Deadly Similarities > From: [email protected] > To: [email protected] > > > Alternatives Watch – 10vii09 > > > DEADLY SIMILARITIES > > > In many aspects, similarities between the regime of the Khmer Rouge > and that of the current government are rather striking. The main > commonality is their overwhelming voracity for displaying their power, > especially when their adversaries are weak, unorganised, or > disorganised. > > Both regimes justify their power grip with a type of democracy that > cannot be allowed to be anarchic. The Khmer Rouge calls its regime > Democratic Kampuchea and enforces its rule of law that tolerates no > opposition whatsoever, real or imagined. The current regime’s > commitment to its brand of democracy is unwavering. In his defence of > the recent lifting of the immunity of two opposition parliamentarians, > prime minister Hun Sen says, “[The] two lawmakers are stripped of > their immunities... for the court to prosecute them. From now on we > are strengthening democracy and the rule of law, this is not an > anarchic democracy.” He insists, “Democracy must have the rule of > law.” > > The rule enforcement of both regimes is practically absolute; they > control the government, national assembly, court, and media. Victims > of the Khmer Rouge have no recourse whatsoever. Though the current > regime claims its rule of law is based on a promise of the separation > of powers, there are too many instances to indicate it exists only on > paper. Perhaps, the only difference between these two democracies is > the magnitude of the brutality they inflict on their victims. > > They resort to all means, including murder, to silence dissenters. > While Democratic Kampuchea uses tortures to extract from victims > confessions it knows all along to be false, the current regime has > lately come to favour the court system it controls to corner its > target victims. Opposition leader Sam Rainsy had to apologise and > promise not to accuse Hun Sen anymore of masterminding the March 1997 > grenade attacks, before the government withdrew lawsuits making way > for his return from exile. More recently, lawyer Kong Sam Onn sends > Hun Sen his apologies after being hounded by his peer group and the > prime minister out of representing opposition parliamentarian Mu > Sochua in a defamation case filed by the prime minister. Kong Sam Onn > also applies for CPP membership, which offers invaluable protection > for his legal practice and livelihood. Opposition newspaper editor Dam > Sith has just begged Hun Sen for forgiveness and freedom from all > pending government lawsuits; in return, he promises to cease his > publication. > > Another similarity is that both regimes underestimate the unknown > amidst such a raw display of internal power. Prime minister Hun Sen > observes that foreigners have now become spokesmen for the opposition > party, especially in the issue of land grabbing and people > displacement. He may not realise, however, that the screw he puts on > Cambodia is so tight that someone will stand up for the people. Hun > Sen seems to forget that the Khmer Rouge regime was so totalitarian > that he himself turned to a foreign intervention that many believe has > remained his power base until now. Pol Pot shared the same oversights, > and had to subsequently pay dearly for it. > > > Ung Bun Ang > > > Quotable Quote: > > > “Two buttocks of one bum.” > > Attributed to: Thomas Sturge Moore (1870–1944), British poet, wood- > engraver, and illustrator. Referring to Hilaire Belloc and G. K. > Chesterton. > > > _________________________________________________________________ Bing™ finds low fares by predicting when to book. Try it now. http://www.bing.com/travel/deals/airline-ticket-deals.do?form=MTRHPG&publ=WLHMTAG&crea=TXT_MTRHPG_Travel_Travel_TravelDeals_1x1 --~--~---------~--~----~------------~-------~--~----~ You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "Cambodia Discussion (CAMDISC) - www.cambodia.org" group. This is an unmoderated forum. 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