It sounds like Ong Kangaroo is Yuon-Hanoi's Spokeman.

To Hun Xen ,CPP and Hanoi,  Rainsy is the thorn in their eyes.
Is it the provocation when Rainsy see something very wrong ? So does the Global 
Witness !!!!

Cambodia for Sale  Cambodia for Sale Cambodia for Sale Cambodia for Sale 
Cambodia for Sale

Yes Yuon-Hanoi did what they could do to encroach more Khmer Territory, after 
the Land of Kampuchea Krom . 

The Thugs & its slaves will having their own days soon.

Cheers,
Ung Bun Heang




> kangaroo <[email protected]> wrote:
> 
> 
> The Vietnamese government did what they could do.
> Sam Rainsy was wrong when he removed the demarcation on his own.
> How can he be sure that the demarcation is wrong?
> Please tell us the truth about Sam Rainsy.
> What in the world did he have the right to do such thing?
> His action was nothing but to provoke confrontation. Is that what he
> wants?
> If he wants that, Sam Rainsy is a stupid polician and/or leader.
> 
> 
> On Nov 1, 4:47 am, "Sam Rainsy Party of North America"
> <[email protected]> wrote:
> > November 1, 2009
> >
> > VIETNAMESE AUTHORITIES ACCUSING AND
> >
> > CAMBODIAN GOVERNMENT SUING SAM RAINSY ON UNFOUNDED CHARGES
> >
> > Late last month the Chantrea district (Svay Rieng province) 
> authorities filed a criminal lawsuit at the Svay Rieng provincial court 
> against opposition leader Sam Rainsy following the latter’s 
> participation in a religious ceremony (Kathen) on October 25 at Ang 
> Romdenh pagoda in Koh Kban Kandal village, Samraong commune, Chantrea 
> district, Svay Rieng province.
> >
> > Ang Romdenh pagoda is located a few hundreds meters from the border 
> with Vietnam. Several hundreds people from Phnom Penh and Svay Rieng 
> province attended the Kathen ceremony. There are professionally made 
> video footages of the whole October 25 event, from the procession from 
> Phnom Penh to the ceremony itself at the pagoda to a subsequent short 
> walk across surrounding rice fields to a newly delineated “white zone” 
> along the border with Vietnam.
> >
> > During the Kathen ceremony at the pagoda, several local villagers 
> spontaneously, successively, unexpectedly and vehemently complained to 
> Sam Rainsy and other National Assembly members present on that occasion 
> that “Vietnamese authorities have grabbed their rice fields over the 
> last few months.”
> >
> > First taken aback by such grievances during a religious ceremony and 
> invited to go to see the problem with his own eyes by the plaintiffs, 
> who were supported by all the villagers present at the pagoda, Sam 
> Rainsy said he would go to try to assess the situation on the spot after 
> the end of the religious ceremony: Buddhist monks were having their 
> mi-day only meal and offerings brought from Phnom Penh were to be 
> ritually made to the pagoda.
> >
> > After the end of the religious ceremony, several dozens villagers led 
> the National Assembly members to their nearby rice fields and showed 
> them a bunch of six newly planted wooden sticks which, according to what 
> local authorities had recently told the villagers, were part of a “new 
> line” delineating a new “white zone” they were not allowed to do 
> anything on from now on. Villagers told the National Assembly members 
> how furious they were since they had been told such a thing because they 
> had worked and lived on these/their rice fields for decades without any 
> problem. They said this was just land grabbing. Nobody understands the 
> alleged technicalities of, and the rationale behind, the recent planting 
> of those sticks on the Cambodian farmers’ rice fields. Villagers accused 
> those who had planted the sticks of violating their private properties. 
> Some villagers said they had pulled out some of the sticks from their 
> rice fields but had been reprimanded by the local authorities. They 
> emotionally called on the higher-level government and any justice-loving 
> organizations to help them.  
> >
> > Sam Rainsy then told the villagers he now understood their grievances 
> and, as an elected representative of the Cambodian people, would not 
> tolerate such injustice. He said such property-violating sticks 
> arbitrarily planted on the villagers’ rice fields without any serious 
> and convincing explanation, were unacceptable. He added he would like to 
> see those sticks planted before his eyes and under his feet be 
> symbolically removed pending an official investigation he would call for 
> when he returns to Phnom Penh. While he was subsequently giving an 
> interview on the phone to a Phnom Penh-based reporter from Radio Free 
> Asia, who had just interviewed on the same phone some of the villagers 
> present on the spot, the assistance in solidarity with the victims 
> pulled out the six wooden sticks and threw them away on the spot. The 
> video footages clearly show that neither Sam Rainsy nor any other 
> National Assembly member took with them those sticks on their way back 
> to Phnom Penh as claimed by both the Vietnamese and the Cambodian 
> authorities who are accusing Sam Rainsy of “sabotage, destruction and 
> theft of public property.”
> >
> > SRP Cabinet        
> 

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