Madman Bury Chau.
Khmer are themselves anti-Khmer case because their children like to
take Vietnamese as girlsfriends and boyfriends, then their
grandchildren will be Viet/Khmer hybrids. They speak Vietnamese like
Khmer Krom do everyday. Now Bury Chau you see who are anti-Khmer race?
But's not other!

On Mar 25, 12:49 pm, Bury Chau <[email protected]> wrote:
>  THE SUFFERINGS OF THE KHMER PEOPLE AS VICTIMS OF THE FOREIGN AGGRESSIONS:
>
> A. AMERICAN INVASION OF CAMBODIA 1970
> B.COMMUNISM CREATED BY JACOB SCHIFF, LENIN,TROTSKY, HO CHI MINH ,MAO TSE 
> TOUNG ,FRENCH COMMUNISTS
> C. VIETNAMESE INVASION ,OCCUPATION SUPPORTED BY THE SOVIET UNION, FUNDED BY 
> THE FEDERAL RESERVE BANK OF NEW YORK
>
> MORPHOLOGY ON THE KHMER RACE.
>
> A. THE KHMER                Surin's Thong Ploy Music: Chapei and Mahori
>
> http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kqiyHqkAV3U
>
> http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yOYV-zt7cS4&feature=related
> Click to Read More...
>
> Posted by Socheata | Permalink |     | 4 comments | Links to this post
> Labels: Khmer heritage | Khmer Surin singer
>
> http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kqiyHqkAV3U
>
> http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yOYV-zt7cS4&feature=related
> Click to Read More...
>
> Posted by Socheata
> Labels: Khmer heritage |
>
> 2. B. THE CAMBODIANS
> 1. Long Beach Student Show Seeks To Preserve Culture
>
> Students at a rehearsal, about a Cambodian family living in Long Beach, 
> California. (Photo: Courtesy of Cheang Sophinarath)
>
> 2. Ministry To Seek Out Fraudulent Orphanages
>
> A group of Cambodian orphans gather and play while an orphanage worker looks 
> on (File photo, Photo: AP)
>
> 3. THE CAMBODIAN .
>
> Couple at heart of sensational money-laundering trial in Montreal
>
> Thursday, Mar. 24, 2011
> JULIAN SHER AND TU THANH HA
> Friday's Globe and Mail (Toronto, Ontario, Canada)
>
> There are the Cambodian bankers and their monk. The Quebec mobster and his 
> psychic. The crooked cop and a bunch of Colombian cocaine traffickers.
>
> Not to mention the axe murder, the Israeli diamonds and the Latvian bank 
> accounts.
>
> From Miami to Phnom Penh, this tale involves as much as $100-million in drug 
> money, in one of the largest alleged schemes to hide proceeds of crime ever 
> brought before the courts in Canada.
>
> Sy Veng Chun, 63, and his wife Leng Ky Lech, 48, are charged with running 
> what prosecutors call “a sophisticated money-laundering system” with a drug 
> trafficker named Daniel Muir as one of their principal clients.
>
> The Cambodian-born couple ran a tiny currency-exchange boutique in Montreal’s 
> Chinatown, not two blocks from the courthouse where they now stand accused.
>
> From evidence at the Montreal trial, which began a year ago, and in other 
> court cases in Florida, a fuller picture is emerging for the first time of an 
> alleged intricate criminal web spanning three continents.
> Click to Read More ...
>
> 4.  
>
> Kem SokhaKem Sokha: Former SRP party members defection will not affect the 
> union with the SRP
> Friday, March 25, 2011
>
> Cambodia's orphanages target the wallets of well-meaning tourists
>
> Research indicates most of the country's orphans have a living parent (Photo: 
> Getty)
> Friday, 25 March 2011
> By Robert Carmichael in Phnom Penh
> The Independent
>
> The Cambodian government has started inspecting more than 250 orphanages 
> after it was revealed that most of the country's 12,000 orphans have at least 
> one living parent. The government said that until the assessment is 
> completed, it had no idea whether the children were being cared for properly.
>
> Aid groups suspect that those running homes for children are enticing more 
> parents to give up their children with promises of food, shelter and, 
> crucially in Cambodia, education. In return, those running orphanages can 
> expect larger donations from charities and Western tourists, who are 
> encouraged to visit homes.
>
> Richard Bridle, the country representative of the UN children's agency 
> Unicef, said research had indicated 28 per cent of children in orphanages had 
> lost both parents, raising the question about why thousands of others with at 
> least one surviving parent were in institutional care. Unicef has also 
> expressed concern at the near doubling of orphanage numbers from 153 to 269 
> in the last five years. Just 21 are state-run; the rest operate privately, 
> and many of those are faith-based.
>
> "Overseas donors are the main funders of residential care, and many 
> residential-care centres have begun to turn to tourism to attract funders, 
> and in doing so, are putting children at risk," Mr Bridle said.
>
> The rate of growth in the number of Cambodia's orphanages over the past five 
> years matches the increase in the number of tourists visiting the country 
> during the same period. Visitors to Cambodia's three main tourist areas – 
> Phnom Penh, the temple city of Siem Reap and the beach resort town of 
> Sihanoukville – are regularly bombarded with offers to visit private 
> orphanages and donate money.
>
> Guesthouses commonly display posters asking travellers to visit particular 
> orphanages. One poster promoting an orphanage in Phnom Penh says people can 
> help "in many different areas", from teaching English and playing with the 
> children to donating food, toys, educational materials and cash. Another 
> orphanage displayed the appeal: "Children in Cambodia need your help!" Mr 
> Bridle said even those tourists and volunteers who visited with good 
> intentions were sustaining a system that was separating children from their 
> families.
>
> Although Unicef recognises orphanages had a place, institutional care should 
> be a last resort, he said. It was far better for the children – and far 
> cheaper – to have children looked after by a parent or in the community.
>
> Sebastien Marot, the head of Friends International, a charity for street 
> children, said orphanage tourism was simply a cynical marketing ploy that 
> exploited children. "The system is very simple," he said. "You put a few 
> poor-looking, sad-looking children in a centre and you try to attract 
> tourists."
>
> The money that tourists leave typically did not benefit the children, 
> because, "otherwise you're breaking the business", he said. "So the money 
> goes elsewhere and the children are maintained in the situation of poverty, 
> looking poor and so you attract more tourists and make more money
>
> 5. Heartache of Khmer Rouge forced marriage victims
>
> Heartache of Khmer Rouge forced marriage victims
>
> Thursday March 24, 2011
> By Emily Wilkins
> TheStateNews.com (East Lansing, Michigan, USA)
>
> The Finnish Women’s Bank Women in Cambodia
>
> These Cambodian women have received training in savings and loan operations, 
> and are now managing the local village bank themselves.
>
> THE KAMPUCHEAN :
> Comrade Hor Nam Hong appreciates Communist Cuba
>
> Cambodia Appreciates Cuban Support, Says Foreign Minister
>
> HAVANA, Cuba, Mar 23 (Cuban News Agency) The Deputy Prime Minister of 
> Cambodia, Hor Namhong, Minister of Foreign Affairs and International 
> Cooperation, expressed the gratitude of his country for the Cuban support 
> during several decades.
>
> Kaing Guek Eav, better known as Duch, was sentenced to 35 years in prison by 
> a United Nations-backed tribunal in Phnom Penh, Cambodia, last July, after he 
> had pleaded guilty to crimes against humanity, war crimes, premeditated 
> murder and torture.
>
> Duch, 67, confessed to the torture of more than 12,000 people – among them Mr 
> Hamill's brother, Kerry, in 1978 – before they were executed during his 
> tenure as chief of the notorious S-21 prison in Phnom Penh, Cambodia's 
> capital. Duch's defence lawyers claim he was not the most responsible senior 
> official at S-21.
>
> The prosecution has also appealed the length of Duch's sentence, which they 
> want extended to 45 years.
>
> Friday, March 25, 2011
>
> Rob Hamill pursues brother's torturer
>
> ROB HAMILL: Wants to meet war criminal.
> 25/03/2011
> BEN STANLEY
> Waikato Times (New Zealand)
>
> A continuing desire for a face-to-face meeting with the man responsible for 
> the killing of his brother will send Rob Hamill back to Cambodia today to 
> attend an appeal hearing for a Khmer Rouge war criminal.
>
> Kaing Guek Eav, better known as Duch, was sentenced to 35 years in prison by 
> a United Nations-backed tribunal in Phnom Penh, Cambodia, last July, after he 
> had pleaded guilty to crimes against humanity, war crimes, premeditated 
> murder and torture.
>
> Duch, 67, confessed to the torture of more than 12,000 people – among them Mr 
> Hamill's brother, Kerry, in 1978 – before they were executed during his 
> tenure as chief of the notorious S-21 prison in Phnom Penh, Cambodia's 
> capital. Duch's defence lawyers claim he was not the most responsible senior 
> official at S-21.
>
> The prosecution has also appealed the length of Duch's sentence, which they 
> want extended to 45 years.
>
> Mr Hamill, who lives in Te Pahu, addressed the war criminal in court in Phnom 
> Penh last year, but now wants an opportunity to speak to him "face-to-face".
>
> Emails to Duch's defence team have not received replies but Mr Hamill remains 
> resolute, saying he would attempt to speak with Duch's representatives again 
> while in Phnom Penh.
>
> "There's more to it than him just agreeing to meet."
>
> Mr Hamill believes Duch had an opportunity to "walk away" from S-21 or stop 
> what was happening at the infamous torture camp.
>
> "He didn't do a Schindler's List when he could have," Mr Hamill said.
>
> "He could've got out of there and helped people ... but he didn't."
>
> Mr Hamill expects it "could take months" before a new sentence is confirmed 
> or denied.
>
> The appeal begins on Monday and will last four days.
>
> Mr Hamill is currently making the final edits to a documentary about his 
> brother and his search for justice for Kerry's death.
>
> Entitled Brother Number One, it is expected to be released later this year.
>
> Who are  the Khmer  that HENRY KISSINGER HATES MOST ?
> WHO ARE THE CAMBODIAN TODAY?
> WHO ARE THE KAMPUCHEAN ?
>
> Friday, March 25, 2011
>
> Cops put down Boeung Kak protesters in front of Phnom Penh city hall
>
> (All photos: CEN)
>
> 25 March 2011
> Free Press Magazine Online
> Translated from Khmer by Soch
>
> THE ANTI KHMER
>
> THE ANTI-KHMER RACE GROUP OF SATAN HENRY KISSINGER ARE CRIMINALS.
> WHO ARE THESE ANTI-KHMER RACE GROUP OR CRIMINALS ?
>
> 1.THE FEDERAL RESERVE BANK OF NEW YORK?
> 2. THE WALL STREET BANKERS IN NEW YORK?
> 3. THE ...
>
> read more »

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