1. LEADERS OF KAMPUCHEA 1979-2011  




Paw in communist game : see this Picture 













FOR CAMBODIA   
10 UN RESOLUTIONS,(1979-1988) VOTED BY 116 UN MEMBER COUNTRIES ,CALL VIETNAM TO 
CEASE HER OCCUPATION OF CAMBODIA & REMOVE ALL HER TROOPS FROM THE COUNTRY, ARE 
NOT RESPECTED AS OF TODAY. US SECRETARY OF STATE HILLARY CLINTON OMITS TO READ 
THESE 10 UN RESOLUTIONS ON CAMBODIA. SHE SHAKES HAND WITH A VIETNAMESE INVADER 
ADMINSTRATION (HOR NAM HONG HERE )

 



 
>From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia


 
Hor Namhong (or Hor Nam Hong) (born November 15, 1935, Phnom Penh[1] ) is the 
foreign minister of Cambodia since 1998.[2] He was also foreign minister from 
1990 until 1993.[3] He is a member of the Cambodian People's Party.
  


 US SECRETARY OF STATE SHAKES HAND WITH A KAMPUCHEAN (CPP MEMBER ) 
PAWN GAME IS IN FULL PLAY HERE 
  
CAMBODIAN VICTIMS OF THE AMERICAN INVASION ,SECRET BOMBING, AND SELL OUT BY 
KISSINGER  & VIETNAMESE RULE 










 
As of today,Cambodia is still occupied by the Vietnamese troops despite the 
call from the US president to Vietnam to cease her occupation of Cambodia since 
1988. 
Cambodia needs Independence from Vietnam and the Vietnamese invaders.
Vietnam must cease her occupation of Cambodia at once.

 

 

Sideshow: Kissinger, Nixon, and the Destruction of Cambodia by William 
Shawcross 



 




CAMBODIA MUST PERISH,  PARALLEL DESTRUCTION WITH,  Germany Must Perish! 
[Paperback] Theodore N. Kaufman  (Author)  

DANGER ZONES: A Diplomat's Fight for America's Interests - Paperback (May 1, 
2009) by John Gunther Dean

Subject: RE: Prampi Makara Yuon Chlean Pean Kampuchea 1979-2011








 

Fall of Phnom Penh on 17 April 1975 and the surrender to the Khmer Rouge before 
the genocide (Photo: Roland Neveu) 





KR soldiers entering Phnom Penh along Monivong Blvd 
Source: DC-Cam
Sideshow Kissinger, Nixon and the Destruction of Cambodia.  by William Shawcross

The Beginning
p365
When the first strange soldiers walked along Monivong Boulevard early on the 
morning of April 17, they waved as the townspeople cheered, embraced them and 
wept. Small children danced around, the government ordered all troops to cease 
fire. At last, it seemed to those who saw the scene, the fratricide was over, 
guns would be laid aside, the "gentle, smiling Khmers" would reunite.
It was a cruel deception, and a short one. This first contingent was a tiny 
group, mostly students from Phnom Penh acting, some say, under the influence of 
Lon Nol's brother Lon Non, who still apparently imagined that victory could be 
denied the Communists if only a new government seized power from Long Boret. In 
less than two hours, the Khmer Rouge themselves arrived.
They marched in from all sides of the city, those from the south arriving 
first. All in black, wearing checked scarves and Ho Chi Minh sandals, their 
most obvious qualities were their youth and their exhaustion. Hung around with 
bandoliers and shouldering their AK-47s, they strode through the town.
Within a few hours they had stationed themselves at strategic crossroads all 
over the city. They did not smile much, and the relief with which most people 
had begun the day began to dissipate; joy was replaced by concern, concern by 
trepidation, trepidation by fear. 
Toward the end of the morning a platoon of the young victors marched into the 
grounds of the Preah Ket Melea hospital. Many of the doctors had already fled, 
and here, as in most other hospitals, patients lay untended in filth and agony. 
A mother had been sitting motionless with her children; she waved the flies off 
the bloated, patchy body of one dying baby. Wrapped in brown paper beside her, 
its feeding bottle by its head, lay the dead body of her other child. A soldier 
with a gaping, untreated stomach wound gasped for water he could not have 
swallowed. The corridors, on which bodies, alive and dead, were piled, were 
awash with blood and excrement.
The soldiers marched through the wards, and then they ordered all those 
patients who could walk to get off their beds and push out through the doors 
those who could not move. And so, in the heat of the day, a most dreadful 
parade began.
>From hospitals all over the city crawled and hobbled the casualties of the 
>war, the first victims of the "peace." Men with no legs bumped down stairs, 
>and levered themselves on skinny arms along the street; blind boys laid their 
>hands on the shoulders of crippled guides, soldiers with one foot and no 
>crutches dragged themselves away, parents carried their wounded children in 
>plastic bags that oozed blood. Beds were pushed slowly, jolting along, the 
>blood and plasma bottles breaking. One father stumbled through the heat with 
>his daughter tied in a sheet around his neck. A man with a foot hanging only 
>by skin to the end of his leg begged Father Francois Ponchaud, a Jesuit 
>priest, for refuge as he passed his house. The priest refused him, feeling as 
>he did so that he had lost the last shred of human dignity. With thousands of 
>others the man stumbled along toward the countryside.
This was only one stage in the purification of the city. At the same time 
soldiers ordered everyone out of the grounds of the Hotel Phnom, where the Red 
Cross had hoped to establish a neutral zone. Many Cambodians and almost all the 
foreigners who remained in Phnom Penh now made their way to the French embassy, 
which, despite Sihanouk's order to close, was still manned by the vice-consul. 
All together, about 800 foreigners and 600 or more Cambodians, among them Sirik 
Matak, now facing the consequences of his brave refusal of John Dean's escape 
offer, crowded into the compound.
It afforded no refuge. Within forty-eight hours, the vice-consul was informed 
by the Khmer Rouge that Cambodia was owned by its people and that the new 
government recognized no such concepts as territoriality or diplomatic 
privilege; if he did not expel all the Cambodians then the lives of the 
foreigners would also be forfeit. Cambodian women married to foreigners could 
remain; Cambodian men in the same situation could not. A few marriages were 
hastily arranged so that some women could acquire French citizenship. No 
resistance was offered. The foreigners stood and wept as their husbands, 
friends, lovers, servants, colleagues were hustled through the embassy gates.
Within a fortnight the foreigners were taken out of the country in trucks. 
Almost none of those Cambodians has ever reappeared. The new authorities later 
announced that Sirik Matak had been executed. So was Prime Minister Long Boret, 
who had surrendered to the victors with great dignity. So was Lon Nol's brother 
Lon Non.
When the hospitals had been emptied, it was the turn of the ordinary 
townspeople and the refugees. They were ordered to abandon their houses, their 
apartments, their shacks, their camps. They were told to take with them only 
the food they could carry. Those who were separated from their families were 
not allowed to seek them. No demurral was allowed. As the sun began to sink 
that afternoon, men, women and children all over Phnom Penh straggled bemused 
out of the side streets and onto the highways. The roads became clogged; people 
could shuffle forward only a few yards at a time. In the crush, hundreds of 
families were split, and as they moved on more and more people fell under the 
strain. The old and the very young were the first to go; within a few miles of 
the city center more and more bodies were to be seen Iying where their 
relatives had been forced to leave them.
Out on the roads the evacuees found that the Communists had accumulated stocks 
of food in places. But these and supplies of water were not adequate for more 
than two and a half million people. When the townspeople asked how they were to 
eat, where they could find drugs, where they were to go, the response was one 
with which they were soon to become familiar. "Angka" or "Angka Loeu"-''The 
Organization" or "Supreme Organization''-would provide. Angka would instruct 
them. The nature of Angka was not clear to the evacuees at first, but within 
hours millions of Cambodians had realized that its orders, transmitted through 
the fierce young soldiers who supervised their trek, were to be obeyed 
instantly, and that complaints were often met by immediate execution. As they 
walked into that first night of April 17, 1975, they were told that from now on 
only Angka ruled and that Cambodia was beginning again. This was "Year Zero."



VIETNAM INVASION & OCCUPATION OF CAMBODIA 1979-2011.




View Image 
sihanouk warming...
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.













Vietnamese-led forces entering Phnom Penh in 1979.






Red Cross gift distribution by Bun Rany (Vietnamese ) used as a PROPAGANDA 
forum for the CPP 






Chumteav Thom Dr. Bun Rany distributes gifts to elderly people (Photo: Uy Song, 
Koh Santepheap)






Svay Sitha, a high ranking CPP official, is now the secretary of state in Hun 
Sen regime's Council of Ministers

THE VIETNAMESE TRICKS IN CAMBODIA OCCUPIED BY VIETNAM.
THE VIETNAMESE WEARING THE LABEL "CAMBODIAN" 






 
 
 
 
 


FAKE "CAMBODIAN" HEAD OF THE INTERPOL OF CAMBODIA. THE VIETNAMESE MILITARY IN 
UNIFORM SEEN HERE .



WHAT RIGHTS DO THESE VIETNAMESE INVADERS HAVE TO RUN CAMBODIA IN VIOLATION OF 
THE 10 UN RESOLUTION?

 ACCORDING TO THIS FORMULA :
THIS BOOK : " GIAI PHONG " by T Terzani. It describes a Vietnamese as THIEF, A 
LIAR, A KILLER, A DECEIVER , a sleeper ......  Chea Leang(a Vietnamese )posing 
as "Cambodian" co-prosecutor)Tribunal judges will determine whether more 
suspects should be investigated.
  

this woman , the Deputy Prime Ministers Men Sam An(A VIETNAMESE ), Nhek Bun 
Chhay and Keat Chhon.



Ms Chea Leang seen here on this picture ,the so called "CAMBODIAN" 
CO-PROSECUTOR, is a Vietnamese woman 

Phnom Penh (Cambodia) 20 November 2006. Co-prosecutors Robert Petit talked to 
Chea Leang(a Vietnamese posing as "Cambodian" co-prosecutor) during the plenary 
session of judges for the KR Tribunal (Photo: John Vink/Magnum) 

 



ONG YIN TIENG IS A VIETNAMESE RULING CAMBODIA UNDER THE LABEL "CAMBODIAN". 

 

Photo by: Julie Leafe Om Yentieng, chairman of the Anticorruption Unit, speaks 
during a press conference in July.
 






FOR CAMBODIA   
10 UN RESOLUTIONS,(1979-1988) VOTED BY 116 UN MEMBER COUNTRIES ,CALL VIETNAM TO 
CEASE HER OCCUPATION OF CAMBODIA & REMOVE ALL HER TROOPS FROM THE COUNTRY, ARE 
NOT RESPECTED AS OF TODAY. 









Cambodians ride atop vehicles as they leave Phnom Penh to return to their 
hometowns to celebrate the Khmer New Year April 13, 2011. The Khmer New Year is 
celebrated from April 14 to 16 (REUTERS/Samrang Pring) 
Vietnamese influence in the Khmer Art in the New year  






Children walk past the colossal statues Thursday at the Wat Dhammararam 
Buddhist Temple, which is hosting Cambodian New Year festivities through 
Sunday. (MICHAEL McCOLLUM/The Record)








 


FAKE "Cambodian" Ambassador to Thailand You Ay(A VIETNAMESE WOMAN" arrives in 
Bangkok yesterday  

Bury 



Date: Sat, 16 Apr 2011 21:34:16 -0700
Subject: 17 Mesa (by Hin Sithan)
From: [email protected]
To: [email protected]

Please see attachment.

Thanks,

V.S.


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