Unlike yuons or siams, Khmer has many thousand years of culture before being
dominated by yuons and yuon culture. I believe yuons should better back its
sorry ass to Tokin to be Chinese criminals and slaves as the old time under
the great Chinese leadership than little bunch of criminal and assassins.
Youns will be better under Chinese leadership than led by a bunch of
criminal with its culture, its down visions of thing and of the world. Only
Chinese can control the bunch of yuon criminals and can offer yuons some
culture and some human forms to these yuon criminals because Chinese know
yuons better than anyone else. It is also the best way for yuons to fight
its old master and enemy from inside.
----- Original Message -----
From: "kangaroo" <[email protected]>
To: "Cambodia Discussion (CAMDISC) - www.cambodia.org"
<[email protected]>
Sent: Sunday, April 24, 2011 9:11 PM
Subject: Re: Fwd: Vietnam-Cambodia relations from Truong Minh Giang to
Nguyen Tan Dung
My friend,
Thailand would never join communist Vietnam.
On the other hand, I am still stand on what I said in the past.
Cambodians would be better under Vietnam because their own governments
have put them through so much to ground zero from one generation to
another. I am not kidding. Vietnamese would make Cambodians feel
better if Cambodia is a part of Vietnam.
However, I prefer to see Cambodains as parts of Thailand instead
because I believe Thailand has alot to offer if Cambodia join Thailand
as one country called the Kingdom of Thailand under the leadership of
Thail monarchy.
And I am serious.
On Apr 22, 4:33 pm, Chetrasena <[email protected]> wrote:
President Nguyen Minh Triet called for unity among three indo-chinese
states, Cambodia, Lao and Vietnam during the security meeting on April
20 at Ho Chi Minh city.He said that the reactionary forces continue to
sabotage the friendship and solidarity between the three countries.The
reactionary forces are the peaceful democratic movement in Cambodia,
Lao and Vietnam must be eliminated and capitulated. So the visit of
Premiere Dung to the Kingdom is very important, not only for
investment, but something more than that. The king left for China for
medical reason and declined to attend royal wedding at England. The
three Samdachs are welcoming and hosting their friend Nguyen Tan Dung.
On Apr 22, 1:09 pm, khmer sralanh khmer
<[email protected]> wrote:
> -----Original Message-----
> From: Rainsy Sam <[email protected]>
> April 22, 2011
> VIETNAM-CAMBODIA RELATIONS
> FROM TRUONG MINH GIANG TO NGUYEN TAN DUNG
> To welcome Vietnam Prime Minister Nguyen Tan Dung who is starting an
> official visit in Cambodia on April 23, opposition radio stations in
> Phnom Penh started today to broadcast an interview with Sam Rainsy in
> which the latter compares Nguyen Tan Dung to Truong Minh Giang.
> Truong Minh Giang was an army general from Annam (precursor of
> Vietnam) in the first half of the 19th century who administered
> Cambodia as a colony of the imperial court of Hue (capital of Annam).
> At that time, Cambodia’s King named Ang Chan was just a puppet, having
> been installed on the throne by a foreign occupation army led by
> Truong Minh Giang. Cambodia’s territories were being seized by Annam
> which started to annex Cambodia’s southern part known as Kampucha Krom
> where a massive and steady flow of Vietnamese immigrants were
> establishing an increasing number of foreign settlements.
> French researcher Michel Blanchard (in “Vietnam-Cambodge: Une
> frontière contestée”, L’Harmattan, 1999) wrote:
> « Très affaibli, le royaume khmer [capitale à Oudong] maintint
> cependant une administration dans les provinces du Kampuchea Krom
> jusque dans les années 1840. Nous sommes alors encore dans le système
> de la “peau de léopard”, l’unité du territoire khmer étant brisée par
> de enclaves vietnamiennes, mais la souveraineté étant partagée entre
> les cours de Hué et de Oudong sur leurs nationaux respectifs. La
> frontière entre les deux pays, de ce fait, est donc difficile à tracer
> et n’a, à ce moment, rien de linéaire (…).
> L’expansion vietnamienne s’accéléra sous le règne de la reine
> cambodgienne Ang Mi, placée sur le trône par les Vietnamiens en 1834.
> Des fortins [vietnamiens] furent construits un peu partout, et les
> révoltes [cambodgiennes] réprimées dans le sang. Mais les Vietnamiens,
> conduits par Truong Minh Giang, allèrent trop loin en pratiquant une
> vietnamisation à outrance. En 1840, un soulèvement général des
> populations cambodgiennes se produisit tant au Cambodge lui-même que
> dans les provinces du delta du Mékong [Kampuchea Krom] en voie
> d’annexion ».
> « Much weakened, the Khmer kingdom [capital city at Oudong]
> nevertheless maintained an administration in the provinces of
> Kampuchea Krom until the years 1840s. We were still then in the system
> of “leopard skin”, the Khmer territorial unity being broken par
> Vietnamese enclaves [represented by the dark spots on a leopard skin],
> with sovereignty being shared between the imperial/royal courts of Hue
> and Oudong on their respective nationals. Subsequently, the border
> between the two countries was difficult to trace and was, at that
> time, anything but a straight line (...).
> Vietnamese expansion accelerated under the reign of Cambodian Queen
> Ang Mi, who was put on the throne by the Vietnamese in 1834.
> Vietnamese military forts were built all over the country and revolts
> by the Cambodian people repressed in blood. But the Vietnamese, led by
> Truong Minh Giang, went too far by implementing a systematic
> vietnamization of the country. En 1840, a general uprising of the
> Cambodian populations took place in Cambodia itself as well as in the
> Mekong delta provinces of Kampuchea Krom in the process of being
> annexed by Vietnam. »
> The current puppet Cambodian prime minister Hun Sen, who was installed
> in power by another Vietnamese invasion army in 1979, is as harmful
> for Cambodia as the former puppet Cambodian monarchs Ang Chan and Ang
> Mi. Even though the current Vietnamese Prime Minister Nguyen Tan Dung
> is more subtle politically than General Truong Minh Giang, their
> objective remains the same: To swallow Khmer lands until Cambodia’s
> extinction.
> In the 19th century, the “dark spots” on the “leopard skin” were
> Vietnamese settlements and military fortifications. At the beginning
> of this 21st century, they are the “economic concessions” and other
> huge “land concessions” granted in increasing number by Hun Sen to
> Vietnamese companies for the colonization of Cambodia. Nguyen Tan Dung
> is now in Cambodia to inspect the ongoing colonization process. Truong
> Minh Giang in his tomb can be proud of his successors.
> Listen to Sam Rainsy’s interview in Khmer athttp://tinyurl.com/3l2avzl
> SRP Members of Parliament
> ------------------------------------------------------------------- Hide
> quoted text -
> - Show quoted text -- Hide quoted text -
- Show quoted text -
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