my whereabout
It has been long time that i din post any. I have started my work for about 3 weeks alr. Anyway, below is my whereabout for the next 2 months:
22nd May: Fly off from SIngapore to Jakarta.
18th June: Fly from Jakarta to Singapore
18th June: Fly from Singapore to Hanoii
28th June: Fly from Hanoii to Ho Chi Ming
6th July: Fly from Ho Chi Ming to Phnom Penh.
13th July Fly from Cambodia to Singapore for graduation
17th July: Fly from Singapore to Cambodia to work.....
Headache....
22nd May: Fly off from SIngapore to Jakarta.
18th June: Fly from Jakarta to Singapore
18th June: Fly from Singapore to Hanoii
28th June: Fly from Hanoii to Ho Chi Ming
6th July: Fly from Ho Chi Ming to Phnom Penh.
13th July Fly from Cambodia to Singapore for graduation
17th July: Fly from Singapore to Cambodia to work.....
Headache....
19 Comments:
yeah, headache... fly alot pek jeng heuy lolz...
i wanna fly der... brother teach me tech merl hahahahhaha
fuck the casino manager... he knows no shit. He probably nevers cum to see for himself what the disparity of poor and rich people are here in Cambo at the moment. He can't have a good life in cambo that's why he flees to cananda, and now he said all these? No one would leave their home town, unless necessitated by some events beyond their controls.
Do u, casino, know what the ramification of corruption on normal populace? I tell u this turd, it means no fair opporunity for people to use their talent and improve their lives without proper political connections.
If u r so ignorant of the real situation, why not just fucking shut up? Let me ask u this, faggot, it's so easy to tell if a person is corrupt. Look at the salary. A senior govt official now earns $250 a month. Now tell me turd, where do he have money to buy houses, visit overseas, lead an extravagant lifestyle, purhcase brand new vehicles, send siblings for oversea educations, have mistresses, throw parties for no reasons...etc? I don't need to conduct investigation, but I know as clear as a daylight.
Now yeah true every country has corruptino, but let me tell u this, cambodia is among the top among corrupt countries. From top to bottom, and they would sell their mothers if the price is right. Why should they care? they sell rivers, mountains, and sky already. Why would they care? u tell me turd.
sometimes I do wanna say it, but it irritates me so much to hear some one so ignorant of the facts. Yeah, if I I I I could do anything about it, I would not complain it here, but I would do it NOW. But look, the inter'l community can't do anything, would you expect me, someone who flee the country for a better life, can do something about it? Do yoiu really expect me to ahve such po9wer? tell me turd. I am not scared to have you challenge me, but if you really expect that I could do anything about it, you are beyond repair faggot.
The war to grab power within the Cambodian People's Party [CPP] will burst out when CPP Vice Chairman Hun Sen dismisses the army chief loyal to CPP Chairman Chea Sim. Even though he has already given notice to the chief of Chea Sim's bodyguard unit and an army general, close to Chea Sim, implicated in a land dispute, Hun Sen still feels not satisfied. He is still attempting to remove from their positions some military and police officials loyal to Chea Sim.
CPP officials have disclosed that Hun Sen tried to pull Ke Kimyan, commander in chief of the Royal Cambodian Armed Forces [RCAF], away from Chea Sim and Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of Interior Sar Kheng several times, but it was unsuccessful because Ke Kimyan does sell Chea Sim and Sar Kheng down the river. The sources added that Hun Sen would resort to the case relating to the chemicals for drug production weighing over three metric tons found in Treng Tra-yoeng commune, Phnum Sruoch District, Kampong Spoe Province, to harm Ke Kimyan soon.
On the night of 1 April, the authorities in Kampong Spoe Province, in cooperation with a team from the Interior Ministry led by Gen Moek Dara, raided a drug-making lair located on a block of land of many hectares in Treng Trayoeng commune, Phnum Sruoch District, Kampong Spoe Province. The authorities hinted that the offense might involve four-star Gen Nhoek Bun-chhai, secretary general of the FUNCINPEC [National United Front for an Independent, Neutral, Peaceful, and Cooperative Cambodia] Party, but he denied the accusation.
According to a photocopied document that Sralanh Khmer has received, the drug-producing site is linked to a right-granting of Ke Kim-yan. The letter was prepared in two copies--one in Cambodian, another in English--that were signed and stamped by Ke Kimyan on 28 August 2001. The contents of the document are as follows:
"In reference to the working meeting held on 27 August 2001 by the Development Office of the Supreme Command, represented by its chief Brig Gen Chum Tong-heng, Mr. Chea Chung, and Mr. So Phat, with Orient Champion Holdings Sdn Bhd [name published in English] represented by Mr. Razalibin Abu Bakar and Mr. Yusof Bin Ahmad [name published in English] on the investment in cow farm in the Kingdom of Cambodia, I, on behalf of the RCAF, have the honor to grant the right [to use the land] to the gentlemen whose names appear below:
"1. Brig Gen Chum Tong-heng, chief of the Supreme Command's Development Office.
"2. Mr. Chea Chung, director in charge of coordinating general affairs and representative of the Supreme Command responsible for relations with foreign investors making investments in the Kingdom of Cambodia with the Supreme Command of the RCAF.
"In every task of cooperation, I hope that all of you will have warmth and understanding so as to achieve the goal as an investment partner into the future.
The document was attached with a list of expenses in which the name of Chea Chung, former adviser to Nhoek Bun-chhai, was also mentioned.
However, the disclosure of the document pertaining to the land in Treng Trayoeng commune, Phnum Sruoch District, Kampong Spoe Province, in which four-star Gen Ke Kimyan is named, is suspected to have been arranged or revealed by the Hun Sen-led faction, with the sole purpose of forcing Ke Kimyan to leave Chea Sim and Sar Kheng. Anyway, the document is a list of expenses for setting up a cow farm only; it does not mention drugs production.
Following the operation that broke up the drug-making lair, Nhiek Bun Chhay was reportedly involved in the case. However, he denied it. Later, the document, which implicates Ke Kimyan, was seen disclosed at the time when Hun Sen and Chea Sim are in confrontation with each other.
A CPP official disclosed that after the shooting of singer Pov Panhapich, a conflicting faction in the CPP made up documents putting the blame on an army general loyal to Chea Sim. However, the plot could not get off the ground, because it would cause the situation in the CPP to become tenser. Besides, Chea Sim and his supporters had already readied themselves: if anyone dared act madly, abusively against Chea Sim as in the past, specifically if anyone dared order Police Chief Hok Lundy to use forces to surround Chea Sim's house as on the night of 12 July 2004 again, there would certainly be response from Chea Sim's faction. That was why the Hun Sen-led faction tried to find other ways to make sure that the armed forces loyal to Chea Sim lose influence or be removed from their posts as the chief of Chea Sim's bodyguard unit, who had got the chop recently.
Communist Party candidates have been elected to more than 90 percent of the seats in Vietnam's National Assembly. The government announced the results of the May 21 election on Tuesday. Matt Steinglass reports from Hanoi.
There were 875 candidates running for 500 seats in last week's Vietnamese National Assembly elections. But the outcome was never in doubt.
Bui Ngoc Thanh, the head of the National Assembly's electoral council, announced that 91 percent of the 493 winning candidates were members of the Communist Party.
Thanh says the election reflected the Vietnamese people's confidence in the Communist Party's reformist economic policies, and the people's right to self-government.
Vietnam maintains a one-party system. The National Assembly has gained some influence since 1992, when a new constitution assigned it a greater role in government. Once a rubber-stamp body, it now debates changes to the law, and often questions government leaders.
In these elections, the government declared it wanted to broaden participation to more non-Party members, but Thanh says those efforts were disappointing.
He says the government had hoped to get 50 non-Party members as delegates, but only 43 were elected.
The nomination process was controlled by a powerful Communist Party-affiliated organization called the Fatherland Front. Almost all the candidates, including the non-party members, are nominated by the Party, or by mass organizations like the Women's Union.
In principle, Vietnamese citizens can run as "self-nominated," or independent, candidates. But such candidates face tough scrutiny. Hundreds volunteered, but only 30 made it through the pre-election approval process.
When the results were announced, it turned out that of those 30, only one had been elected.
Officials said 99.6 percent of Vietnam's voters cast their ballots in the elections. Prime Minister Nguyen Tan Dung won his National Assembly seat, in the city of Haiphong, with 99 percent of the vote.
Opposition lawmakers Monday lambasted the government for its inability to solve the murders of or attacks on several famous singers, as debate on a legal code continued.
Opposition leader Sam Rainsy said the new penal code would be good for justice in Cambodia, but he criticized the government's apparent inability to solve the murders of several famous singers, some believed to be mistresses of high-ranking officials.
Unsolved cases include those of Pisith Pelika, who was killed in 1999, That Marina, who survived an acid attack, Touch Sreynich, who was paralyzed after a shooting and the most recent victim, Pov Panhapich, who survived a shooting in February.
"The prosecutors did not file lawsuits, the victims did not dare file lawsuits. So it is the end," Sam Rainsy said. "The cases were closed. They killed them according to their whim in Cambodia. Impunity is the culture of the people with power, with money. They kill according to their whim, and they always get away free."
Land-grabbing is creating tensions in rural Cambodia as farmers are deprived of their livelihoods.
From his wooden house on stilts, Kong Song, a Cambodian farmer, points out the tractor kicking up a huge dust cloud on the land where he and his fellow villagers once cultivated water-melons, maize and other lucrative cash crops to supplement their rice harvests. The watermelons, sold at a nearby beach resort, helped the villagers of Trapeang Kandol buy motorbikes and mobile phones and finance wedding feasts - significant economic advances in the impoverished countryside.
But last November Mr Kong Song and 52 families in his village were ordered off their land by Koh Kong Sugar Industry, a politically connected company that claimed it had official permission to absorb the fields into a new plantation. Since then, the incensed farmers, with another 300 dispossessed families from the Sre Ambil district, have battled to reclaim land that has now been surrounded by a deep ditch, cleared with bulldozers and planted with sugar.
So far they have been met with brute force. Military police last year fired into a crowd of protesting villagers, injuring several. "We are so worried," says Mr Kong Song, who says he is left with just two hectares of paddy fields after the company seized five hectares from him. "I just think about how I can support my family because we depend on the land. We cannot survive with just two hectares."
The tensions in Sre Ambil are symptomatic of rural anger in an economically resurgent Cambodia as powerful companies take possession of vast tracts of increasingly valuable land with little or no regard for the farmers already cultivating the fields. Licadho, a human rights group, says it received complaints about 115 rural land-grabbing cases in 2006 and that authorities and companies are increasingly responding to protests with violence.
In the 1970s, the radical Khmer Rouge abolished private property, forcing people to live on collective farms. After their brutal reign, during which about one-quarter of the population perished, Cambodia was left with just 6m people and there was little pressure on land. But with the population now up to 13m and the economy growing rapidly, land values are rising sharply, prompting those with clout to snap up as much as they can.
Under Cambodia's progressive 2001 land law, farmers who have used land for five years peacefully and without dispute have the rights to it, but few poor farmers have undertaken the expensive process of obtaining full title, or are even aware such a process exists. While the World Bank is now assisting with land titling, it is a slow undertaking. Meanwhile, when villagers confront powerful claimants to their lands, local authorities and courts frequently say they are powerless to intervene.
Hun Sen, prime minister, recognises that growing rural discontent over land is a huge problem for his regime. "Landlessness and land-grabbing creates serious threat to the social and political stability of Cambodia," the long-time strongman said in February, vowing to punish any officials involved. But so far, analysts say, his approach has been ad hoc, merely forcing a pair of high-profile officials to relinquish some land.
For all the tough rhetoric, much conflict stems from state policies ostensibly intended to transform fallow or underutilised land into productive plantations for export-generating crops such as sugar. Since 1992, 57 companies, many with close connections to the ruling party, have been awarded "economic land concessions" covering nearly 1m hectares.
In theory, concessions should exclude farmers' lands or provide "fair, just compensation". But Henry Hwang, an adviser with the Cambodian Legal Education Centre, says these conditions are rarely met.
Koh Kong Sugar, partly owned by a businessman-senator, was last year granted a concession for 9,700 hectares of land in Sre Ambil, some of which was being farmed by villagers. In Trapeang Kandol the company offered compensation of $50 per hectare, although rights lawyers, who are pursuing the case in the courts, say fair market value would have been $500-$1,000 per hectare. While 23 families accepted the money, another 27 families rejected it.
In nearby Chouk Village, Lay Doul, a mother of seven who lost eight hectares to the sugar plantation, is furious at forces that she says are leaving villagers worse off than they were under the Khmer Rouge. "During the Khmer Rouge time, they said 'everything belongs to everyone', and they provided food for us to eat," she said. "Now they take our land, without paying anything, and they are happy and we are crying."
delete all ur posts... i thought u said u can cum get me... if u delete ur posts, where is the evidence that i wrote it... oh u saved it. i am scared now...
Sok An will trains the scout to be vietnam slave forever. Those children don't know what they are getting into. Someone needs to warn them about their future. They will be body guards and soldiers for CPP.
Excellent, now we got a great and
distinguised person (Sok An) to
help put our kid on the right track
toward success. Furthermore, it
allowed the Vice-Minister to
learn what Khmer Youth needs in
order to become great citizens.
Thank you, your excelency for
your dedication to our youth!
God blesses you and your family
for your noble works for Cambodia!
Oh please!!In the whole Cambodia, Cambodian scout couldn't find a new leader beside making an old fart SOK AN as their leader??? Where have all the Cambodian leadership gone? ahahahha!
I mean new generation must learn to take charge and lead the scout organization! An old fart SOK AN is about to die tomorrow!!! Please leave an old fart SOK AN alone to lead his "rectangular economic tragedy" ahahhahhahahhaha!
Please no more old farts!!!
Yes, we do speak about Democracy,
but where did we said anything
about a full blown textbook
democracy, huh? Were only
interested in a subset of Democracy
the fit our need, alright, mate?
Plus, we all know, no two democracy
on this planet are alike.
Noope, I said no two democracy
are alike on this planet.
Therefore, how can we be like KR
or anyone else?
To be the leader, responsibily is very important. Do u think, Mr. Sok An, is responsible for this job? I don't think so. He has too many posittions already in the goverment and those positions are very important for the courntry. Do u think Mr. Sok An has 25 hours a day to work for his position?No. Plus, how many youth today want him to lead them?So not to be the leader just for lead, but be responsible as the leader.
u know why i won't dare see u face to face? coz i know that i dun have the same power as u do. I know i will get killed. But if u dare debate face to face with me without using ur power, I am not scared because I am morally stronger than you. I am not unconscionably corrupt like u.
I believed in what I said. Many people would love to see a regime change, and u better bear this in mind: when u lose ur power, ur family will never stay safe. just like Saddam Hussein. All his male family members are gone, except the females. People don't say it, but you know how much they hate you inside their hearts. I am one of them...
what i have done with u. I simply know nuts about anything...would u mind just talk to me in my msn or yahoo...Dun use anything nonsense here, alright ? sorry if it sounds serious, but i am getting pissed of now.
oh the big boy is pissed off... we all should run man run... if u want to live... sorry man I got to run too, get ya laterz
alright i'll chat wit u now... let see
I am true to myself, and I believe in what I said. I will make sacrifices, if the situation warrants it. I wait, like a snake, for the right opportunity to strike, coz I dun wanna disappear for nothing and so easily.
man..ppl get over it! this guy "wattanak" is just a normal citizen like all of us, and this's his personal webpage..it's got nuffin to do with politic. u ppl r so unreasonable.
annoying reader
yeah, what the hell has he got to do with politics? I dun understand the purpose of anonymous posting all those news article. If u want criticize someone, go there and say to them directly. I am pissed off too...I think some ppl's brains are just too far ahead of time... go to hell to those posting this political stories here.
your mother fucker casino giger, u are a dog shit in canada
Coffin not yet arrives, arrogant person still smiles of ignorance".
Hun Sen's outraged speech targeting his opponents and Cambodian people who love freedom, human rights and democracy is normal.
We can observe that whenever there are news or rumors relating his boss (Yuan or so-called Vietnam), sensitivity from absolute puppet Hun Sen will be wilderly louded in the public to fight against those news or rumors.
This is so strange for Hun Sen, eventhough a kid has brain can think that their life will be not forever lasted; they have to gain goodness and self-sacrifice whatever they can to remain their own dignity, reputation as well as human beings'.
I am really enjoying to see how our Pemier can live 90 years as well as to maintain his Premier Position until he is 90 years old as he has always been publicly declared.
With all my best to Premier! Cheer up Ah BLind hun SEn
fuck david mother fucker! I dun wanna talk to u, y insult me. U r not job that's why so free to talk shit. I am no time to talk to u. go to hell like reader 2 said, u motherfukcer
Fuck ur mother fucker casino manager, U are old fart shit and clown talking !!!! ur mother fucker barmpot and cobblers faggot heheheheh
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