Friday, April 30, 2010

Chea Vichea film to be shown

Chea Vichea film to be shown


Friday, 30 April 2010
Meas Sokchea and James O’toole
The Phnom Penh Post


Organisers say they will ignore government orders to first secure permission.

CAMBODIAN Confederation of Unions (CCU) President Rong Chhun says he will hold an outdoor screening of a controversial documentary about slain labour leader Chea Vichea on Saturday’s Labour Day holiday, despite not having received permission from government officials to do so.

Rong Chhun met at City Hall on Thursday for one hour with Koeut Chhe, the Phnom Penh Municipality’s deputy chief of cabinet, who told him that he could not show the film without first securing permission from the “relevant” government ministries such as the Ministry of Interior. The CCU president’s decision to flout the official’s orders could set up a confrontation, though it was unclear on Thursday how the government would respond to Rong Chhun’s decision.

“This country has laws, so if [Rong Chhun] is showing the film publicly, he must ask permission,” Koeut Chhe said following the meeting. “If he violates the law, that’s his business, but he must be responsible for his violations of the law.”

Khmer singing contest in 2007 at Montreal part 2

Khmer singing contest in 2007 at Montreal part 1

http://worldkhmerradio.com/

http://worldkhmerradio.com/

Auction of Srey Krup Leak scene will be be banned by Cambodian censors

Auction of Srey Krup Leak scene will be be banned by Cambodian censors

Bogus news story on million-dollar daughter auction causes outrage

Fri, 30 Apr 2010
DPA

Phnom Penh - An article on the front page of one of Cambodia's biggest-selling newspapers has caused outrage after reporting that a woman was auctioning off her highly eligible daughter for 1 million dollars, local media reported Friday.

The article in the Koh Santepheap newspaper said the mother was driven to distraction trying to find a suitor for her foreign-educated and beautiful daughter and decided an auction - with bids starting at 1 million dollars - would resolve the problem.

The only catch? The news story was a disguised advertisement for a movie being filmed for the national television channel CTN, and the so-called facts were the script.

In my own special screening, director Bradley Cox recently showed me his 55-minute film Who Killed Chea Vichea? in his office in Manhattan. Bradley is now in Southeast Asia. Chea Vichea was the president of the Free Trade Union of Workers of the Kingdom of Cambodia (FTUWKC) until his assassination on Chinese New Year in January 2004. Vichea was shot in the head and chest early in the morning while reading a newspaper at a kiosk in Phnom Penh.

I had interviewed Cambodian Parliament Member Mu Sochua -- the Cory Aquino or Aung San Suu Kyi of Cambodia, for The Huffington Post in March before she returned to Phnom Penh (story). She had told me, "The day I joined the opposition party was the day the leader of the workers' movement -- Chea Vichea -- was assassinated. He was the founder of the opposition in Cambodia."

Chea Vichea was assassinated in broad daylight. Brad Cox arrived just minutes after he was gunned down, and his footage makes for some of the most powerful moments of the film.

Local police struggle to maintain order as journalists and frenzied onlookers surrounded the fallen union leader, his blood spilled over a copy of that day's newspaper. Images from the funeral that followed of Buddhist priests crying as they watch the procession pass are haunting.

Click to Read More...

CSULB professor urges Cambodians to testify to history at event

Prof. Leakhena Nou with one of the KR victims (Photo: AP)

04/29/2010
By Greg Mellen, Staff Writer
Long Beach Press Telegram (California, USA)

LONG BEACH - For two years now, Leakhena Nou has been engaged in a personal mission.

The sociology professor at Cal State Long Beach has been at the forefront of collecting testimony from victims of 1970s Khmer Rouge atrocities in the Cambodian refugee community. The information could become part of the court records in the ongoing Khmer Rouge war crimes tribunal being held in Cambodia.

Even 35 years after the rise of Pol Pot's genocidal regime and more than 30 years after it was toppled, Cambodian residents of Long Beach still struggle with the legacy of a genocide that left upwards of 2 million, or about one-quarter of Cambodia's population dead.

And for years, Nou bristled at the unwillingness to come forth of her countrymen in the Cambodian diaspora who were witnesses to the genocide.

Click to Read More...

The story of Baby Mai [Norn Chanboramai]

BABY MAI

Story by: Partners in Compassion Cambodia - Wat Opot Stories
Originally posted at: http://www.partnersincompassioncambodia.com/index_files/babymai.htm


Every once in a while you come across someone special and you know from that very first meeting that this one is going to steal your heart.

Baby Mai came to us in January of 2007. Her mother is HIV Positive but could not get transportation to the doctor when the time came for Mai to be born and so she had the baby at home. She was not aware that by doing so the baby ran the risk of getting HIV as well. She tried caring for the child but, because she also has both of her aging parents to care for, she found it difficult to keep the baby and so she brought Mai to us.

It has been well over a year since we have had anyone really sick here and so when Baby Mai developed diarrhea on a Friday morning I was not really concerned. She was getting in some new teeth and I assumed that was all it was. By Sunday morning however she was beginning to get dehydrated and so we forced fluids throughout the day. Monday was a holiday and the clinic was closed but she appeared to be responding to the treatment. We sent her in to the hospital early Tuesday morning and the Doctors decided to keep her there for observation and IV therapy.

It didn’t take long for Baby Mai to win her way into the hearts of everyone here and despite her being HIV Positive she developed rapidly into a sweet young girl, throwing her kisses to everyone as they passed by.

Click to Read More...

A beautiful Khmer baby named Ann Marie

Baby Ann Marie (Photo courtesy of Wayne Matthysse, co-founder of Partners In Compassion)

April 30, 2010
By David Calleja
Foreign Policy Journal


Ann Marie is not the most traditional Khmer name a Cambodian girl can be christened with. Her bulging eyes and a black mark on her forehead the size of a human thumb print are signs of the burden she is carrying. This fragile baby who weighed 1.6 kilograms (3.5 pounds) at birth on March 23 has already experienced more trauma in her short lifetime than so many of us would experience in half of our statistically predicted average life expectancy.

Twenty days after Ann Marie was born, her mother passed away from AIDS-related complications. There is a high probability that Ann Marie is HIV positive. It is hoped that she has relatives who may come to visit her one day, but this is not a certainty because none of her relatives know where she is.

Wayne Matthysse is co-founder of Partners in Compassion, a communal home for residents infected with or affected by HIV/AIDS. He is under no illusions about the situation that he is dealing with. “We do not get the perfect children, just the rejected ones. But when you are in the kind of business we are in, you take whatever comes.”

Click to Read More...

South East Asian emergency rice reserve closer

The East Asia Emergency Rice Reserve Pilot Project, was used to help disaster victims in Cambodia, Indonesia and Burma as well as for malnourishment eradication programs in Cambodia and Indonesia. [Reuters]

Friday, April 30, 2010
ABC Radio Australia

A group of 10 South East Asian nations is close to realizing their goal of establishing an emergency rice reserve to ensure food security in the face of sudden instabilities in supply and production.

Japan's Kyodo news agency quotes official sources saying agricultural and forestry ministers from 13 countries aim to sign the agreement when they meet in October in Cambodia.

It will be the first time for the region to have a permanent mechanism for an emergency rice reserve and stock based on cooperation among the 10 members of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations and the three Northeast Asian countries, Japan, China and South Korea.

Thursday, April 29, 2010

Tim Sakhorn at UN

Former Bikku Tim Sakhorn before his arrest
Tim Sakhorn was put in a sham trial in Vietnam
Tim Sakhorn attending the Ninth Session of the United Nations Permanent Forum on Indigenous Issues (UNPFII) held at the UN Headquarters in New York City between 19-30 April 2010 (Photo provided)



Rithy Panh's appeal to help Vann Nath, one of the S-21 survivors

Vann Nath standing next to his paintings (Photo: Jared Ferrie)

Dear Friends

Please allow me to send you this urgent call for help.

Vann Nath whom you all know as a S-21 survivor, a painter and a restless and dedicated witness of the Khmer Rouge regime atrocities has been admitted on Tuesday to the emergency unit at Calmette Hospital, in Phnom Penh: This is the only institution which seems to be able to treat the bowel (duodenom) and stomach haemorrhage he is suffering from (though, I am not in position to give you further details).

Vann Nath is fighting for his life, and his wife and children stand by him. However, their financial resources cannot sustain such medical costs for long.

With Vann Nath's agreement, I am therefore sending this appeal for funds in order to help his family to pay for medical bills and to support them through such painful struggle. Whatever the amount, any donation you may send will show your solidarity and support to him and his family.

I am very grateful for any contribution you may give.

Donations can be sent in a sealed envelope to Elen Gallien, at the Bophana Center (n°64 street 200). She is in charge of collecting all donations until Saturday included. Her telephone number is 092 132 718.

I truly thank you for your help.

Morover, if any of you's blood type is A+ or O+ and is willing to donate their blood, please give me your contact details so that we can contact you whenever that might be necessary.

Best wishes and many thanks,

Rithy Panh

----------
Additional information: You can send your donation to below contacts and addresses until Saturday

Elen Gallien
Bophana Center (#64, St 200)
092 132 718
elen.gallien@bophana.org

Sa Sa Art Gallery (#7, St 360)
097 7320 555
info@sasaart.info

Who were killing Chea Vichea???



Authorities Ban Screening of Chea Vichea Film

Kong Sothanarith, VOA Khmer
Phnom Penh Thursday, 29 April 2010

The movie does not dishonor the nation,” he said. “And we think the screening would push authorities to speed up the investigation.”
Phnom Penh and Ministry of Interior authorities have banned the screening of a US documentary on the murder of labor leader Chea Vichea, saying the film is not licensed in Cambodia.

Organizers of the Cambodian Confederation of Unions had planned to show the film, which questions the motives behind the 2004 murder of the widely popular activist, for International Labor Day.

Organizers had wanted to screen the film following a May 1 march of around 200 workers and teachers on the National Assembly and the site near Wat Langka pagoda where Chea Vichea was killed.

Click to Read More...

Exiled Journalists Worry Over Press Freedom

Journalist Khim Sambo's funeral (Photo: Xinhua)

Sok Khemara, VOA Khmer
Washington, DC Thursday, 29 April 2010

“First, it’s a question of political will from authorities, coming from the government, from the judicial system, from police also."
With World Press Freedom Day approaching next week, two Cambodian journalists living in exile say Cambodia needs to improve its media environment or risk becoming more dangerous, or an authoritarian state.

The vast majority of Cambodia’s TV, radio and newspapers are controlled or influenced by members of the ruling party and the government, with few outlets for alternative news or opposition voices. Cambodia's media was described as ''not free'' Thursday in Freedom House's annual international press freedom report for 2010. Last year, Freedom House ranked Cambodia’s media as “partly free,” and Reporters Without Borders ranks the country No. 117 of 174 in press freedom.

Un Sokhom was the editor in chief of the Neak Prayuth newspaper until he fled to the US in 2004 in fear of his safety. He says a more open press will bring more safety to society.

Wednesday, April 28, 2010

http://worldkhmerradio.com/

ប្រជា​ពលរដ្ឋ​នៅ​ស្រុក​កៀន​ស្វាយ​ចោទ​ក្រុមហ៊ុន​ មួយ​ថា​ចាក់​ដី​លុប​បឹង​ធម្មជាតិ

ប្រជា​ពលរដ្ឋ​នៅ​ស្រុក​កៀន​ស្វាយ​ចោទ​ក្រុមហ៊ុន​មួយ​ថា​ចាក់​ដី​លុប​បឹង​ធម្មជាតិ

2010-04-28

ប៉ុន្តែ​ភាគី​ក្រុម​ហ៊ុន​បាន​ឆ្លើយ​បំភ្លឺ​វិញ​ថា ពុំ​មែន​ដូច្នោះ​ទេ។ ពួក​គេ​គ្រាន់​តែ​លើក​ទំនប់​ទឹក​លើ​បឹង​នោះ ឲ្យ​ខ្ពស់​ថែម​ទៀត ដើម្បី​ស្តុក​ទឹក​សម្រាប់​ឲ្យ​កម្មករ​រោង​ចក្រ​កាត់​ដេរ​ប្រើ​ប្រាស់ នៅ​ក្នុង​រដូវ​ប្រាំង។

ប្រជា​ពលរដ្ឋ នៅ​ក្នុង​ភូមិ​ជ្រោយ​អំពិល ឃុំ​ក្បាល​កោះ ស្រុក​កៀន​ស្វាយ ខេត្ត​កណ្ដាល បាន​ឲ្យ​ដឹង​ថា ពួក​គាត់​កំពុង​តែ​មាន​ការ​ព្រួយ​បារម្ភ អំពី​ក្រុម​ហ៊ុន​ឯក​ជន​មួយ កំពុង​តែ​ឈូស​ឆាយ​ដី​ធ្លី ដើម្បី​លុប​បឹង​ធម្មជាតិ​ធំ​មួយ ដែល​នឹង​ធ្វើ​ឲ្យ​ប្រជា​ពលរដ្ឋ ជា​ច្រើន​រយ​គ្រួសារ ប្រឈម​មុខ​នឹង​ការ​បាត់​បង់​ប្រភព​ទឹក​នៅ​រដូវ​ប្រាំង និង​មាន​គ្រោះ​ទឹក​ជំនន់​លិច​ភូមិ​នៅ​ក្នុង​រដូវ​វស្សា។

មន្ត្រី​អាជ្ញាធរ​មូលដ្ឋាន និង​តំណាង​ក្រុមហ៊ុន បញ្ជាក់​ថា ក្រុមហ៊ុន​គ្មាន​ផែនការ​ណា​មួយ លុប​បឹង​ធម្មជាតិ​នោះ​ទេ គឺ​គេ​ឈូស​ឆា​យក​ដី​ធ្លី​នោះ ដើម្បី​លើក​ទំនប់​ទឹក​លើ​បឹង​នោះ ឲ្យ​ខ្ពស់​ថែម​ទៀត ដើម្បី​ស្តុក​ទឹក​សម្រាប់​ឲ្យ​កម្មករ​រោង​ចក្រ​កាត់​ដេរ​ប្រើ​ប្រាស់ នៅ​ក្នុង​រដូវ​ប្រាំង។

ប្រជា​ពលរដ្ឋ​នៅ​ក្នុង​ភូមិ​ជ្រោយ​អំពិល ឃុំ​ក្បាល​កោះ ស្រុក​កៀន​ស្វាយ ខេត្ត​កណ្ដាល ដែល​សុំ​មិន​ឲ្យ​បញ្ចេញ​ឈ្មោះ បាន​ថ្លែង​ប្រាប់​វិទ្យុ​អាស៊ី​សេរី​ថា ប្រជា​ពលរដ្ឋ មាន​ការ​ព្រួយ​បារម្ភ ខ្លាច​ក្រែង​បឹង​ធម្មជាតិ​ធំ​មួយ​នោះ នឹង​ត្រូវ​បាន​ក្រុមហ៊ុន​ឯកជន​លុប​ដី ដែល​នឹង​ញាំង​ឲ្យ​បាត់​បង់​ប្រភព​ទឹក ដើម្បី​ស្រោច​ស្រព​ដំណាំ​ចម្ការ នៅ​ក្នុង​រដូវ​ប្រាំង។

គាត់​មាន​ប្រសាសន៍​ពិស្ដារ​ថា ៖ «អត់​មាន​កន្លែង​សម្រាប់​ប្រជាជន មាន​ទឹក​សម្រាប់​ប្រើ​ប្រាស់ ស្រោច​ស្រព​ដំណាំ​ហ្នឹង​ផង។ វា​បាត់​បង់​ដី​របស់​ប្រជាជន​នៅ​ក្នុង​ភូមិ​ហ្នឹង​ផង ដែល​ជា​ដី​ធ្លាប់​ធ្វើ​ភោគលាភ បង្ក​បង្កើន​ផង។ ហើយ​យើង​អត់​ចង់​ឲ្យ​បាត់​ទេ ហើយ​ទី​២ វា​ជា​ដី​ដែល​ធ្វើ​ភោគលាភ របស់​យើង​ហ្នឹង​បាទ»។

បឹង​ធម្មជាតិ​នោះ គេ​បាន​ប៉ាន់​ស្មាន​ថា មាន​ទំហំ​ទទឹង​រវាង ៣០០​ម៉ែត្រ ទៅ​៤០០​ម៉ែត្រ និង​បណ្ដោយ​ប្រវែង​ច្រើន​ពាន់​ម៉ែត្រ នៅ​ជាប់​ទន្លេ​មេគង្គ តាម​បណ្ដោយ​ផ្លូវ​ជាតិ​លេខ​១។ តំណាង​ប្រជា​ពលរដ្ឋ​តវ៉ា និង​អាជ្ញាធរ​មូលដ្ឋាន​ភូមិ ឃុំ និង​តំណាង​ក្រុម​ហ៊ុន​ឯកជន ធ្លាប់​បាន​ជួប​ប្រជុំ​គ្នា​រួច​ម្ដង​ទៅ​ហើយ ដោះ​ស្រាយ​រឿង​នេះ ប៉ុន្តែ​មិន​ទាន់​មាន​ការ​ចុះ​សំរុង​គ្នា។

ប្រជា​ពលរដ្ឋ​មួយ​គ្រួសារ​ទៀត ដែល​រស់​នៅ​ក្បែរ​បឹង​ធម្មជាតិ បាន​ថ្លែង​ថា ប្រជា​ពលរដ្ឋ​ច្រើន​រយ​គ្រួសារ រស់​នៅ​អាស្រ័យ​លើ​ប្រភព​ទឹក​បឹង​ធម្មជាតិ​នោះ យូរ​យា​មក​ហើយ ៖ «បឹង​ហ្នឹង​ជា​អាង​ស្តុក​ទឹក នៅ​ពេល​រដូវ​វស្សា​ទៅ ទឹក​ដក់​នៅ​ហ្នឹង ជៀស​វាង ឬ​បញ្ចៀស​ការ​លិច​លង់​ផល​ដំណាំ​ខាង​មាត់​លើ​នេះ។ ទី​២ គឺ​នៅ​រដូវ​ប្រាំង ប្រជាជន​បូម​ទឹក​ហ្នឹង យក​មក​ស្រោច​ដំណាំ។ តែ​យើង​ខ្ញុំ​បាន​ធ្វើ​ការ​ប្ដឹង​ផ្ដល់​រឿង​ហ្នឹង​តាម​រយៈ​លោក​មេឃុំ។ គេ​ទប់​បិត​ជិត​ហើយ គេ​អត់​ឲ្យ​មាន​ទឹក​ហូរ​ចូល​ក្នុង​បឹង​ហ្នឹង​បាន​ទេ»។

សុខ សេរីចុះ​ខែ​ប្រាំង។ ប្រជាពលរដ្ឋ ដល់​តែ​ខែ​ប្រាំង ប្រជាជន​ត្រូវ​ការ​បូម​ទឹក​ស្រោច​ដំណាំ​អី អត់​បូម​បាន​តែ ពី​ព្រោះ បឹង​ហ្នឹង​ជា​របស់​គេ​ទៅ​ហើយ។

វិទ្យុ​អាស៊ី​សេរី បាន​ទាក់​ទង​មេ​ឃុំ​ក្បាល​កោះ ស្រុក​កៀន​ស្វាយ ខេត្ត​កណ្ដាល លោក ហោ វែង​ណៃ អំពី​ការ​ព្រួយ​បារម្ភ​របស់​គ្រួសារ​ទាំង​នោះ លោក​បាន​មាន​ប្រសាសន៍​ថា គ្មាន​ផែនការ​លុប​បឹង​នោះ​ទេ។

លោក​បន្ត​ថា ៖ «តាម​ពិត គាត់​ព័ទ្ធ​ទំនប់ ហើយ​នឹង​ជីក​យក​ទឹក​បម្រើ​ឲ្យ​រោង​ចក្រ។ ឃើញ​គេ​ព័ទ្ធ​ទំនប់​ស្មាន​តែ​គេ​ជីក។ គេ​ព័ទ្ធ​ទំនប់ ដើម្បី​ឲ្យ​ហើយ​ទៅ ហើយ​គេ​យក​អី ជីក​ឲ្យ​បាន​ជ្រៅ​ទៅ ដើម្បី​ឲ្យ​មាន​ទឹក​ផ្គត់ផ្គង់​ឲ្យ​រោង​ចក្រ»។

ជា​មួយ​គ្នា​នេះ លោក សៅ សេរីមុន្នី តំណាង​ក្រុម​ហ៊ុន​ឯកជន ដែល​ប្រជា​ពលរដ្ឋ​បាន​ស្គាល់​លោក​ថា ជា​រដ្ឋ​លេខាធិការ​របស់​ក្រសួង​ធនធាន​ទឹក និង​ឧតុនិយម បាន​មាន​ប្រសាសន៍​បំភ្លឺ​ថា កូន​ប្រុស​របស់​លោក មាន​រោង​ចក្រ​កាត់​ដេរ​ចំនួន ៣​រោង​ចក្រ នៅ​ទី​នោះ ដែល​មាន​កម្មករ​កាត់​ដេរ ចំនួន​ជិត​៤០០០​នាក់​ធ្វើ​ការ​ងារ។ ក្រុម​ហ៊ុន​នេះ គ្មាន​ផែនការ​លុប​បឹង​ទេ ប៉ុន្តែ​លើក​ទំនប់​លើ​បឹង​នោះ ដើម្បី​ស្តុក​ទឹក​នៅ​រដូវ​ប្រាំង សម្រាប់​កម្មករ​ប្រើ​ប្រាស់។

លោក​មាន​ប្រសាសន៍​បន្ត​ថា ៖ អា​រឿង​បឹង​ហ្នឹង ពូ​អត់​មាន​លុប​ទេ យល់​ទេ គឺ​ជីក​ថែម ហើយ​ទន្ទឹម​នឹង​ជីក​ថែម​ហ្នឹង គឺ​ពូ​ទប់​សព្វ​ថ្ងៃ​ហ្នឹង វា​អត់​គោក​ទេ ពី​ព្រោះ​ថ្ងៃ​ទី​១៥ ខែ​៥​ហ្នឹង ចាប់​ភ្លៀង​ហើយ។ ពូ​មិន​លុប​ឯណា។ ឥឡូវ​ធ្វើ​ក្រវាត់​ឲ្យ​ខ្ពស់ ដើម្បី​បាន​ទឹក​ច្រើន"។

កន្លង​មក នៅ​តាម​បណ្ដា​ខេត្ត​មួយ​ចំនួន ប្រជា​ពលរដ្ឋ​តែង​តែ​តវ៉ា​ថា បឹង​ធម្មជាតិ ត្រូវ​បាន​អាជ្ញាធរ​មូលដ្ឋាន​បាន​លក់​ឲ្យ​ក្រុមហ៊ុន​ឯកជន ដើម្បី​កាន់​កាប់​ជា​កម្មសិទ្ធិ​ឯកជន​ផ្ដាច់​មុខ ដែល​ញាំង​ឲ្យ​គ្រួសារ ប្រជា​ពលរដ្ឋ គ្មាន​ប្រភព​ទឹក​ប្រើ​ប្រាស់ សម្រាប់​ស្រែ​ចម្ការ និង​នេសាទ​ត្រី សម្រាប់​ជីវភាព​ប្រចាំ​ថ្ងៃ៕

KKF Welcomes Tim Sakhorn, Kim Moeun & Danh Ton to USA


Picture: KKF members welcome the former monks at the airport

Source: Khmer Kampuchea-Krom Federation

Members of the Khmers Kampuchea-Krom Federation and the general Khmer community in Philadelphia, USA are today celebrating the arrival of Khmer Krom latest heroes and human rights activists, Tim Sakhorn, Danh Ton and Kim Mouen.

On 8th February 2007, two hundred Khmer Krom Buddhist monks from Khleang (renamed Soc Trang) conducted a peaceful demonstration demanding religious freedom. Five monks, amongst them Danh Tol and Kim Mouen were forced to disrobed by Vietnamese authorities and sent to prison for 2 to 5 years.

Nabbed as the “Khmer Krom hero that rose from the delta”, Tim Sakhorn was a Khmer ‐Krom Buddhist monk and also an Abbot of North Phnom‐Denh temple in Phnom‐Denh village, Karivong District, Takeo province, Cambodia. On June 2007, he was defrocked and then deported to Vietnam by the Cambodian government for an alleged crime of undermining the relationship between Vietnam and Cambodia.

In 2009, Kim Moeun and Danh Ton fled Vietnam after being released from prison and made the perilous journey through Cambodia to Thailand seeking asylum. When Tim Sakhorn was allowed to visit Cambodia for his mother’s funeral in April, 2009, he too fled to Thailand on a motorbike. They were accepted by the Sweden government later the same year.

Today, they are celebrating their survival and sharing their stories to the world. The former monks are expected to attend the United Nations Permanent Forum on Indigenous Issues this coming week, travel to Washington DC and visit Khmer and Khmer Krom community around the USA to testify against the Vietnam government and tell the world the reality in Kampuchea-Krom.

“Srey Krup Leak” Cambodian woman auction: Asking price starting from $1 million


For auction: Miss Nuon Neang Lom-orng, asking price starting from $1 million

Special News for the new decade: Auction of “Srey Krup Leak” (the perfect woman) by name of Miss Nuon Neang Lom-orng, starting price from $1 million

28 April 2010
By Koh Ekareach
Koh Santepheap
Translated from Khmer by Boros Min Krup Leak (?) Heng Soy
Click here to read the article in Khmer

Heng Soy's naughty question: "At $1 million, how much is the cost per kilo?" ;)

KI-Media Note: Respected Readers! Lest there is a misunderstanding, we, at KI-Media, do not condone the action taken by Miss Nuon Neang Lom-orng's mother. This is degrading for women in general and Cambodian women in particular. We are presenting this story with the hope that this degrading action will be called off soon.
Miss Nuon Neang Lom-orng, a beautiful woman, coming from a well to do family, having the quality of perfect modern household wife with high knowledge, completing her study abroad, knowledgeable about art, music, classical songs, born in a highly honorable family. She received a lot a marriage proposals from all sources, and [this predicament] let Chumteav Nuon Voraneath, [her mother], have difficulties making the decision as to who she should hand over her daughter, therefore, she decided to auction off her daughter with the aim of using 50% of the auction proceed to donate to an orphanage and old people foundations in Cambodia.

Condition for the auction:

The bidder must be well off, have good standing name in the society, still single (not married yet or widowed), must take her as his single top wife.

The auction price starts at $1 million. For detailed information, contact phone number: 012 802 718, or email: sambath_art@yahoo.com

Khmer Krom moument



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