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         Cambodian Government:     more books (44)
  1. Khmers Stand Up: A History of the Cambodian Government, 1970-1975 (Monash Papers on Southeast Asia) by Justin J. Corfield, 1994-01
  2. The Stones Cry Out: A Cambodian Childhood, 1975-1980 by Molyda Szymusiak, 1986-06
  3. A visit with our government by Mieko Shimizu Han, 1983
  4. Cambodian crisis: Problems of a settlement and policy dilemmas for the United States (CRS issue brief) by Robert G Sutter, 1991
  5. The Cambodian peace agreement: Issues for U.S. policy (CRS issue brief) by Robert G Sutter, 1992
  6. Cambodian conflict: The final phase? (Conflict studies) by Michael Leifer, 1989
  7. Genocide by Proxy: Cambodian Pawn on a Superpower Chessboard by Michael Haas, 1991-12-30
  8. The Khmer Rouge and the Cambodian Genocide (Genocide in Modern Times) by Sean Bergin, 2008-09
  9. The Tragedy of Cambodian History: Politics, War, and Revolution since 1945 by Professor David P. Chandler, 1993-09-10
  10. When Elephants Fight: A Cambodian Family's Survival in the Face of Murderous Intent by Vannary Imam, 2001-03
  11. Escape from the Killing Fields: One Girl Who Survived the Cambodian Holocaust by Nancy Moyer, 1991-07
  12. Cambodian Culture Since 1975: Homeland and Exile (Asia East By South Series)
  13. Bringing the Khmer Rouge to Justice: Prosecuting Mass Violence Before the Cambodian Courts (Criminology Studies)
  14. Indonesia's Role in the Resolution of the Cambodian Problem by Em Nagendraprasad, M. Nagendra Prasad, 2001-12

81. Press Release 9f
Cambodia Protect Montagnard Refugees Fleeing Vietnam. (New York, September 25, 2002) Human Rights Watch today criticized the cambodian government for sealing
http://www.montagnard-foundation.org/MRelease-02-2509.htm
Revised 25-09-2002. Cambodia: Protect Montagnard Refugees Fleeing Vietnam
(New York, September 25, 2002) - Human Rights Watch today criticized the Cambodian government for sealing its borders and deporting hundreds of indigenous Montagnard refugees back to Vietnam, despite a fresh crackdown against Montagnards and ongoing mistreatment of returnees by Vietnamese authorities. The latest round of deportations began in April of this year.
Human Rights Watch called on the Cambodian government to continue granting first asylum to new arrivals from the Central Highlands of Vietnam and to cease the harassment and arrest of Cambodian villagers suspected of helping Montagnard refugees.
“Cambodia is in flagrant breach of its international obligations not to deport refugees to a place where they may face serious persecution,” said Mike Jendrzejczyk, Washington director of the Asia Division of Human Rights Watch. “The international community should insist that the Cambodian government provide asylum to any new refugees from Vietnam.”
Since the crumbling of a tripartite refugee repatriation agreement between the United Nations, Cambodia and Vietnam in April 2002, Cambodian authorities have deported more than 400 Montagnard asylum seekers back to Vietnam. Armed Cambodian militia have been dispatched to Cambodian villages bordering Vietnam’s Central Highlands, where they have ordered Cambodian villagers not to help Montagnard refugees from Vietnam or face arrest.

82. Cambodian Deportees Land Back On Their Feet
But the organization is particularly concerned that the cambodian government doesnot seem to have the resources or expertise to provide basic reintegration
http://seattlepi.nwsource.com/local/78071_deportees11.shtml
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Cambodian deportees land back on their feet Thursday, July 11, 2002 By CHRIS McGANN
SEATTLE POST-INTELLIGENCER REPORTER Home-cooked meals and the open arms of relatives not indefinite imprisonment and mob violence greeted six felons, former refugees in the United States who were deported back to Cambodia last month under a post-Sept. 11 agreement signed by the two counties in March, their families here say. Those first deportations raised concerns among Cambodian communities and human-rights advocates nationwide last month, in large part because of Cambodia's deplorable human rights record and reported statements by Prime Minister Hun Sen indicating that the deportees would be jailed on arrival. For Mao Chan, 27, who lived in Seattle and was convicted of armed robbery, the part of the trip after deportation that he described as the most unnerving the uncertainty is over.

83. National Geographic Magazine: August 2000 @ Nationalgeographic.com
Direct responsibility for preservation of antiquities rests with the cambodian government,but there must first be a clear indication—from its highest levels
http://www.nationalgeographic.com/ngm/0008/forum/essay.html
SITE INDEX
By Martin Lerner Helping impoverished countries maintain and preserve their cultural patrimony is decidedly complex and not susceptible to easy answers. Solutions, whether they have any foundation of common sense or practicality, have traditionally been advanced by individual groups and governmental agencies following their own often narrow interests and agendas. The ongoing problem of antiquities leaving Cambodia is of major concern, and protective measures beyond foreign archaeologists lobbying for blanket restrictions or the ill-considered recent U.S. embargo on Cambodian stones need to be implemented to correct, or at least significantly improve, this troublesome situation. Soldiers and police forces in the countryside receive their pitiful salaries on such an erratic basis that they, too, must somehow supplement their tenuous existence and are likely to try to sell anything they accidentally come across. Assuming that the international trade in antiquities cannot be stopped by blanket regulations prohibiting their exportation, and given that it is unlikely that governments of poor nations can smother the incentive to send antiquities out of the country clandestinely, a more enlightened approach is necessary. Since art still remains the single best ambassador for any nation, is it in the national interest to prohibit the exportation of all works of art? The real goal should be to establish some degree of control over what leaves the country, and this is not beyond the capabilities of the Cambodian government. The government can demonstrate its will to protect its cultural patrimony by allocating adequate funding to establish a large trained force to guard architectural monuments. Currently, the few guards assigned to protect the temples at Angkor are paid so little they seem more interested in selling souvenirs, like their badges, to tourists.

84. Human Rights Watch: Cambodia
Rights Watch Reports by Country Cambodia Cambodia's Commune Elections Setting TheStage For The 2003 National Elections he cambodian government should take
http://docsmgmt.hrw.org/cambodia-pubs.php

Africa
Americas Asia Europe/Central Asia ...
Human Rights Watch Reports by Country

Cambodia
Cambodia's Commune Elections:

Setting The Stage For The 2003 National Elections

May 2002
Download PDF

Purchase online

ISBN: C1404
Cambodia Impunity in Cambodia: How Human Rights Offenders Escape Justice
A Report by Adhoc, Licadho, and Human Rights Watch In this report, three human rights organizations urged the Royal Cambodian Government to end impunity for perpetrators of human rights violations in Cambodia. They documented the failure of the government at all levels to prosecute civilian and military authorities for killing and torture; and found that a major cause of the problem was a lack of political will by the government to prosecute known human rights abusers. Adding to the problem is the lack of neutrality and independence of the judicial and law enforcement systems, as well as a low level of professionalism in these bodies. The report also identifies as a problem the excessive use of lethal force and misuse of weapons by law enforcement officials. June 1999 Purchase online ISBN: D1103 Toxic Justice: Human Rights, Justice, and Toxic Waste in Cambodia

85. Cambodian National Teachers Strike Met With Government-Sponsored
The strike is a peaceful demonstration aimed at urging the cambodian governmentto increase funding for education and establish fair salaries for teachers.
http://zena.secureforum.com/interactive/content/display_item.cfm?itemID=1348

86. Online Edition Of Daily News - Features
However, it is important to note that the cambodian government has lostno time in normalizing relations with Thailand. Besides, the
http://origin.dailynews.lk/2003/02/04/fea02.html
Tuesday, 4 February 2003 The widest coverage in Sri Lanka. Features News
Business

Features

Editorial
... Archives
Asia Watch : Troubling posers from Cambodia's anti-Thai riots
Cambodians carry home looted goods from the stormed Thai-owned Royal Phnom Penh Hotel in Cambodia, 31 January 2003. The Cambodian government said Thursday that it had arrested 150 “extremists” and announced it would pay compensation for violent anti-Thai riots as it sought to repair relations with a furious Bangkok. One person was killed and at least seven injured when Cambodian protesters stormed the Thai embassy and looted Thai-owned hotels and businesses in Phnom Penh after they were angered by alleged comments by popular Thai actress Suvanant Kongying that the country’s famous Angkor Wat temple complex belonged to neighbouring Thailand. AFP by Lynn Ockersz The explosive emergence of anti-Thai riots in Cambodia, which could have been considered a South East Asian state on the mend, following decades of civil war and strife, should compel political and economic agenda-setters of the Third World to stop in their tracks and ponder over their future courses of action. Comprehensive details are yet to come in on the general backdrop to and the more immediate causes of the riots, but there is, obviously, no denying the fact that ethnic tensions have been on the rise in Cambodia which had at one time chosen an entirely socialist path to socio-economic advancement. The riots have, however, followed a familiar broad pattern. Some Thai business houses and establishments, besides the Thai embassy in Phnom Penh, have apparently been attacked by the rabble. This points to rising commercial rivalry among some of Cambodia's ethnic groups, with those seen as dominating the business world, evoking fierce hostility among their competitors. The process of demonising "the other", who is usually a business competitor, an all too familiar pattern in some of Asia's multi-ethnic states ravaged by racial tensions, seems to be taking hold in Cambodia too.

87. Hr-headlines@hrea.org - Cambodia: Government Should Prosecute Perpetrators Of Po
From ownerhr-headlines@hrea.org; Date Wed, 01 May 2002 090309 -0700. (NewYork, May 1, 2002) - The cambodian government should take immediate steps to
http://www.hrea.org/lists/hr-headlines/markup/msg00388.html
Cambodia: Government should prosecute perpetrators of political violence
Reply to this message Start a new topic Date Index ... HREA Home Page

88. :::: TEMBO.ORG ::::
One million acres of pristine wilderness, inhabited by tigers, elephants and bears,has been officially protected by the cambodian government, with financial
http://www.tembo.org/index.php?page=newsDisplay&idNews=93

89. Human Rights Watch Denounces Cambodia's Deportation Of Montagnard
New York (May 20, 2001) Human Rights Watch today denounced the cambodian government'sforced expulsions of at least eighty-nine indigenous minority asylum
http://www.fva.org/200105/story07.htm
Cambodia: Deportation of Montagnard Refugees to Vietnam
Human Rights Watch Denounces Cambodia's Deportation
of Montagnard Refugees to Vietnam
New York (May 20, 2001) - Human Rights Watch today denounced the Cambodian government's forced expulsions of at least eighty-nine indigenous minority asylum seekers from the Central Highlands of Vietnam, and called for immediate measures to protect other refugees who may be at risk. Seventy people have been expelled in the last ten days alone. "These forced returns violate the cardinal rule of international refugee law - the principle of non-refoulement: Governments must not send people fleeing persecution back to countries where their lives and liberty could be at risk," said Rachael Reilly, Refugee Policy Director for Human Rights Watch. "No one knows where the people who have been deported now are, whether they are in custody, or how they are being treated." Human Rights Watch called on the Cambodian government to launch an immediate investigation into the forced deportations, which were carried out by provincial authorities and which represented a breach in commitments made by Cambodia’s Prime Minister, Deputy Prime Minister, and the Director General of the National Police. All three had declared that Vietnamese asylum seekers fleeing to Cambodia would not be deported. At a minimum, the deportations show that policies publicly announced in Phnom Penh are not being implemented in the provinces. Human Rights Watch also urged the Vietnamese government to immediately clarify the whereabouts and conditions of the eighty-nine people who were forcibly returned from Cambodia, and said they should be given immediate access to diplomatic representatives, international organizations, and the U.N. High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR). It said there are real fears for their safety because the Vietnamese Criminal Code provides for harsh punishment for non-violent political activity deemed to be "anti-government."

90. Cambodia-Thailand Ties On The Mend
Thaksin said Hor Namhong, who is here on a 24hour visit, had informed him that thecambodian government would foot the repair bill for the US$7.5mil (RM28.5mil
http://thestar.com.my/news/story.asp?file=/2003/2/5/asia/camrepair

91. Royal Cambodian Embassy In Washington, D.C.
The official website of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs' Royal cambodian Embassy in Washington, DC.Category Regional Asia Cambodia government......The Consulate General of the Kingdom of Cambodia. The government of the Kingdomof Cambodia. Cambodia's Tourism service by Royal cambodian Embassy.
http://www.embassy.org/cambodia/

Cambodia National Anthem

The Cuisine of Cambodia on Sale

The Royal Cambodian Embassy in Washington, D.C.
4530 16th Street NW, Washington D.C. 20011.
Telephone: or FAX:
cambodia@embassy.org
Site Map

92. CNN - Deposed Cambodian Asks U.N. To Shun 'illegal' Government - July 10, 1997
CNN.com
http://www.cnn.com/WORLD/9707/10/cambodia.pm/
Deposed Cambodian asks U.N. to shun 'illegal' government
July 10, 1997
Web posted at: 8:25 p.m. EDT (0025 GMT)
In this story:
UNITED NATIONS (CNN) Prince Norodom Ranariddh, ousted as first prime minister of Cambodia on Sunday, appealed to the international community not to recognize what he calls the "illegal" government in Cambodia. "I was elected by the people of Cambodia in elections that were supervised and organized by the United Nations," Ranariddh said at a news conference Thursday afternoon. "Sedach Hun Sen (Cambodia's second prime minister) says I was 'dismissed,' but not through legal procedures, but through the use of tanks and guns," Ranariddh said. "It is a coup d'etat." Ranariddh was ousted by Hun Sen after two days of fighting in Phnom Penh. Ranariddh said the U.N. "and all peace-loving nations must not recognize a regime coming from such a coup." He also asked that the U.N. use economic sanctions to pressure Hun Sen into ending the coup and holding elections. "The Security Council must do something," he said.

93. Welcome To The National Assembly Of The Kingdom Of Cambodia
Limon S1; fontstyle normal; font-weight normal; src url( http// www. cambodian- parliament. org/ font/ limons0.
http://www.cambodian-parliament.org/
The National Assembly
Samdech Sothearos Blvd,
Phnom Penh, Kingdom of Cambodia Phone: (855) 23-214-136
Fax: (855) 23-217-769
E-mail: kimhenglong@cambodian-parliament.org
Your visitor number

94. Governments On The WWW: Cambodia
Sam Rainsy Party (SRP); Union of cambodian Democrats (UCD); Khmer Neutral Party;Parti de l'Unité Khmère (PUK) Khmer Unity Party. Additional Information
http://www.gksoft.com/govt/en/kh.html
Governments on the WWW: Cambodia
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Cambodia [ Kampuchea ]
Official language: Khmer
National Institutions:
Municipal Institutions:
Representations in Foreign Countries:
Political Parties:
Additional Information:
General Information:
Political Information:

95. Talking And Starving
When hundreds of thousands of cambodian farmers are facing hunger, the cambodiangovernment is organising what I consider a useless summit meeting in Phnom
http://www.rnw.nl/hotspots/html/cam021105.html
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Tuesday, 05 November, 2002 Talking and starving by our Internet desk, 5 November 2002 Opposition leader Sam Rainsy speaks to hungry farmers in Phnom Penh Delegates at the summit of South East Asian nations in Phnom Penh are busy striking deals that will shape the future of their region. A free-trade pact signed Monday between China and the 10-member Association of Southeast Asian Nations is set to come into affect within a decade, and will affect 1.7 billion people. But while Asian leaders discuss future prosperity in the Cambodian capital, protesters claim that many Cambodians are going hungry. One of the fiercest critics of the summit is opposition leader Sam Rainsy, who's staging a hunger strike. In this interview with Radio Netherlands, he explains why he sees the summit as a waste of money: click to hear Claire Cavanagh interviewing Sam Rainsy 3´14 "When hundreds of thousands of Cambodian farmers are facing hunger, the Cambodian government is organising what I consider a useless summit meeting in Phnom Penh." RN: "And the authorities are quite unhappy with the protests you've been holding?"

96. Cambodia.gov.kh
BROWSER ERROR !! Please use Microsoft Internet Explorer to access!
http://www.ocm.gov.kh/

97. The Council Of Ministers
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98. Soul Survivors | Stories Of Women And Children In Cambodia
1982, The three rebel groups opposed to the new Vietnamesebacked Cambodiangovernment form a resistance coalition. By the late 1980s
http://www.efn.org/~bhavia/canvas-history-01.htm
Chronology of Cambodian History 802 AD Kingdom of Angkor is established.
Angkor Empire covers most of southeast Asia and is known for its beautiful temples and sculpture.
Angkor declines due to warfare and loses territory to the Thais and the Vietnamese. Cambodian King Norodom reluctantly signs a treaty of protectorate with the French, which lasts until 1953. The movement for independence from foreign imperialism in Southeast Asia begins. Ho Chi Minh founds the Indochinese Communist Party. The French establish nineteen-year-old Prince Norodom Sihanouk as king. The Japanese occupy Cambodia during World War II. The war for independence in Vietnam begins as Ho Chi Minh's Viet Minh army fights the French. Saloth Sar (Pol Pot) goes to study in France. Sihanouk wins Cambodia's independence from France. Saloth Sar (Pol Pot) becomes leader of Cambodia's Communist Party. US troops arrive in Vietnam. Sihanouk ends diplomatic relations with the United States. Cambodia loses tax revenues on rice that is smuggled into Vietnam during the war. Sihanouk increases the tax on remaining rice supplies, which spurs a peasant uprising and the armed communist revolution. Communists seek to eliminate widespread rural poverty and the corrupt ruling elite. President Nixon begins an illegal secret bombing of neutral Cambodia that continues until August 1973 when US Congress stops the Pentagon.

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