CAMBODIA OCCUPIED BY VIETNAM 1979-2008 AGAINST 10 UN RESOLUTIONS.
Look to this clown Ong Yen Tieng talking about corruption while his third wife 
was doing illegal logging?
 
WHO IS THIS MAN ONG YEN TIENG ?
A VIETNAMESE ,FLUENT IN CAMBODIAN LANGUAGE.
 
10 UN RESOLUTIONS call  ALL Viet invaders to go home. 
 
THE Modern study called MSRDA system and FORENSIC, as  tools enable us to find 
in the records the names of the Vietnamese invaders, in disguise, as 
"Cambodian" in the CPP regime such as:1. Chan Sarun, Ty Sokun, Yim Voeun Than, 
Chan Tong Ieu , at the Ministry of Agriculture2. Nger Chhai Lieng Head of 
CAMCONTROL Min commerce, he fixed 73 cpp seats at 2003 gen election3. Hok 
Lundy,Heng Peouv (nephew?) Hok Lundao,Li Rasy5.Khieu Kanharit, Khieu Thavika 
Minstry of Foreign Affairs,Svay Sitha6.Sok Kong , sok sipohana,7. Kao Kim Huon 
MinAffairs8 Hor Nam Hong, Nuon Saret,9.Cheam Yeap, Mme Men Sam An,11.Um Sarit 
sec gen Senate former PP judge ?12.Lim Samkol Ambassador to South Korea13. Mme 
Yin Serey Ambassador to Singapore etc.....These Vietnamese invaders have no 
rights to be here in Cambodia .Oct. 21, 1986 The UN General Assembly adopted a 
resolution A/RES/41/6,by vote of 116-21 with 13 abstentions, calling for a 
withdrawal ofVietnamese forces from Cambodia..President Reagan's address to the 
43d Session of the United NationsGeneral Assembly in New York, New York . 
September 26, 1988."Mr. Secretary-General, there are new hopes for Cambodia, a 
nationwhose freedom and independence we seek just as avidly as we sought 
thefreedom and independence of Afghanistan. We urge the rapid removal ofall 
Vietnamese troops ...."They must go home to Vietnam. 
 
Cambodia to Cambodian 
 
To All Vietnamese invaders it's time to go home .The 10 UN resolutions are 
calling Vietnam to cease her occupation of Cambodia and compell you to do so.
 
So Ong Yen Tieng you are a clown here.
Fight against corruption: few tactless civil servants condemned, the struggle 
is still arduous 



Phnom Penh (Cambodia). 9/12/2008: OM Yeng Tieng, Head of the Anti-Corruption 
Unit at the Council of Ministers, talking at the International Anti- Corruption 
Day celebrations. (Photo: John Vink/ Magnum)09-12-2008 By Duong Sokha Ka-set in 
EnglishClick here to read the article in FrenchClick here to read the article 
in Khmer
December 9th being the International Anti-Corruption Day, the Coalition of 
civil society organisations, leading a fight against corruption, repeated in 
front of an audience gathering more than 200 students, monks and organisation 
members in Wat Phnom, Phnom Penh, its appeal to the government to adopt as soon 
as possible the promised and awaited anti-corruption legislation.In the 
audience, Om Yintieng, choice spectator for the event. Head of the 
Anti-Corruption Unit at the Council of Ministers, a governmental organisation, 
Om Yintieng tried to reassure NGOs about the government's determination to 
enforce the law. But, he precised, this will only happen once the bill has been 
thoroughly examined, and once the new Penal Code is adopted. Om Yintieng then 
presented the assessment of the progress of his two year-old unit, because 
“some asked me why I had not publicised my report yet, when I did it at a press 
conference...”. He admitted first that his unit “has not done much since its 
creation” and then pointed out that their “white box”, a box meant for people 
to post denunciations of corruption cases, only received “60 letters” in the 
space of two years, out of which 80% were signed by their authors.“Thirty-six 
of these letters gave way to investigations, now over, 2 have been returned to 
sender [because off-topic], 3 have been transferred to the concerned 
authorities, and 19 are still being examined.”A “special operation”, in Om 
Yintieng's own words, was launched after the investigations of cases of 
corruption were carried out. It led to the dismissal of six province civil 
servants by under-decree of the government, and the lay-off of a 
“representative and his team of customs officers at the border”, he said, 
without adding more details on the case. He stressed that two or three months 
ago, the Cambodian justice condemned four “people” to serve 4 years in prison 
and two others to serve a six-year sentence in jail, on grounds of 
corruption.Om Yintieng, speaking to young students in the audience, explained 
that drafting laws was not as easy as pie and that the struggle against 
corruption appeared to be complicated, since “solid evidence before the 
tribunal” is required in order for the accused to be indicted. He also insisted 
on another problem which adds to the complicated aspect of the struggle: 
witnesses for the prosecution who retract, fearing retaliation on the part of 
the charged persons.
 

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