THE FACTS : 

"Prime Minister Pham Van Dong called on me and, in the presence of Premier Chou 
En-lai, swore in the name of the Democratic Republic of Vietnam that the latter 
would always respect the land frontiers as well as all islands belonging to the 
"Kingdom of Cambodia" March 1970 by Sihanouk . Wilfred Burchett book "The China 
Cambodia Vietnam triangle " P-176-177

CAMBODIA REMAINS OCCUPIED BY VIETNAM IN VIOLATION OF 10 UN RESOLUTIONS.

UN Passes Strong Resolution on Cambodia Human Rights Abuses 
Feb. 27, 1982 : UN Commission on Human Rights meeting in Geneva adopted a 
resolution condemning Vietnam’s occupation of Cambodia as a violation of 
Cambodian human rights. The vote was 28 in favor, 8 against, and 5 abstentions.


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 of Vietnamese forces 
from Cambodia. 
IT'S IMPERATIVE FOR VIETNAM TO COMPLY WITH THIS UN RESOLUTION


 


Date: Sat, 5 Sep 2009 06:50:54 -0700
Subject: School of Social Welfare Alumni Event in Sacramento -- Mu Sochua (MSW 
'81) to speak at the World Affairs Council in Sacramento on Tuesday September 
15th
From: [email protected]
To: [email protected]





















From: Morry Hermón from the School of Social Welfare <[email protected]>












Dear School of Social Welfare alumni, faculty, staff and friends. On September 
14th, esteemed alumna Mu Sochua will be giving the 2009 Friedlander Lecture at 
4pm in Boalt Hall. For those of you who live or work in Sacramento and can’t 
make it to the Berkeley campus on a Monday afternoon, Mu Sochua will also be 
giving a public talk at the World Affairs Council Sacramento Chapter on 
Tuesday, September 15th at 12pm, located in the downtown area at the University 
of California Sacramento Center. The event is free to SSW alumni. 
Please join us there or pass this link along to your Sacramento colleagues who 
might be interesting in attending: 
http://www.itsyourworld.org/assnfe/ev.asp?ID=2583




Mu Sochua, Member of Cambodian Parliament and Women’s Human Rights Advocate

Tuesday, September 15th 
12pm- 1pm
University of California Sacramento Center
Suite Lower Level 3
Sacramento, California 95814

Title: 
Cambodian Democracy and Human Rights under Siege: One Woman's Fight
Description: 
The UC Berkeley School of Social Welfare proudly presents alumna Mu Sochua (MSW 
’81) — opposition leader, social worker, and women's rights advocate — for the 
2009 Walter Friedlander Memorial Lecture on Monday September 14th, at 4pm. 
Sochua will discuss her years battling sex trafficking, domestic violence 
against women, government corruption and land grabs in Cambodia, and the court 
case that has now attracted the attention of the UN High Commission on Human 
Rights. 
One of the most outspoken members of the Cambodian parliament, Mu Sochua has 
taken on the Prime Minister in a test of her country’s legal system. In a s 
eries of events that began last year, over the summer Mu Sochua had her 
parliamentary immunity stripped and faced trial without legal representation 
(her lawyer was threatened by Prime Minister Hun Sen to drop his client or be 
disbarred).
Hers is one of at least six cases in which the Cambodian government is 
currently using the courts to silence opposition leaders, journalists and human 
rights groups, reports the Asian Human Rights Commission. According to UC 
Berkeley Law School faculty member Stephen Golub, “Sochua's battle is important 
in and of itself, but also resonates far beyond Cambodia. It has important 
implications for US foreign policy and for development aid provided by our 
country and many others.
To read more about this issue, you can read two recent articles in the 
Washington Post and the New York Times.
Mu Sochua originally served as a member of Prime Minister Hun Sen's cabinet but 
left the position after witnessing government corruption; she is now a senior 
member of the Sam Rainsy Party. A former minister of women's affairs, in 2005 
she was nominated for the Nobel Peace Prize for her work with women trapped in 
the Cambodian and Thai sex trade. In 2007, UC Berkeley Chancellor Robert 
Birgeneau presented Sochua with the prestigious Elise and Walter A. Haas 
International Award for her distinguished record of service to her people and 
country.
For more information, please contact Morry Hermón, Director of Development, UC 
Berkeley School of Social Welfare at (510) 643-5433, or e-mail  
[email protected]

 

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