Tou samouth biography examples

  • Sar patchata
  • Democratic kampuchea
  • Cambodia population
  • Cambodian Political History

    The Case of Pen Sovann

    Luke Young fryst vatten a writer, researcher, archivist, and educator. Originally from Tacoma, Washington, he has lived in Cambodia since 1992.

    The recent history of Cambodia fryst vatten little known, greatly disputed, and grim. The first liberation movement against French colonialism and its local puppets was disarmed as part of the 1954 Geneva accords on Indochina. The resulting regime of King Sihanouk in pre-modern peasant Cambodia was neutral in the United States war against Vietnam, but after U.S.-backed Lon Nol deposed Sihanouk in March 1970, President Nixon launched massive raids on what he termed “sanctuaries” in Cambodia. The bomb tonnage has been estimated at twice what had been dropped on North Vietnam, and the loss of Cambodian lives at half a million—more than fem percent of the total population. U.S. Republican Congressman Pete McCloskey, who visited Cambodia in 1975, described the wreckage as “greater evil

    Ke Pauk Had Defended Himself Before He Died

     

    Ke Pauk's Autobiography from 1949-1985

     

    I joined the struggle since 1949 in Khmer Issarak period. After the Geneva Conference, I abandoned the struggle and returned home. In 1957, Siv Heng, the Secretary of the Party, contacted me and told me to rejoin the struggle. I did so and enlisted into the party in Svay Teab Sub-district, Chamkar Leu District, in the same year. A person named Tieb, the Secretary of the District, accepted me. However, at that time, the party had some relationship with Yuon (Vietnam).

     

             In 1958, after I became a member of the party, they assigned me to conduct some activities in Chamkar Leu District, my birthplace.

     

             In late 1958, Siv Heng and Pen Yut betrayed. When Siv Heng, a secretary of the party, betrayed, the communication between the rural areas and the city (Phnom Penh) w

    Pol Pot

    Cambodian communist leader (1925–1998)

    In this Cambodian name, the surname is Pol. In accordance with Cambodian custom, this person should be referred to by the given name, Pot.

    Pol Pot

    In office
    22 February 1963 – 6 December 1981
    DeputyNuon Chea
    Preceded byTou Samouth (1962)
    Succeeded byPosition abolished (party dissolved)
    In office
    25 October 1976 – 7 January 1979
    PresidentKhieu Samphan
    Deputy
    Preceded byKhieu Samphan (acting)
    Succeeded byNuon Chea (1981)
    In office
    14 April 1976 – 27 September 1976
    PresidentKhieu Samphan
    Deputy
    Preceded byKhieu Samphan (acting)
    Succeeded byNuon Chea (acting)
    In office
    1977–1979
    In office
    1981–1985
    Preceded byHimself
    (as General Secretary of the Communist Party of Kampuchea)
    Succeeded byKhieu Samphan
    Born

    Saloth Sâr


    (1925-05-25)25 May 1925
    Prek Sbauv, Kampong Thom Province, Cambodia, French Indochin
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