A woman weeps beside a portrait of two-year-old baby, Cho Yun-min, who was a victim of a plane crash in Cambodia, during a condolence ceremony at a hospital in Seoul June 30, 2007. The bodies of 13 South Koreans, killed when their chartered plane crashed in Cambodia earlier this week, arrived in South Korea. REUTERS/Han Jae-ho
Women cry beside a portrait of a two-year-old baby, Cho Yun-min, who was a victim of a plane crash in Cambodia, during a condolence ceremony at a hospital in Seoul June 30, 2007. The bodies of 13 South Koreans, killed when their chartered plane crashed in Cambodia earlier this week, arrived in South Korea. REUTERS/Han Jae-ho
1 comment:
First of all, my aching heart goes to those victims, friends and families. Please accept my sincere condolences and commiserations for your great loss. And I would like to share your loss as you’re struggling during these tumultuous times. May God be bless you and be with you during these difficult times.
As a Khmer-American airline pilot, after have personally observed and seen the suffering of the ill-fated flight, I'm perplexedly confounded with the fact that the Cambodian government arbitrarily and ignominiously made this egregious decision and continue to prevaricate the public about the actual cause of the crash, yet allow the PMT airlines continues to continue fly into a pyramid of corruption and ignoring the victims’ friends and families’ right.
Again, I summon the friends and families of 13 Korean victims to galvanize viable legal sources and bring the PMT airlines to justice for those victims who perished in the crash.
What happened to the NTSB (National Transportation Safety Board) committee? It is my belief that the (Cambodian) government acts as NTSB (and plays as experts and gambles with the lives of passengers).
Khmer-American pilot
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