Tuesday, November 04, 2008

Rockfall in Phnom Troap creates panic among Thai soldiers

04 Nov 2008
Everyday.com.kh
Translated from Khmer by Socheata

At around 6:30 AM on Monday 03 November, a large white piece of rock fell off from the top of Phnom Troap mountain, creating a deafening noise like that of a bomb dropped from a plane. Frontline Thai soldiers stationed near the border at Phnom Troap immediately scrambled into their trenches, while others were waving their hands and shouting to Khmer soldiers not to shoot. It was later on that it was learnt that the explosion-like noise was no other than that of a rock falling from the mountain. A Cambodian soldier stationed in Phnom Troap said that it was sheer luck that the rock fall missed Cambodian soldiers stationed there and rolled towards Thai soldiers instead. If we were to believe in superstition, this must be another doing from the power of the spirit of ancient Cambodian troop commander Ta Dy.

5 comments:

Anonymous said...

Gods bless Cambodia and Cambodians and curse the Thais. Do more bad things and you Siamese will all go to hell.

Anonymous said...

Good work, Lok Ta Dy, please scare them some more! Bring along Lok Ta Khlean Moeung as well to send the Siamese troops packing and running like hell.

Anonymous said...

SOON THE ASTEROID WILL BE FALLING ON THE TUOL KRASAING COMPOUND AND THE NATIONAL ASSEMBLEY BUILDING.

Anonymous said...

Ta Dy will bring Ah Hok landy with him soon for dare to use the same name!

Anonymous said...

Car bomb hits officials in deep South:

By The Nation
Narathiwat
Published on November 5, 2008

Suspected insurgents, blending in with some 300 village headmen and officials, set off a car bomb near the venue of a monthly meeting in Sukhirin district yesterday.


Seventy people were hurt in an attack police said was meant to inflict maximum damage.

At least 12 of the victims were in critical condition. A woman had been reported as dying from the explosion, but authorities said she was still fighting for her life at Sukhirin Hospital.

The homemade explosive was packed inside a fire extinguisher weighing about 50 kilograms and placed inside a sedan parked alongside the personal vehicles of officials attending the meeting.

Minutes later, a second bomb tied to a motorbike was detonated near a teashop. A third blast was heard soon after, but it was an exploding tyre, not a bomb.

Vice governor Niphan Naraphitakkul said the first bomb was aimed at some 300 officials as they were walking to their vehicles.

The victims were taken to hospitals in Sungai Kolok and Sukhirin, with about 30 in serious condition, a hospital source said.

Sukhirin chief Worachet Promopart said violent incidents were rare in his district, compared to other areas in the Muslimmajority border area.

"We had received briefings from intelligence officials warning about attacks on government installations in Muang district but they said nothฌing about Sukirin," he said.

Human Rights Watch's Sunai Phasuk said the fact that insurgents employed powerful explosions to take out relatively lowprofile targets in a district that is quite remote suggests a titfortat between the local militant cell and security officials in the area.

"It was in response to something specific," he said. "If anything, this was a strong statement to the security apparatus."

Assoc Professor Srisompob Jitpiromya, director of the Deep South Watch centre at the Prince of Songkhla University Pattani, said that since January 2004, this wave of insurgency attacks had left 3,200 dead and 5,226 injured in the Malayspeaking southernmost provinces.

He said the government had become complacent over this past year as rebel attacks became more intermittent. However, the level of uncertainty and insecurity was still very high.

"The problem with the government is that it doesn't treat the insurgency in the deep South as a conflict but as an issue of law and order that can be handled by the military alone," he said.