Showing posts with label Hypocrit family. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Hypocrit family. Show all posts

Friday, April 02, 2010

Crocodile-teary Chumteav Doctor?

Chumteav Dr Bun Rany Hun Xen claimed during the ceremony to bestow an education honorary doctorate from Sylla U: “The mother’s tears, tears from the wife separated from her husband, tears of Cambodian women are my tears" (Photo: DAP news)
Now, the question is: "Where was the crocodile-teary first lady when these Cambodian women and children were crying their lung out when they were evicted by police force working for the regime of the Chumteav Dr's husband?"
Also: "Where were the crocodile-teary Chumteav Dr when these cops working her husband's regime beat up peaceful Khmer Krom monks?"

Cambodia’s first lady received an honorary doctorate from South Korean U.

01 April 2010
DAP news
Translated from Khmer by Heng Soy

Phnom Penh – In the afternoon of 01 April 2010, Chumteav Dr. Bun Rany Hun Xen, president of the Cambodian Red Cross and first lady of Cambodia, received an honorary doctorate in education from the famous Sylla University in South Korea. Present during the handing of the honorary doctorate to the Chumteav Dr was her husband, the Samdach Akkok Moha Sena Batt Dey Dek Cho Hun Xen, the prime minister of Cambodia, as well as numerous other government officials, army and police commanders. The event took place at the Chaktokmouk conference center.

The Sylla U., which decided to bestow the honorary doctorate to the Chumteav Dr, counts 17,000 students and 400 employees. The university occupies a plot of 30-hectare in Busan, South Korea.

Chung Hong Sub, dean of the Sylla U., said during the ceremony that the Chumteav Dr is a powerful leader in Cambodia who spent effort for the cause of safety for families in Cambodia, as well as all over the world. He added that, under the leadership of the Chumteav Dr, the Cambodian Red Cross has progressed so much and that it now counts 120,000 members –100,000 of whom are volunteer youths – and 24 branch offices all over the country. The dean added: “As the first lady of the kingdom, the Chumteav always think about the hardship of the RCAF, the members of whom dedicated their lives and time in the forest to preserve the territorial safety and integrity, and the Chumteav always visited, paid attention, supported and encouraged the RCAF force as well.”

Chumteav Dr Bun Rany Hun Xen said during the ceremony: “My words of thanks to the Sylla U. are words that truly came out of a front in which I fought in my life, ever since my youth. There is no hardship suffered by Cambodian women and Cambodian people that I did not know about.” She added: “The mother’s tears, tears from the wife separated from her husband, tears of Cambodian women are my tears. The soldiers’ hardship, the suffering of the victims are my own hardship and suffering.”

The Chumteav Dr went on to say that the people’s wish to get out of poverty, to have a decent life in a clean society that is just, indiscriminate, equal, and where human rights is respected, where the law is respected, where there is no vices – such as women, alcohol, gambling, etc… - they are also her personal wishes.

It should be noted that in the past, the Chumteav Dr received the freedom forum cup from leaders of the Asian Pacific region for her involvement in AIADS and HIV, and she also received the development cup for development for her tireless leadership to expand universal services and making it happen to all the people, in particular, to prevent the transmission of rice (?) to babies, and for the protection of people with HIV and AIDS [KI-Media note: Does anybody know anything what these award cups are?]

Wednesday, February 18, 2009

Bun Rany should teach social mores and good behavior to her household first?

A teenager reads a magazine at a news stand in Phnom Penh on Tuesday. The prime minister's wife, Bun Rany, has lashed out at magazines running ‘pornographic' photos of women in ‘sexy' clothes, saying it damages morality. (Photo by: TRACEY SHELTON)

First lady rails against rise of racy images and fashion

Wednesday, 18 February 2009
Written by Mom Kunthear
The Phnom Penh Post


Latest bout fits into Bun Rany's larger multi-front crusade against elements she says degrade country's social mores and popularise bad behaviour.

FIRST lady Bun Rany on Monday railed against the proliferation of racy images of women and blamed the Ministry of Information for failing to stamp them out.

"The Ministry of Information has to close magazines that have pornography in order to avoid letting them have a bad impact on readers," she said at the annual meeting of the National Committee on the Promotion of Morality, Women and Family Values in Phnom Penh.

"If we all cooperate, we can reduce problems in our country such as rape and banditry."

Bun Rany, who is head of the Red Cross in Cambodia, also said film stars and singers dressed in revealing clothing were encouraging youth to don inappropriate fashion.

In particular, the first lady blamed the Ministry of Information for not enforcing laws prohibiting the publication of pornographic images.

Information Minister Khieu Kanharith said his office has previously ordered certain publications to stop publishing "sexy" pictures, but one magazine had ignored the order.

He had shied away from a strong crackdown in the past, however, since it would unfairly stunt the magazine's business prospects, he said.

"We have not fined them because we understand they want to make good business, and using sexy pictures helps them do that," he said.

"But they are overdoing it, so now we have to take action."

According to Sy Define, a secretary of state at the Ministry of Women's Affairs, business interests should not come at the expense of moral standards.

"Some businesses only care about their profile and don't care about the social impact of what they do," she said. "So the Ministry of Information needs to control them and press them harder so they are afraid."

A determined fight

Bun Rany has long crusaded against images, lyrics, health programs, technology and individuals that, she says, compromise the social mores of the Kingdom.

In December of last year, she warned HIV/Aids campaigners that distributing free condoms may stimulate the nation's sexual appetite, claiming traditional moral practices, such as abstaining from sex until marriage, are more useful tools in the global fight against Aids.

She called for a ban in February 2008 on a song titled "Give Me a Portion of Your Heart", which referred to an adulterous relationship, on TV stations and urged Phnom Penh authorities to inspect nightclubs with reputations for violence and escort services.

In 2006, she spearheaded an effort among the wives of senior officials to ban video phones, citing concerns the video technology would be used to send pornography.

That year she also had a female presenter taken off the Cambodian Television Network for wearing a backless dress.