Showing posts with label Suon Pheakdei. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Suon Pheakdei. Show all posts

Sunday, November 23, 2008

The DJ Ano Disappearance: Is It A Conspiracy Theory?

DJ Ano's arrival for the live TV interview to dispel the rumours.

Opinion by Khmerization
22nd November, 2008

“Without prejudice and without judgement, I have no intention of accusing her of purposefully fabricating the rumours nor have I any evidence to suggest that she was wilfully faking her own disappearance. But I can say this, her disappearance, with a high degree of certainty, has the hallmark of a conspiracy theory.”


The supposed disappearance of Miss Suon Pheakdei, called DJ Ano, has caused a stir throughout Cambodia and in within some circles of the Khmer communities overseas. The DJ Ano rumours, if anything at all, has taught us one thing: and that is, our gullibility and our failures to check facts have made us all, me included, look like fools.

Without prejudice and without judgement, I have no intention of accusing her of purposefully fabricating the rumours nor have I any evidence to suggest that she was wilfully faking her own disappearance. But I can say this, her disappearance, with a high degree of certainty, has the hallmark of a conspiracy theory. It has all the criteria of a fake disappearance. In fact, it is probably a publicity stunt and a self-glorification, staged for the purpose of a publicity consumption. In layman’s term, her disappearance, was probably a publicity coup, conspired, aided and abetted by her mother and her employer, TV3, in order to make her and TV3 more famous. And I will say this, if she was not personally involved in the faking of her disappearance, one question remained to be answered: why didn’t she, her relatives or employer come out to dispel the rumours so earlier?

In order to prove a conspiracy theory, let’s look at what happened during the period of her disappearance: At the height of the rumours, when there were news that DJ Ano was attacked with 83 razor blade cuts to her body and private parts and that she had died in a Vietnamese hospital, all her friends, mother, management of TV3, remained tight-lipped. The management of TV3 said that they didn’t know anything about her whereabouts and that she did not apply for permission of leave. Everyone seemed to be in hiding and too scared to say anything, when journalists and human right investigators went to her homes to enquire about her safety and whereabouts. All the two addresses where she used to live appeared to have been deserted, when in actual fact all her relatives and DJ Ano herself lived in Phnom Penh with her mother.

When the sky was about to be clear of the clouds, the people mentioned above sang a different tune. Shortly before DJ Ano was about to appear live on TV3 to dispel the rumours on the night of the 19th of November, they all have a lot of things to say about her. Mr. Khampuon Keomony, director of TV3, who had denied about her whereabouts before and who said that she was on absence without leave, has now issued a statement saying that DJ Ano was alive and well and that she had a “leave permission” to go on holiday in Malaysia, Macau and Hong Kong. Her mother, Mrs. Suon Pov, has boldly come out and bragged to Koh Santepheap reporter that “in the past few weeks” DJ Ano lived happily in their rented house with her in Phnom Penh.

On her part, during her interview with the Angkor Thom magazine, DJ Ano said that she had a “leave permission” to go on holiday overseas with a few friends. She told Angkor Thom that: “At the same time as when I disappeared from my TV programs, the rumours (of attacks on me) have emerged and I didn’t think that people were talking about my name. I thought it was someone else who has the same name as me.” OK, doesn’t she know her own name?

And by the look of it, all her employer’s as well as her mother’s statements and even her own alibi seemed very contradictory and at times, didn’t add up. She said that she felt very “hurt” when she heard all about the false news of her disappearance and the razor blade attacks on her. One would imagine that, if she was so “hurt” about the rumours, why didn’t she come out to dispel the rumours so early? So, was all of this fuss a hoax designed to get the attention?

Well, if she is seeking self-glorification and publicity, she has certainly got it. But whether her fans, who have been fooled for the past few weeks, will forgive her or not is another matter. There is an old saying that ‘one can forgive but one cannot forget’. I certainly will forgive her but I certainly will never forget her actions or inactions in fooling the public, including myself, if that was her real intention. If, in the future, hapless and unfortunate things happen to her as has been cruelly rumoured in the past few weeks, she probably won’t get the sympathy and attention to the amount that has been poured in in the past few weeks.

I am thankful that she has come out alive and unscathed and I wish her all the best for her future career. But I am furious that she has allowed the rumours to spread like a wildfire for so long and that it has taken her, her family and her employer, TV3, this long to come out to deny the rumours. This is outrageous and beyond comprehension.

Her action or inaction, in the rumours and disappearance and of not coming out to dispel the rumours at an early stage, is unethical and immoral. It is the betrayal of the trusts of her fans and probably have angered them all. They are owed an unreserved apology. And on my part, I shall offer my apology unreservedly and unequivocally to those who have been misled by my previous articles. And I shall offer my unconditional apology to the late Gen. Hok Lundy and his wife, whom my previous articles have unfairly smeared and vilified. I’m so sorry, mate!

Tuesday, November 11, 2008

Hok Lundy: The Death of a Murderer

Opinion by Khmerization
11th November, 2008

“Hok Lundy’s death is a gain for the humanity because his death means that Cambodian has rid one of the worst human right abusers Cambodia has ever had.”


In Buddhism, karma has been described as a fate or destiny which was determined by one’s own actions. In the Buddhist philosophy, karma is the quality of somebody's current and future lives as determined by that person's behaviour in this and in previous lives. In short, if you do good things, good things will happen to you. But if you do bad things, bad things will happen to you.

If one believes in the Buddhist philosophy of karma, then the recently death of Gen. Hok Lundy, Cambodia’s notorious police commissioner, has been attributed to his own bad karmic practices. And judging from the reactions of my fellow bloggers to the death of Gen. Hok Lundy, I wonder if his death has anything to do with his karma.

Gen. Hok Lundy, during his 14 years tenure as Cambodia’s police commissioner, has committed numerous gross human right violations. His ruthless approaches to his critics and opponents have seen many of them brutally killed and tortured.

He has ordered or personally carried out many politically-motivated and extra-judicial killings against his opponents. As recently as last July, he has been reportedly named by the respected South China Morning Post as having some, either directly or indirectly, involvements with the murders of journalist Khim Sambo and his son because Khim Sambo has written an article critical of his gambling addiction at Bavet Casino, the place where his helicopter crashed that killed him last Sunday. In 1997, a few days after the July’s coup d’etat, Gen. Ho Sok, a secretary of state of the Ministry of Interior from the Funcinpec Party, who was supposedly Hok Lundy’s boss, was personally executed by Hok Lundy himself inside the Ministry of Interior’s building.

Gen. Hok Lundy has been linked to many other high profile murders as well. The murder of Piseth Pilika, an actress who had a secret love affairs with Prime Minister Hun Sen and the attempted murder on Touch Sounnik, a famous singer who was rumoured to be romantically linked with a high-ranking government official, were somewhat linked to Gen. Hok Lundy. Other politically-motivated murders include the grenade attacks in front of the National Assembly on 30th March, 1997 in which 19 peaceful protesters were killed and 190 others were wounded, the murders in 2003 of Chea Vichea, a union leader and the murder in 2003 of Om Radsady, a prominent politician, are all linked to Gen. Hok Lundy.

But the recent attempted murder on Miss Suon Pheadkei, called DJ Ano, a TV presenter and an actress who was rumoured to have had a love affair with Gen. Hok Lundy, should shock everyone. Miss Suon Pheakdei had disappeared a few weeks ago and according to witnesses, she was last seen bundled into a car by 3-4 men. She was later found with head shaved and her body, breast and private parts riddled with 80 razor blade cuts. She was treated in a Vietnamese hospital and is not expected to live.

The person who ordered the kidnapping and mutilations of Miss Suon Pheakdei’s body is rumoured to be Gen. Hok Lundy’s wife. After the news of Gen. Hok Lundy’s death, I received an email from a respected lawyer and in reactions to Lundy’s death he said: “Justice may be slow in catching up on this criminal, but karma isn't. We hope his wife, who is holding DJ Anoy’s hostage in a Vietnamese hospital, will face justice.”

When asked to confirm how credible his information is, he said: “I can't confirm; the info was relayed to me by a friend who works in the film/karaoke industry in phnompnh.”

The death of someone should not be celebrated. Instead, it should be mourned. But, when it comes to the death of Gen. Hok Lundy, one of the ruthless killers of Cambodia, the news of his death, if not celebrated, should be enthusiastically welcomed. Personally, his death means the passing of one of Cambodia’s worst human right abusers. But in respect to the spirit of the death, I offer my sympathy to the bereaved family, his wife being the exception considering what she had done to Miss Suon Pheakdei.

And from the point of view of the human right advocates, Hok Lundy’s death is a gain for the humanity because his death means that Cambodia has rid one of the worst human right abusers Cambodia has ever had.

After reading different reports and claims from different sources, one wonders if Gen. Hok Lundy’s death was accidental or it was an assassination. Some people claimed that some witnesses told them that there is a group of people who shot down the helicopter with a rocket launcher before it landed at a helipad at Bavet town. Other witnesses claimed that they saw a fire at the tail of the helicopter before it went down. Other said that the tail of the helicopter appeared to have been hit by something.

So, was the helicopter crash an accident or was it hit by a rocket launcher? If it was hit by a rocket launcher, could it be the work of someone who wanted to get rid of Hok Lundy? Here is what I have received in my email from the same respected lawyer in which he said: “hun Sen also happy to see him dead as he is a thorn in HS's good eye. Lundi also held HS (Hun Sen) hostage for a lot of awful things.”

In summing up this editorial, Hok Lundy’s death is a loss, not a loss to the humanity but a loss of one of Cambodia’s murderous top cop. His passing should be a cause for celebration. But one should be worried about his replacement, Lt-Gen. Neth Savoeun. Gen. Neth Savoeun, a nephew-in-law of Prime Minister Hun Sen, is no angel either. He has a reputation of being a ruthless and another serious human right abuser, if not on par with Gen. Hok Lundy, his notoriety is no better either. This is another case of one murderer being replaced by another murderer.//

Saturday, November 08, 2008

Rumor mills: Little hope for DJ Ano to survive from the razor blades attack

07 Nov 2008
Rasmei Kampuchea
Translated from Khmer by Heng Soy

Even though sources from the Cambodian police and from the court claimed that there is no information and no complaint about the razor blade torture perpetrated on TV presenter DJ Ano, several artists confirmed that “violence on DJ Ano did occur and she is currently in serious condition.”

Information about the razor blade attack on the entire body of DJ Ano was reported by the Sophorn and Procheaprey (Popular) magazines.

DJ Ano, whose birth name is Suon Pheakdei, is a well known presenter of TV3 station in Phnom Penh. She is not a very young star anymore, as she is now 27-year-old.

In its 16th edition published for the period of 02-15 November 2008, the Sophorn magazine reported that the wife of a high ranking official kidnapped her, had her head shaved and her face cut with razor blades because this wife was angry that DJ Ano had an affair with her husband. The magazine claimed that DJ Ano was sent to Vietnam and that there is little hope that she will survive the attack. The report did not provide details about where and when the almost fatal assault took place.

Chuon Narin, chief of the serious crimes in Phnom Penh, told Rasmei Kampuchea in the afternoon of 06 November that: “I heard this information also. My force went to do research on it, but there is no sure source that could confirm it up to now, and there is no complaint brought up about this case either.”

General Touch Naroth, Phnom Penh police commissioner, made the same statement also, and the Phnom Penh court claimed that there was no complaint about DJ Ano’s case.

Nevertheless, some artists claimed that DJ Ano who was attacked by razor blades has only about 20% chance of survival because she lost too much blood from the attack. However, these sources asked to remain anonymous.

Special artists from TV3 channel claimed that the attack on DJ Ano was perpetrated by the wife of high ranking official who ordered 3-4 of her bodyguards to kidnap DJ Ano and threw her in a car. At first, the bodyguards used razor blades to shave DJ Ano hair, they then proceeded to cut her face with the blades also. Later on, they cut her entire body from top to bottom with razor blades and even her genital part was not spared. The source added that DJ Ano was very seriously injured and her family rushed her out of the country for medical care.

All the sources consulted by Rasmei Kampuchea claimed that the razor attack on DJ Ano is 100% true, and some even gave the name of the country where DJ Ano was sent to for medical care. According to one group of sources, she would be sent to Malaysia, while a second group claimed that she was sent to Vietnam instead. It appears that information from the second group is more accurate because Rasmei Kampuchea received the news on 06 November that she was sent to Vietnam.

The source consulted by Rasmei Kampuchea indicated that, as of now, there is only 20% chance that DJ Ano will survive because she lost too much blood during the attack.

DJ Ano was born as Suon Pheakei, she used to have a love relationship with a Filipino man and a Thai man. After her breakup from her Filipino boyfriend, she was asked for marriage by a Cambodian expat living in the US. Following her breakup with her fiancé from the US, DJ Ano received a warning from a woman telling her to be careful because she may be splashed with acid. The Sophorn magazine claimed that prior to her liaison with the high ranking government official, she was linked to the owner of massage parlor.

DJ Ano did not have any relatives in Phnom Penh, and her house is Phnom Penh is unknown. But, a number of sources indicated that she had an adopted elder sister, and that this sister would be an important witness in this attack case.

Up to now, TV3 does not the whereabout of DJ Ano. Kong Socheat from TV3 claimed that DJ Ano did not come to the station for the past 2-3 weeks.

Liaison with a married man is believed to be the source of this violent attack case.