Buddhist monks walk past a former prison that is being converted into a temple at Sre Chea Khang Choeung commune in Kamport province, 146 km southwest of Phnom Penh, February 1, 2007. REUTERS/Chor Sokunthea
Former Khmer Rouge men carry a statue at a former prison that has been converted into a temple at Sre Chea Khang Choeung commune in Kamport province, 146 km southwest of Phnom Penh, February 1, 2007. Kamport province, 146 km southwest of Phnom Penh, February 1, 2007. REUTERS/Chor Sokunthea
People pay their respects by the graves of British, Australian and French victims of the Khmer Rouge, at the Sre Chea Khang Choeung commune in Kamport province, 146 km southwest of Phnom Penh, February 1, 2007. More than 100 former Khmer Rouge families and Buddhist monks gathered at the ceremony on Thursday to pay their respects to 10 Cambodians and Westerners who were killed in a Khmer Rouge train ambush in 1994. REUTERS/Chor Sokunthea
Cambodian Buddhist monks bless the graves of British, Australian and French victims of a Khmer Rouge train ambush at the Sre Chea Khang Choeung commune in Kamport province, 146 km southwest of Phnom Penh, February 1, 2007. More than 100 former Khmer Rouge families and Buddhist monks gathered at the ceremony on Thursday to pay their respects to 10 Cambodians and Westerners who were killed in a Khmer Rouge train ambush in 1994. REUTERS/Chor Sokunthea
Julia Shand (L), vice consul at the British embassy in Cambodia, and Naomi Viccars, third secretary at the Australian embassy in Cambodia, pray at Sre Chea Khang Choeung commune in Kamport province, 146 km southwest of Phnom Penh, February 1, 2007. More than 100 former Khmer Rouge families and Buddhist monks gathered at the ceremony on Thursday to pay their respects to 10 Cambodians and Westerners, including a British, French and Australian, who were killed in the train ambush 13 years ago. REUTERS/Chor Sokunthea
Former Khmer Rouge men carry a statue at a former prison that has been converted into a temple at Sre Chea Khang Choeung commune in Kamport province, 146 km southwest of Phnom Penh, February 1, 2007. Kamport province, 146 km southwest of Phnom Penh, February 1, 2007. REUTERS/Chor Sokunthea
People pay their respects by the graves of British, Australian and French victims of the Khmer Rouge, at the Sre Chea Khang Choeung commune in Kamport province, 146 km southwest of Phnom Penh, February 1, 2007. More than 100 former Khmer Rouge families and Buddhist monks gathered at the ceremony on Thursday to pay their respects to 10 Cambodians and Westerners who were killed in a Khmer Rouge train ambush in 1994. REUTERS/Chor Sokunthea
Cambodian Buddhist monks bless the graves of British, Australian and French victims of a Khmer Rouge train ambush at the Sre Chea Khang Choeung commune in Kamport province, 146 km southwest of Phnom Penh, February 1, 2007. More than 100 former Khmer Rouge families and Buddhist monks gathered at the ceremony on Thursday to pay their respects to 10 Cambodians and Westerners who were killed in a Khmer Rouge train ambush in 1994. REUTERS/Chor Sokunthea
Julia Shand (L), vice consul at the British embassy in Cambodia, and Naomi Viccars, third secretary at the Australian embassy in Cambodia, pray at Sre Chea Khang Choeung commune in Kamport province, 146 km southwest of Phnom Penh, February 1, 2007. More than 100 former Khmer Rouge families and Buddhist monks gathered at the ceremony on Thursday to pay their respects to 10 Cambodians and Westerners, including a British, French and Australian, who were killed in the train ambush 13 years ago. REUTERS/Chor Sokunthea
1 comment:
My heart goes out to those families who had lost their love ones to those Hanoi babaric endoctrinated commy Khmer Rouge (KR) elements, and for those victims themelves - MAY YOU REST IN PEACE. God bless.
AK4AhnetKhmer
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