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M.D.G.’s for Beginners ... and Finishers

We wish the Prime Minister well as he attends this Summit in New York; may he be inspired to implement this obvious ROAD MAP toward reducing poverty in Cambodia. May he also use this occasion to raise the Preah Vihear issue with more than just Abhisit but with other ASEAN and Paris Peace Agreement signatories. A great article by the amazing singer-humanitarian BONO. - Theary Seng, Phnom Penh, 19 Sept. 2010.

Theary Seng and Singer Bono at P8, Germany, 2007



September 18, 2010
By BONO
The New York Times


I’ve noticed that New Yorkers, and I sometimes try to pass for one these days, tend to greet the word “summit” with an irritated roll of the eyes, a grunt, an impatient glance at the wristwatch. In Manhattan, a summit has nothing to do with crampons and ice picks, but refers instead to a large gathering of important persons, head-of-state types and their rock-star retinues in the vicinity of the United Nations building and creates, therefore, a near total immobilization of the East Side. Can world peace possibly be worth this? Never, never...Eleanor Roosevelt, look what you’ve done ... .

Recent global summit meetings, from Copenhagen to Toronto, have frankly been a bust, so the world, which may not know it yet, is overdue for a good multilateral confab — one that’s not just about the gabbing but about the doing. The subject of the summit meeting at the United Nations this week is one whose monumental importance is matched only by its minuscule brand recognition: the Millennium Development Goals, henceforth known as the M.D.G.’s (God save us from such dull shorthand).

The M.D.G.’s are possibly the most visionary deal that most people have never heard of. In the run-up to the 21st century, a grand global bargain was negotiated at a series of summit meetings and then signed in 2000. The United Nations’ “Millennium Declaration” pledged to “ensure that globalization becomes a positive force for all the world’s people,” especially the most marginalized in developing countries. It wasn’t a promise of rich nations to poor ones; it was a pact, a partnership, in which each side would meet obligations to its own citizens and to one another.
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UN tribunal indicts 4 Khmer Rouge

Sun Sep 19, 2010
Press TV

The surviving leaders of the Khmer Rouge have been indicted for the deaths of nearly 2 million Cambodians, after thirty-one years of impunity.

On Thursday, judges at the UN-backed tribunal specially convened to investigate and try the crimes of the Democratic Kampuchea government, which ruled Cambodia from 1975 to 1979, signed an order to put four aging suspects on trial for what the court deemed was "an attack on the entire population of Cambodia."

The indictments include charges of war crimes, genocide, crimes against humanity, murder, torture, and religious persecution.

Judge Marcel Lemonde of France, who also announced his resignation after a tumultuous four years, told reporters gathered at the UN-backed tribunal on Thursday, "Some commentators have said, and I believe they were correct, that this matter is the most complex since the Nuremberg tribunal."

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