News about Pol Pot

From gold kimonos to a stunning outdoor pool: Inside one of the world's most luxurious river cruises

www.dailymail.co.uk, September 17, 2024
Jo Kessel steps aboard the new 88-passenger, five-deck Mekong Serenity (pictured) from Vietnam to Cambodia and captures the cruise on camera. She reveals the ship's 'swish and stylish interiors', 'exciting excursions', and her river-view suite cabin that comes with 'sexy gold kimonos'.

How watching this 96-year-old woman in the dock convinced me those who helped the Nazis MUST face justice... no matter how old

www.dailymail.co.uk, August 29, 2024
As she was pushed into the court in a wheelchair, the elderly woman's face was hidden behind a printed silk scarf. Sunglasses and a medical mask further shielded her from Press photographers who had been briefly permitted to take pictures. Irmgard Furchner was the first woman to stand trial on charges relating to Third Reich atrocities for decades.

Shocking courtroom words of predator Christopher Clements who snatched girl, 6, from her bedroom as she slept before murdering her, as he is sentenced to spend rest of his life in prison

www.dailymail.co.uk, April 13, 2024
Christopher Clements, 42, was convicted of murdering Isabel Celis in 2012 after snatching her from her parents' bedroom. He had previously been convicted of murdering 13-year-old Maribel Gonzalez, whose remains were found in the same Arizona desert as Celis. At Pima County Superior Court on Wednesday he read a rambling and confused statement, branding his conviction a 'Stalin show trial of the Soviet era' and 'Hitler's fascist government'.

John Pilger, a fearless journalist who drew the world's attention to Cambodian genocide and condemned Western foreign policy as he passes away

www.dailymail.co.uk, December 31, 2023
Mr Pilger, a foreign correspondent who made his name as a foreign correspondent, reported on two of the twentieth century's most significant world events, including the Vietnam War and the death of Dr Martin Luther King in the United States. However, he was known for his coverage of Cambodia during the reign of its draconian tyrant, Pol Pot, on which he appeared for the Mirror and later a documentary called Year Zero: The Silent Death of Cambodia. He also made a documentary about the victims of the thalidomide epidemic in the United Kingdom, which had seen pregnant mothers who were given the drug give birth to malformed children who were otherwise excluded from the drug's court settlement.

Why is Nigel Farage the only person in Britain you can throw ANY insult at?Writes JAN MOIR

www.dailymail.co.uk, November 23, 2023
JAN MOIR: What is it about Nigel Farage that makes people feel they can say anything they like about him, or treat him with the disdain usually reserved for toxic waste or tyrants? Nigel believes in Brexit, controlled immigration, and a ban on illegal migrants arriving in this region. He is portrayed by some on the Left as some sort of neomist maniac, with the despot gauge hitting a few notches to the right of Pol Pot. However, the majority of people in this world have these beliefs, rather than being revolutionary or risky. Many that can see clearly what's going on here, their clear gaze unveiled with the toxic smoke triggered by false accusations of bigotry.

A progressive Seattle Times columnist has been chastised for suggesting that Hitler might be less harmful than Lenin's newspaper and awakened the crowd

www.dailymail.co.uk, July 26, 2023
A liberal journalist has slammed a awakened crowd who had him fired after a tweet claiming that Hitler may be less harmful than Lenin. In a long column published in The Free Press, David Volodzko, who was fired from his job in the Seattle Times after just one column, defended himself. He writes about his lifelong dedication to telling the tales of the oppressed, including during stints in South Korea, Mongolia, and Israel. He also emphasizes his own Jewish lineage, including a grandfather who hunted Nazis and nearly died in a concentration camp.

After children were taken by Russians to're-education camps,' Ukrainian parents shared their sadness.'

www.dailymail.co.uk, March 5, 2023
Children are either being kidnapped or tricked into giving them up, according to Russians who have tried to portray the relocation of the children as saving orphanage. However, international criminal court prosecutor Karim Khan has condemned the large-scale kidnappings to those carried out by terror groups like ISIS, which removed Yazidi girls from their homes this week. Even suggested that Ukrainian parents be paid to travel to Russia or Annexed areas, where they might be reunited with their children if they wanted to live there. Out of tens of thousands of potential victims, only 300 children are believed to have made it back to Ukraine. On February 23, Ukrainians left hundreds of teddy bears outside the European Commission to try and raise concerns of their children's plight (right).

aDRIAN THRILLS: For 50 reasons, Madonna, the queen of clubs, has gotten us into the groove

www.dailymail.co.uk, August 19, 2022
ADRIAN THRILLS: This week, the Queen Of Pop celebrated her 64th birthday in a familiar style. She took a few spicy selfies on Instagram and held a party in a Sicilian palace. She's also geared up for the unveiling of a new remix album today, which reaffirms her desire to spend summer under a mirrorball.

MARTIN SAMUEL: Why sport is a bigger deal to Saudi Arabia than you think

www.dailymail.co.uk, August 18, 2022
MARTIN SAMUEL (inset top) Salma al-Shehab (inset top) was a PhD student at Leeds University, where she was doing exploratory research into new oral and dental medicine methods and how they could be used in her native land, Saudi Arabia. She returned to the United Kingdom with her husband and two children in December 2020, with the intention to return to Britain. She is now serving a 34-year prison term. Al-Shehab's crime was intended to "cause public demonstrations and destabilize civil and national security." She did this by following Twitter accounts of Saudi dissidents in exile and sometimes retweeting their posts. Loujain al-Hathloul, a Saudi feminist activist who was previously jailed and now claims to have been tortured for advocating driving rights for women, was also on display for the cause of women's rights. She now lives under a travel ban. In many ways, Usyk-Joshua (main) is the undercard. When the earth's natural resources run out, the true fight is for who wields the most authority in the area. If Saudi Arabia (inset bottom, Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman) genuinely cared about whether the West thought about crime or punishment, it would not have to send two boxers around the world.