QUOTE (topgun562 @ Oct 29 2009, 10:18 AM)

This is amazing !! Bumbol kill his brother and now he using his brother name to use for his project. Also, those Thai ain't coming back to Thailand to help the country. The Chinese is helping the country. lol
I don't think that's what you should worry about.
What you should concern is that your old-aged former king Norodom Sihanouk who have to live far far away from his own country and his people are really sick and he said he wants to die as soon as possible.
Why is that? Isn't he happy with his life? When he have to go to the hospital, no any cambodian people care about his illness? Why do his people leave him alone?
You people neglect your own royal family while you concern so much about others' monarch.
I really feel pity for him, it's his bad luck to be born as a cambodian king.
QUOTE
Cambodian ex-king says he wants to die soon
Agence France-Presse
First Posted 17:47:00 10/08/2009
Filed Under: Health, Diseases, Imperial and Royal Matters
PHNOM PENH—Cambodia's elderly former king Norodom Sihanouk said he has lived too long and wishes to die as soon as possible, according to a personal handwritten note on his website Thursday.
In a royal message, Sihanouk said his father, Suramarit, died at the age of 64, and his great-grandfather, Sisowath, died at the age of 83.
"But for me, who sincerely wants to die as near in the future as possible, I have lived too long," wrote the former king, who will turn 87 at the end of this month.
The ex-monarch, who has been in Beijing since last month for routine medical treatment, went on to say in his message, dated October 2, that the "lengthy longevity bears on me like an unbearable weight."
Sihanouk went on to thank compatriots who have wished that he lives to be over 100 years old, but asked them to refrain from wishing him a long life.
"What I want is to die as soon as possible, without having to infringe on the teachings of the (esteemed) Buddha who forbade suicide," he wrote.
Sihanouk has suffered from a number of ailments, including cancer, diabetes and hypertension.
One of Asia's longest-serving monarchs, he abruptly quit the throne in October 2004 in favor of his son, Sihamoni, citing old age and health problems.
Despite abdicating, Sihanouk remains a prominent figure in Cambodia and often uses messages on his website to comment on matters of state.