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CORRECTION-CAMBODIA-BRITAIN-CRIME-KROUGE-VERDICT
CORRECTION UPDATING SENTENCE
Former Cambodian Khmer Rouge rebel Khem Ngun (R) covers his face as policeman (L) escorts him, at Phnom Penh court on October 14, 2008. A Cambodian court on October 14, sentenced three former Khmer Rouge guerrillas to 20 years in jail over the 1996 kidnapping and murder of a British mine clearer and his translator. Briton Christopher Howes and his translator Huon Huot were shot a few days after they and other members of their mine clearance team were seized near the famed Angkor Wat temples in northwest Cambodia. Their remains were found in 1998, the same year Cambodia's civil war ended when the Khmer Rouge movement disintegrated. The judge convicted Khem Ngun, 58, Puth Lim, 57, and Loch Mao, 56, and sentenced each of them to 20 years in prison, while Sin Dorn, 52, was jailed for 10 years. AFP PHOTO/TANG CHHIN SOTHY
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Detalii fotografie |
Loc: |
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Phnom Penh, CAMBODIA |
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Sursa: |
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AFP / Mediafax Foto |
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Fotograf: |
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TANG CHHIN SOTHY |
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Data: |
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14 Octombrie 2008 |
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Dimensiuni: |
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2700 x 1940 (759.78 KB) |
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