| Got my loved ones around me
|
| Now I know what heaven is like
|
| And all but life’s contempt me
|
| I’m drowning to die now, I mean I pray every night
|
| I got no secrets around me
|
| Someone loves me and I love them back
|
| They do so much for me
|
| They got me on file
|
| So they know who I am
|
| parapet
|
| bat of an eye
|
| bodies
|
| Glass pouring wine
|
| They put me in the service
|
| Glass pouring wine
|
| force to the right
|
| smiling
|
| Making a farce
|
| force to the left
|
| Left side
|
| Stop
|
| Up
|
| Quote from The Observer, dated the 18th of April, 1993:
|
| «I confirm,' wrote Margaret Thatcher to Neil Kinnock, 'that there is no British
|
| Government involvement of any kind in training, equipping or cooperating with
|
| Khmer Rouge forces, or those allied with them.'
|
| In 1991 the Government admitted this was false: that training of Pol Pot’s
|
| allies had indeed been going on since 1983. The SAS training had concentrated
|
| on sabotage and mine-laying: terror tactics. |
| Again, the Government denied this.
|
| 'Oh, that story’s old hat,' said the minister, Lord Caithness. |
| 'We don’t plant
|
| any mines.' |
| In September 1991, the American human rights organisation,
|
| Asia Watch, issued a report entitled The Cowards' War, which named two foreign
|
| powers that are or have been involved in training Cambodian resistance factions
|
| in the use of mines and explosives against civilian as well as military
|
| targets'. |
| They are China and Britain.» |