_http://www.stuff.co.nz/travel/international/3074770/Resiliant-Cambodia-batt
les-history_ 
(http://www.stuff.co.nz/travel/international/3074770/Resiliant-Cambodia-battles-history)
 
 
Resiliant Cambodia battles history 
 
Last  updated 11:49 18/11/2009

 
MICHAEL FOX/Stuff.co.nz
 
 
 



DETENTE: A Thai and Cambodian soldier stand together in the Thai military  
camp just across the border from Cambodia near the Preah Vihear temple. 
Leaders  of the two armies were in talks following a two-day  firefight.

Cambodia is a land of both  brutality and promise.  
It embodies some of the  world's major social problems: inequality and 
unbridled growth with scant regard  for human, social or environmental 
consequences. 
It bears the scars of war,  fanaticism, cruelty and what happens when the 
rest of the world turns a blind  eye. 
But it also shows remarkable  resilience. 
As the historian John Tully  noted, it is a misfortune for a country to be 
known primarily for a brutal  history. So it is for Cambodia, which is 
working to shake its tag as the home of  Pol Pot, the Killing Fields and Tuol 
Sleng. 
I arrived in Phnom Penh on a  two month exchange where I would be working 
for the Phnom Penh Post - one of two  English language papers in the 
predominantly Khmer-speaking country. 
In contrast to the expanse  of Suvarnabhumi Airport in Bangkok, where I had 
travelled from, the Cambodian  capital's airport was about the size of a 
Four Square. 
After a customs official  decided he was going to charge me a few extra 
dollars for the sake of it, I knew  I was in for an interesting stay. That 
wasn't helped by being soundly ripped off  by the first couple of tuk tuk 
drivers before I wised up and realised that  whatever they tried to charge, 
about 
a third of that was acceptable. 
Caked in sweat, slightly  disoriented and batting off drug dealers, it took 
a while to take in where I  was. 
Being my first time overseas  my mind was reeling - the heat, the beggars, 
the unregulated traffic and the  food, of which I had no idea what was safe 
to eat. 
I was fortunate that working  over there allowed me to take in some sights 
I might not otherwise have seen and  I got to work on some stories which 
showed me the less well-known sides of the  Kingdom. 
One was tracking down three  villagers in a hospital in Siem Reap after 
they had been shot by police  following a land dispute. 
The hospital was what I'd  heard hospitals were like in developing 
countries, but I was still shocked by  what I saw. Two of the injured men were 
on 
mats on the ground surrounded by some  very sick looking patients, crammed 
into corridors in the stinking heat. Doctors  were hard to find. 
Sitting on the floor with  the men, surrounded by curious locals, I had a 
translator who could barely speak  English which made the interview even more 
difficult. 
Another work highlight was  being sent to a village about 20 minutes from 
Siem Reap where a "robber family"  had reportedly killed 100 people and 
buried them in their backyard. I hired a  tuk tuk driver to act as a translator 
and he took me to the house, down a long  dirt road far off the main road. 
The house was a tin building in a large barren  compound, surrounded by a high 
wire fence. Blood was still visible on the ground  and the wall from where 
the alleged murder had taken place. Locals who had also  heard the talk were 
making the same journey en mass. 
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It turned out to be a rumour  though - only one person had been killed 
there. 
I was sent to Preah Vihear  on the Cambodia-Thailand border following two 
days of shooting where three Thai  soldiers were killed. I was to spend time 
with Cambodian troops. 
The two countries, Thailand  and Cambodia both claim a small section of 
land near the Preah Vihear temple - a  900 year-old monument built at the 
height of the Khmer empire awarded to  Cambodia in 1962 and made a World 
Heritage 
Site in 2008. 
In the preceding days'  fighting a marketplace was completely destroyed by 
shelling, leaving many  vendors desolate, and Preah Vihear temple was 
damaged by Thai bullets. 
The journey on  pot-holed roads took the better part of two days, first 
travelling from Phnom  Penh north to Siem Reap then on to Anlong Veng, near the 
grave of Pol Pot, where  we stayed the night, and then on to Preah Vihear 
the next day. 
The site of the standoff was  something pretty foreign to me as a New 
Zealander. 
Machine gun nests, AK47s and  sand bagged trenches littered the plateau, 
rocket launchers leaned against walls  unattended while armed soldiers who 
spoke no English lounged around in hammocks.  The Thai camp was a stone's throw 
away across a gully littered with landmines -  a scourge in Cambodia. 
It was interesting to see  the clash between the old and the new here. The 
soldiers on the Cambodian side  were camped around Preah Vihear temple. Atop 
a vast plateau with views  stretching for miles back into Cambodia and over 
into Thailand, it was  reportedly perched there so that visitors to the 
ruler were overawed by the  occasion. 
Following peace talks, we  crossed to the Thai side and it was here I got a 
bit lost. 
As I followed a group of  armed troops it wasn't until about 200m down a 
track, getting further and  further away from Cambodia that I realised I was 
on my own and following a group  of Thai soldiers, without my passport. 
I fast tracked it back to  Cambodia and sanctuary, through the Thai front 
line and across the de-mined  path. I still haven't told my mum. 
On the same trip I travelled  further along the border to near the 
Cambodia-Thailand-Laos tri-border as part  of a field trip with representatives 
of a 
shared conservation project. 
As I waited in a small  village at the intersection of the two roads, I 
became aware I was the star  attraction. I was like a circus freak - a foot 
taller than everyone else and  pale(ish) skinned. The Khmers are also not shy 
about staring and are known for  making foreigners the butt of their jokes. 
There isn't much you can do but smile  back and keep walking. 
Not being able to speak with  anyone made it difficult to order any food or 
drink. Having run out of clean  clothes as I could only carry with me what 
I could fit in my back pack, trying  to buy a clean shirt proved fruitless 
also. They're generally smaller over  there. 
It showed me the strange  relationships that can develop between 
neighbouring countries. In one area,  Thais and Cambodians were shooting at 
each other 
while 17 miles away they were  working together to preserve the 
environment. 
This turned out to not be  quite the case however, as the trip ultimately 
revealed the Cambodian armed  forces were building a military base and two 
major roads through the protected  forest. This apparently did not jeopardise 
the project. 
Working some days on the  business desk it was interesting to note the 
issues a developing economy  faces. 
There is much to dislike  about Cambodia. 
Corruption and impunity are  endemic. Brutal crimes are rife and the street 
is littered with beggars with  missing limbs and deformities, the result of 
landmines and battlefields and poor  maternal health. 
Yet there is also much to  love and admire. The people, while out to make a 
quick buck, are relentlessly  positive, quick to laugh (albeit often at 
your expense), loyal to their families  and attempting to get on with their 
lives. 
Their tenacity and resolve  is admirable when only three decades ago was 
one of the world's worst  atrocities. 
While I was there the Khmer  Rouge trials were on and I was privileged to 
speak with Cambodians about their  experiences and their opinions. It is one 
thing to know about what happened from  1975 to 1979 but it is another thing 
to hear people talk about it happening to  them. 
The country has its faults  but as a burgeoning destination and a country 
on the mend it is a must-see for  those touring South East Asia. 
Michael Fox was in  Cambodia courtesy of the Asia New Zealand Foundation.
Sathonne  Chhim
Timothychhim.blogspot.com
http://www.youtube.com/results?search_type=&search_query=timothy+chhim&aq=f

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