A flak from the Russians
Wat Thmei the New Temple on the Killing Fields
Memorial to a cruel history
Silver plating: the art of Metal
Workers in Artisans Angkor manufactory
Nightlife in the Old Market
Nightlife in the Old Market
Lingas in the river
Phnom Kulen Linga River
Spring from underground
Holy meditation altar beside the spring
Lingas in the river
Herbs sold to the worshippers
Vendor Khmer girl at the market of Phnom Kulen
Boy gets a herb seller
Way up to the holy hill top
An holy shrine at Preah Ang Thom
Holy altar on the steps to the reclining Buddha
Phnom Kulen Reclining Buddha
Abbot blesses a little girl
Kids enjoy the cool mountain stream
First waterfall of Siem Reap River
First waterfall of Siem Reap River
Warning sign for UXOs
Exhibits in the war museum
Rusty Russian tanks as exhibits
This Apsara is for sale
On the shore of the lake
West Baray near Angkor Thom
Children play in the man made lake
Young Khmer girl Samnang sales baby corn
Result of beautiful silk patterns
Silk weaving by manual work
Silk spinning machine
Women spinning thread to make it smooth
Get shoot a photo of her working
Kids greeting in front of the manufacture
Silk moths at a reed basket
Silk worms in their cocoons
Downtown Siem Reap
Women at work on the loom
Tonlé Sap harbor Chong Khneas near Siem Reap
Way back to the harbor of Chong Khneas
Simple life along the dam
Village life in Chong Khneas
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Sample of mined fields


The most terrible display was the landmines. This was also the most personal for a Cambodian who had lost his leg to a Vietnamese mine.
“I heard the mine click, when I stepped on it. I looked down. When my leg exploded, my own bones became shrapnel, making me blind.”
A major episode of mine laying followed the withdrawal of Vietnamese troops in September 1989, in the military power vacuum that resulted. Government forces laid an enormous quantity of mines to hold back resistance forces on the Thai border. Resistance fighters in turn launched an offensive bigger than any in the war prior to this, and laid mines deep within the country. Mines continued to be employed by the Khmer Rouge and by Government forces even after the 1993 elections. Throughout the three decades of mine laying in Cambodia, it was standard practice to lay much denser minefields than necessary, and to lay them not only in battlegrounds but among civilian communities. Minefield location maps were generally not drawn, and as a result, mine laying frequently took place in already-mined areas. Wet seasons caused mines to move or become buried, which further complicates the task of locating and clearing them.
“I heard the mine click, when I stepped on it. I looked down. When my leg exploded, my own bones became shrapnel, making me blind.”
A major episode of mine laying followed the withdrawal of Vietnamese troops in September 1989, in the military power vacuum that resulted. Government forces laid an enormous quantity of mines to hold back resistance forces on the Thai border. Resistance fighters in turn launched an offensive bigger than any in the war prior to this, and laid mines deep within the country. Mines continued to be employed by the Khmer Rouge and by Government forces even after the 1993 elections. Throughout the three decades of mine laying in Cambodia, it was standard practice to lay much denser minefields than necessary, and to lay them not only in battlegrounds but among civilian communities. Minefield location maps were generally not drawn, and as a result, mine laying frequently took place in already-mined areas. Wet seasons caused mines to move or become buried, which further complicates the task of locating and clearing them.
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