Crossing
the border by foot. A seemingly simple procedure made arduous by
crooked border officials who jack up the price of a visa. The scam is so
classic that Lonely Planet describes it in detail. We told our Thai bus
driver that we'd pay for the visa at the border. He became irate and
made us separate from the rest of the group. They took us to a desolate
building with a sign that said "Cambodia Immigration Department" or something and again tried to make us pay the
inflated price. When we refused again, they basically dumped us at a
random parking lot and told us good luck, that it would take hours for
us to cross by ourselves without their expedited help, and that the bus
on the other side wouldn't wait for us. They were very careful to pull
the truck over right next to a huge pile of garbage that we had to step
in to get our backpacks out of the back. Then we wandered a bit, found a
steady stream of foot traffic, and followed it to the official
crossing. We made it into Cambodia in under ten minutes! We even found
the rest of the gang from our mini-bus, who had grudgingly paid the
extra money, and guess what? They were way behind us in line to get our
passports stamped.
Talk about a business model! Once we got to the border, the Cambodians were so much nicer, and not trying to rip you off. It was a welcome change. The entrance to Cambodia:
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| In the style of Angkor Wat. |
Haing Ngor eventually escaped when Vietnam invaded, and traveled to the US, where he was chosen to star in the 1984 film, The Killing Fields. He won Academy Award for best actor in supporting role. A more sorry history I have never read. However, it provides deep insight into why Cambodia is the way it is today, and its history of the past 50 years. It is excellently told, a tear-jerker, and a must-read.
| The book, pic provided by Amazon.com. Don't sue me. |
Alix and I visited S-21 in Phnom Penh. Now it is Tuol Seng Genocide Museum. It originally was a high school, but under the regime it became a prison camp/torture camp. Thousands, including children, entered; only twelve people are known to have survived. It poured buckets while we were in there, but we didn't linger. It's easier to get drenched than think of the infinite capacity for human suffering.
| S-21, the infamous prison camp. |
Sorry to dwell on that, but you can't be in Cambodia without thinking of two things: the Killing Fields, and how truly epic and amazing Angkor Wat is. What completely opposite feelings they inspire.

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