Wednesday, November 24, 2010

Secure online donations to the victims of Koh Pich tragedy accepted at The WAVE Project



This week's Water Festival tragedy in Cambodia has shocked and saddened us all.

Our friends at Strey Khmer in Phnom Penh have been part of the relief effort - working without pause, caring for the injured, comforting and reuniting grief-stricken survivors, providing food and shelter.

In the spirit of Thanksgiving, please consider helping those whose lives have been forever changed by this horrific event.

Your generous donation is tax deductible as allowed by law, and much appreciated.

Donation can be made at: http://www.thewaveproject.org/ (use the "Donate" link at the bottom right hand side of the page), or click here to go The Wave's donation page.

Thank you!

Monks bless dead after horror [-Koh Pich bridge: the "gate to hell"]


Nov 24, 2010
Reuters

DESPERATE SCREAMS


Scores of people leapt to their deaths from the pedestrian bridge, unable to swim and dragged under water amid frantic splashing as desperate and panicked people plunged down from above.


While many victims drowned, most perished while trapped under the weight of hundreds of fleeing revellers.


Hours after the tragedy, the scene was untouched. Shoes, flip-flops and ripped clothing piled up a foot high across some parts of the 80m bridge linking Phnom Penh to a gawdy man-made entertainment island packed with restaurants, fairground rides and exhibition centres.

Hundreds of onlookers endured the stench of rotting garbage and tip-toed across the trampled grass to get a glimpse at the place where so many died.

Many people sat in silence on the steep banks of the Tonle Sap, a tributary of the Mekong River, listening to the chanting of hundreds of Buddhist monks who laid flowers and lit incense to bless the dead.

Flags were flown at half mast across the city of about 2 million people, which swelled during the festival as hundreds of thousands flocked in from surrounding provinces for the festival marking the end of the rainy season.

Television repeatedly showed footage of shirtless, shoeless bodies laid out on the ground and on hospital floors, many open-eyed and covered in bruises.

Relatives of the dead wept at the Khmer-Soviet hospital, where more than 100 unclaimed and unidentified bodies, most of them teenagers, lay side-by-side, covered in white sheets.

'I didn't feel safe on the bridge, there were just too many people, so I crossed just in time,' said Bothra Cheahcha, whose friends were among the dead.

'It's tragic and I was so lucky,' he said. 'I feel like I'm reborn, like I have been given a second chance at life.' -- REUTERS
PHNOM PENH - SAFFRON-ROBED Buddhist monks chanted as onlookers gazed silently across a bridge piled with the shoes and torn clothing left behind by victims of a stampede in Cambodia's capital.

The body count stood at 375 by sunset on Tuesday and was expected to rise. Many people were missing and Cambodians had many questions about one of the darkest days of their country's recent and troubled history.

The cause of the stampede on the Diamond Gate bridge late on Monday, the last day of an annual three-day Water Festival, remained a mystery.



'Everyone is shocked that this can happen to us,' said Chhun Sreypong, 45, clutching her one-year-old baby and looking out across Phnom Penh's Tonle Sap river, from where scores of limp bodies were dragged.

'Those who died were mostly youngsters. Many mothers have lost their children. No one knows why this happened.' Survivors gave chilling accounts of being buried under piles of bodies, alive and dead, for as long as three hours, crying for help and clambering for air, open-mouthed as police doused the trapped crowd with water cannons.

'People were shouting for help and began to push,' said Touch Theara, 38, who was among the thousands who flocked to Diamond Island to eat in restaurants, listen to live music and buy cheap clothes. Her sister and her friend died on the bridge, which some described as a 'gate to hell'. About 755 people were injured.

Cambodia mourns stampede victims


Cambodia mourns festival tragedy


Aftermath of the stampede video


Condolences from KEA Inc.


CONDOLENCES
TO VICTIM’S FAMILIES
KHMER ENTERTAINMENT OF AMERICA, INC.
7863 Broadway, Lemon Grove, California 91945, United States of America (USA)
Tel: (619) 840-6651- Fax: (619) 583-5813 - email: cheanglp@cox.net



On behalf of the KHMER ENTERTAINMENT OF AMERICA, Inc. and families of all officers, I am saddened for the loss of hundreds of lives at Koh Pich Bridge, during the last day of Water Festival, in Phnom Penh.

We would like to extend our profound condolences and best wishes for quick recovery to the families and friends of those lost or injured in the unfortunate stampede in Koh Pich.

Our thoughts and prayers are with the families and friends of the victims and with all Khmers inside the country and abroad.

Signed:
LIM CHEANG
President
KEA

Tuesday, November 23, 2010

Fortress of solitude


via CAAI

PAUL SHEEHAN - Sydney Morning Herald
24/11/2010

AMAZING ANGKOR: The battle between forest and stone at Ta Prohm.

Among the throngs at Angkor, find peace and wonder among the temples less trampled.

Siem Reap, the gateway city to Angkor, which is shorthand for the largest temple complex in the world, remains a paradise for the budget traveller. The old town bristles with all the services listed above, except for the entry pass to Angkor.

Men should not be accosted with anything so gauche as street-walkers but they will be discreetly presented with an a la carte menu of prostitution options, usually by a driver: "You want 19-year-old Vietnamese girl? Whole night?"

So Siem Reap, an eight-minute drive by tuk-tuk from Angkor, remains a site of old-school Asian budget travel, with plenty of cheap flesh-pot options.

I, however, am seeking a very different experience. Siem Reap and Angkor have been transformed from backpacker havens and adventure travel destinations. Let me count the ways.

I run headlong into one of the new realities of Angkor in one of the most popular and densely visited of the hundreds of temple sites, named Ta Prohm.

Most visitors call it by another name - the "Angelina Jolie Temple" or the "Tomb Raiders Temple" - because it was the setting for several spectacular scenes in the first of the Tomb Raider films, with Jolie starring as the fantasy character Lara Croft. It is instantly recognisable and one of the most photographed temples in the world.

It is a zoo. The courtyard around the monumental gnarled tree roots growing around the walls is packed and noisy. A construction crew is busy amid lines of tourists. A crane is working. Drills, hammers, piles of rubble. A group of boisterous Koreans take turns having their photos taken in front of the tree, while other tour groups wait their turn.

The new Angkor is now like the Vatican - it requires crowd countermeasures. And that is what I have, in the form of a guide who steers me 20 paces, through a low arch and into an almost identical courtyard in the complex, with an equally monumental gnarled tree growing out of the stone. And silence. Not a soul. It is just as beautiful and I have it to myself.

"If you do your research, you can even have the temples at Angkor largely to yourself, depending on your timing and your routing," says Andy Booth, an Englishman (Oxford-educated, former British rowing champion, former highly successful options trader) who runs a tour company called AboutAsia. It customises day trips around the complex: driver, transport, English-speaking guide, refreshments and, above all, a shrewd and practised knowledge of where and when to go.

"Everyone does the same," he says over dinner at the Sugar Palm, one of the best restaurants in Siem Reap. "Everyone does Angkor Wat at dawn, then the south gate, then Bayon, then the terraces. The guides are using the manual written by Maurice Glaize 60 years ago [published in 1944]."

So this is how one best navigates the new realities of Angkor - with assistance.

My two-day visit starts well with the relief of arriving in the small airport and seeing a man holding a sign with my name on it.

My hotel, the five-star La Residence d'Angkor, part of the Orient Express group, has sent a car to pick me up from the airport. From that point, everything is seamless.

The hotel offers a day-long tour, with tuk-tuk, driver and guide for $US79 and the driver is happy to zip back to the hotel for a break. This is important, because walking and climbing in the heat and humidity becomes arduous over the course of a day. The stone steps can be uncompromising but that is part of the aura of the place; my favourite climb is at Ta Keo.

There is so much to see and so much that is not crowded most of the time. The World Heritage Angkor Archaeological Park, its official title, spans about 400 square kilometres. In the cluster near the Angkor Wat temple complex and Siem Reap there are 45 distinct temple sites, each about a thousand years old and surrounded by forest. This is the apex of a Khmer civilisation that dominated the region across Thailand, Cambodia, Laos and Vietnam and peaked in 1210. The temples are influenced by Indian civilisation, and Hindu and Buddhist beliefs.

Of the 45 temples I'll mention just four but visitors will find their own magic among the lesser temples. Obviously, the centrepiece, Angkor Wat, is a must but the eye needs to be alert to its myriad details, not just the grand scale, especially the bas-reliefs of battle scenes and royal ceremonies that run for hundreds of metres around the walls.

The guidebooks say that if you have time to visit just two temples then the other should be Bayon, so it needs to be mentioned, though I preferred other sites. This is another photographer's dream and instantly recognisable for its giant stone faces, dating from the 12th century.

A favourite is Banteay Srei, the "citadel of women", built 1000 years ago. It's an intricate array of towers, stairways, chambers and ramparts in pink sandstone with ornate designs and walls decorated in carvings of dense and intricate detail. This temple was a lost treasure for hundreds of years until its rediscovery in 1914.

Visitors will find their own treasures among the lesser temple complexes and one of mine is Preah Palilay, in a forest glen where trees have forced their way into the stone over years and been cut back. The battle between forest and stone is one of the delights of the walks through the complex and the forest is what protected this marvel after the Khmer empire went into decline and eclipse 700 years ago.

The new empire of Angkor is in the era of tourism, and here the changes have been exponential. Twenty years ago there was only a trickle of visitors to a country still haunted by the ravages of 20 years of war, civil war and genocide. Siem Reap had one fine hotel, Raffles, and two decent guesthouses.

Today there are 140 hotels, including five five-star resorts and more than 400 guesthouses. Another 40 hotels are under construction, mostly funded by Chinese and Korean developers. Siem Reap sits on a huge water table but so great has been the growth in demand that the city is experiencing water shortages.

Cambodia would have almost no infrastructure were in not for foreign aid and in this case the Japanese government intervened by building a new water-supply system for Siem Reap.

The once-sleepy regional town of Siem Reap has 1 million residents and the nearby temples now receive more than a million foreign visitors a year, especially middle-class Asians. Visitor numbers have been growing exponentially for a decade - 20 per cent a year compounding - doubling since 2003 from 500,000 visitors.

This growth reflects not just the end of turmoil in Cambodia but the rapid growth of the Asian middle classes in the past decade.

Ninety per cent of visitors to Angkor are from Asia. Chinese and Koreans are travelling to Angkor in great numbers and they travel in squadrons, with flags marking their groups.

The most numerous are the Chinese, who one tour manager politely describes to me as "early-stage travellers".

As my Cambodian guide, Sophy Chhay, mentions as we walk around Angkor Wat: "When I avoid the crowds and take the Chinese groups to places while there are no other tourists, they say to me: 'Why are you not taking us to popular temples?"'

The number of temple complexes have grown in size and accessibility. Numerous restorations have begun or have been completed by foreign-aid agencies and more archaeological sites have been discovered by satellite mapping. The sense of adventure the jungle complex used to have can be recaptured at a another significant temple complex, Beng Melea, 85 kilometres from Siem Reap and a 90-minute drive by dirt road. It is a large site and much more ruined than Angkor Wat. The place is largely deserted, especially in the afternoon. I imagine this is how Angkor Wat used to feel, 60 years ago.

Cambodia is poor and a four- or five-star experience can be had for a three-star price. Apart from Siem Reap's five five-star hotels, there are dozens of excellent-value options at the next level down.

One of the joys of travel is the unexpected, the unfamiliar, the unprogrammed.

Angkor, however, is simply too big, too sprawling and too hot to wander aimlessly for long. To move from complex to complex takes time and saps energy.

With stamina and some planning, however, the site's impact is cumulative. Each new glade reveals a discovery. The combination of splendour, scale, antiquity and isolation, along with the melding of Hindu and Buddhist worship, is unique. Nothing commercial is in view.

When you lose the crowds, a visitor can feel just a little like Henri Mouhot, the French naturalist who came upon Angkor in 1860 when the complex was still under a canopy of equatorial forest. He is popularly credited with rediscovering the lost city of Angkor, though it was never lost, just obscured for centuries. The sense of mystery that comes from seeing what was buried treasure still clings to the place.

The Khmer people also help. They are gentle, not pushy. I have two vivid memories of them among the temples. One is of a group of musicians, all missing limbs, the victims of land mines, sitting in the grass and playing gentle music. And elsewhere a tiny girl, sitting alone in the dust in front of an equally tiny pile of fruit, which she is selling. No adult is anywhere to be seen.

She is working, alone, a human dot among a maze of temples and forest.

Cambodia stampede (Photos)


The coffins of Bun Ratha and his wife, Sim Ratanak, are pictured at a funeral in Kandal province. Ratha and Ratanak died at a stampede on the Diamond Gate bridge during the annual three-day Water Festival. (Chor Sokunthea/Reuters)


At least 378 people have died in Phnom Penh, Cambodia, and the city is steeling itself for that number to rise. People celebrating the end of the rainy season got caught up in a stampede as they crossed a narrow bridge Monday. In panic, the crowd trampled on itself, and many fell over into the river below.

Buddhist monks take part in a religious ceremony to mourn the deaths of stampede victims. (Chor Sokunthea/Reuters)

Women cry as they prepare to carry home the body of their loved one from a makeshift morgue inside the Calmette hospital in Phnom Penh. (Hoang Dinh Nam/AFP)

People look at pictures of victims of the stampede posted on a billboard outside the Calmette hospital. (Hoang Dinh Nam/AFP)

Bodies of stampede victims are lined up at the Preah Kossamak Hospital. (Chor Sokunthea/Reuters)

Cambodia Mourns in Aftermath of Bridge Stampede


Reporters, VOA Khmer
Phnom Penh Tuesday, 23 November 2010

via CAAI

Photo: by Heng Reaksmey
Earlier today, in Cambodia, a group of monks and officials pray for victims near the site where people stampeded during Monday's water festival in Phnom Penh.

“My sister's body was blackened on the hands, chest, stomach and feet, like people had stomped on her.”

The day after the largest tragedy in recent Cambodian history, hospitals were overwhelmed with family members as they searched for lost loved ones.

Hospitals were lined with the bodies of the dead, with disaster authorities claiming they had so far only identified 60 percent of the victims.

Bodies were put in coffins and shipped to their home provinces for burial, as the government declared Thursday a national day of mourning and established an investigative committee.

Officials say at least 378 people were killed during a crowd stampede on a bridge near Diamond Island, on the riverfront, following annual Water Festival festivities.

Revelry turned to tragedy as a crowd in the thousands, trapped on the bridge, panicked, crushing some underfoot as others jumped into the river to escape. More than 700 people were wounded in the event, which had emergency crews scrabbling through the early morning hours Tuesday.

Hospitals were filled with the bodies of the dead, lined up along the floor, where loved ones were forced to search for the lost.

Horn Sam An, 41, in L'vea Em district, Kandal province, found her sister dead after she spent from midnight to 8 am searching three hospitals before finding her at a fourth, Calmette.

Soa Sok, 37, from Kampong Cham province, said he walked with three friends from hospital to hospital to find his missing brother. He had still not found him as of Tuesday afternoon.

In a national address, Prime Minister Hun Sen called the tragedy the worst since the Khmer Rouge, and he appointed one investigative committee to learn the reason for the disaster and a second committee to help the families of victims.

Nhim Vanda, deputy chief of the National Disaster Committee, said health officials were performing examinations of the bodies and identifying them for families.

“And then we put the bodies in white cloth and plastic in a coffin and are transporting the bodies to their respective homes for traditional ceremonies,” he said. “The government has paid everything for all the bodies of families for transport and ceremony.”

Bodies were sent back home via ambulances, military trucks and other vehicles.

Prum Sokha, secretary of state for the Interior Ministry and the head of the investigative committee, called for the survivors and other witnesses to help by providing information to the authorities.

Family members who came to Calmette Tuesday morning described bruised and broken bodies.

“My sister's body was blackened on the hands, chest, stomach and feet, like people had stomped on her,” said Sok Navy, 41, from Kandal province.

But there were those too who escaped the stampede with their lives. Pheoung Srey Leak, a 22-year-old survivor, said she was trapped on the crowded bridge for four hours.

“It was very stuff, and no air,” she said. “I couldn't walk out of the crowd. I had a feeling I was probably not alive, and I was hopeless.... I was determined not to faint. If I had fainted and fallen down, I would have been stomped to death by other people.”

But she did faint, she said, and she couldn't breathe. “When I woke up, I was in the emergency room of Calmette hospital,” she said.

For those who died, some 4,000 Buddhist monks held a ceremony of prayer Tuesday afternoon.

The government has declared Thursday a national day of mourning, and groups from around the country have pledged their support to the families of victims.

Former king Norodom Sihanouk and his son, the king, Norodom Sihamoni, expressed condolences for lost loved ones and promised $200 to the families of the deceased and $100 to the families of the injured.

Students from 10 separate universities have established the 2211 foundation, named for the date of the incident, to gather funds for the families.

“And to march on Nov. 25 to pay respect to the souls of the deceased,” said Toch Norin, a student representative.

Political parties and development agencies issued their own condolences, along with others.

US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton issued a statement on behalf of President Barrack Obama, saying: “I have seen their strength and resilience first hand, including during my recent visit, and I am confident that they will pull together and persevere through this difficult time.”

But questions over how the tragedy happened, and the response, remain.

The Asian Human Rights Commission issued a statement of condolence that also questioned security measures in the capital during the massive festival, saying: “It is clear that Phnom Penh was unprepared for any large-scale disaster.”

Cambodia stampede: 'I was in the middle. Everyone was falling'


Ben Doherty speaks to survivors of the crush that Cambodia's PM called 'the greatest tragedy in more than 31 years'

Ben Doherty in Phnom Penh
guardian.co.uk, Tuesday 23 November 2010
Police begin their investigations amid the belongings left behind by victims of the festival crush on Rainbow Bridge. Photograph: Tang Chhin Sothy/AFP/Getty Images

On Monday night this week the streets of Phnom Penh were full, there were market stalls and music, fairground rides and partygoers crowding every available inch of space in the city.

Sopheap Meng and his older brother Sovaan were on the Rainbow Bridge, a structure spanning barely 50 metres, connecting Cambodia's capital with Koh Pich, also known as Diamond Island, at the heart of the annual Water Festival.

The three-day festival, Bon Om Touk, is the biggest party of the year here. It causes the normally sleepy city to swell by more than 2 million people, international and domestic visitors coming for the parties and the boat races, and to give thanks for the end of the rainy season.

But shortly before 10pm, the night of celebration turned disastrous. A big crowd of people packed on to the narrow Rainbow footbridge panicked, surged and created a crush.

In a few terrifying minutes the crush led to deaths of 378 or more people, and left more than 700 injured. Cambodia's prime minister, Hun Sen, described the occurrence as the greatest tragedy to befall the country since the blood-soaked rule of the Khmer Rouge.

Most of those who died were from the rural areas, unwilling to jump from the bridge because they could not swim; they did not know the water was only waist deep. Most were young, and most women, unable to resist the weight of humanity pushing them to the ground. They suffocated on the bridge, or drowned having fallen unconscious into the water.

Sopheap Meng had gripped his brother's hand as tightly as he could. He fought the crush pushing him to the ground.

"But there was no air, I could not breathe. I got pushed to the side of the bridge, people were falling all around, on to my arm, and I had to let go." Rescued by police from the crush which had pinned his legs, it was hours before 18-year-old Sopheap found his brother again. Sovaan's corpse was pulled from the heap of bodies on Rainbow Bridge.

What sparked the panic is the subject of countless theories. Some at the scene yesterday said it started when word swept among the tightly packed crowd that the bridge was about to collapse. One witness said he saw the bridge bouncing under the weight of the people.

Others said the panic started when the multicoloured lights strung from the suspension ropes began sparking.

There were still more rumours – of mass food poisoning starting the crush, or a gang of youths robbing the crowd. It could be that there were just too many people on the narrow concrete footbridge.

The Rainbow Bridge was built this year, and only open for the festival. It was supposed to be a one-way system, leading people from the island to the city. People trying to get on to the island were meant to take a second bridge, which was 200 metres to the south. But the Rainbow Bridge was closer to the action and, amid the excitement and the celebrations, the regulations were relaxed.

Lin was right in the middle of the bridge with his girlfriend Ni when the crush became unbearable.

"I realised I could not move," Lin told the Guardian. "I could not go back, I could not go forward. People were pushing from everywhere and there was nothing I could do. I was right in the middle, everyone around me was falling, one on top of another, they were being crushed. There were dead people all around me." His girlfriend survived too, shaken but uninjured. "We are the lucky ones today. One in 1,000 lucky. Two more minutes and I would have fallen too."

Yesterday the bridge remained littered with the evidence of the tragedy: there were thousands of shoes, shirts and hats, left behind in the terror that consumed those caught in the crush. Police and army officers pored over the items for clues.

On the banks of the Bassac river, relatives of the victims made Buddhist offerings and prayed for the lost.

At the nearby Calmette hospital a makeshift open-air morgue was laid out in the grounds. Bodies were arranged in lines on straw mats inside a large white tent.

Family members peered through open windows, searching for their loved ones. Those identified were covered with a white sheet, those unknown were left exposed so that they could be claimed. Flies buzzed constantly in the stifling heat.

Boupha Lak sat at her dead daughter's feet, gentling stroking them, waiting for the paperwork to be completed so she could take her home.

Boupha said: "She went to the festival to see her friends, but she was alone on the bridge when it happened – her friends I have seen today, they were on the other side. She was found on the bridge, crushed underneath all the other bodies. They told me she was on the bottom."

In the heat of midday, coffins lined with wallpaper began arriving in army lorries. They were given out to the family members of victims, along with transport to take their loved ones home.

One woman wailed at the pile of wooden coffins, her daughter's name scrawled in text on the lid of one. "It's not fair," she cried. "My daughter doesn't deserve this. She deserved a long life."

Cambodia is a country much too used to tragedy, its people weary of loss and of suffering. The prime minister acknowledged as much when he spoke in the middle of the night on Monday. "This is the greatest tragedy in more than 31 years after the Pol Pot regime," Hun Sen said in reference to the Khmer Rouge, whose regime killed a quarter of the Cambodian population, an estimated 1.7 million people, between 1975-79. "I ask you all to understand me and forgive me for this very bad situation."

The prime minister declared Thursday a day of mourning, and he promised compensation of 5m riel (about £780) to the families of those killed and 1m riel to those who were injured.

In the late afternoon, more than one hundred monks held a Buddhist vigil at the bridge, burning incense and offering prayers for the souls of the deceased.

By sunset, all the bodies had been cleared from the makeshift morgue at Calmette hospital. Army lorries bound for the provinces, loaded with plain brown coffins and grieving relatives, rolled out of the city all evening.

Cause of Deadly Crowd Panic Unclear, Authorities Say


Heng Reaksmey, VOA Khmer
Phnom Penh Monday, 22 November 2010

via CAAI

Photo: Heng Reaksmey, VOA Khmer
Victims of a deadly stampede are carried onto a rescue truck in Phnom Penh, in what Cambodian Prime Minister calls the country's "worst tragedy" since the Khmer Rouge period.

"The killing of Cambodian people this time is a second tragedy after Khmer Rouge regime."

The spark that caused the deadly panic in crowds Monday night at the conclusion of Cambodia’s largest annual festival remained unclear Tuesday morning, authorities told VOA Khmer.

A stampede at the conclusion of the three-day Water Festival killed at least 345 people and injured more than 400 others. The crowds grew unruly and dangerous shortly before 10 pm, and most of the victims were aged between 17 and 25, authorities told VOA Khmer.

Two toddlers, aged three and four, were saved from drowning, authorities confirmed early Tuesday. But they also described the deadly incident as one of the low points in modern Cambodian history.

There are conflicting reports about what sparked the chaos, according to interviews with witnesses, police, local authorities, and victim’s families.

Some witnesses said the incident was likely caused from an electrical shock when people were crossing the bridge of Koh Pich resort area. Others at the scene told VOA Khmer that people were spooked by rumors that the bridge would collapse. There were also reports of a fist fight on the bridge between two groups of teenagers and that when one group ran, turmoil erupted.

Prime Minister Hun Sen appeared several times throughout the night on Bayon TV. He sat at a desk, apparently at his home in Takhmau, on the outskirts of the capital. The broadcasts were carried simultaneously on two other prominent stations, TVK and CTN. Hun Sen said the incident was the worst affliction to strike Cambodia since the 1970s regime of the Khmer Rouge.

“The killing of Cambodian people this time is a second tragedy after Khmer Rouge regime,” a solemn Hun Sen said on the television broadcast.

Hun Sen publicly expressed his condolences and set up committees to investigate the incident.

Phnom Penh municipal authorities have set up special telephone numbers for people who wish to search for lost family members.

There are many people coming to Koh Pich to look for their relatives and many could not find them. They were told to go to Calmette hospital and other hospitals and clinics. Many were distraught.

Authorities have now cordoned off the area and tightened security for investigation. However, Prime Minister Hun Sen said that initial finding was that it was not “a terrorist attack”.

US sends condolences to Cambodia


















via CAAI

WASHINGTON - THE United States on Monday extended its 'deep condolences' for the nearly 350 lives lost during deadly stampede in Cambodia's capital.

'On behalf of President (Barack) Obama and the people of the United States, I offer our deep condolences for the tragic loss of life and the injuries in Phnom Penh during Cambodia's annual Water Festival,' said US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton.

'Our thoughts and prayers are with the family and friends of the victims and with all the people of the Kingdom of Cambodia,' she added in a statement.

Mrs Clinton remarked on the 'strength and resilience' of the Cambodian people she observed 'first hand' during her recent visit earlier this month to the country, adding: 'I am confident that they will pull together and persevere through this difficult time.'

Cambodia began the grim task on Tuesday of identifying 347 people - two thirds of them women - crushed to death in a bridge stampede when revellers panicked at a huge water festival in Phnom Penh.

More than 400 people were also injured in the disaster, Cambodia's deadliest in decades, which took place late on Monday on an overcrowded narrow bridge as millions celebrated the end of the annual three-day event. -- AFP

The Southeast Asian nation has emerged from decades of conflict, but continues to face many challenges.



Last Modified: 22 Nov 2010


Cambodia is a constitutional monarchy in Southeast Asia. King Norodom Sihamoni has reigned since 2004.

Theravada Buddhism is the official religion of Cambodia, which is practiced by around 96 per cent of the Cambodian population. The majority of Cambodians describe themselves to be Khmers, descendants of the Angkor Empire. The country's minority include Cham, ethnic Chinese, Vietnamese and various tribal groups.

Three-quarters of Cambodians depend on the land to make a living and agriculture remains the most important sector. Many farmers have been forced to sell their land to cope with financial pressures in recent years and land grabbing is a major issue.

Oil and nature gas deposits were found in Cambodian waters in 2005. Extraction is set to begin in 2011 and is predicted to have a transformative effect on the country's economy.

While there has been rapid economic growth in the past decade, this has come with a rising gap between the country’s poor and rich. Economic and political power remains in the hands of a small number of elites.

Cambodia is ranked 136 out of 179 in UNDP's Human Development Index (2008), the lowest among East Asian countries. More than a third of Cambodia's population live on less than $1 per day.

Illegal logging is prevalent throughout the country, leading to soil erosion and declining biodiversity. Fish stocks are also in decline because of overfishing.

There are up to one million small arms and light weapons in circulation in Cambodia and weapons remain "dangerously easy to obtain" and selling for as little as $25, according to Oxfam, a UK-based international development NGO.

Broadcast media is a mixture of state-owned, joint public-private, and privately-owned.

Tragic past

Cambodia was "protected" from its neighbours by the French from 1863, and became part of French Indochina in 1887.

Occupied by the Japanese during World War Two, the country won independence from the French in November 1953.

The Communist Khmer Rouge forces captured Phnom Penh in April 1975, after five years of fighting.

Executions, forced labour and starvation devastated the population. More than 1.5 million Cambodians died from atrocities committed during the Khmer Rouge regime.

The Vietnamese invaded in December 1978, driving the Khmer Rouge into the countryside. Vietnamese occupation was to last a decade and triggered 13 years of civil war.

The Paris Peace Accords in 1991 mandated democratic elections and a ceasefire, although the Khmer Rouge did not fully abide by it.

Some surviving Khmer Rouge leaders are awaiting trial for crimes against humanity by a hybrid UN-Cambodian tribunal supported by international assistance.

Monday, November 22, 2010

Hundreds die in tragic end to water festival


A mourner weeps amid several covered bodies at Calmette Hospital early this morning following a stampede that killed hundreds on the northen Koh Pich bridge during the water festival. (Photo by: Pha Lina)
Tuesday, 23 November 2010
The Phnom Penh Post Staff

Hundreds died and hundreds more were injured last night in a stampede on Diamond Island’s north bridge, bringing a tragic close to the final day of water festival celebrations in Phnom Penh.

Prime Minister Hun Sen announced via video conference at 2:30am that 339 people had been confirmed dead and 329 injured.

“With this miserable event, I would like to share my condolences with my compatriots and the family members of the victims,” he said.

This needs to be investigated more.”

A committee would be set up to examine the incident.



“This is the biggest tragedy since the Pol Pot regime,” he said, adding that Cambodia would hold a national day of mourning tomorrow.

The cause of the stampede has not yet been confirmed, but Minister of Information Khieu Kanharith said it happened because “one million people”, many of whom were leaving the island, became “scared of something.”

Municipal Police Chief Touch Naruth also could not confirm the series of events that led to the disaster.

“People were afraid and began to trample each other and some jumped into the river,” he said at the scene.

Bedlam ensued as the frenzied crowd began to push its way off the bridge, causing a jam that made it nearly impossible to breathe, according to witnesses.

With no other escape route, hundreds of people began jumping off the suspension bridge.

Sirens started to awaken city residents minutes later as ambulances, police cars and emergency vehicles began rushing to the scene, where they had to clear away the crowd before reaching victims.

Boats were called in to pull people out of the water and ferry others across the narrow Bassac River to the shore in front of the Royal Palace, where emergency workers fought through the crowd of frantic onlookers to care for the injured.

The bodies of victims were taken away in ambulances, flat-bed trucks and motor-bikes to area hospitals as police struggled to clear away the crowd by shouting, pushing and beating them back with their belts.

As the scene cleared, many bodies remained on the road, which was littered with shoes, shirts, pants and other objects dropped in the mayhem. Pieces of cardboard were placed over the heads of those obviously dead, while bystanders fanned people thought to be still alive.

Area hospitals confirmed that hundreds were either dead on arrival or died soon after, with witnesses on hand giving various explanations for the initial cause of the stampede and the actual cause of deaths.

A doctor at Calmette hospital, who declined to give his name, said after a preliminary assessment the principal causes of death among the victims he had examined were suffocation and electrocution.

Ouk Sokhhoeun, 21, was at the scene with his sister, 23-year-old Ouk Srey Mom, who was left unconscious and taken to Calmette hospital, said that military police started firing water cannons into the crowd on the bridge after the stampede had already caused scores of people to fall unconscious.

He said the water caused many people on the bridge to receive electric shocks from the cables lighting the bridge, at which point “some police also received electric shocks”.

Victims from Koh Pich


Video on Koh Pich


Eyewitness account at Koh Pich


By Azuriel
Source: http://www.expat-advisory.com/forum/asia/cambodia/phnom-penh-pub-expats-expats-cambodia/diamond-island-bridge

Just arrived back home after the missus and I spent some 4 hours stuck on Koh Pich ... we were just about to cross back to the mainland from the island when the stampede started, and police started cordoning the area off ... total chaos' prolly the best way to describe it ...

spent most of my 4 hours trying to help out, inclusing performing CPR on 4 girls that got fished out of the river ... unfortunately only managed to revive 2 of them ... ( ... of the other 2, only 1 had a pulse when they rushed her to hospital, but nevertheless, hope the ambulance crews managed to do more than my meagre first aid skills ...

From talking to the locals, some of the security and event management staff, and first-hand experience, I gather the following chain of events occurred; not sure these events occurred in this order though, but it's close:
- about 30-odd people were electrocuted (few direct deaths, but many losing consciousness, suffering severe burns) from contact with the metal guard rails on either side of the bridge ...
- about a dozen people fainted from the crush of the crowd, heat exhaustion, dehydration, or a combination of these, and fell underfoot ...
- Crowd panicked from the electrocutions and surged into a stampede; More people tripped or got pushed over, and got trampled underfoot ...
- People started jumping off the bridge into the river below to escape the mob; some were electrocuted climbing over the railings; some died from jumping into shallow water, or missing the water altogether, and landing on the concrete escarpments. One of the girls I performed CPR on had a nasty gash stretching from her collarbone down to just past her belly button ... not bleeding too badly, but was still a pain to patch up half-decently ...
- Curious onlookers surged towards the bridge from both ends trying to find out what was going on. POLICE WERE VERY FORCEFULLY PUSHING BYSTANDERS BACK, USING FISTS, BATONS, PISTOLS, AND PIECES OF METAL PIPING!!! ==>> AND IN PARTICULAR, SHAME SHAME SHAME ON THE BIG BLACK GUY WITH THE AMERICAN ACCENT THAT PHYSICALLY ASSAULTED MY WIFE AND I, NOT ONCE BUT TWICE: WHEN I TRACK DOWN YOUR DETAILS, I'LL BE USING ALL MY POLICE AND LEGAL CONTACTS TO PRESS CHARGES!! <<== Wish more foreigners could've put their energies into helping the wounded, as opposed to bashing up on the innocent bystanders ...
- Some police near the Koh Pich end of the bridge fired warning shops to try to disperse the crowd, but it only served to set off a 2nd panic, since no-one at that stage knew who was shooting, nor at who or what ...
- The crowd was warned to stay away from the metal guard rails along the easter edge of Koh Pich, for fear of electrocution. Around the same time, all the neon lights on the bridge were turned off, along with most of the street lamps along the eastern shore of the island.

As of 3am on Tuesday morning, the official death toll sits at 332 deaths, and 329 injured ...

a moment of silence please ...

ironically, the bayon TV concert a couple of hundred metres away blasted on throughout all of this ... ... ...w

CNN news blog: Stampede allegedly started by cops firing water cannon on the crowd


Cambodian minister: 339 dead in stampede

Source: http://news.blogs.cnn.com/2010/11/22/more-than-100-killed-in-cambodia-festival-stampede/

[Updated at 4:25 p.m.] Steve Finch, a Phnom Penh Post reporter, told CNN that the stampede at the water festival in Phnom Penh began around 10 p.m. Monday (10 a.m. ET), when police began firing a water cannon onto a bridge to an island in the center of a river.

The bridge was packed with people, and police fired the water cannon in an effort to get them to move, he said.

"That just caused complete and utter panic," he told CNN in a telephone interview. He said a number of people lost consciousness and fell into the water; some may have died by electric shock, he said.

Watch: "It was chaos," reporter says

Finch cited witnesses as saying that the bridge was festooned with electric lights, which may have played a role in the deaths.

The government denied anyone died by electric shock.

But a doctor who declined to be identified publicly said the main cause of death was suffocation and electric shock. Police were among the dead, he said.

While Finch said the incident apparently coincided with the firing of the water cannon, a witness, Ouk Sokhhoeun, 21, told the Phnom Penh Post that the stampede began first.

In addition to the 339 people who have been confirmed dead, 329 people were injured, Prime Minister Hun Sen said, according to The Phnom Penh Post.

The incident happened on the final day of the three-day festival, according to The Phnom Peng Post. The festival, which attracts people from all over Cambodia, is held annually to commemorate a victory by the Cambodian naval forces during the 12th century reign of King Jayavarman VII, according to the Tourism Cambodia website.

[Updated at 3:37 p.m.] Steve Finch, a Phnom Penh Post reporter, told CNN there were reports from witnesses of people electrocuted as police fired water cannons at people on the bridge to hurry them along causing the stampede.

According to a Radio Australia report, a big crowd watching the annual water festival panicked when a number of people were apparently electrocuted on the bridge.

Cambodian authorities say hundreds of people were either crushed in the resulting stampede or drowned when they fell or jumped into the river.

Prime Minister Hun Sen has given several post-midnight live broadcasts to update the country. In one, according to the Associated Press, he called the stampede the "biggest tragedy" in Cambodia since the Khmer Rouge reign of terror in the 1970s.

He also ordered all government ministries to fly the flag at half-staff and said there would be a national day of morning.

[Updated at 3:05 p.m.] Cambodian Prime Minister Hun Sen said on state-run TV he was unsure yet as to what caused the stampede.

"This needs to be investigated more," Hun Sen said, according to an AFP report.

Hun Sen said a committee would be set up to examine the incident.

The Associated Press, Reuters and AFP reported that witnesses said 10 people had either collapsed or become unconscious during the festival, triggering the panic.

That led, they reported, to people rushing towards a bridge headed toward Diamond Island. That's when things got worse, a witness told AFP.

"We were crossing the bridge to Diamond Island when people started pushing from the other side. There was lots of screaming and panic," 23-year-old Kruon Hay told AFP. "People started running and were falling over each other. I fell too. I only survived because other people pulled me up. Many people jumped in the water."

Sok Sambath, governor of the capital's Daun Penh district, told AFP "this is the biggest tragedy we have ever seen."

iReport: Are you there? Send photos, videos, descriptions

[Updated at 2:41 p.m.] Khieu Kanharith, the Cambodian Minister of Information, has said the death toll from the stampede has now reached 339.

The three-day festival attracts people from all over Cambodia - and around the world - to the Royal palace. The festival is held annually to commemorate a victory by the Cambodian naval forces during the 12th century reign of King Jayvarman VII, according to the Tourism Cambodia website.

The festival is also used to pray for a good rice harvest, sufficient rain and to celebrate the full moon, the site says. The festival dates back to before the 7th century.

At night, the boats on the river are illuminated with neon lights and there is a fireworks display.

A stampede occurred during a water festival in Phnom Penh, Cambodia.

[Updated at 2:36 p.m.] Cambodian Prime Minister Hun Sen said Monday on state-run Bayon Television that more than 200 people have died in the water festival stampede.

Officers with the Prime Ministers Bodyguard Unit stood outside a local hospital trying to help those who brought injured and control the scene of chaos outside.

Hundreds of shoes, clothing and personal items still littered the streets, the bridge and the underlying water near where the festival took place. The road on the bridge was so covered you could barely see the surface.

[Updated at 2:26 p.m.] Ambulances appeared to be making runs back and forth between the scene of the stampede and the hospital - dropping off the injured and then speeding away again, video on state-run Bayon Television showed.

Doctors stood outside a hospital, trying to direct traffic, between ambulances and vehicles of regular citizens bringing in the injured.

Friends and family clutched some the injured already in the hospital while others raced from the streets clutching the injured in the arms.

[Updated at 2:23 p.m.] Video from state-run Bayon Television in Cambodia showed panic in the streets and outside local hospitals.

Dozens of injured people appeared to be laying on what appeared to be the waiting room floor of a hospital with IV lines hooked up to them that were strung across benches.

[Updated at 2:04 p.m.] Cambodian Prime Minister Hun Sen said Monday on state-run Bayon Television that 180 people have died in the water festival stampede.

"With this miserable event, I would like to share my condolences with my compatriots and the family members of the victims," he said, according to AFP.

More than 4 million people were attending the Water Festival when the stampede occurred, said Visalsok Nou, a Cambodian Embassy official in Washington.

[Posted at 1:55 p.m.] More than 100 people were killed Monday in a stampede that occurred during a festival near Cambodia's royal palace in Phnom Penh, a Cambodian Embassy official in Washington said.

This story is developing. We'll bring you the latest information as soon as we get it.

Koh Pich: Video updates









Koh Pich Update 5: Photos from Reuters and AP


Tang Chhin Sothy/Getty Images
The aftermath of a stampede near a bridge in Phnom Penh, Cambodia on Saturday after millions celebrated the end of the annual Water Festival.

Victims of a stampede lie in a hospital in Phnom Penh on Monday. November.

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