CAMBODIA: A Former Battlefield Now Provides Clean Water and Sustainable Farming
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MAG returned to Phlov Meas village, Battambang Province, almost a year after two minefields in the village were cleared. In total, MAG cleared almost 80,000 square meters of land from this former battlefield, removing 37 landmines and 32 items of unexploded ordnance (UXO)in the process. |
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Forty-one year-old mother of seven, Sim Horn, proudly cleans her newly-built wooden house. The house measures six metres-by-seven metres. According to the community chief Vai Chamroeun, more than 90 per cent of his community members eke out a living by growing corn, sugarcane, beans and sesame. He says that before the clearance took place, few crops were grown. "Fearful of mines, the villagers didn't expand the land for cultivation," says the community chief. "Now their lives are improving to a certain extent. It's not so hard like before. Today people live in safety."
Just a few months before MAG undertook clearance work, Pin Ry, in her 80s, had a lucky escape. "The hoe hit the side of the mine. I lifted the hoe up and showed it to my son, asking him, ‘what is it?' He told me, ‘Mother! Mine!'" Pin Ry said. "I put the hoe down very gently." Pin Ry hit at least two mines on two previous occasions when she attempted to clear the land in front of her house. In one incident, she damaged an eye when a mine exploded as she dug the soil. As a result, she became afraid to farm. "I cut the old leaves away so that my sugarcane will become healthier. Now it's nearly four months old and is ready to be harvested," she says. MAG thanks the following donor for funding the work mentioned in this article: Office of Weapons Removal and Abatement, US Department of State.
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| [Photo by Chea Makara of MAG Cambodia] | |






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