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PHOTO GALLERY: CAMBODIAN
WOMEN CLEAR MINES
December 19, 2003 (AlertNet) Sean Sutton
of British-based Mines Advisory Group (MAG) visited Cambodia's first
all-women mine-clearance team, took these photographs and wrote
about the people he met.
In a ramshackle market in a remote corner of northwestern Cambodia,
Leath Chumbory sits on a wooden bench and hurriedly eats her breakfast
of soup and noodles.
The first light of the day is beginning to seep between the gaps
in the bamboo roof and Chumbory is keen to begin work before the
sun rises too high in the sky and makes conditions stiflingly uncomfortable.
She is part of a unique project - Cambodia's
only all-female demining team, in one of the most heavily mined
areas in the world.
Seng Somala admits her team has come under closer scrutiny because
it is made up entirely of women. She has no doubts, however, that
her deminers can match their male counterparts.
"Men are stronger and sometimes quicker
than women deminers but women are more patient and they try harder
so they easily make up," she says.
Seng Somala believes the pilot all-female
team has been a model for the whole of Cambodian society, empowering
the women and encouraging strong bonds between them.
"They take care of each other and are
more confident and vocal," she said.
"This is a real example of what women
in Cambodia can achieve. It will improve the profile of women and
promote our position in society."
Although the women range in age from 22 to 45, Som Chany regards
her fellow team members as equals - united in their determination
to rid their country of landmines.
"Some women are strong, some women are
less strong, but working together makes us all strong," she
said.
The team is currently working in the village
of Svay Sor, 60km from the provincial capital of Battambang Town.
The 50 families living in Svay Sor, which means tall mango tree
in the Khmer language, abandoned the village in 1979 because of
the heavy fighting in the area. It was 17 years before they were
able to begin returning.
As the sun begins to cool on the dusty fields
of Svay Sor, the women begin packing up their metal detectors, flak
jackets and safety helmets and prepare to return to the accommodation
building they share during the week. In front of a mirror nailed
to a bamboo post, Som Chany combs the grit and sweat from her hair
and applies a veneer of make-up.
Leath Chumbory's motivations for working in such a dangerous environment
are a mixture of the humanitarian and the financial. She is proud
to be able to clear fields, villages and wells so that those living
there are able to live their lives free from the threat of landmines.
But with a salary almost ten times Cambodia's
national average, Leath Chumbory and her fellow deminers are able
to support not only themselves but large extended families as well.
In Chumbory's case, her income enables her to raise the five children
she adopted from her sister after her brother-in-law was killed
by a mine.
Leath Chumbory experienced at first hand the
terrifying excesses of the Khmer Rouge regime. She had just entered
her teens when, in 1975, Cambodia's then leader Lon Nol fled the
country and the capital Phnom Penh fell to Pol Pot's rebels.
After taking Phnom Penh, the Khmer Rouge began implementing its
murderous experiment of trying to transform Cambodia into a Maoist
agrarian society. The Khmer Rouge forced the population of Phnom
Penh and the other major towns into the countryside to undertake
slave labour in the fields.
Leath Chumbory was among them.
She was forced to walk 400km from the capital
to Battambang Province with her family. Three of her five sisters
went missing on the road to Battambang and were never seen again.
Later, Leath Chumbory learnt the horrific fate of many of her other
relatives.
Her father and two of her brothers were killed
at Phnom Penh's infamous Security Prison 21, a former school where
more than 17,000 people were detained and tortured before being
transported to the killing fields on the outskirts of the city and
murdered. Her brother in law, an army general under Lon Nol, was
slowly cooked to death in an oven.
When she reached Battambang, Leath Chumbory
was forced, like thousands of other Cambodians, to build dams for
up to 15 hours a day. She knew that even the most minor act of disobedience
would result in summary execution. The work nearly killed her.
In 1978, Vietnam launched a full-scale invasion of Cambodia. Two
weeks later, Pol Pot's government was toppled. As the Khmer Rouge
soldiers fled into the jungle and the mountains on either side of
the Thai border, Leath Chumbory was able to escape and begin the
search for her missing family members. She was eventually reunited
with her sister - the only relative to have survived the Pol Pot
years.
She returned to Phnom Penh, married and gave
birth to a baby daughter. The couple scratched out a meagre existence
running a street stall in the capital but when Leath Chumbory's
husband died in 1990, she struggled to survive.
By 1996, Leath Chumbory was poverty-stricken
and desperate. But her life was about to change. She replied to
a newspaper advert placed by MAG, a mine clearance charity, inviting
women in difficult circumstances to train as deminers. She was selected
and, after undergoing training in demining techniques, began working
with a 15-strong Mine Action Team.
Almost three decades of conflict have left
Cambodia with a chronic landmine problem. Years of aerial bombing
and the widespread use of mines by all sides in Cambodia's recent
bloody history have had a devastating impact on the country.
Almost half of Cambodia's 11 million people
live alongside, or even in the middle of, minefields. More than
800 people, the vast majority of them civilians, were killed or
injured by landmines in Cambodia last year. More than a quarter
of the victims were children.
The landmine problem is particularly acute
in the northwestern province of Battambang. The area was the scene
of some of the fiercest fighting between Pol Pot's genocidal Khmer
Rouge regime and Vietnamese and Cambodian government soldiers. During
the battles of the 1970s and 1980s, landmines were an everyday weapon
of war. Pol Pot called mines his "perfect soldiers," so
effective were they at causing death and injury to his enemies.
More than 100 families, most of them farmers, have now settled in
Svay Sor -- even though the village is heavily contaminated with
mines ranging from small anti-personnel devices to powerful anti-tank
weapons. Accidents are common and a number of villagers limp along
on crude prosthetic limbs, a poor substitute for the legs they lost
to landmines.
Despite the risks, the villagers of Svay Sor
say they have no choice but to work the land. They know the risks
- but this is the only land they have. Some villagers have taken
extraordinary risks by trying to clear the mines themselves. Others
have simply tried to plant crops around the areas they know to be
mined.
The women deminers search the land methodically,
first with a metal detector and then on hands and knees. Inserting
a metal spike into the ground at an angle of 30 degrees so as not
to disturb the sensitive lids of the mines, they clear the village
inch by inch. Many of the mines commonly found in Cambodia are too
dangerous to be physically removed from the ground. Instead, they
are surrounded by explosives and blown up wherever they're found.
Each safely destroyed mine leaves a deep crater, into which a yellow
wooden stake is placed, marking the spot like a tombstone.
The future development and economic growth
of Cambodia depends entirely on the work of the Mine Action Teams.
Crops cannot be grown, wells cannot be drilled and schools, clinics
and roads cannot be built until the landmines have been found and
destroyed.
To view the photo gallery that accompanies
this article and to read the article on the AlertNet site, visit:
http://www.alertnet.org/thenews/photogallery/KHmag.htm
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