✍️ 🇰🇭|The Original Cambodian traditional costume more than 1000 years ago
🇰🇭|សំលៀកបំពាក់ប្រពៃណីខ្មែរដើមដែលមានអាយុកាលជាង 1000 ឆ្នាំមុន %#highlight%#Cambodia
Let's listen this video a bit, you won't be got cheated by some Thais anymore. The picture in front of Angkor wat was in late 1924 while Siamese (Thai) prince and his armies visited Angkor for 10 days, hosted by French...
#KhmerHistory#angkorwat
Thailand has robbed Khmer land, plundered civilian property, and deliberately destroyed sacred temples, bridges, Buddhist pagodas, schools, hotels, markets, roads, and the homes of civilians.
I first met Steve years ago when I needed immigration advice for my older son, who is Cambodian. I have always found him level-headed and well informed. He has lived in Cambodia for 30 years and works closely with economically disadvantaged families. While I do not always agree with his approach, I take this video seriously and believe him. Regardless of the border dispute, Thailand forcibly displaced thousands of people from the Chouk Chey Village area in Banteay Meanchey. Prior to the renewed fighting, joint surveying was underway, a peaceful process for resolving disputed areas. Now unexploded ordnance has made the area unsafe, leaving thousands unable to return home, many permanently, following Thai aggression.
"My youngest daughter's name is Pearl, or "Srey Kuit" in Khmer. Yesterday, I was in a village that I have worked in for many years helping CMAC locate unexploded bombs. There I met another girl name Srey Kuit who shared with me a video of her nearly being killed by a mortar round shot by Thailand on December 9. The video is shocking to watch. She did live. It is not safe for her to live in her village yet, but she is too poor to not go to work at a nearby factory. There are still 150,000 people who are unable to return to their villages simply because Thailand has taken over their homes and destroyed them, or there are unexploded bombs all over their village making it unsafe to live there."
Cambodian villagers have told Al Jazeera they’re being prevented from returning to their homes by Thai forces who remain on the Cambodian side of the border. Assed Baig sent this exclusive report from Chouk Chey, which has been cut off with rows of shipping containers.
Credit: Al Jazeera
Behind the Thai containers and barbed wire is the Cambodian village of Chok Chey, a disputed area now blocked by Thai forces, leaving residents unable to access their homes and some reporting warning shots when they tried to approach. Cambodia maintains that borders here are defined by existing treaties and international law, while Thailand does not recognize the area as Cambodian, a dispute that continues to leave civilians caught in the middle and cut off from their village.