Info and tips about Cambodia part 4.
Cambodia is a democracy in that they have elections every five years. However there are many areas where their democracy falls short. Cambodia’s entire population of 8 million was forced out of the cities to work in rice fields. Intellectuals of any class were murdered. Cambodia has annnounced plans to erect walls across disputed border territories, including over the territory at Preah Vihear. In effect, they´re going to prevent access to the temple from Thailand and try building cable car access from the Cambodian side. Cambodia has come a long way in the last several years. The economy is growing. Cambodian Buddhism exists side-by-side with, and to some extent intermingles with, pre-Buddhist animism and Brahman practices. Most Cambodians, whether or not they profess to be Buddhists (or Muslims), believe in a rich supernatural world. Cambodia would literally be hell on earth for Crive. If he had booked himself on the same bus we banked from Siem Reap to Bangkok. Cambodia has all the makings of an idyllic tourist destination: miles of coastline, year-round warm weather and a rich cultural heritage. Instead, it is a country with a tumultuous past, one that has been caught for decades in the middle of warring nations and civil unrest. Cambodia has one of the most hack-friendly, McGyver-friendly cultures I’ve ever seen, in which locals can make just about anything out of whatever is available. I don’t think eating rat is inherently more nasty than eating a Big Mac. Cambodia´s press is more or less free to write about corruption.