Tuesday, October 23, 2007

A day with the Cambodian police

Wednesday 10th October


Much worse than the mugging itself, was the ordeal of the following day, most of which was spent in Cambodian police stations. By the end of the day, I would certainly have said it was not worth the trouble, except for the fact that unfortunately we relied on a police report in order to get our replacement, temporary passports and for any insurance claims.

The day began comically, as not one person could direct us to a police station. It was not marked in any guidebooks or maps either. We had read that the police were a bit of a joke in Cambodia and it was evidently true. Our guesthouse owner also informed us of the rife corruption - and told us if we paid a sum of money, we could perhaps have our passports 'retrieved', i.e. the criminals and the cops were one and the same. Although this did not exactly come as an almighty shock to the system, the fact that the corruption was so openly known and talked about, made us a little apprehensive.

Eventually, someone in a tourist office, which happened to be situated close to a police station, gave us some very vague, hesitant instruction, and we stumbled across it. Except 'it' wasn't really 'it'. I think it must have been some kind of administrative base. There were a couple of men inside, who didn't know what to suggest when we told them we'd been mugged. One of them said the police station was closed. Soon a crowd of men had gathered on the street - most of them not police. After much discussion and deliberation and a series of misunderstandings, the conclusion was that we had to go somewhere else - to another station. Hoping that we were not hopping on to the back of a moto with a complete randomer, we were off.

We arrived at the other station - a grubby room with a few men lazing around inside, playing cards and watching telly. No-one budged an inch to acknowledge our presence. No eye contact, no greeting and no change of activity or body language. Just hostility and sarcasm. All the officers laughed at us during the day, but looking back on it now, I think the laughter was more out of embarrassment of their own incompetence and lack of training. There was a feeling of improvisation throughout.

They got someone off the street to translate, as none of them spoke any English. What followed, was a painful half hour or so, of us trying to describe what happened and the contents of the snatched bag. Then Briony went off on a moto with one of them to show exactly where it happened. We'd got up really early to try and sort this out because we'd hoped to get a bus that afternoon, out of the city. But we were told to come back at 3pm. So next we went to the British Embassy to sort out our passports. We were told there also, that it would be useful to give a bit of money here and there to the police to speed things up. So when we arrived back at about 2.30pm, we gave $5 to the man who had taken down the initial report and driven us to the embassy, saying it was for petrol for his moto. Eventually we were taken upstairs and sat in a room for a while - again with no-one telling us what the hell was going on. Everyone just looked around and smiled awkwardly, and we wondered when the interview, or whatever, was going to begin. By this time, another translator had arrived, but at this point we didn't know that he was also an outsider. So when he told us about how hard and expensive it was to deal with crimes like this, we asked if a bit of money would help speed things along, as we were all just sitting there and we wondered if they were waiting for money before beginning! The translator said yes, but when we put $5 on the table for the policeman who it appeared was going to interview us, he wouldn't except the money, saying that we had just been robbed and it would be wrong to take money from us. All very embarrassing and confusing.

Then we were told to get up and go to another room, where apparently the boss was sat. The boss, like the others, was rude and did not acknowledge our presence. While we twiddled out thumbs, he just carried on doing his own thing, chewing gum really loudly, with his mouth wide open, on what I assume was a very large piece, by the exaggerated movements of his ugly jaw. Of course, there was no progress made with the case during the hours that had passed. We were asked exactly the same questions all over again and Briony went out once again - with the boss - to show where the incident had occurred. While away, Briony was also treated to a kiss, a cuddle and an arse grope from the boss, and I spoke to the translator about his regular job as a hotel driver, and the corruption of the police.

Shortly after Briony and the boss returned, the translator left and a woman came and sat in his place. To my dying day, I will never know what her and the boss spoke/argued about, but it felt so distinctly fake - like they were acting. He was probably asking her about another case, but it was just so surreal. Then she just upped and left and smiled at me on the way out, like nothing had just happened. We naively thought that the process had come to an end, but oh no. Now we had to see the English tourist police, for the ACTUAL report. So far we had just obtained the investigative report. While we waited for the tourist police, the boss treated us to a mini exhibition of horrendous photos that he was extremely proud of; photos of him and his officers having 'retrieved' passports etc. for other people who had been mugged; a group of disgruntled youth who he'd caught smoking; and a whole series of bloody, nasty photos of Cambodian people having been beaten up (it not being clear whether they were the victims of the criminals or the criminals themselves), including a bloody naked woman lying in a shower, who looked like she'd been raped. Briony did her best to jolly him along, saying 'very good' to everything presented to us. I, on the other hand, was at this stage finding it quite difficult to hide my bemusement and disgust.

We waved the sleazy, egotistical wanker boss goodbye as we got on to the tourist policeman's moto for the 15K drive out of town to the closed tourist police headquarters. By this point, they were really taking the piss. We had been waiting around for hours already during the day. We insisted on making a stop to call the British Embassy before going to the tourist police station out of town. And it's a good thing we did because the woman there who we'd dealt with earlier said that the tourist policeman who was accompanying us had just charged $50 each for police reports for two other girls who had been robbed the same day as us, and told us to pay no more than $10 - $15 each. Of course, we were not supposed to be paying anything at all. It's all just bullshit.

When he finally finished the reports and told us it would set us back $50 each, rather than be confrontational about it and not pay anything at all, seen as it was now dark and we were in the middle of the Cambodian countryside at the mercy of 2 or 3 crooks, we decided to play dumb and acted surprised - very shocked, in fact - when he told us the sum. "We don't have that kind of money" I explained. "We've just been robbed" etc. His reaction was actually quite pathetic and he looked like we'd hurt his feelings. When he was out of the room, we hid all our cash in one bag, and put just $30 and a few riel in my wallet. When he came back, I sadly put the money on the table and told him that was all we had, but that we also had to eat that evening and tell our families what had happened - to make it all sound more real. Although I think he completely believed us, he still took all the money. Unbelievable!

The we got into the car of another policeman who drove us most of the way back, with his rap music playing loudly. It was really eerie, because it was the holiday festival in Cambodia, so the station was closed and they were just open for business like ours, and it was very quiet all around.
For the last leg of the journey, we got back on to the moto of the tourist policeman leading the whole debacle. About half a mile from our guesthouse his moto broke down and we had to get a tuk-tuk. He was not best pleased. I laughed so hard as we saw him wheel his moto off into the distance.

Saturday, October 20, 2007

Birthday treat: Killing Fields and mugging

Tuesday 9th October

AM - Choeung Ek Genocidal Centre - another dose of horrendous, Cambodian history - the killing fields of Choeung Ek. We got a moto there - our first while sitting on the same bike, so we had the added excitement of making sure Briony, who sat at the back of the bike, stayed on the bike.
Near the entrance of the site is a memorial which is very splendid on the outside. Inside, it is filled to the brim with human skulls. The site is quite small, with one mass grave close to the next. Beside the graves, there are signs with brief messages about who was buried there. There were also a couple of other signs next to trees, saying something like "Tree which children were held against while being battered to death". Another: "Magic tree - on which a loud speaker was hung, to drown the moans of victims".
But most disturbing of all, are the clothes and bones poking out of the ground, which I assume have been left there on purpose, but I'm not sure how they have survived. Really horrible.



It was my birthday, so we went out in the evening and had a really nice time, until we were mugged. When we were on the road, Briony, who was carrying all our possessions in one bag, felt a hand slide over her shoulder, slippping her bag off. Two guys on a moto drove by us very close and fast and snatched her bag. Briony was very confused and called out my name. I was disorientated and firstly thought that she had been hit by the bike. Then I thought they had grabbed her wrist and were dragging her away. But then I saw the green strap of her bag stretched out in front of her and watched in horror as she was dragged into the distance, still keeping hold of the bag. It was probably foolish to try and retrieve the bag but it was just instinctive to keep hold of it. And it really looked like Briony had a chance to snatch it back again, especially at the beginning of the struggle. But afterwards, she thought that perhaps they were even taunting her. They were going quite fast and it was hard for her to keep up with them as she had flip-flops on. She decided to let go when they turned a corner, even though she knew that she would fall over. And she did, rolling across the floor, bruising and scratching herself quite badly.
Briony cried out after a tuk-tuk driver going the same way, asking him to try and follow the moto which, thinking about it now, is quite comic - but he started driving after the moto! Of course, it was all in vain and the tuk-tuk turned around back towards us, and I decided to finish my rant of 'You stupid fucking bastards! You arseholes! You FUCKING BAAAASTAAAARDS!!!', etc.
Luckily, the tuk-tuk driver was nice and so were the two men inside it, who gave us a lift back to our guesthouse and gave us a few dollars to be getting on with. The driver informed us that the area we were in was very common for robberies - of local people as well as tourists. And it was a holiday in Cambodia too, so muggings were even more common. We are normally so much more careful than we were that night. We've learnt the hard way not to be complacent!
We arrived at our guesthouse, minus 2 passports, 2 mobile phones, lots of money, an expensive camera, bank cards and various other items of monetary and sentimental value :-( It was stupid to carry that amount of stuff around with us, but then items get nicked from guesthouses all the time too. The gate of the guesthouse was locked, even though the night was young, due to its rude interruption. So, we had to humiliate ourselves further by shouting from the street. The owner of the guesthouse was also very kind and took us in his car to a 24-hour internet cafe, so that Briony could cancel her bank cards. We eventually got to bed, tired, shaken and severely pised off.

Thursday, October 18, 2007

Tuol Sleng Museum

Monday 8th October
The museum was quite difficult to find. It was badly marked on our map and we went round in circles, walking down dirty, dusty back streets, before stumbling upon a small, concentrated Western hub - with the usual cold drinks for sale, white faces, beggars and tuk-tuks.

The museum was quite interesting. There was not much to read, but it was useful just to get a feel for what went on there. Before it became the S-21 Prison, and then the museum it is today, it was a school. In the grounds there is an uneasy incongruous mix of children's climbing frames and the remains of torture tools, including a big wooden frame on which political prisoners were hoisted upside down until losing consciousness. Then afterwards they would be plunged into a big pot of manure, or something similar, to be torn back into consciousness again.
The individual torture chambers were particularly eerie, each one similar to the next: a bare room, besides an old metal bed frame with various rusty iron torture tools resting on top; a photo above the bed - bad quality, blown-up, black and white photos of torture victims - post-torture, with blood, limbs and flesh all over the place; the imagination doing most of the work.
Then upstairs there were rows and rows of badly lit, tiny individual cells. There was a seemingly randomly placed cardboard cutout of a prisoner sitting inside one of them, which because of the light, I didn't see at first and it scared the shit out of me.
There were also rows and rows of photos of prisonsers, including very young children.

In the evening we couldn't be bothered to have dinner so we just ate peanuts and chocolate instead.

Tuesday, October 16, 2007

HCMC to Phnom Penh

We got up early to get a taxi to the airport for a short flight to Phnom Penh, Cambodia. It was an extremely smooth exit out of the swish Phnom Penh airport. The visas and baggage collection were very quick and we were immediately met by lots of taxi drivers outside the airport. This time around, we took our time and didn't let the energy of potential scammers influence us with their fluster. We ensured that we knew the going rate for a taxi, and set the price - before getting inside one.
The taxi driver had a bit of trouble finding our guesthouse, but did quite well considering the completely illogical and haphazard system of road and house numbers in Cambodia. There is no system. House numbers are not necessarily in order and can be repeated in one street. The guesthouse was run by a French woman and a Cambodian man and had a really nice atmosphere. Imagine hammocks, a slightly hippy commune feel, with Jack Johnson playing in the background and an absolutely delicious blend of Khmer and Western food.

Photos from Sapa




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Sunday, October 14, 2007

War Remnants Museum, HCMC

We got up and had a farewell breakfast and then saw people off.
Then Briony and I headed to the War Remnants Museum, which was basically just a powerful exhibition of photographs taken during the Vietnam War.
It was utterly gut-wrenching. We were quite overwhelmed by the end of it. One really awful photo after another, of imperialist warfare: photos of petrified women and children just before being shot by U.S troops; pictures of torture by U.S. troops, of citizens and 'suspected Viet Cong'. I did not realize the extent of the devastation - at least 6 million Vietnamese killed or injured during the war. The photos were so graphic and it was hard to absorb the evil of the U.S. bombardment and the terror of its occupation.
There was also a section of photos of children born with very bad deformities, as a direct result of the chemicals their parents were exposed to, e.g. 'The Orange Agent', napalm, etc. from the chemical bombs which were dropped by the U.S. on a massive scale.
An exhibition like that just lets you see so clearly through the bullshit and lies, still told by many today. No scruples - just imperialist warfare - bloody, openly brutal, ruthless and devastating.

In the evening, Hoang and a couple of others who were still in Vietnam went out in the evening, but Briony and I had an early night because we're old women.

Around HCMC

Hoang gave us an orientation tour around HCMC and then we went it alone. We ended up walking aroung the city for about 6 hours and got back to the hotel completely knackered and filthy. It was such hard work trying to find anything. We had to sort out flight tickets to Phnom Penh, visas, and other organisey stuff. But we seemed to spend at least half the time trying to find something to eat. We ended up scuttling in to the completely overpriced Rex hotel, soaking wet and very hungry, after getting caught in the predictable afternoon downpour.
Part of the problem was trying to find some vegetarian food, which wasn't from a fast food place or from an expensive restaurant. One of the many places which we looked at was an ostrich restaurant, which sold NOTHING but ostrich meat, in its various (and numerous) forms.

We went for a farewell meal with the whole group in the evening. Then we went for a piss-up and played pool - again! It was really sad that everything was nearly over in Vietnam.