Visitors from Malaysia / Tuesday

The visitors returned from Siem Reap this evening and we went to a final dinner together.  Click here for a photo from the restaurant.  Tomorrow morning early they fly back to Malaysia.

[Somehow, somewhere the photos from Thursday and Saturday have been misplaced!  If I ever find them on my computer, I’ll let you know!]

The cost of progress

This is a street near the Salesian Sisters Technical School for Girls in Tuol Kork.  It used to be a fairly big tree-shaded avenue.  Now it’s getting even bigger but without the trees.  All that is left of them are big stumps like the one above as the trees were sacrificed for progress.

Odds are against the wildlife

A distressing article in The Phnom Penh Post reported that more than 100,000 snares were found in one national forest in Cambodia over the last six years.  An official estimated there were at least twice that many that they did not find.  The snares–used because they are easy and inexpensive–kill animals indiscriminately and the toll is especially bad for the endangered species.  Part of the reason for the destruction of the wildlife is cultural–some groups literally don’t know any better and just keep hunting the animals as their people have for centuries; another part is economic–there is a thriving market for wild animals shipped to China and Vietnam and other places; and part of it is governmental–the government has a very poor record of enforcement of any type throughout the country (unless the target is seen as an opponent of the ruling party in which case a perverted “justice” is swift and overwhelming.)