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이 페이지는 한국어로 제공되지 않으며 English로 표시됩니다.

의견

2015년 2월 20일

저자:
Photos by Nicolas Axelrod; Text by Denise Hruby

Transitioning Cambodia: Photo essay of rapid developments in modern-day Cambodia

July 07, 2011 - Phnom Penh, Cambodia. A resident of Boeung Kak rows a wooden boat against a storm moving in over Phnom Penh. The new buildings of the Council of Ministers and the office of the Prime Minister can be seen in the background.

 

With the first beams of sunlight, men and women would set out on wooden longboats, passing the reflection of their stilted homes onto the middle of Boeung Kak, a lake nestled in the heart of Cambodia's capital Phnom Penh. 

Soon, their hand-made fishing nets would be filled with flapping fish, and their woven baskets would brim with morning glory. Little more is needed for a filling supper.

March 27, 2009 - Phnom Penh, Cambodia. A child plays in muddy water that is spraying out of a broken pipe, the pipes are pumping sand into a natural lake in Borei Reakreay community. The community was evicted from their homes in mid-2009 to make way for residential complexes.

 

Most of the maps you'll find of Phnom Penh will still show this vast body of water. Surrounded by the Council of Ministers, the Royal University and the offices of the Prime Minister, the community seemed a little out of place: Lacking electricity, clean drinking water and hygiene, it was the poor who had formed a close-knit community here. 

August 23, 2010 - Phnom Penh, Cambodia. A worker dismantles a house on Boeung Kak. Residents had the option of accepting 8500 dollars in compensation or receive 500 dollars to relocate to housing provided by the developers on the outskirts of the capital.

 

If you'd visit the once vibrant area today, you'd find little more than sand. In 2008, a real estate company started to pump sand into the lake. A few years later, and the water was no more. Neither was the vibrant community of several thousand people that had called the lake home for decades.

That somebody would fill in a whole lake to erect high-rise buildings might seem ludicrous — but after acquiring the rights to develop the lake, that’s exactly what a real estate company did. With the economy growing at a flabbergasting average of 7.7 percent over the past twenty years, the need for development is inevitable.

July 27, 2012 - Phnom Penh, Cambodia. Camko city, an urban development project three kilometres north of central Phnom Penh. The high rise buildings and town houses in the satellite city were largely built on land reclaimed from natural lakes.

 

After decades under the genocidal Khmer Rouge regime and ensuing civil war, the country's middle class is growing, and so is consumerism. Cambodians are embracing this modernisation. The young now dress in fashionable clothes and munch on Belgium pralines before watching the newest 3D Hollywood blockbuster. Affluent families are moving into apartment buildings that feature gyms, pools, countless air condition units and a daily maid service. Even luxury carmakers like Porsche and Rolls Royce have opened dealerships in the capital Phnom Penh.

March 03, 2009 - Phnom Penh, Cambodia. Vin Thy (cntr) and Chanty (cntr right) sit in front of their corrugated iron homes in the center of Phnom Penh. Their community is slated for a second eviction, the first one saw them move out of their homes in Borei Keila and relocated to a near by community, their pending eviction will send them to live on the outskirts of the capital.

 

Countless opportunities exist for investors, but critics say that rapid development has made the rich richer, and the poor poorer. The majority of the population is left out.

Jan. 24, 2009 - Phnom Penh, Cambodia. Residents flee a bulldozer as it charges into rubble of destroyed homes during the forced eviction of Dey Krahorm. The community of Dey Krahorm situated in central Phnom Penh was made up largely of artists and musicians, the eviction saw residents relocated to the out skirts of Phnom Penh.

 

For the hundreds of families that were violently evicted from their homes in the city center, development meant that they were relocated to barren plots of land. Schools, health-care centers, markets or any income opportunity were out of reach. The ones who fought for their land were violently suppressed, driven out of their homes with tear gas and water canons.

Today, their once poor but lively communities have been replaced with sterile real estate projects.

June 05, 2014 - Phnom Penh, Cambodia. Kunthea and her son Panha (right) travel in a tuk-tuk with her cousin in central Phnom Penh. Kunthea is a single mother, working as a cleaner for four different expat families.

 

In Cambodia, development has been happening fast -- but with little regard for collateral damage.

Transitioning Cambodia is the first photo book that will showcase these rapid developments in modern-day Cambodia, it's changing landscapes and society.
We are currently running a crowd funding to distributed the photo book in pre-sale through:
https://www.indiegogo.com/projects/transitioning-cambodia/x/9714237 

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