20. Landmine Museum
Written by the Founder Who Had Been a Child Soldier After Parents Were Shot |
On the way back
from Banteay Srei, Mr. Touch #2 took us to the Landmine Museum, it was a stop
he recommended.
The Khmer Rouge
planted millions of mines all throughout Cambodia.
It might have
been an act of desperation but it sure was extremely stupid.
The mines were
laid down without a master plan, without any plan whatsoever. The ‘soldiers’ of
the Khmer Rouge were just told to mine this field, these woods, that piece of
land, etc and were given unlimited mines and the boys or girls just went out
and put them in the ground. Nobody knows where they are.
Trying to Give Back to His Country |
There are a few
larger, heavy duty mines for tanks, trucks and vehicles.
But the majority
are smaller mines, all were set haphazardly; all were set as anti-personnel
mines. The museum showed the kind of mines used.
After the Khmer
Rouge disbanded, the land, the woods full of landmines, was not usable, was even
dangerous to enter. Rice paddies, bamboo groves, usable lumber areas all were
ruined by sleeping, lethal mines; large and small ones of different makes.
Still Has Live Ammunition In It |
It’s a
disaster. Young children were used to disarm the mines because their weight was
so low that mines did not trigger a lot of times, but there were also
trip-wired mines, or other mines that killed or maimed many a child until the
government decreed certification necessary to de-fuse mines. Like the dreaded Claymore Mine.
Found Less Than a Year Ago |
Even today in
2020, large areas in Cambodia are still ‘mined’. There are an estimated
3,000,000 still active land mines in the ground in Cambodia.
Rats are used
today to sniff out the TNT in the ground.
I will write
another blog about those rats later and explain how
they do it. Rats are good
sniffers; they found 4,500 mines in 2019 alone and 36,000 bombs or grenades.
More Bomb and Mine Samples |
This stop was a
shocking reminder that the time of the Khmer Rouge still has residue that kills
people, yes, even today. A log is kept of how many people are killed each year
by landmines.
Child Soldier Taken by Khmer Rouge When He Was 5 Yrs. Old |
Why use mines,
they don’t kill people only during war times but more people die from mines
AFTER a war or conflict stops. Mines are really, really bad.
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