Kamping Pouy Bassin is located between two mountains Phnom Ku or Phnom
Ta Ngen and Phnom Kamping Pouy - in Ta Nget Village, Ta Kream Srok
commune, about 35 kilometers west of the provincial town.This gigantic
civil-engineering project was central to the Khmer Rouge?s plan to
irrigate the countryside around Battambang. Tragically, the construction
of the Kamping Puoy Reservoir resulted in the deaths of tens of
thousands of people. Unlike the victims of S21 and Choeung Ek most of
the deaths on the Kamping Puoy project were caused by malnutrition,
disease, overwork or mistreatment. The deaths were in short,
preventable.
A gripping, visceral and painfully honest account
of life in Battambang under the Khmer Rouge was written by Haing S.
Ngor, the Cambodian doctor, actor and community worker who won an oscar
for the film The Killing Fields. His book Survival in Cambodia's Killing
Fields is perhaps the most eloquent account of day-to-day life during
the Pol Pot period. It is laced with insights into the Khmer psyche and
is ultimately a heartbreaking read. Kamping Pouy Bassin is 6meters long
and 1,900 meters wide. During the rainy season the basin can hold 110
million cubic metere of water, which is used primarily for agriculture.
Kamping Pouy basin is vital to this area. It is now a popular picnic
site for residents of Pailin and Battambang because of its fresh air.
Lotus flowers grow in the water and nearby you can buy lotus seeds to
eat (they are delicious and taste a bit like sweet, uncooked peas).
Takream Commune in Banan District is the nearest settlement.
Thursday, December 4, 2014
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