My afternoon trip was a totally different affair. Linda would not go with me. Having experienced all the pleasurable aspects that Cambodia had to offer thus far it was time to bite the bullet and engage with the more unsavoury side of its recent history. Tuol Sleng is Phnom Penh's Genocide Museum. It is located on the actual site of Security Office 21 (S21) of the former "Democratic Kampuchea"; created by Pol Pot for the systematic interrogation, torture and murder of its citizens. The place itself used to be a high school but the Khmer Rouge turned the four, three-storey concrete Blocks into cells and torture chambers. Visitors can visit the cells, see the rusty metal beds and the shackles and devices that held the prisoners, see the barbed wire that surrounded the outside of the Blocks to stop would-be suicides, and look at the grainy enlarged black and white photos of all the people who were about to be killed. It hit me hard as I was walking past wall after wall of these doomed "mug shots" when I realised I was looking at pictures of little asian children. Steve: you remember the impact of the Jersey underground war museum all those years ago? This is worse. I've been wandering the streets for an hour prior to finding this internet cafe: I do not and cannot understand this! I was considering visiting one of the more infamous "killíng fields" about 15 klicks outside PP but I can't face any more. The human species in the 20th century has a lot to answer for.Sorry about the lack of humour in this post. Normal service will be resumed tomorrow as our adventures take us away from PP to Siem Reap.

2 comments:
Yup !! I remember all to well, and would have equally avoided like the Plague. Sorry back to the bar for me !!
Sorry you had to have your bubble burst in that way.
Welcome to the real world.
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