A Change of Guard

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Tuesday, 19 March 2013

[Khemarak Sereymon's] Song proves eerily prescient

Last Updated on 19 March 2013 
Phnom Penh Post 
By Mom Kunthear and Joe Freeman
sereymon acident song
A screengrab shows the background image that accompanies Khemarak Sereymon’s new song about the dangers of traffic accidents.
About a week after popular vocalist Khemarak Sereymon walked away from a traffic accident that killed four of his friends earlier this month along National Road 4, a song of his appeared on YouTube.

The mournful ballad didn’t cover the familiar territory of love and relationships. To the melody of Leonard Cohen’s Hallejujah, Sereymon’s crooning travelled into unfamiliar terrrority: traffic accidents.

“Drink too much and drive without thinking about the other people’ lives,” goes one lyric.

Whether because of his celebrity, the recent public interest in road safety, or a combination of both, the post started to rack up page views, accumulating more than 20,000 since first appearing on March 12.

Though initially thought to be an artistic response to the traumatising incident – which occurred on March 7 in Preah Sihanouk province when a Sok Korn Company truck’s container fell onto his car, injuring four and killing the other passengers – it turns out the song was in the works a month ago and had simply not yet been released.


First written and produced for Cambodia Television Network as a public safety message, the recording now seems strangely prophetic.

“Traffic accidents separate parents from their children forever,” Sereymon sang in one verse.

Victims of the crash on March 7 include Chi Vireak, 19, son of comedian Chuong Chi, also known as Neay Koy, and Each Vannak, 19, son of comedienne Noy Samnang.

The song could not have come at a more apt time. An average of five Cambodians die every day on the roads, and crashes are the second-leading cause of death in the country.

But it’s hard to tell what influence the song will have on the government, which is looking at passing a new traffic law, or the bad habits of drivers, whose speeding and drunk driving account for the majority of accident deaths.

Using celebrities to spread messages and raising awareness is “nothing new, it’s always been happening here,” said Sonny Krishnan, a spokesman for the World Health Organization, which is leading a massive road safety project.

Because of Sereymon’s stature and exposure, he said, the song could affect some driving habits.

“It has an impact in the sense that in communications theory, these people are role models. And audiences tend to emulate the behaviour of this person.”

To contact the reporters on this story: Mom Kunthear at kunthear.mom and Joe Freeman at joseph.freeman@phnompenhpost.com

2 comments:

Anonymous said...

Cambodian's law should prosecute this guy that drunken and killed people during traffic accident send a message loud and clear that drinking and driving is not mix!.He is not sorry nor remorse nothing the lyric of the song is just a lyric not real suffer for his stupidity parts driving while intoxication that killed innocent people,prosecute this arrogance's kid put him in jail and teach him a lesson of consequences from irresponsible behavior.

Yobal Khmer

Anonymous said...

This irresponsible act of traffic carelessness goes beyond drink driving. It strikes on the way Cambodia succumbs to a regime of impunity from whatever crimes committed.The law was never upheld by the thugs and murderers in the CPP inclusive of their rich and spoiled brads of offsprings, to their dogs who beat up poor people every day.If those in the govt supposed to uphold the law and did not, why expect every one to respect them.It is a 2 standards society controlled by a bunch of wanking bastard of murderers who know only of jungle laws like their ancestors