Monday, 10 September 2012
By Kim Yuthana and Rachel Will
Phnom Penh Post
Three
children were killed when a suspected Khmer Rouge-era B40 rocket
exploded in a field in Cambodia’s northern Oddar Meanchey province on
Sunday.
Police suspect the three boys, aged between eight and
nine years old, had tried to break apart the bomb to salvage a copper
metal ring to sell as scrap metal, causing the ordnance to explode.
“This
whole area is a former battlefield between the armed forces government
and Khmer Rouge soldiers,” Keo Than, Trapaing Prasat district police
chief said.
Two of the boys died instantly from the blast in the
field, while the third died en route to the hospital due to wounds from
the explosion.
“Their bodies were severely injured by the unexploded ordnance. We almost could not identify the victims’ body,” Than said.
While the sale of UXOs is illegal in Cambodia, the risk trade is hard to stamp out, Cambodian Mine Action Centre director general Heng Ratana said.
“Usually
[individuals] try to sell the scrap metal, but this [type of] rocket
does not have a lot of scrap metal,” Ratana said, adding in recent years
he had seen a big drop in the illegal trade of bombs.
“The B40 rocket launcher was very commonly used in Cambodia and can be found in [war] fields,” Ratana said.
According to UXO research by Cambodian Mine Victim Information System (CMVIS), Oddar Meanchey is a high-risk province for remaining land mines and explosives.
In
the first seven months of this year, there have been 114 casualties and
25 fatalities. In Oddar Meanchey, which has the second highest rate
nationally, there have been 47 casualties.
"There are people injured and killed by UXOs nearly every year despite education to warn about the dangers of UXOs,” Than said.
To contact the reporters on this story: Kim Yuthana at yuthana.kim@phnompenhpost.com
Rachel Will at rachel.will@phnompenhpost.com
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AP
/
September 10, 2012
PHNOM PENH, Cambodia (AP) — Three Cambodian boys have been killed by a B-40 rocket left over from the country’s 1980s civil war.
District police chief Keo Tann said Monday the boys found the rocket
in a northern forest and tried to smash it apart, hoping to sell its
pieces as scrap metal.
Two of the boys were 8 and the other 9.
They were killed Sunday in Oddor Meanchey province, a site of intense
battles between the former Khmer Rouge regime and government forces.
An estimated 4 to 6 million land mines and other unexploded ordnance
from more than three decades of armed conflict continue to maim or kill
Cambodians each year.
1 comment:
www.aminefreeworld.org We cannot do anything to help these boys but we can help landmine survivors and landmine-affected families. 3 more little angels victims of a man-made destructive device. May they rest in peace.
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