A Change of Guard

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Monday, 5 May 2014

Dave Walker found dead at Cambodia temple months after vanishing from guest house


A body believed to be that of missing Canadian Dave Walker is seen in a jungle at the famed Angkor complex in Siem Reap province on May 1.
YOU VONG/AFP/Getty ImagesA body believed to be that of missing Canadian Dave Walker is seen in a jungle at the famed Angkor complex in Siem Reap province on May 1.
Files
FilesDave Walker is shown in this undated handout photo.
The family of Dave Walker, a Canadian filmmaker who went missing in Cambodia in February, says he was found dead Thursday.
A statement issued on behalf of Walker’s family says his body was reportedly discovered by a child at the Angkor Wat temples in Siem Reap, Cambodia.
Cambodian law enforcement officials told the family it appeared Walker had died several weeks ago
The statement says a doctor at the site was unable to determine a cause of death and an autopsy will be held to try to determine how and when Walker died.
Walker, who was 58, had been living in Cambodia for the past year and a half. He was staying at a guest house when he stepped out while a housekeeper tended to his room and was not seen again.
Animist Farm Films
Animist Farm Films
Dave Walker was last seen when he left his guest house in the northwest city of Siem Reap. He left behind his laptop, phone and passport.

Alberta man who went missing in Cambodia may have been ‘silenced’ over film about war criminals, friend says

Canadian officials said Wednesday they were working with Cambodian authorities to try to find an Edmonton filmmaker and journalist who disappeared in the country late last week.
Dave Walker has not been seen since he left his guesthouse in the northwest city of Siem Reap on Friday afternoon. He left behind his laptop, phone and passport. Cambodian police are investigating.
The disappearance baffled family and friends, who said Walker spoke the language, knew the streets and was familiar with the local culture.
Walker and a partner had set up a film company in Siem Reap in July 2012 called Animist Farm Films. They had recently been working on a documentary about the Khmer Rouge regime, which left close to two million people dead.
Walker grew up in Edmonton but last lived in Toronto, where he studied for a Master’s degree at York University in 2009. His family said he has lived and worked in Southeast Asia on and off for years.
He also co-authored a non-fiction book, called Hello My Big Big Honey, which chronicles the experiences of Bangkok bar girls and their Western admirers.

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