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The Incredible Journey of Aki Ra, Former Child Soldier

Aki Ra telling his story at the Helena May in Hong Kong, on Oct. 13, 2009.

Aki Ra telling his story at the Helena May in Hong Kong, on Oct. 13, 2009.

HONG KONG, October 13, 2009 - Aki Ra's story is, perhaps, not an uncommon one in Cambodia, where land mines have wreaked havoc on a nation of 14 million people.

At age five, Aki Ra lost his parents to land mines and went to live in the jungle with other children who'd suffered a similar fate. At age 12, he was forced by the Khmer Rouge to join their army. The former child soldier recalls how some friends made fatal mistakes in handling live ammunition. Their bodies were simply discarded into a river and washed downstream. 

By then, Aki Ra was already depositing between 100 and 1,000 land mines a day. “It's easy to lay because you just take out the safety pin, bury it in the grass or dig a small hole to put it in,” he said. “It's very quick.”

After three decades of conflict, Cambodia has one of the worst land mine problems in the world. They were scattered across the country,and once embedded can remain active for up to half a century.

“Landmines are not designed to kill. They are designed to maim,” says Bill Morse, who works with Aki Ra.

“It scares the heck out of everyone else as no one wants to be the next person to step on a land mine.”

After a peace settlement was brokered in 1991, the United Nations was given a mandate to enforce a ceasefire and deal with disarmament in Cambodia. There are an estimated three to 10 million land mines still left in the country, although experts put the figure at five million.

Inspired by the UN's work, Aki Ra has been devoting his time to clearing land mines. Between 1990 and 2005, he has de-commissioned about 50,000 devices with just a knife, without any protective equipment. In 1997, Aki Ra went on to establish the Cambodia Land Mine Museum and now works with a team of 10 men in the field.

His wife and six-year-old son are also adept at de-mining. Aki Ra spends 25 days a month clearing the land while the remainder of the time is devoted to the museum. Residing at the museum alongside his family are 25 children, bearing the scars of a country ravaged by conflict. There, he provides the former street children with more than just shelter - it is their home.

Aki Ra relies on private donations to finance their operations. “The Cambodian government doesn’t provide any funding,” explained Bill Morse. “11 years ago, the government was barely functioning… after civil war for 30 years. They’ve accomplished a lot since the civil war ended but they are in dire straits. The economy pretty much runs on foreign aid. All de-mining is funded by international donors.”

While a number of organizations are involved in de-mining work, most focus on the high-risk areas. However, Aki Ra targets a different category. As Bill Morse observes, they work in “low priority villages -villages that are so far down the list they may not be cleared for five years, ten years. Maybe never if there’s not enough (funding) going around.”

It is difficult to quantify how many land mines are de-commissioned. “Some days we clear a dozen, some days none. But we clear a lot of land. The first village we cleared was outside Siem Reap. 25 families are now farming that land. A year ago it was killing people,” said Bill Morse.

For more information on Aki Ra and his work: http://www.cambodialandminemuseum.org. 

Users' Comments

Dustin | 01:11:10 01:43am

im doing a project on you and im really gald i did this project on you so i just want to show you the project i did i hope you like it! By:Dustin Yung Date: Dec 15 2009 Aki Ra Aki Ra is a peace keeper in Cambodia right now demining mines and dangerous explosives that could kill him and others. He has demined over 50,000 mines and he said his only goal in life is to make his country safe for his people. No one knows Aki Ra’s exact birth date even Aki Ra himself. But his teacher said she remembers he was born in 1973, He has always lived in Siem Reap province in Northwest Cambodia. His parents were good people and were both killed by the Khmer Rouge for committing very simple crimes, the Khmer Rough were jungle rebels and there leader Pol pot were a strong army and wanted Cambodia. The Khmer Rouge where fighting Lonol’s armies. Lonol’s armies where formed in 1970, he was the general and leader of the Cambodian army. He held a successful military group against Prince Sihanouk and he retreated to China. Prince Sihanouk was the prince of Cambodia at the time being. Lonol’s army had support of powerful allies from Thailand, South Vietnam and the USA. So the battle was between the Khmer Rouge and Lonol’s armies for Cambodia. Fighting continued between the Khmer Rouge and Lonol’s armies until the USA and the South Vietnamese, along with the Thailand forces, retreated out of Cambodia in 1975, leaving Lonol’s army to lose to the Khmer Rouge. The Khmer Rouge took Phnom Penh (Capital and largest city of Cambodia) in April 17, 1975, happily and victoriously marching through the streets promising peace for Cambodia. But instead the Cambodian people suffered for four years under the control of the Khmer Rouge leader Pol Pot. His plan was to create a farming system that had everybody working in fields like it was back in time 400 years ago. By doing this system, the Khmer Rouge took every citizen’s job, family and processions in order to rearrange society. Even the calendar year was turned back to year zero. People that where Educated were considered the enemy and were cruelly tortured and killed in the killing fields around Cambodia. The Cambodian army was forced to give their weapons and move forward with the promise of a new way of life. But instead they were frown in trucks, taken into the jungles and brutally murdered. Between the years 1975 and 1979, it is estimated that over three million people died form the Khmer Rouge. This was called year zero. When His father got a new job of constructing the roads, he was not fed enough and overworked and he became very ill. He went to the hospital and was given fake medicine. After 10 days he was still sick and also starving. Than that day he was given a big bowl of nutritious soup which he ate very quickly. When he was finished eating, the Khmer Rouge accused him of lying about being ill and killed him as punishment. His mother had been given the job of collecting sewage as a fertilizer. If a house didn’t have any sewage, the people would be tortured as punishment. His mother told people to make pretend sewage from mud and water so they wouldn’t get hurt in case they didn’t have any real sewage. She was a good worker and after time she was promoted to rice rationer and tailor. He only saw his mother when she brought him food which is really sad if you ask me. One day she was caught committing a very very simple crime of calling out to an old man to be careful as he was about to trip and spill his food, which I think is the most silliest rule there is in the history. The Khmer Rouge saw it all, they had eyes in the back of their heads. They said they took his mother to “school” and if you went to school you never came back. Aki Ra he as a child was terrified of “school.” But what I think is really terrifying is the rules, laws and punishments, for instants there was a true story that happened. There was a man that was so hungry he stole a banana from a tree. The Khmer Rouge saw him and told the village that they where going to make an example out of him in case anyone else had any ideas that where similar. They disemboweled the man in front of his family and they had to cheer and clap, they where not allowed to cry because the Khmer Rouge said it was a sing of weakness. When he was about only 5 years old he was brought up by the Khmer Rouge to work in their army. He was taught to lay land mines and fire guns and rocket launchers and make simple bombs. By 10 he had his first gun an AK47 and was forced to fight for the Khmer Rouge. In 1979 the Vietnamese army came to Cambodia but they did not get to Siem Reap until 1983. The Khmer Rouge had lots of camps in the jungles but the Vietnamese were everywhere on the roads. One day Aki Ra heard the Vietnamese where coming. The Khmer Rouge had lots of tactics to fight them and they where really sneaky. One camp from the Khmer Rouge actually made a huge pot of soup with a lot of meat and vegetables in it and also a lot of poison from a near by tree, so when the Vietnamese went near it and the Khmer Rouge ran away they would happily drink the soup to celebrate there victory and than they would become very ill from the poison. The Vietnamese finally came and the armies where evenly matched. After a few days of fighting the Vietnamese sent in tanks. At the time the Khmer Rouge had never seen a tank and was not sure how to fight a tank so the Khmer Rouge put an attack with all they had, machine guns, rocket launchers and other weapons. When the tanks stopped in their tracks, the Khmer Rouge thought that they had broken the tanks and they moved towards the tanks. But they weren’t broken; a Vietnamese soldier gave a signal to move towards the Khmer Rouge and fire. It killed all the Khmer Rouge but luckily Aki Ra did not come close to the tanks instead he fled into the jungle. But he didn’t know that the Vietnamese were waiting for him in the trees and captured him. He was given an option of joining them or he would be killed. After that he was conscripted into the Vietnamese army and went to fight his old army, the Khmer Rouge. He stayed with the Vietnamese army until 1990 when they finally pulled there troops out of Cambodia and he went on to join the Cambodian army which was still fighting the Khmer Rouge. In 1993 the United Nations sent Peace Keeping forces to the province and he went to work for them, helping them clear many mines that had been laid over the years by other fighting forces. In 1999 he opened the landmine museum in Siem Reap and that’s how Aki Ra became the man he is now trying to protect his people, raising landmine awareness and clearing mines all over Cambodia. A new Museum was opened in 2007 thanks to the fund raising efforts of the Cambodian Landmine Museum Relief Fund. I think his life has probably been the most difficult life in the world but now it’s good and he has married to a woman called Hourt and they had a son whose name is Amatak in 2003. They also have 10 young landmines victims who live with them, there are orphans like Aki Ra or have parents who asked him to take care of the children who lost body parts and help them to live by themselves when they grow up. He also helps children around the area and sends them to school. Unfortunately Aki Ra’s wife Hourt died on April 15, 2009, she was ill and died in her sleep. Aki Ra is a great man and I am really glad he is making a lot more people aware about landmines and how they affect people no matter where they are. I think what led him to be a peace keeper was how many people where affected by landmines when he was young and all the dangers, obstacles, experience and horrors he had to overcome and been through just only as child. I hope you enjoyed my project I made, i couldn't print the pictures for some reson but i hope you enjoyed it! send me at dustinyung@yahoo.com

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