Pailin is a small municipality in the West
of Cambodia very closed to the border of Thailand. The provincial
capital is called Pailin City and is known to much of the world as being
the area where many of the Khmer Rouge leaders came from and retreated
after their fall. Until the year of 2001 Pailin was part of the
Battambang Province, but was then elevated to city status and thus
became a province and autonomous zone of its own.
The city was
during the 1980s and 1990s a major Khmer Rouge strongpoint and resource
centre. Even after the death of their brutal leader Pol Pot in 1998,
many Khmer Rouge leaders still remained there. Some of the leaders went
into hiding in fear of punishment for their crimes, although other
leaders or henchmen lived openly in the province. It is said that almost
70 percent of the area's older men were fighters for the Khmer Rouge,
but unfortunately none of the regular fighters have yet been brought to
justice.
As of September 2007, Pailin's remaining Khmer Rouge
leaders were being rounded up to face justice by an international
tribunal, including Khieu Samphan and Nuon Chea. So after years of the
governmental dump contemplation regarding the crime of the Khmer Rouge,
its time for lasting enlightenment of what has happen.
Poipet is
now more and more becoming a boomtown attracting Cambodians from around
the country seeking to make their fortune, or at least a better salary
than back home. Pailin was the major revenue producer for the Khmer
Rouge guerrillas, being a major gem producing area as well as a prime
logging area.
While gem production seems to have tapered off a
bit, other business opportunities and the lifestyle have attracted
prospectors to the town. Up until the surrender deal of Khmer Rouge's
number three men, Ieng Sary, in 1996, the townsfolk lived under the
strict rules of the KR hierarchy, with little freedom of expression and
most aspects of life being completely controlled by the paranoid regime.
Pailin is just another Wild West town of Cambodia and like the
gold-rush days of California, people seem to be everywhere in the hills
sifting through mud puddles and scratching at the dirt, looking to
strike it rich with the find of a nice gem. Still, there is more control
of some aspects of life than in other areas of Cambodia.
But
this seems to have attracted people rather than kept them away. Several
people, who had moved to Pailin from Phnom Penh, gave this as the main
reason they made the move. They liked the idea that criminals did not
enjoy the same impunity that they seem to enjoy in Phnom Penh. The
influx of residents from other parts of the country has produced a
friendlier Pailin. Nowadays the mixed lot of Pailin residents seem happy
to see foreigners coming in for holidays and check the place out,
realizing that their presence means that normalcy and revenue are
arriving in Pailin.
Even the Vietnamese residents seem to have
been accepted, which is truly amazing given the hatred the Khmer Rouge
have generally shown them. Pailin is worth checking out. The town is
nestled in a beautiful valley with picturesque sunsets over the
mountains that separate Cambodia and Thailand close by.
Wat
Gohng-Kahng is very famous and features the much-photographed landmark
gate of Pailin town that you face as you arrive on the highway from
Battambang. This wat is the centre of holiday festivities these days in
Pailin and was the scene of the official Pailin reintegration ceremony
in 1996, after the Ieng Sary faction of the Khmer Rouge worked out
surrender and semi-autonomy deals with the Cambodian government.


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