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The Editor
Managing Editor
Cambodian Online

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Cambodian
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Information
24-Aug-2005
Last Edited
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In the beginning was
Angelina. Then came Minnie, Ashley, Jackie, Rupert, Roger and Cliff. After
decades of war and the genocide of Pol Pot’s Khmer Rouge, Cambodia is back
on the tourist map and Hollywood is jumping on the plane — not to mention
the bandwagon.
With a well-founded
reputation for eastern mystique and a less well-founded one for danger, as
well as a litany of social woes from desperate poverty to the highest AIDS
infection rate in Asia, it has become a top destination for celebrities
seeking heart-warming headlines.
Angelina Jolie became the
unwitting torch-bearer for the Hollywood throng after falling in love with
the jungle-clad south-east Asian nation, while shooting ‘Lara Croft: Tomb
Raider’ at the 800-year-old Angkor Wat temples.
Besides funding aid
projects for the disabled former Khmer Rouge soldiers, the Oscar-winning
actress adopted a Cambodian boy, Maddox, after meeting him in an orphanage
in ’01. Since then, barely a month has gone by without one Hollywood name or
another stepping off the plane in Phnom Penh doing their bit for charity.
On Tuesday,
editors will be in something of a quandary: whether to go for Ashley Judd
with child prostitutes or Rupert Everett with adult ones? If you were
kicking around the dusty wastes of Prey Veng province near the Vietnam
border in February, you might have come across British actress Minnie Driver
in a mud hut, highlighting the plight of garment factory workers on behalf
of Oxfam.
In April, Hong Kong action
star Jackie Chan kicked off his role as a UN AIDS ambassador with a trip to
Cambodia to see child victims of AIDS and land mines, a legacy of the long
civil war, which finally ended in ’98. James Bond star Roger Moore has also
been spotted deep in ex-Khmer Rouge country promoting iodized salt for the
UN, while squeaky clean British singer Cliff Richard visited AIDS patients
in Phnom Penh in January for the aid agency Tearfund.
The stream of celebrities
is bemusing many locals, including Michael Hayes, proprietor of the Phnom
Penh Post newspaper, who himself had a brief brush with stardom, type-cast
as a jaded and cynical expat in Matt Dillon’s Cambodian movie ‘City of
Ghosts.’
“As one movie star to
another, I welcome all my fellow actors to Cambodia and look forward to
meeting them — the more the merrier, whoever they are,” said Hayes, who
might be accused of being out of touch with the latest gossip from Los
Angeles. |