Accession Number | P03258.500 |
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Collection type | Photograph |
Object type | Black & white - Film original negative 120 safety base |
Maker |
Smith, Heide |
Place made | Cambodia |
Date made | 1993 |
Conflict |
Period 1990-1999 |
Copyright |
Item copyright: © Australian War Memorial![]() |
A farmer ploughs his paddy field using a wooden plough pulled by a pair of zebu as others plant ...
A farmer ploughs his paddy field using a wooden plough pulled by a pair of zebu as others plant rice in the wake of the plough on a farm south of Phnom Penh. Cambodian farming methods remain as they have been for hundreds of years, linked to the annual cycles of flooding and dry season. The Khmer Rouge regime of the mid 1970s attempted to turn Cambodia's entire population over to agriculture, establishing paddy fields from virgin jungle and banning traditional forms of rice growing, which not only led to mass starvation, but to the loss of important rice seed stocks, levee banks and centuries of expertise. Combined with indiscriminate seeding of anti personnel mines which tie an estimated 800,000 hectares of productive land, the losses are still being felt today.