Protect Cambodia Heritage sites
For more stories related to Angkor Wat and Siam Reap in Cambodia please go to: http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/asia-pacific/7015647.stm
The Images from the workshop participants during our last trip in Cambodia you find at: http://gdphotoworkshop.com/images.html

© Gunther Deichmann, Cambodia
2007
Selected images by
GD
Cambodia bid to protect treasures
By Guy De Launey
BBC News, Siem Reap
Statues with no heads in Angkor Wat
Looting is evident even at protected Angkor Wat
Cambodia has invited international law enforcement
agencies to help protect the country's ancient
temples.
US homeland security and FBI agents are among those
who may be advising the new national heritage police
force. They are hoping to put an end to the rampant
looting that has seen many monuments stripped of
their statues. Peace has not been kind to many of
Cambodia's ancient monuments. As decades of conflict
ended in the 1990s, looting accelerated dramatically.
The local authorities and the United Nations'
cultural organisation, Unesco, moved quickly to
protect the world-famous Angkor Wat and its
surrounding temples.
But more remote sites were left to their fate.
Stolen-to-order
US agents and local officers have been meeting in
Siem Reap to discuss ways of protecting what is left.
US special agent Ann Hurst said their experience of
dealing with stolen artefacts from Iraq will be
crucial.
"We can provide training in how to prevent these
types of violations. There were stolen paintings and
stolen coins being taken out of Iraq and smuggled in
to the US," she said.
"What we did in those cases was prosecute the people
who smuggled the goods in - and the people who
accepted the goods in the US." Many Cambodian items
have been stolen to order for private collectors.
Others have turned up at international auction
houses, so expertise in intercepting illicit
shipments is badly needed. Technical assistance in
detection and policing will also bolster the
thinly-stretched and poorly-funded local forces.
For Cambodia, stopping the looting is partly a matter
of pride - the towers of Angkor adorn the national
flag - but as tourism grows, so does the economic
importance of preserving ancient treasures.