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Dedicating his life to mine clearance: the journey of Aki Ra, a former child soldier

Explosive weapons
Cambodia

13 years after the trial of “Comrade Duch,” the Khmer Rouge torturer convicted of crimes against humanity, a former child soldier turned deminer tells his story.

Portrait of Aki Ra

Aki Ra photographed in the Landmine Museum he founded before starting his demining operations | © Till Mayer / HI

Aki Ra laid his first mines when he was just 5 or 6 years old. He survived 20 years of war and now dedicates his life to mine clearance. The founder of Cambodian Self-Help Demining (CSHD), a national demining organization supported by Humanity & Inclusion, explains how he has helped to clear more than 9.5 million m2 of land in Cambodia.

Aki Ra says he is 50 years old, but he does not know his real age. His identity card states that he was born on January 1, 1975. That same year, the Vietnam War came to an end, but in neighboring countries such as Cambodia, the violence did not stop. On the contrary, the country entered one of the darkest periods in its history.

Forced into the army by the Khmer Rouge

On April 17, 1975, Pol Pot, the leader of the Khmer Rouge (the Communist Party of Kampuchea) seized power and imposed his totalitarian regime in Phnom Penh. During four years of violent dictatorship, the soldiers in red bandanas and black uniforms imprisoned, tortured and massacred nearly 2 million innocent people. They had two weapons of choice: landmines and children. In fact, one of the regime's proudest achievements was conscripting children into the army, after tearing them from their parents' arms and then executing them. Aki Ra is one of these survivors.

“I was one of the youngest soldiers. There were boys and girls. Some child soldiers liked to play with pistols, I liked mines.”

Mines are “powerful toys,” he says. Like the other child soldiers, Aki Ra's first job was to cook, hunt in the jungle or bring food to the soldiers on the front line.

Then he was ordered to kill. Taken prisoner by the Vietnamese troops who had come to eradicate Pol Pot’s regime, Aki Ra found himself on the other side of the battlefield for several months. He experienced war at its harshest: the tracking, the fatigue, the death and the blood. He continued to lay hundreds of mines until the Khmer Rouge was completely disbanded.

Portrait of Aki Ra“I've seen so many people mourning the loss of their loved ones, losing everything that was dearest to them. One day, my boss asked us to lay explosive devices in the ground. It was in a field about 100 meters long. I told my comrades that we all had to move away from each other before we started to mark out the territory. While the others laid their mines, I dug a pit into which I put at least 50 devices, and I buried them there. I made sure that everything was secure. That day, I said to myself ‘never again in my life,’ I decided that from that moment on, and for the rest of my life, I was going to get rid of them.”

After serving in Cambodia's national army, which rose from the ashes of the dictatorship, Aki Ra joined the United Nations program to clear Cambodia’s mines. The former child soldier, now a deminer, has survived 20 years of war. His country remains one of the most mine-contaminated areas in the world.

Dedicating his life to mine clearance

He decided to open a museum: the Cambodia Landmine Museum. A vast collection of defused explosive devices and archives just a few steps from the small house where he now lives with his three children.

“I wanted to tell young people about the history of their country and the wars it has been through, to tell tourists about the danger of mines and then... I wanted to get the support of the whole world to help us clear the mines.”

HI support in Cambodia

Aki Ra in front of landminesHe then founded his own humanitarian organization, CSHD. It was in this context that his path crossed that of Humanity & Inclusion in the Siem Reap region, in the north of Cambodia. Humanity & Inclusion provides operational and administrative support to the organization, thanks to funding from the U.S. Department of State’s Office of Weapons Removal and Abatement. The plan is to enable CSHD to be an autonomous, national mine-action NGO. Leonard Kaminski is Humanity & Inclusion's mine action specialist in Cambodia:

“Initially, Aki Ra and his teams cleared contaminated land manually using simple metal detectors. We have trained them in the latest, more modern and more effective technologies.”

More than 9.5 million m2 of land—approximately 2,350 acres—have been cleared since CSHD was set up in 2008.

“The biggest challenge we face is locating landmines efficiently. These explosive devices have been used as personal weapons by soldiers such as Aki Ra, and on a larger strategic scale by the army. Strategic minefields are fairly easy to find, but the task is much more difficult when it comes to mines deployed haphazardly by the soldiers themselves.”

Bringing villages back to life

Cambodia is still committed to becoming a “mine-free” country by 2025. This is the third time the authorities have extended the deadline. The stakes are still very high. Every day, Humanity & Inclusion teams measure the positive impact of demining operations. As soon as a footbridge is cleared of mines, a whole village comes back to life.

“In the village of Toul Kros (Siem Reap province), for example, every time we clear a half-hectare block, the villagers reclaim the land and start farming again. That's why we always start by clearing minefields. Seeing a minefield become a paddy field again, or in some places a cashew-nut orchard, while we're still working close to the village, is more than encouraging!”

Aki Ra is also targeting farmers in this recently cleared rural area:

“Please don't be afraid to farm your land. We're working every day to clear it of mines, so you don't have to worry anymore!”

HI's partnership with CSHD is made possible thanks to the support of the Office of Weapons Removal and Abatement in the U.S. State Department's Bureau of Political-Military Affairs (PM/WRA).

Date published: 07/26/23

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