Sunday, July 24, 2016

Crossing The Border to Cambodia



Crossing The Border into Cambodia
July 2005


I am traveling for three weeks through Viet Nam and Cambodia with two sisters from England, a woman from New Zealand newly married couple from Australia. As has become so prevalent when I travel now, foreigners are openly critical of President Bush, the United States and our foreign policy. During his first term in office, people are polite, “it’s not Americans we don’t like. We just don’t like your government.” I heard this statement too to many times to remember.

But this second term of his is different. Unabashed these people tell me that now they no longer like Americans as well. “We gave you the benefit of the doubt before. But when you reelected Bush, you sent a real message to the rest of the world. You Americans only care about yourself”. Harriet delivered her position with as much restraint as she could muster. She tries to hold back for the sake of preserving civility amongst the group. But she is still visibly angry.

“Hey,” I respond offensively. “What about you guys. You re-elected Tony Blair and he sits right there in Bush’s pocket. You’re just as bad”, I say lightheartedly in hopes of dissipating some of the tension in the air. It’s obvious the others agree with Harriet. But they aren’t going to add any more unpleasantries to our tense discussion.

Meredith chimes in. “That’s different. We didn’t have any good choices. You have choices. There were plenty of competent Americans to run your country and you picked Bush twice”.

“If it’s any consolation, I didn’t vote for him,” I say with hopes that this’ll redeem me with them. It does for the moment.

“Well, how unusual, an American with a conscience. You don’t see that too often,”
 Harriett retorts. With that we end our discussion and move on to more pleasant topics.

That afternoon, we go to the American War Museum. And the displays of atrocities on our part are awful and shameful and hard to defend. Meredith and Harriet can’t get past the front room of exhibit. So they wait outside in the heat, their bodies baking from the sun and their angers boiling over from the consequences of our foreign policy. None of us speak on our way back to the hotel. Each of us are deep in thought and sorrow. It’s an ugly day.

Several days later we are going to cross the Vietnamese- Cambodian border by riverboat. We are on the Mekong River. Our guide assurances us that there will be no problem. “It will be smooth sailing. You’re just show them the passport and you finished. It’s okay. I’ll be with you whole time. No problems. Guaranteed,” he says lightheartedly.

So we board our boat and we float down this river which is one photo op after another. I am clicking away on my camera and enjoying every moment of this voyage.

 We come to the border and we dock. We are instructed to get out of the boat and line up. For some reason my guide suggest that I stepped to the back of the line which I do without question. The five in front of me get through without a problem, just is our guided promised. They move on to the local shops and restroom.

But my passport seems to cause the official some concerns. It’s hard for me to understand what the issue is because their English is limited. I have no Cambodian language skills. I looked at my guide to intervene. He is off in the distance and not accessible.

I am now alone with these officials. It is just ten soldiers with their machine guns and me with my passport that seems unacceptable to them. The man in charge holds my passport with his left hand and points to it with his right index finger. He seems annoyed. He speaks in broken English using only a few keywords, “no”, “American”, “no good”. I am worried and I see my guide off in the distance. He gets in a waiting boat and takes off.  He abandons me and now I suspect that all of this is planned.   I’ve gotten used to the universal assumption that all Americans are rich. We have money to burn. I can see now that this is nothing personal. I am just the opportunity of the day.

The official indicates that there are not enough pages left in my passport.  I examine it and I find five empty pages. I show him but that doesn’t appease him.  Apparently he wants to put my entry sticker only on a right-sided page and I only have left-sided pages available. I do have ½ of a right side available that would have accommodated this sticker. But he wanted a full page. He huffed and sighed and jester that he was at a complete loss as to what to do.

How were we going to resolve this monumental problem of not having the absolutely perfect spot for this damn sticker; the sticker that will never be looked at again.  I was becoming angry but realize that I have to contain my emotions. Shit happens.  I am going to have to pay something to him. And if I’m not careful, my attitude could contribute to the final cost.
So I watch my tone and ask to summon the US ambassador. My request is understood but ignored.  So I ask again.

Harriet finally notices that I am being detained so she comes over and checks in on me.

“What’s the matter?” she wants to know.

“Apparently, there aren’t enough pages left in my passport to accommodate the entry sticker so I can’t come in.”  I roll my eyes.

“What?”  She can’t believe it. “Where’s our guide?” She looks around for him.

“Gone. He took the first boat out of here.”

“Gone?? Where did he go?”

“He must be in on it because he got the hell out of here.  He’s already on his way back to Viet Nam.  Have you seen our new guide?” I ask.

“No, not yet,” she tells me.  There is a little panic in her voice. “What should we do?” She stands beside me and scans the area in search of anyone who looks as if he could be our guide.  She whispers to me, “Do you think they are doing this to you because you are the only American?”

“What do you think?” I ask with a tone of annoyance.

“This is unbelievable,” she says almost apologetically.  I could see thoughts racing through her head.  This is the flip side of all of her views of our arrogance.  It never occurred to her that I could be abused because I am an American.

Again I ask to speak to my US ambassador. And again my request is ignored. But now the official seems to have improved dramatically in his English skills. He tells me in very broken English that there are not enough pages on my passport. And if I sign a statement (written in Cambodian) to that effect and pay a $10 US fee, they will put a sticker over a page that has already been used.  And then I could be on my way.

The statement handed to me is two pages long and all in the Cambodian language.  I sign the document and added at the bottom, “I have signed this document in direst.’ I ask for a copy of the document but my request is denied.  I hand over a crisp $10 bill which the official takes quickly. He palms it in his hand.  He puts the sticker squarely in the middle of a used page and then with a facial gesture, ushers me off the dock. I am free to go.  We move quickly.

Harriet is livid and I suggest she hold her comments until we are clearly out of their view.  I can hear a transformation in her thinking. Her views on Americans will never be so black and white again.  This gray matter would permeate her thinking now.

 “I can’t believe them,” she says, shaking her head. “That was unbelievable.  They just stopped you because you are an American.  Who do they think they are?” Her tone could be empathy or shame or both.  But she is shaken by her own naiveté.

We join the others who had wandered off to so some shopping with the local merchants. I’m not sure they knew we were missing.

“Where have you two been?” Meredith wants to know. Our new guide is with them and he introduces himself, oblivious to what just transpired.

Harriet tells the story but I don’t pay any attention. A part of me is angry. A part of me understands the unpleasant reality of corruption. And I recognize that I am living on the plus side of life and the border official is living on the minus side, and I realize I got off relatively easy today.  He could have charged me more.  But maybe, just maybe, my repeated insistence that we call the US ambassador worried him. Maybe he realized that it was not worth it to me to make a big stink just for $10.  And he was right, I was already putting the incident behind me. It is just the price I have to pay to visit this developing country.

Two days later, I am in my hotel room, getting ready for the day’s events.  I turn on the TV and it is another day of horror for the world.  I immediately call to Meredith and Harriet’s room.

“Do you gave the news on right now?” I ask quickly.

“No”, Harriet tells me, “why?”

“London’s been bombed.  The tube system was just bombed.”