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26 JUNE 2006 - SIEM REAP, CAMBODIA: A woman tends to her baby in the woman's dorm at Handicapped International in Siem Reap, Cambodia. Handicapped International helps Cambodians maimed by mines and unexploded ordinance as well as traffic accidents and disease adjust to a life without limbs. Cambodians are still wrestling with the legacy of the war in Vietnam and subsequent civil wars. At one time it was the most heavily mined country in the world and a vast swath of Cambodia, along the Thai-Cambodian border, is still mined. In 2004, more than 800 people were killed by mines and unexploded ordinance still found in the countryside. Photo by Jack Kurtz

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Cambodia Child Civilians Landmine Southeast Asia Tourism Travel Victims War
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26 JUNE 2006 - SIEM REAP, CAMBODIA: A woman tends to her baby in the woman's dorm at Handicapped International in Siem Reap, Cambodia. Handicapped International helps Cambodians maimed by mines and unexploded ordinance as well as traffic accidents and disease adjust to a life without limbs. Cambodians are still wrestling with the legacy of the war in Vietnam and subsequent civil wars. At one time it was the most heavily mined country in the world and a vast swath of Cambodia, along the Thai-Cambodian border, is still mined. In 2004, more than 800 people were killed by mines and unexploded ordinance still found in the countryside.  Photo by Jack Kurtz
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Jack Kurtz, Photojournalist & Travel Photographer

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