Cambodia sees rise of superstition

Published January 17, 2009

PHNOM PENH: Pang Nop was pedalling his bicycle home through a light drizzle when he paused to pick up some stones for his slingshot. As he did, the sky flashed and he fell to the ground, dead.

“Suddenly we saw him lying down,” said Uy Saroeurn, the boy’s uncle who was planting rice in a nearby field.

The 14-year-old had died instantly, a big bruise on the back of his neck.

Pang Nop had become one of 95 Cambodians killed by lightning last year, more than double the 2007 total of 45 lightning fatalities and the highest-ever annual tally in the country.

“Most of the people killed are farmers who continue to work in rice paddies or herd cattle during rainstorms,” says Long Saravuth, a weather expert at Cambodia’s ministry of water resources and meteorology.

The tropical Southeast Asian country of lazy rivers and lakes is particularly prone to cloud formations which generate intense lightning storms, said Long Saravuth.

These formations can hover just 164 feet above the earth, and anyone underneath is vulnerable to lightning strike.

As the country’s rainy season drew to a close, local newspapers seemed to carry reports on new lightning deaths nearly every day – farmers, fishermen, and football players have all recently been hit.

Worried Cambodians hope 2009 will offer respite. The country only began compiling lightning statistics two years ago after an increase in reports of deaths.

Some Cambodians have searched science and religion to explain the phenomenon, with many of the country’s 14 million people believing lightning is connected to supernatural forces.

“The lightning last year was more fierce than ever before. I’m worried I might be the next victim – but I believe if we do good deeds, we avoid lightning and bad luck,” said Cheng Chenda, a housewife in Phnom Penh.

In his office at the Buddhist Institute, adviser on mores and customs Miech Ponn said Cambodians believe people with moles on their calves are susceptible to lightning strikes, as are people who have broken promises.

Cambodians also use mystical cures for those who have been struck. When he found Pang Nop’s body, Uy Saroeurn carried it to the boy’s mother who quickly covered her son with a white cloth in the hope that it would revive him.

“To resuscitate a victim, Cambodian villagers drape the person’s body with a white cloth, or jump over it three times, or place the victim in a bed and light a fire under the bed,” said Miech Ponn, who believes these techniques can work.—AFP

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