Tens of thousands of spectators flocked to the riverfront in the
Cambodian capital Phnom Penh on Thursday for an annual boat race — the
centrepiece of the kingdom’s water festival.
Around 270 boats, their crew dressed in bright T-shirts, began
competing along a stretch of the Tonle Sap river that runs in front of
the royal palace.
Concerts and fireworks are also part of the three-day festival, which
celebrates the reversal of the flow, a phenomenon that occurs when
monsoon rains bloat the Mekong river, pushing the waters of the smaller
Tonle Sap in the other direction.
The two rivers intersect in the capital, where Cambodian King Norodom
Sihamoni, Prime Minister Hun Sen and senior government officials looked
on as the yearly extravaganza began.
“The water festival is important for all Cambodian people, it is the
festival for the king, for our king,” spectator Bun Narath, 51, told
AFP.
“We celebrate the water festival to thank ancestors who won the fight
with enemies and to thank rivers that provide water for all people,” he
added.
On the last day of the water festival in 2010, more than 350 people
were killed in a stampede on an overcrowded bridge after panic spread
over rumours it was about to collapse.
Hun Sen described the disaster as Cambodia’s worst tragedy since the
Khmer Rouge’s 1975-1979 reign of terror, which killed up to a quarter of
the population.
AFP
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