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THAILAND

Kabul's traffickers are in for the long haul

Spectrum, Luke Hunt, Published on 17/11/2013

» Kabul's black market for illegal travel is still doing a brisk trade despite the crackdown from Australia's newly installed government on people smuggling. However, the logistics required to circumvent the authorities and ensure a safe trip have become more complex and smugglers are under pressure to maximise profits. Fake passports, forged visas, tickets to Southeast Asia, sometimes via the Middle East, and boats to Australia and elsewhere are often available for about US$25,000 (788,000 baht) a head, more than double the costs the smugglers first charged when they began plying the Kangaroo Route in the late 1990s.

THAILAND

Pol Pot's henchmen damned by evidence

Spectrum, Luke Hunt, Published on 27/10/2013

» For more than two years, the latest instalment of the Khmer Rouge tribunal has provided a blow-by-blow account of Pol Pot's bloody reign of terror and the inner workings of the political machine blamed for the deaths of between 1.7 million and 2.2 million people.

THAILAND

Youthful daring challenges the status quo and dirty tricks

Spectrum, Luke Hunt, Published on 28/07/2013

» Throughout Cambodia's election campaign the politically outgunned opposition has put in an astonishing performance. Fuelled by youthful exuberance, flash mobs of up to 3,000 form and trumpet the virtues of change as supporters ride in twos, threes and fours, through the capital on motorbikes.

THAILAND

Muslim acceptance in Laos stark contrast to Myanmar intolerance

Spectrum, Luke Hunt, Published on 02/09/2012

» Just over a decade ago the tiny Islamic population of Laos, like Muslims everywhere, watched on in horror as al-Qaeda carried out its suicide attacks on New York and Washington. They were then flabbergasted as a tide of Western opinion turned on them.

THAILAND

Fledgling art scene more trippy than traditional

Spectrum, Luke Hunt, Published on 15/01/2012

» Fifteen years ago Cambodian art was virtually non-existent. Just a handful of painters practised their trade and typically their focus was restricted to the horrors of the Killing Fields and war or traditional copies of Angkor Wat and pleasant rural scenes.