The Phnom Penh Post

Paratroope­rs blown into rush-hour traffic

- Bun Sengkong and Jack Davies

EIGHT paratroope­rs from the elite 911 airborne brigade will this afternoon theatrical­ly descend into the middle of Olympic Stadium, forming the centrepiec­e of the opening ceremony for the country’s first ever National Games. They will be hoping not to repeat a disastrous Wednesday practice run.

Amid peak hour traffic at about 6pm, poor wind conditions pushed a number of the jumpers off course, with one landing on a major boulevard by the stadium and another ending up helplessly suspended from a lamppost by his chute for 15 minutes.

“He looked like he had hanged himself,” recounted security guard Som Soum, 36, a security guard working at a petrol station outside the sta- dium, and directly in front of the fateful lamppost.

Em Bunthoeurn, a pump attendant, said the crowd swung the helpless elite paratroope­r – dangling from the crossbar – closer to the lamppost until he was able to get down.

Across the street, the other paratroope­r briefly brought traffic to a standstill on the congested Monireth Boulevard, which served as his emergency landing strip, according to Soum and other witnesses.

“Everyone stopped their cars and motos; they were afraid they might hit him,” said Srey Tea, a vendor at a fruit shop in front of the landing strip.

Soum, the security guard, said he heard one of the paratroope­rs explain that strong winds at high altitude and weak winds at lower altitudes were to blame.

 ?? YOUTUBE ?? A soldier with the 911 paratroope­r brigade clutches a lamppost in Phnom Penh after missing his landing area.
YOUTUBE A soldier with the 911 paratroope­r brigade clutches a lamppost in Phnom Penh after missing his landing area.

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