China Daily (Hong Kong)

Nude photos at temple site spark anger

- By ASSOCIATED PRESS in Siem Reap, Cambodia

At least five foreign visitors have been arrested and deported this year for taking nude photos at Cambodia’s most popular tourist attraction, the sacred complex of temples that includes the Angkor Wat.

Authoritie­s have no tolerance for people stripping down at Angkor Archeologi­cal Park, a sprawling, centurieso­ld UNESCO World Heritage Site that drew 2 million visitors in 2014. The incidents are also upsetting to ordinary Cambodians, for whom the complex holds spiritual and historical significan­ce.

“Angkor Wat is the most sacred temple in Cambodia. Not only Cambodians but also tourists have to pay respect,’’ said Rattanak Te, a resident in Phnom Penh, the capital.

“It definitely upsets me and all Cambodians, because outsiders will think we, Cambodian people, are careless and do not take good care of this World Heritage (site) by allowing these tourists to do such an unacceptab­le act.”

This month, guards arrest- ed two US sisters after seeing them snap photos of each other’s naked backsides in the temple of Preah Khan, said Kerya Chau Sun, spokeswoma­n for the Apsara Authority, which manages the temple complex in Siem Reap, in northweste­rn Cambodia.

Lindsey Adams, 22, and Leslie Adams, 20, both of Prescott, Arizona, were each given a six-month suspended sentence, a fine of 1 million riel ($250), deportatio­n and a four-year ban from the country.

In January, three Frenchmen in their 20s were deported after they were caught taking nude photograph­s at Angkor complex. Three tourists were also caught riding a motorbike naked near Phnom Penh in January, according to local media reports.

Angkor is not the only world-renowned site that has had to deal with nude tourists. In 2014, officials at Peru’s Machu Picchu said they were increasing surveillan­ce after visitors were caught taking nude photograph­s or running through the ancient site naked.

 ?? ANAT GIVON / ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Foreign tourists
ANAT GIVON / ASSOCIATED PRESS Foreign tourists

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