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Sihanoukville, also known as Kampong Som, or Kampong Saom, is a port city in southern Cambodia on the Gulf of Thailand. The city was founded in 1964 to be the only deep water port in Cambodia and its beaches are making it more popular as a tourist destination. According to the Royal Government of Cambodia some 320,000 tourists visited Sihanoukville in 2006, up by 30 percent from 2005. The city is named after King Norodom Sihanouk. Sadly in 1994, the town was the location where three western backpackers were kidnapped and killed by the Khmer Rouge, which affected tourism in the area for many years after.
In a land with thousands of years of history, Sihanoukville is a
colorful but tragic upstart. A mere fifty years ago, a French-Cambodian
construction carved a camp out of the jungle and started building the
first deep-sea port of a newly independent Cambodia. Named Sihanoukville
in 1964 after the ruling prince of the kingdom, the booming port and
its golden beaches soon drew Cambodia's jetsetting elite, spawning the
first Angkor Beer brewery and the modernist seven-story Independence
Hotel which, claim locals, even played host to Jacqueline Kennedy on
her whirlwind tour of Cambodia in 1967.
Alas, the party came to an abrupt end in 1970 when Sihanouk was
deposed in a coup and Cambodia descended into civil war. The town -
renamed Kompong Som - soon fell on hard times: the victorious
Khmer Rouge used the Independence Hotel for target practice and, when
they made the mistake of hijacking an American container ship, the port
was bombed by the U.S. Air Force. Even after Pol Pot's regime was
driven from power, the bumpy highway to the capital was long notorious
for banditry and the beaches stayed empty.
Peace returned in 1997 and in the ensuing ten years
Sihanoukville has been busy picking up the pieces. First visited only
by a few intrepid backpackers, guidebooks still talk of walls
pockmarked by bullets, but any signs of war are hard to spot in today's
Sihanoukville, whose new symbol seems to be the construction site. More
and more Khmers and expats have settled down to run hotels, bars and
restaurants, and the buzz of what the New York Times dubbed "Asia's
next trendsetting beach" is starting to spread far and wide. After 30
years of housing only ghosts, the Independence Hotel is wrapped in
scaffolding and scheduled to be rise from the ashes soon.
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