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CAMBODIA: Mine accident survivor becomes deminer

Images from MAG's programme in Cambodia – one of the most heavily mine- and unexploded ordnance-contaminated countries in the world

  • Chea Sia survived stepping on a landmine but, with life in Cambodia difficult for disabled people who have little education, he and his wife struggled to make a living until a friend told him about MAG



Chea Sia, a 48-year-old amputee, has worked for MAG for 14 years as a deminer. He lost his right leg to a landmine explosion in 1982, while serving as a soldier for the Khmer People’s National Liberation Front, led by the late former Prime Minister Son Sann.

MAG invests in, trains and employs staff from the local population. Around 96 per cent of our 3,000-strong staff around the world are natives of the countries in which they work. The focus is to encourage a community's economy through employment; to enhance a family's prospects by getting people out of poverty and making them wage-earners with a future and not just survivors of a devastating conflict.

[Photos: Makara Chea / MAG]

The accident took place in Battambang province whilst patrolling the area around his camp. 

“I stepped on a landmine laid by the Khmer Rouge. We didn’t realise [they] had laid mines in the area,” he says.

His fellow soldiers fired a few times into the air as a distress signal, and other soldiers came to assist them.

“They arrived and sent me to the camp where I received first aid from the paramedics,” he recalls.

After receiving first aid, Chea Sia was put on a tractor and sent to a French hospital in Thailand near the Cambodian border, and was then transferred to a hospital in Khao-I-Dang refugee camp run by the International Committee of the Red Cross. 

He stayed at the hospital for about three months and was then sent to a refugee camp in Thailand, where he lived for the next decade. 

Along with many other refugees, he was repatriated to Cambodia in 1992.

“During the first four or five months [back] in Cambodia, I didn’t do anything but depended on some money I had left from the camp,” he says. “When I returned to Cambodia, we had big problems… we needed everything, unlike life in the camp where we were given food.”

Chea Sia and his wife struggled to survive and eked out a living by buying and selling small items and farming. Then he heard about MAG.

“Initially, I wasn’t aware that MAG recruited amputee deminers. My friend asked me to join. Frankly speaking, at that time I knew nothing about demining. While I was a soldier, I only knew that mines are dangerous. But I was assured that I would be sent to be trained.”

Currently, Chea Sia carries out demining tasks in Pailin province, the former stronghold of the Khmer Rouge.

"[My work] has a lot of benefits. One, we receive salary from MAG to feed ourselves and families and two, we can rid our villages of landmines."

– Chea Sia

He says that it is difficult for disabled people with little education to find good jobs, and that he is lucky to work for MAG.

“I don’t have any knowledge or education, so I depend on my physical strength to get a job. It would be difficult for me to find a better-paid job than the job I have with MAG.”

Your donation to MAG helps us to move into current and former conflict zones to clear the remnants of those conflicts, enabling recovery and assisting the development of affected populations.

As a deminer, Chea Sia has to wear a special prosthetic leg, which will not affect or disrupt a metal detector.

“Prosthetic limbs usually have a metal bar inside but those provided for amputee deminers contain no metal,” he explains.

Chea Sia says that amputee deminers sometimes find it difficult when they have to walk up or downhill to get to a minefield, and said that they may work marginally slower than able-bodied persons.

“But it’s not a big deal at all. We can perform our job. We are not asked to work where disabled people find it difficult to perform their tasks.”

Chea Sia says that he is very happy to work with MAG, an organisation which has benefited people from the communities affected by landmine contamination.

“It has a lot of benefits. One, we receive salary from MAG to feed ourselves and families and two, we can rid our villages of landmines.”

Images from MAG's programme in Cambodia – one of the most heavily mine- and unexploded ordnance-contaminated countries in the world:


Created with Admarket's flickrSLiDR. Photos: Sean Sutton / MAG

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18 May 09




MAG's work in Cambodia is supported by: Care International; DFID (UK Department for International Development); Hind Aladwani; Imperial Tobacco; Isle of Man Government Overseas Development Assistance (ODA)/Manx Landmine Action; Japanese Government, Ministry of Foreign Affairs; Jersey Overseas Aid Commission; Kyoto East Lions Club; Khaled Al Mashaan; Landmine Come To Zero Miyaki; Landmine Survivors Network; Lutheran World Federation; Rufford Maurice Laing Foundation; Night Vision Electronic Sensors Directorate (NVESD), U.S. Army Research, Development and Engineering Command; Office of Weapons Removal and Abatement, U.S. Department of State; Terra Renaissance; World Vision Cambodia; Zeromatsui.

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MAG (Mines Advisory Group) saves and improves lives by reducing the devastating effects armed violence and remnants of conflict have on people around the world.
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