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Venerable Luon Sovath - activist Buddhist monk who documented some events of the film. Chris Kelly

How a trip to Cambodia turned into an almost ten year project for this Irish filmmaker

Chris Kelly’s documentary A Cambodian Spring looks at the conflict between residents and government over land in the south-east Asian country.

WHEN CHRIS KELLY went on a trip to Cambodian in 2006 he wasn’t expecting to end up spending most of the next decade there filming what would become his documentary A Cambodian Spring.

The film, released in Irish cinemas last week, tells the story of a group of residents of the Boeung Kak Lake in Phnom Penh, who were faced with their homes being lost to corrupt developers as the the lake was pumped right into their homes, flooding and destroying them.

With government backing, the developers have attempted to pay off the residents with meagre sums to turn the land into real estate property. But the residents, who have lived in the area for years and worked hard to buy their homes, aren’t interested in moving.

The documentary follows their story through the years 2009 to 2015 as well as documenting the turmoil in Cambodian politics including the return of the major opposition party leader, and months of post-electoral protests that saw many killed and arrested.

But when he first arrived in the country, Kelly didn’t intend to film what he saw there. He was simply curious.

Dark History

“I became fascinated with the place,” he told TheJournal.ie. “The people were warm and friendly but the country’s dark history was this presence bubbling just under the surface.”

Kelly did his research but found that many documentaries concentrated on Cambodia’s past – the Khmer Rouge; the Killing Fields – but not so much on modern Cambodia.

He was interested in the land rights issues and so the Derry-born filmmaker organised a three-month filming trip with funding from the Irish Film Board and Northern Ireland Screen.

It was meant to be a short documentary – talking heads, some images of the situation playing out – but it quickly turned into something more.

As the three months were coming to a close, Kelly realised he couldn’t stop. The residents’ ongoing fight for their human fights compelled him to stay.

“We were going to fly in an expensive cinematographer, but we decided not to and use that funding to go into spending more time there, and on local fixers and crew.”

Soon Kelly found himself doing odd jobs for The Guardian and other publications for documentary and journalism work in Thailand and Burma in order to keep the project going.

[image alt="A_Cambodian_Spring_6" src="http://cdn.thejournal.ie/media/2018/05/a_cambodian_spring_6-296x196.jpg" width="296" height="196" credit-source="Chris%20Kelly" caption="Homes%20are%20destroyed%20as%20developers%20move%20in." class="aligncenter" /end]

‘It was difficult to leave’

He ended up covering stories that looked at the connection between the seafood trade and slavery in the Thai fishing industry and  the Rohingya refugee crisis.

It was work he had never done before, coming from a role in a production house in Belfast that filmed commercials, music videos and short films. But the project, and the relationships he had formed with the people he was documenting in Cambodia, kept him in the region.

“It was very difficult to leave the country – you want to be there the whole time,” he said.

“Things that seem inconsequential at the time, can be a key element to the film later on.”

Other than necessary work visits to other parts of south-east Asia to help with funding, Kelly would spend the next six years in Cambodia filming what would be A Cambodian Spring.

While the film’s main focus is on the residents and the forces displayed against them, three distinct characters take the forefront.

Boeung Kak Lake residents Toul Srey Pov and Tep Vanny show the strength of the women of their community taking the fight to the developers who continue to pump the lake water and sand into their land.

[image alt="A Cambodian Spring 008 1920" src="http://cdn.thejournal.ie/media/2018/05/a-cambodian-spring-008-1920-296x197.jpg" width="296" height="197" caption="Tep%20Vanny%20-%20one%20of%20the%20protagonists%20of%20the%20film%20who%20is%20currently%20serving%20a%20prison%20sentence%20for%20her%20activism.%20" class="aligncenter" /end]

Some of the most emotional parts of the film include when Toul Srey Pov’s young daughter and the rest of the children of the village demonstrate with megaphones and signboards for their mothers’ freedom after many of the protesting women are put in jail.

The elation when they are freed is joyful and Buddhist Monk, Venerable Luon Sovath, is there to document it all with his array of smartphones and camcorders.

Some of the footage in the documentary comes directly from Sovath’s own footage of filming injustices in Cambodia.

The activist monk has been joining Kelly on the promotional tour of the documentary, spreading the word about the ongoing turmoil in his country.

Cambodia Today

And though Kelly left the country with his hundreds of hours of footage in 2015, he said things have not gotten better for Cambodia.

“There is currently no press freedom,” he said.

Many of the native press organisations have been shut down by Prime Minister Hun Sen’s authoritarian government that saw the Boeung Kak Lake residents lose their land and homes.

“The situation is definitely much worse and very cyclic in nature,” Kelly said. “Not much is going to change despite the potential of activists like Tep Vanny and Venerable Luon Sovath.”

He adds that most people who come as tourists, as he once did over a decade ago, won’t be aware of what is going on. And because he was an outsider who then became deeply involved, he could only present the film in that way.

“It’s meant to be a subjective portrayal of my time in Cambodia. A foreigner can’t tell their story.”

At the time, being a foreigner helped with filming: he was left alone mostly – except when he encountered difficulties trying to film officials and the like from the ruling party.

“Generally as a foreigner we had no real intimidation from the authorities,” he said - which is a different story from Cambodia today as many foreign reporters are harassed and dissuaded from filming in the country.

Many of the fixers and Cambodian  reporters  who helped Kelly with his journey are now in prison under disputed espionage charges relating to their own press work.

[image alt="A_Cambodian_Spring_4 low" src="http://cdn.thejournal.ie/media/2018/05/a_cambodian_spring_4-low-296x197.jpg" width="296" height="197" credit-source="Chris%20Kelly" caption="A%20car%20burns%20during%20the%202013-2014%20protests%20against%20the%20government.%20" class="aligncenter" /end]

He hopes the film will do its bit to help a current case being built against Cambodia’s prime minister Hun Sen for his government’s land grabbing techniques.

He said his team are also working with Global Witness and other organisations to help people like Tep Vanny who is currently in prison for protesting.

Moral Responsibilty

During one point in the film, when the 2013-2014 Cambodian protests against Hun Sen’s government were taking place, a bullet from a Cambodian police officer hits a young man in the head, killing him.

The young man had been throwing stones at the police and Kelly was only three feet away from him at the time.

Though he had training in how to operate in a hostile environment, Kelly says he had a “moral responsibility” to film the chaos and upheavals, regardless of potential safety concerns.

“It’s disturbing to have someone killed right in front of you, but I was there with a camera and my mission was to film.” He said anything less would have been in conflict with his responsibility to tell what he could of the Cambodian peoples’ story.

[image alt="A Cambodian Spring 009" src="http://cdn.thejournal.ie/media/2018/05/a-cambodian-spring-009-296x197.jpg" width="296" height="197" credit-source="Chris%20Kelly" caption="Women%20of%20the%20Boeung%20Kak%20community%20during%20their%20trial%20for%20their%20demonstrations." class="aligncenter" /end]

“I had no idea it would take so many years,” Kelly says of the project. “People risked a lot for me to film them and being associated with a foreigner can be detrimental to them.”

But at the end of the day, all he could do was “tell the story as I understood it” and hope that the right people might see it.

A Cambodian Spring is out now in Irish cinemas.

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    Mute Derek
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    Aug 15th 2015, 12:22 PM

    I bough basil, thyme, parsley, mint and coriander in Lidl and planted them outside and they are thriving. My herb shopping days are truly over.

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    Mute Martin Hayes
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    Aug 15th 2015, 1:41 PM

    IYou are lucky to get basil to thrive Derek,it can be a challenge in the Irish climate. As for mint, I hope you didn’t make the mistake of planting it in the open garden.

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    Mute Derek
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    Aug 15th 2015, 2:30 PM

    Both basil plants are sturdy and healthy looking thankfully and the mint, both of them got a bit of a pruning as they were growing to tall and stalky initially but doing well now. Is there something about mint I should know when grown outdoors?

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    Mute Nicholas J Campbell
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    Aug 15th 2015, 2:50 PM

    I think mint plants tend to overtake flower beds. Like little Borg plants.

    47
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    Mute Martin Hayes
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    Aug 15th 2015, 3:17 PM

    As Nicholas has touched on Derek, mint is an absolute thug, it will spread everywhere and is very difficult to control or eradicate. I would suggest you dig it out immediately and plant it in a pot, make sure you get every last bit.

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    Mute Martin Hayes
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    Aug 15th 2015, 3:20 PM

    As far as basil is concerned, it is unlikely to survive too long in the open ground in Ireland, too wet too dull and too cold. It needs to be in a pot in a sunny spot.

    17
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    Mute Derek
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    Aug 15th 2015, 3:38 PM

    Sorry, I should have got what you meant, the mint is spreading all right but I do grab a few leaves for the kitchen and snip it back occasionally.

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    Mute Stephen Brady
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    Aug 15th 2015, 4:08 PM

    They spread their roots under ground and take over. Should have planted them in a container. On the plus side you’ll have plenty of mint next year.

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    Mute Derek
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    Aug 15th 2015, 4:42 PM

    That’s good to know, thank you, I’ll see about digging them out and potting them before they get out of hand.

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    Mute Cupid Stunt
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    Aug 15th 2015, 12:28 PM

    the price of some native fruit here in the supermarkets is off the wall. when I think of my grandmothers garden and the stuff she used to grow. literally hundreds of Euro worth of stuff at today’s prices and at the time we didn’t think anything of it.

    59
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    Mute Bi88les
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    Aug 15th 2015, 12:10 PM

    Great tips there, never heard of pine mouth before. Any way of knowing if the pine nuts are contaminated before you eat them? I love pine nuts, especially roasted in salads.

    54
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    Mute Mick Fox
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    Aug 15th 2015, 12:23 PM

    I had a bout of pine mouth a few years ago, was nasty and lasted about a week. It’s one of those things that isn’t really understood but anecdotally is thought to come more from imported Chinese pine nuts.

    I haven’t touched pine nuts since either as it takes a few days to develop do there’s no way to tell if it’s coming.

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    Mute Nicholas J Campbell
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    Aug 15th 2015, 12:12 PM

    Every drug dealers nightmare. A marijuana plant facing their house.

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    Mute Kevin Higgins
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    Aug 15th 2015, 12:26 PM

    They grow very well in the tomatoe patch, just make sure your garden wall is high enough for a healthy plant to hide behind ;)

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    Mute Ripper Murphy
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    Aug 15th 2015, 12:31 PM

    when i lived abrod i tryed to grow maruana but i kiled it by acident nd tryed to smoke dog poo insted lol. it is bad.

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    Mute little jim
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    Aug 15th 2015, 12:41 PM

    Sounds like a random thing you’d do anyway Ripper..

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    Mute Kevin Higgins
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    Aug 15th 2015, 12:42 PM

    anonymous accounts can be funny at times but please give it a rest. there’s an open mic night near the HA penny bridge if you want to give reality a go

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    Mute Ripper Murphy
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    Aug 15th 2015, 12:48 PM

    tank u jimmy. kevin will u go with me plz?

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    Mute catherine
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    Aug 15th 2015, 12:19 PM

    I love thyme and some other herbs and have tried to grow them in pots or window boxes but they didn’t last very long and were very poor to begin with. I must be doing the same caring things because I have tried a few times and failed. Very frustrating ! When my daughter moved house there was a beautiful Rosemary bush grown in the garden. Nice bonus !

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    Mute Tap Solny
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    Aug 15th 2015, 12:12 PM

    I just checked the area under my nose and I found three varieties of herb.

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    Mute Michael Sands
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    Aug 15th 2015, 9:26 PM

    A wash might help that, lol.

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    Mute Cool Lights
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    Aug 15th 2015, 12:49 PM

    The live herb plants in supermarkets are really cheap and on par price wise with the few sprigs you get on the cellophane.

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    Mute Jarlath Murphy
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    Aug 15th 2015, 3:35 PM

    More of these please!

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    Mute Lily
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    Aug 15th 2015, 12:49 PM

    I had a rosemary bush in my garden every now and then I would spot a lady going into my garden and taking a snippet. The scent of rosemary was lovely but the bush became too much and I got rid of it.

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    Mute funkybuscuits
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    Aug 15th 2015, 10:42 PM

    I saw rosemarys bush one time,messy

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    Mute Michael Sands
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    Aug 15th 2015, 9:29 PM

    Will someone tell me why no one grows Artemisia abrotanum (southernwood, lad’s love, southern wormwood) as it is as powerful smelling as any herb and no one grows it in their herb garden as it repels certain insects but is not for eating but a powerful smelling plant.

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    Mute Michael Sands
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    Aug 15th 2015, 9:24 PM

    Borage is good for bees and a tea is made from the leaves that has herbal properties…
    I have lovage as it smells nice and winter savory but never used them to cook with, some herbs can be nice just to have them due to what they smell like. With rosemary and hyssop which I grow as a flowering plant as well, these herbs can shoot up your blood pressure, so care needed there?

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