New Zealander wanted over broken statue in Cambodia’s Angkor complex
Agence France-Presse
| 13 October 2014
PHNOM PENH —
Cambodian authorities say they are hunting a New Zealand tourist who
allegedly destroyed a statue while illegally staying overnight at the
country’s famed Angkor Wat temple complex.
Restoration workers found the woman, who has
not been named, at the 12th-century Bayon temple on Friday morning —
one of the most recognizable temples at the sprawling heritage site.
She was questioned by police but it was not
until after her release that a one-meter tall Buddha statue was found
shattered inside the Bayon temple, according to the government agency
managing the Angkor complex.
The complex is closed to visitors at dusk
and re-opens at dawn, when tourist throngs return to watch the sunrise
over the iconic Angkor Wat temple.
In a statement released on Sunday, Apsara
Authorities said they were looking for “evidence to prosecute the
criminal who destroyed the national heritage (statue).”
The woman visited the stunning Khmer
Empire-era site on Thursday but as night fell her driver reported her
disappearance, the statement added.
She was found early the next day by workers
at the Bayon temple, which is instantly recognizable for the huge stone
faces that adorn its main towers.
The broken statue, restored in 1988 using ancient sandstone but with a replica head made from cement, was discovered later.
Part of the temple has now been closed to visitors to allow restoration work on the broken statue.
Heritage police and Apsara Authority
officials could not be reached for comment on Monday, but local media
reported that the tourist suspect had travelled on to Thailand.
The Angkor Archaeological Park contains the
remains of the different capitals of the Khmer Empire, dating from the
9th to the 15th century.
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