's Outpatient Dept. 1, Nong Samet, May 1984.Food distribution problems had been resolved by the aid agencies in 1980 and Nong Samet became a model camp for its organization and the quality of its
health care services, which included a
tuberculosis treatment program, established in spite of claims that the situation was still too unstable to permit long-term treatment. A 100-bed hospital with
pediatrics,
maternity and surgical facilities and two outpatient clinics were operated by the
American Refugee Committee, which trained 150 Khmer
medics,
midwives,
pharmacists and
nurses. ARC also operated a
traditional medicine clinic. Food and some water were provided by the
World Food Programme under the supervision of the
United Nations Border Relief Operation (UNBRO). Deep wells also provided potable water for much of the camp. Other services fluctuated over the years, but in September 1983 supplementary feeding was being handled by
Catholic Relief Services (CRS),
sanitation and maternal-child health by
World Concern,
physical rehabilitation by
Handicap International, and security by UNBRO. CRS also operated a mobile dental team and the
Japan International Volunteer Center (JVC) provided a weekly
X-ray service.
Aid worker recollections just outside Nong Samet Refugee Camp, where refugee monks provided religious services to camp residents, May 1984. Several aid workers have described their experiences at Nong Samet Camp, including Dr. Louis Braile: There was really a palpable difference between Nong Samet and KID (
Khao-I-Dang Holding Center). Perhaps it arose from the wilderness atmosphere. Perhaps it was the presence of the ancient ruins, or perhaps it was the fact that these people, unlike the KID residents, had little hope of
expatriating. Dr.
Steven H. Miles, medical director for the American Refugee Committee, wrote: Relief at the end of the Khmer Rouge has been replaced by fear of the present. There is a hard hopelessness here, much more so than in the past. Escape is not possible. Violence and corruption are pervasive. War is certain. Fear, a sense of extreme vulnerability, is the omnipresent emotion. My experience of Nong Samet in 1983 was overwhelmingly, searingly sad. Robert C. Porter Jr. of the
US Embassy in Bangkok wrote: The
Khmer camp at Nong Samet...always held the most exotic fascination and excitement for me.... A tall forest provided welcome shade. The stone ruins of an old
Angkor-style
Buddhist temple gave it a particularly Khmer air. While its early military leadership was among the more corrupt, disruptive and despicable, the camp was unusually well organized and tightly run.... It had an interesting population and a lively market. For a time in 1979 and 1980 it was the most populous Cambodian city on earth, far surpassing the then reawakening but still tiny
Phnom Penh. ==The Vietnamese dry-season offensive of 1984==