Damnak Chang'aeur District
Damnak Chang'aeur (Khmer: ស្រុកដំណាក់ចង្អើរ) is a district (Khan) in Kep Province, Cambodia. It is the largest district in the province and a train track from Phnom Penh to Sihanoukville runs through here. The district is subdivided into three sections (Sangkat) and 11 groups (Krom).[2]
Damnak Chang'aeur ស្រុកដំណាក់ចង្អើរ | |
---|---|
District | |
Damnak Chang'aeur | |
Coordinates: 10°32′2.18″N 104°20′54.78″E | |
Country | |
Province | Kep |
Communes | 3 |
Villages | 11 |
Population (1998)[1] | |
• Total | 18,341 |
Time zone | +7 |
History
In June 1994, Phnom Voar in Damnak Chang'aeur hit the international headlines as the site of the kidnapping of three westerners, Australian David Wilson, 29, Briton Mark Slater, 28, and Frenchman Jean-Michel Braquet, 27 from a train by Khmer Rouge forces led by Commander Chouk Rin.[3]
Subdivisions
- 230101 អង្កោល Angkaol Section: It is at the west, bordering Kampot at its west, the sea at its south and Kep District at its east.
- 23010101 អំពេង Ampeng Group
- 23010102 ទួលស្រង Tuol Srangam Group
- 23010103 កោះសោម Kaoh Saom Group
- 23010104 អង្កោល Angkaol Group
- 230102 អូរក្រសារ Ou Krasar Section
- 23010201 អូរក្រសារ Ou Krasar Group
- 23010202 ដំណាក់ចំបក់ Damnak Chambak Group
- 230103 ពងទឹក Pong Tuek Section
- 23010301 អូរដូង Ou Doung Group
- 23010302 ព្រៃតាកុយ Prey Ta Koy Group
- 23010303 ភ្នំលាវ Phum Leav Group
- 23010304 រនេស Rones Group
- 23010305 ចំការបី Chamkar Bei Group
gollark: CEASE THINE ABUSIVE DELETINATION OF MINE COMMENTATIONS!
gollark: Besides, you might forget about SCP-055.
gollark: But you might posess anti-bee/anti-me/anti-SCP-055 bias.
gollark: But you can probably just veto them with your voating powers.
gollark: I want bees in the rules and random references to me and SCP-055.
References
- General Population Census of Cambodia, 1998: Village Gazetteer. National Institute of Statistics. February 2000. pp. 1–4.
- National Institute of Statistics, Kep Province, Damnak Chang'aeur District Archived 2008-08-03 at the Wayback Machine
- "Deaths of Khmer Rouge victims cry out for justice". The Australian. February 3, 2007. Retrieved 2009-01-16.
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