Cambodian jungle girl

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The so-called Cambodian jungle girl is a Cambodian woman who emerged from the jungle in Ratanakiri province, Cambodia on 13 January 2007. A family in a nearby village claimed that the woman was their daughter Rochom P'ngieng (born 1979) who had disappeared 18 or 19 years previously; the story was covered in most media as one of a feral child who lived in the jungle for most of her life.[1] However, some reporters and NGOs questioned this explanation and suggested that she instead might be an unrelated woman who had been held in captivity.

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[edit] Discovery

She came to international attention after emerging filthy, naked and scarred from the dense jungle of Ratanakiri province in remote northeastern Cambodia on 13 January 2007. After a villager had noticed food missing from a lunch box, he staked out the area, spotted the woman, gathered some friends and caught her.[2] There have also been reports of a naked man who was seen with the woman and ran away when challenged.[3][4] Some reports have him carrying a sword; some villagers believe he was a jungle spirit.

The Pnong follow no organized religion but the family took the woman to a Buddhist pagoda to have monks calm her spirit.[4]

[edit] Theories about identity

After hearing about the incident, 45-year-old Sal Lou[3] (or Sar Yo[4]), who belongs to the Pnong ethnic minority[2] and works as a village policeman in Oyadao village, traveled to the area and claimed that the woman was his long-lost daughter. He last saw his daughter when she was eight years old; in 1988, she was lost in the jungle while tending water buffalo near the border to Vietnam.[5] Her six-year-old sister was lost on the same day and has never been found.[3] He identified the girl based on a scar on her arm, supposedly from a knife accident that occurred prior to the girl's disappearance,[5] and by facial features similar to those of her mother, Rochom Soy.[3][4] Though DNA testing was once scheduled, the family later withdrew consent[3] and the DNA tests never took place.[6]

A visiting Guardian reporter observed that the woman had deep scars on her left wrist and ankle, possibly from being held in captivity, as well as feet that did not look as if the woman had lived in the jungle for a long time. She was able to use a spoon without instruction. He called the claim that she was a feral child "almost certainly nonsense", stated that "beyond the family's ardent claims to recognise her, there is no evidence that she is the missing girl", and thought it more likely that she was "a girl brought up in captivity, who somehow escaped, and then found her way to a father who desperately wanted to recover something he had loved and lost."[1] Licadho, a human rights NGO, also believed she might have been a victim of abuse. The woman has marks on her arms that may have been caused by a restraint such as a rope. "We believe that this woman is a victim of some kind of torture, maybe sexual or physical," said Kek Galabru.

[edit] Condition upon discovery and afterwards

One week after being discovered, she experienced difficulties adjusting to civilized life. Local police reported that she was only able to say three words: "father", "mother" and "stomachache". A Spanish psychologist who visited the girl reported that she "made some words and smiled in response to a game involving toy animals and a mirror" but did not speak any recognizable language.[7] When she was thirsty or hungry, she pointed at her mouth. She preferred to crawl rather than walk upright. The family watched Rochom P'ngieng around the clock to make sure she did not run off back to the jungle, as she tried to do several times. Her mother constantly had to pull back on the clothes she tried to take off. A visiting Guardian reporter described the family as genuinely caring for her and the woman as listless and sad but restless at night.[1]

The NGO Licadho feared the woman was enduring trauma after returning to society. Penn Bunna, an official at Adhoc, another Cambodian human rights group, said the constant flow of visitors likely caused stress for the woman. "She must have experienced traumatic events in the jungle that have affected her ability to speak," he said.[8]

On 25 September, 2007, Deutsche Presse-Agentur reported that the woman, who had never been able to adjust to village life, had vanished back into the jungle without leaving a trace.[6]

In February 2008, the Phnom Penh Post reported that the woman had disappeared for a couple of days but had then returned. The Spanish psychologist was still seeing her, and she had adjusted a bit better to her new surroundings, but still would not speak. The father was trying to raise money so that he could take his daughter to a spirit healer who could help exorcise the "jungle spirits" from his daughter.[9]

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