When I crossed the border to Cambodia , it was hard not to think about what had happened here in the late 70’s … The Khmer Rouge, led by Pol Pot – also called “Brother No. 1” – started a cruel “experiment” by creating a purely agrarian-based Communist society. Speaker of the Red Khmer announced the beginning of a new revolutionary era in which every form of oppression and tyranny would be abolished. However, within the first months of this revolutionary era the country was transformed into a giant labor and prison camp.
Read more →Blue sky, bright sunshine and I gave my brother a “free ride” from the airport to the old quarter of Hanoi. Shortly before his arrival I ended up in a discussion with the police who wanted me to leave the public parking area at the airport. Motorcycles are supposedly not allowed here and they just asked me to go back to the city. No way!
Read more →The north offers spectacular scenery, often characterized by its paddy fields carpeting the rolling slopes of the mountains. I stayed the first night in Dien Bien near the border and spent the next day traveling north to Sa Pa. August is one of the very rainy months in the monsoon season and it came to no surprise that heavy rainfalls left its marks on the road.
Read more →It has been silent for weeks now, without any updates on this blog but there were good reasons… Sometimes the blink of an eye is enough and the world around you appears in a different light. On July 9, in the Chinese province of Sichuan several tragic events occurred, all more or less at the same time
Read more →The Pamir Highway from Khorog to Osh was built by Soviet military engineers between 1931 and 1934, in order to facilitate troops, transport and provisioning to this very remote outpost of the Soviet empire. Being a major drug-smuggling artery, the road has several border-guard checkpoints, where you will have to register. Our path led more than 500 kilometers along the Afghan border.
Read more →There was only one thing on my way to Dushanbe that bothered me. It was a little passage but I was pretty much concerned about it and it mentally preoccupied my mind for days. I had heard of this section long before I started my journey.
Read more →In Bukhara and Samarkand I used the early morning hours at sunrise to explore the deserted streets and squares before the tourist life took its usual course. There are once again the big architectural masterpieces, which refer to power and glory of past empires, often built by unspeakable violence and excessive urge to rule.
Read more →Although I had four days left to cross Turkmenistan, it only took me 48 hours to get through the country and to exit it towards Uzbekistan. One might ask why such a hurry …
Read more →Esfahan, with it’s tree-lined boulevards, Persian Garden and a number of important Islamic buildings makes it probably the most beautiful city in Iran. My favorite place was the Naqsh-e Jahan Square. In the afternoon, the place was quite empty but in the evening and especially on weekends it gets crowded with people who pick nick, walk around or simply enjoy the atmosphere of this amazing spot in town.
Read more →If you make your travel decisions based on what your friends and family say, you’ll probably never make it to Iran, a country whose politics are impossible to escape. For those of us who have been grown up on an endless diet of images depicting Iran as a dark, dangerous place full of fundamentalist fanatics, discovering the real Iran is the most wonderful surprise. Beyond the stereotypes is a country desperate to be seen for what it is, rather than what it is depicted to be.
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