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Angkor revamp: India's loss, China's gain

28 January 2007 (The Times of India) -

Angkor revamp: India’s loss, China’s gain

China and Japan are in a race to grab a larger portion of the restoration work at Angkor Wat, the 12th century Hindu temple in Cambodia.

These well-intended moves also highlight India’s inability to make the most of an opportunity to build on age-old cultural ties with Cambodia and be seen as an influential friend in the region, sources said.

The Cambodian government and the Unesco are considering an offer from Beijing to fully restore the 900-year-old Chou Say temple, one of the shrines in the sprawling temple complex built by the Chola dynasty.

The project would cost just $1.86 million to the Chinese but it would open the doors for bagging contracts for larger archaeological sites in the complex.


Related Books:
- Angkor Cities and Temples by C. Jaques
- The Treasures of Angkor: Cultural Travel Guide (Rizzoli Art Guide) by M. Albanese
- Southeast Asia: From Prehistory to History by P. S. Bellwood and I. Glover (Eds)
- Khmer Sculpture and the Angkor Civilization by M. Giteau

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  5. Cambodia's Baphuon emerges piece-by-piece