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BANGKOK, Thailand -- Tourists, gamblers, traders and residents can now
	travel by train between Bangkok and the Thai-Cambodian border for the
	first time after tracks were cut 45 years ago, when U.S. and Cambodian
	forces began losing their war against Pol Pot who later unleashed
	Cambodia's "killing fields" regime.
	
	The new rail link ends one of the last disruptions caused by the
	regional U.S.-Vietnam War and tightens the peacetime economies of
	former enemies Thailand and Cambodia.
	
	The two countries recently extended an existing Bangkok-Aranyaprathet
	railway line which crosses eastern Thailand. They repaired its final
	3.5-mile (5.7-kilometer) link between Aranyaprathet and Ban Klong Luk
	Border Station on the Thai side of the frontier.
	
	On July 1, the State Railway of Thailand's trains began scheduled
	departures from each station twice a day -- two at dawn and two at
	lunch time -- for a total of four trips.
	
	Each journey takes about five hours to complete 134 miles (216
	kilometers). Tickets cost less than $2.
	
	"I remember taking the train from Bangkok to Aranyaprathet several
	years ago, and then having to get a taxi to go from there to the
	border," one traveler said.
	
	"But I see that the train from Bangkok will still take five hours to
	get there. Cattle grazing along the tracks will probably be moving
	faster than the train."
	
	These are Southeast Asia's only trains to and from Cambodia which has
	only a skeletal railway.
	
	Passengers crossing the border have to disembark and walk through the
	immigration and customs checkpoint. Public and private vehicles are
	available on the Cambodian side to continue the journey.
	
	Cambodia's railway from Phnom Penh reaches Poipet, four miles (six
	kilometers) from its side of the border, but it is unclear when it
	could be extended to the frontier for an unbroken link to Ban Klong
	Luk.
	
	The four trains on the Bangkok-Ban Klong Luk route will be
	diesel-powered. In Thailand, that often means passengers are forced to
	breathe the engine's foul fumes while the train idles in a station
	polluting its surroundings before departure.
	
	The route's original railway service began in 1955 but a coup in
	Thailand temporarily halted the crossing.
	
	One year later, trains rolled again but were cancelled in 1961 because
	Thailand and Cambodia -- frequent enemies since medieval times --
	argued about who owned the stone ruins of Preah Vihear in a border
	zone still contested today. The 11th century Hindu temple was linked
	to Cambodia's nearby slave-built Angkor Wat complex.
	
	In 1970 the railway line opened again but finally stopped on July 1,
	1974, exactly 45 years ago.
	
	During those years, Thailand hosted U.S. airbases for attacks on
	Cambodia, Laos and Vietnam during America's Vietnam War.
	
	Intense U.S. aerial bombardment and weak Cambodian government troops
	however failed to stop communist Khmer Rouge guerrillas advancing on
	Cambodia's capital Phnom Penh.
	
	Khmer Rouge leader Pol Pot achieved victory in mid-1975.
	
	His xenophobic, ultra-Maoist "killing fields" regime left nearly two
	million people dead and destroyed most of the country before Vietnam
	invaded in January 1979, ousted Pol Pot and occupied the country for
	the next 10 years.
	
	Thailand then became a conduit for U.S., British and other aid to an
	anti-Vietnamese Cambodian resistance which included the Khmer Rouge
	and other guerrillas.
	
	After Vietnam's withdrawal in 1989, border clashes between Thailand
	and Cambodia occasionally erupted from fortified positions until
	agreements were reached several years ago.
	
	Pol Pot died in 1998. Cambodia became peaceful, enabling the two
	former foes to begin repairing the railway link in 2014.
	
	Today, inexpensive flights link both countries.
	
	Road trips across the border are also popular among Thais and other
	gamblers who flock to glitzy casinos, constructed during the past
	several years in Poipet. Gambling is illegal in Thailand.
	
	Among the import-export traders who cross the border each day are
	infamous Cambodian smugglers who bring most of the high-quality,
	made-in-China counterfeit goods sold in Thailand, according to Bangkok
	vendors and counterfeiters.
	
	The most dangerous and feared smugglers are suspected of operating
	safe houses for imported counterfeit items in and around Aranyaprathet
	in Thailand's Sa Kaeo province close to a popular secondhand market
	known as Rong Kluea or Salty Warehouse, investigators said.