Cambodia how safe is it.?
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I love siem reap so it should be nice. As a tourist it's hard to know what a local lifestyle would be like since seeing temples would get old. I live in Thailand so expat life is familiar but it would be different there, more like rural Thailand.  I've only been to phnom penh once and there is more of a city there but with more of a town feel to it, of course much less developed than bangkok. It would be easy to go and take a look at bangkok since bus trips over from siem reap are inexpensive and the trip isn't far.
Have you thought of a ticket into Laos. Siem Riep to Pakse in southern Lao is cheap.
Travel agents in Pakse can organize return into Cambodia for you.
I just researched visas and it seems they use a secondary website and company for visa processing, and it could all be a little clearer in the web pages, but you can also contact the embassy with questions. You really can get visas on arrival in phnom penh or siem reap airports but your concern is for how long and if there are any limiting requirements or non-standard options, as for longer stay.
Siem Reap is consider one of the most friendliest city to travel.
As for your one way ticket thingy, it should not be a big problem. Unlikely they will ask for your return ticket. If they ask, you can said you are doing overland to either Thailand or Vietnam.
I'd recommend buying a one-month business visa on arrival (actually now called an Ordinary visa, with a letter E at the beginning of the visa number) and then extending it for one year once you're in the country. You can do the extension at travel agencies.
If you enter on a tourist visa, you'll probably have to leave Cambodia, then come back in and buy a (one-month) business visa on your return.
hope that helps!
I didn't experience any of that but the hotel staff definitely would try to get you to do things that provided a kick-back for them, like go and see a boring show, or go see that big lake for no good reason but to get their cut on setting it up, or use their friend's car service for double normal rates, or use their cell phone for calls for really high rates. Those things are bad service but not necessarily a scam.
They do start negotiating price around double what they expect to get, or maybe more, depends on them, but again that's not a scam.
In contrast in Laos in the past we found almost every food ticket added up wrong or something on it we didn't order. The pricing was already so low I probably would've missed most of it but it drove my wife crazy (she is Thai), and she wasn't going for it.
The "milk scam" in Siem Reap related to a funny example once. They ask you to buy milk for a baby for them, typically one they are lugging around. You buy it in the local store then they go back in the store and sell it right back, splitting a profit with the owner. My wife said she wanted nothing to do with milk but she would just give them money if they needed it, and they were completely confused since that wasn't part of the scam. The obvious thing to do would be for them to take the money but they wanted to hold out to get the milk (not too bright--they use kids to run the scam), so we walked away.
Are you wearing a virginal suite or have you read bad things in our country
Any western male here in Cambodia is safe if that is what you want
However if you want to indulge.   Let your hair down and go with the flow
You won't forget it.   Or regret your decision
Mjk
Read more:
The ordinary (E) visa is now $35. If you wish to extend it, this would need to be done before the expiry date and before leaving the country again.
OP, have you ever been to Cambodia? Why would you like to move there? Can you deal with living in a country do different from yours where you do not speak the language? You need to take a long hard look at yourself to determine those answers.
In regards to the original question, the answer depends very much on you. Some people travel to a country and meet the wrong kind of people and then can never be convinced that a place is safe, while someone else has been visiting regularly or lives there and never had anything bad happen can never be convinced that the place is safe.
In regards to the plane ticket, all flights to Bangkok require a return ticket or a visa for sure, flights terminating in Phnom Penh may be different.
Once you get there, also visit other parts of Cambodia. The fact that SR is such a big tourist attraction, that land and house prices are rather high (not room rentals though, $100 can get you a small apartment)(l/h.p. might not affect the OP) and that your movement towards Angkor Wat National Park will be limited (they'll want $20 each time for simply entering that area even if you are going somewhere else/just passing through) might get old a bit after a while. SR is also the hottest province I believe and occasionally the city is flooded out around September/October.
I do love the Cambodian countryside and outside of SR is where I fell in love with it for the first time. Eventually, I settled on a different location though.
Do a google search on "entering cambodia with one way ticket from bangkok"
There is a recent thread from 2014 on a different forum. A low cost airline like Air Asia may give you hassle or not, it seems.
Get Malaysia to put their word into your booking record that a one way ticket is OK and you will be fine.
I live in Siem Reap and work in a hotel here. When i moved here, I was on a tourist on arrival visa ( as business one takes time) I flew in on a one way ticket. At no point was I ever asked, or my staff who have joined me,been asked to show a proof of return ticket.
You give your passport into the desk, with your visa application for tourists and pay $31 dollars ( 30 if u have a photo with you already) they stamp it and collect it. Its valid only for one journey in.
There wont be an issue with a one way ticket.
However, you will need to leave the country every 30 days, to get a new visa.
Your hotel or even your apartment rental ( if its decent) will take a copy of your passport and send to immigration. So if you go over your visa time limit, they will expel you ( although that will probably take some time, if u want to stay here, its best to make sure you dont run over your visa)
You could apply for a business visa, saying u are a journalist or something. Its not expensive, and that way u can live here for a year, and come and go as you please.
I adore Siem Reap, its a beautiful and easy place to live and I am sure you will adore it too. It is the most safest friendliest, quietest little place to be, and its a pleasure to be here.
I hope this helps you
Safety kind of depends on what you do when you are there. A Russian guy living next to me had some guys follow him home from a club one night and they shot him on his doorstep. If you go to enjoy the culture and the people, and you respect both you are probably about as safe here as anywhere. If you go for the purpose of exploiting a country with lax and randomly enforced laws on child prostitution and drugs, then you are on your own. Causing someone to lose face can get you into trouble. Cambodia has its share of pick pockets and petty crime and everyone is desperate to make a buck. People are poor. Understand all this and you'll be fine.
Treat all with respect and not as arseholes and you will be ok
Cambodians are very quiet people and do not tolerate or want to answer back
They would rather turn the other cheek and save face
However if forced like anyone else they could go overboard.   But I have never seen
Since 2003
Cambodia is still like the Wild West with little interference from police or anyone else
providing you are doing the right thing.    Which 90 % of us ex pats are doing
No young people or drugs.    otherwise I hope you go to hell and get caught in the meantime
This is a good country and very tolerant for westerners
Michael
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