Saturday, October 31, 2009

Jungle woman Rochom P'ngieng wants to return to the wild

Rochom P'ngieng spent 18 years living in a forest after going missing as a child (Photo: AP)

A Cambodian woman who spent 18 years living in a forest after going missing as a child has struggled to reintegrate in village life and wants to return to the wild.

30 Oct 2009
By Ian MacKinnon in Bangkok
The Telegraph (UK)


Rochom P'ngieng, dubbed "jungle woman" when she emerged in Feb 2007, has still has not learnt to speak and refuses to wear clothes.

Her father said she had been admitted to hospital after refusing to eat for a month and had made several attempts to return to the forest.

Sal Lou said: "Her condition looks worse than the time we brought her from the jungle. She always wants to take off her clothes and crawl back to the jungle.

"She has refused to eat rice for about one month. She is skinny now... She still cannot speak. She acts totally like a monkey. Last night, she took off her clothes, and went to hide in the bathroom."

Rochom P'ngieng disappeared in 1989 when she was eight years old while herding water buffalo in the province of Ratanakkiri bordering Vietnam, north-east of the capital, Phnom Penh.

Her parents had long given up hope of ever seeing her. But in 2007, she emerged from the jungle naked and dirty, hunched over like a monkey, and was caught trying to steal by a farmer.

She was said to have been scavenging food in the forest and could utter only unintelligible words. Sal Lou described the sounds she made simply as "animal noises".

The drama of her disappearance and unlikely reappearance gripped Cambodians who described her as "half animal girl" and "jungle woman", though there were also many questions raised about her identity and whether she could really have survived in the jungle.

But Sal Lou, a village policeman, embraced Rochom P'ngieng as he long-lost daughter after identifying her by a facial scar.

However, in spite of the family's best efforts, the woman has had great difficulty settling in after her years in the jungle.

Sal Lou said that she was admitted to Ratanakkiri's provincial hospital last Monday, but he had removed her because she was unsettled and the medical staff had difficulty preventing her running away.

"We have to hold her hand all the time (at the hospital). Otherwise she would take her clothes off and run away," he said. She has become so difficult that he wants a charity to take her into care.

At the hospital Dr Hing Phan Sokunthea said Sal Lou took her away against the wishes of medical staff. "We wanted to monitor her situation more, but we don't know what to do because the father already took her out of hospital."

The jungles of Ratanakkiri – some of the most isolated and wild in Cambodia – are known to have held hidden groups of hill tribes in the past.

In 2004, four hill tribe families emerged from the dense forest where they had fled in 1979 after the fall of the genocidal Khmer Rouge regime, which they supported.

6 comments:

Anonymous said...

she would make a great team with "jungle man" hun sen

Anonymous said...

I beleive she should be in a psychiatric hospital and be locked up as well as focusing on how to help and cue her. Maybe giving her some drip to boost her energy and also scan on her brain to see what is affecting her life and ability to speak. When she recovers maybe she can tell us a whole lot more of her story side effect. But if we let her go how will she cope with the wheather like too hot or too cold (monsoon season), then she could get sick and died and then this will be another responsiblity for us to face with.

Anonymous said...

Look at the original article -- there's one more picture. Her mother clearly has a black eye. Abusive home? Is that why she's running away? I think the parent should be investigated -- not just send the kid to a psych ward.

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/asia/cambodia/6468099/Jungle-woman-Rochom-Pngieng-wants-to-return-to-the-wild.html

Anonymous said...

Her article always intrigue me. So i talk to my friend who has a PHD in psychologist today. She said that the girl may have elective mutism. It means she chooses not to speak. That is just her quick analysis. But she needs more information make a proper diagnosis. My other friend had sent the story to the National Geographic. Hopefully, the story will become a fascinating documentary on the TV or National Geographic article. And this may help her.

Anonymous said...

If they don't put her in the Hospital for treatment, she may ran off back to the wild...

Anonymous said...

I am a girl and not a lesbian otherwise, I would have married her and bring her to America. All she needs is love and affection and you can give her two or three times a day.