Abstract:
In every war affected community any where in the world, ex combatants are a serious threat
to any form of change from conflict to peace resulting in reversing into the conflict in many
cases or creating new conflicts in others. Mostly it is armed young men with no or extremely
less economic bases to support themselves and their dependents armed with nothing but
military training. Reintegration is a very long and sensitive procedure without a clear ending
or conclusion. Planned detailed programs in suitable economic atmospheres will not
guarantee that quality of life of targeted ex-combatants will certainly equal living conditions
of the lowest layers of the civilian population2. This effort is to provide my view as a member
of a rural community development mission based in Cambodia and lessons learned by other
related programs during my presence in Cambodia in the process of demobilization and
reintegration of ex-combatants in Cambodia. I will be sharing the lessons extracted from our
experience and from research and documents done on it. This will also provide a list of key
readings as well as other useful resources on the subject. Good practices that should be
implemented in similar environments and bad lessons that should be avoided are explained.
Only an ex combatants would know that it is indeed a hard road home