Dave Walker was a Canadian writer, filmmaker and photo-journalist who died under mysterious circumstances in 2014 in Cambodia.[1][2]

Dave Walker
BornDavid Walker
April 7, 1955
Edmonton, Alberta
DiedFebruary 14, 2014
OccupationAuthor, photo-journalist, filmmaker
NationalityCanadian
EducationMA in augmented reality
Alma materYork University, Toronto
Genrejournalism, non-fiction
SubjectCambodia, Thailand
Notable worksHello My Big Big Honey!: Love Letters To Bangkok Bar Girls And Their Interviews (1998)
Website
www.davewalkercase.com

Literature portal

Biography

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Dave Walker was born in Edmonton, Canada, April 7, 1955.[citation needed]

After graduating high school, Walker served briefly as a Toronto Police constable and later joined the British Army serving in Belfast, Northern Ireland during 'The Troubles' where he saw combat against the Provisional IRA (PIRA) in an urban reconnaissance unit trained by and seconded to the Special Air Service (SAS).[3]

After his term of enlistment ended, Walker returned to Canada and worked as a private investigator and eventually began travelling to S.E. Asia on assignments. In the late 1980s, he famously located a missing refugee girl from Cambodia whom he re-united with her refugee family in Canada.[4] While in Canada Walker worked with CSIS (Canadian Security Intelligence Service) identifying Khmer Rouge genocide perpetrators who had infiltrated into Canada among Cambodian refugees in the 1980s.[5][6]

In the late 1980s and early 1990s, Walker trained Karen National Liberation Army insurgents on the Thailand-Myanmar border, where he met his wife in a remote northern Thai village. He brought her to Canada and after five years they divorced amicably.[citation needed]

During the 1990s–2000s, Walker worked as a freelance photo-journalist, screenwriter and film production fixer on films like The Beach and with ABC News' Diane Sawyer on her coverage of the tsunami in 2004. He worked with Canadian filmmakers Peter Lynch and Peter Vronsky in Toronto and Cambodia.[citation needed] In 1998, Walker published a book of love letters he co-edited from Bangkok bar girls to their foreign boyfriends, Hello My Big, Big Honey!.[7][better source needed]

In the early 1990s, Walker was co-producing an independent feature film he had written, The Man from Year Zero with actor Haing S. Ngor from the movie The Killing Fields. Walker's screenplay described how Cambodian refugees in Canada encounter a former Khmer Rouge executioner hiding among them and was going to feature Ngor in the role of the fugitive perpetrator. But after Ngor was murdered by Cambodian gang members in Los Angeles in 1996, the project collapsed.[8]

In 2009, Walker earned an M.A. at York University in Toronto in the field of Augmented Reality before returning to Cambodia.[9] As part of his M.A. thesis, Walker made a short film The Augmented Cambodian.[10]

Walker continued to explore themes in Cambodia's history and in 2012 he returned to Cambodia to begin researching a documentary The Poorest Man, the story of an "Oskar Schindler"-like former Khmer Rouge village chief who risked his life to save victims in his village from the Pol Pot regime's genocidal killings. As many of the Khmer Rouge perpetrators had returned to Cambodia in the 1990s, and re-entered government service, police, military and business, and were now claiming that they "had no choice" in perpetrating their crimes under Pol Pot, Walker's proposed film about the one Khmer Rouge functionary who demonstrated they did have a choice and survived Pol Pot just the same, was met with hostility from some sectors in Cambodia.[11]

Disappearance and death

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On February 14, 2014, Walker disappeared after he left his guest house in Cambodia. Hotel staff stated room service cleaning staff went to Walker's room around 2 pm and he said he would leave the room so the room could be cleaned. He left with a bottle of water in hand and never returned.[12]

Cambodian Police and Canada's foreign affairs department Global Affairs Canada bungled and obstructed the investigation of Walker's mysterious disappearance,[citation needed] while several different private investigations began to duel with each other in bitter rivalry.[1][13]

On May 1, Walker's body was found at Cambodia's Angkor Temple Complex, near the "Gates of Death" at Angkor Thom, approximately 13 kilometers from where he disappeared. Two autopsy reports (one commissioned by Walker's family) could not determine a cause of death, but indicated that Walker died many weeks before his body was discovered, probably on the day of his disappearance.[citation needed] Walker's body was recovered by his ex-wife's family, cremated and his ashes enshrined in the northern Thai village where he had met his wife, as per his wishes.[citation needed]

His disappearance and death remain unsolved.

See also

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References

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  1. ^ a b Leah McLaren (September 11, 2015). "Why a Canadian's death in the jungle is likely to remain a mystery". The Globe and Mail. Retrieved November 5, 2018. As for Dave Walker, friends and family around the world tried to keep the case alive, and a Toronto-based criminal historian and blogger named Peter Vronsky – a close friend of Mr. Walker since the early 1990s – continues to compile an exhaustive account of his death and the subsequent investigation.
  2. ^ CBC News: Canadian filmmaker Dave Walker found dead in Cambodia (accessed January 30, 2016)
  3. ^ "MURDERED CANADIAN JOURNALIST WAS A SPOOK! – Andrew Drummond". www.andrew-drummond.com. May 3, 2014. Retrieved December 8, 2019.
  4. ^ The Sary Dy Story, retrieved December 6, 2019
  5. ^ Chris Doucette, "Canadian found dead in Cambodia provided help to intelligence agents, Toronto Sun, May 2, 2014.
  6. ^ "Body of missing Canadian filmmaker Dave Walker found in Cambodia". CTVNews. May 1, 2014. Retrieved September 10, 2021.
  7. ^ "Hello My Big Big Honey!".
  8. ^ The Augmented Cambodian Part 1 of 3, retrieved September 10, 2021
  9. ^ "Past Student Awards & Grants". Graduate Program in Interdisciplinary Studies. Retrieved September 10, 2021.
  10. ^ The Augmented Cambodian Part 1 of 3, retrieved September 10, 2021
  11. ^ "Projects – Animist Farm Films". March 2, 2014. Archived from the original on March 2, 2014. Retrieved September 10, 2021.
  12. ^ "Search". IFJ. Retrieved December 8, 2019.
  13. ^ Olszewski, Peter. "Man about town: 28 March 2014 | Phnom Penh Post". www.phnompenhpost.com. Retrieved December 6, 2019.
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