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02:18
Spot the fakes! Reproduction clothes have amusing spelling mistakes in Cambodia
These clothes copying household name brands all have amusing spelling mistakes.
The garments were being sold on stalls at the sprawling Central Market in Phnom Penh, Cambodia, on June 6.
It is unclear if the designers had made the errors or deliberately altered existing logos and labels in an attempt to avoid clashing with the originals.
Examples from the video include a 'Bo Tega Venet' t-shirt based on the Italian luxury fashion house based in Milan, Italy.
Also seen was a 'Niki' top - complete with the iconic swoosh tick of Nike - along with 'Luisuitton' pyjamas based on the Luis Vuitton brand.
A top with a label claiming to be 'Dhanen' had the distinctive look of a Chanel top while two-piece shorts and t-shirt sets fused the Dior name with a Nike tick.
Elsewhere in the cluster of stalls was a glittery gold 'Louis Ciaga' top, which mismatches Luis Vuitton and Balenciaga.
There was even a 'The North Cafe Gucci' t-shirt that also mixes two copies in one - The North Face outdoor gear along with designer label Gucci.
A Versace Jeans Couture top might have looked authentic if the makes had not mistaken the line 'PIECE No' for the word 'PIECEN'.
While there was no mistaking that a set of 'Nine' jogging bottoms were a bodged take on the Nike brand name.
Another dress used the word 'Guccy' instead of the instantly recognisable 'Gucci'.
And a pair of shorts appeared to have used the Reebok logo with the word 'Sports' and even thrown in three Adidas stripes for good measure.
The items were seen at Central Market, which opened in the Cambodian capital in 1937 and was the largest in Asia at the time.
It is still busy with tens of thousands of locals every day and is one of the most popular destinations for tourists, listed at number eight on Trip Advisor's Top Attractions in Phnom Penh.
However, the vast numbers of fake garments being sold openly on the market - only a small fraction of which are seen in the video - shows how the country has still struggled to progress economically following the genocidal rule of the left-wing Khmer Rouge party between 1975 and 1979.
Under the leadership of Pol Pot, who studied in France, the brutal Communist regime executed up to three million people and abolished money.
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