WORLD VIEW
Jonathan Power
jonatpower@aol.com
Cambodia has lain for too long under the black
umbrella of its past. But Cambodia is waking up, has looked the evil one in its
eye and, re-born, found its strength.
Cambodia has been to hell and back- 2 million of its
people killed out of a population of 8 million, with 500,000 of them executed,
the consequence of a fanatical communist movement, the Khmer Rouge, led by Pol
Pot and a group of henchmen now being tried in the UN War Crimes Court. (Pol
Pot himself is dead.)
The Khmer Rouge violently took power in 1975 and fell
in 1979. They wanted a classless society. They abolished money, property and
religious practices.
Family relationships were criticised and people were
forbidden from even showing the slightest affection. The work day in the fields
was 12 hours long without pause.
Torture and the bullet were the instant punishment for
deviance. Anybody educated was singled out for death.
In the late 1970s, the neighbouring Vietnamese,
despite having in the early 1970s supported the Khmer Rouge, fought their way
into Cambodia and in January 1979 overthrew the Khmer Rouge, capturing Phnom
Penh.
The Khmer Rouge fled westward, establishing themselves
on the Thai border. Many of them were hungry and ill and Unicef and NGOs fed
and nurtured them. They lived to fight another day.
In an appalling move the US, still scarred by losing
its war with Vietnam, persuaded its Western allies to vote to allow the Khmer
Rouge to take Cambodia’s seat in the UN.
From 1979 to 1990 the Khmer Rouge ruled the diplomatic
roost. Western countries gave their political support to a regime that had
perpetrated the second worst genocide of the twentieth century.
In this they were opposed by the Soviet Union. The
Chinese were more in a quandary having been the Khmer Rouge’s main supplier of
military hardware.
A handful of US diplomats would like to see the US
making an apology, as President Bill Clinton did over CIA activity in
supporting a murderous government in Guatemala.
But in the words of one Cambodian-based diplomat
“Washington won’t let us talk about it.” In Cambodia the Vietnamese established
a government that ruled for a decade.
In 1991 the UN negotiated a peace agreement between
the de facto Cambodian government and the Khmer Rouge. A UN organised election
was agreed to, but in the end the Khmer Rouge baulked.
Hun Sen, now Cambodia’s autocratic prime minister,
lost the 1993 election but then muscled his way into a power-sharing deal. In
1997 he staged a coup. He is now Asia’s longest serving leader.
Diplomatic and local media observers say that Hun Sen
is popular and could win an election without the limits on press freedom and
the arbitrary arrests and occasional murder of dissidents that he allows or
encourages.
Capitalism is the tool of economic progress. (But one
long street is named the Kim Il Sung Boulevard.) On the economic front Hun Sen
has delivered.
A country that lost a quarter of its population now
has a new generation which in the last handful of years has matured into
workers and professionals. Good economic policies have given them their head
The press, albeit gradually becoming freer, is
controlled. Although three independent human rights-orientated radio stations
are allowed the head of one is in jail.
The media have had to be restrained on such issues as
covering the government’s land grabs on behalf of industry and large scale
farming
Economic growth, says the local IMF representative,
was above 6 per cent last year and will be 7 per cent to 8 per cent this year,
one of the world’s highest.
There is little inflation andno big debt. In 2012
foreign investment went up by 44 per cent mainly from China, Vietnam and
Taiwan. The US welcomes Chinese investment in the absence of its own. Last year
exports to the European Union went up sharply.
Tourism climbed by 20 per cent last year, garment
exports by 14%, rice production by 8 per cent and, rare for a developing
country, agriculture increased by nearly 5 per cent.
In the 1980s ninety percent of the people lived in
poverty. Today it is only 20 per cent, a remarkable achievement. It is one of
the largest poverty reductions in the world, says the World Bank
representative- far better than its neighbour, Thailand.
Nutrition rates are up. So are hygiene and the
availability of clean water. Most children are now inoculated and infant
mortality has fallen fast. Unemployment is very low.
Cambodia is fifth in the world in terms of attaining
the Millennium Development Goals (that measure social progress). But
educational improvement goes too slowly. Corruption is pervasive. Manufacturing
is only just getting under way.
In July there will be a general election. Hun Sen will
win. He has the organisation and the money. Perhaps then he will loosen up a
bit more. A prosperous democracy could be, if he willed it, not too far away.
1 comment:
do you really think hun sen wishes democracy? how long can a dictatorship survive actually in cambodia?
regards
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