Hun Sen and the “K5” Forced Labor Program
Extract from HRW report: '30 Years of Hun Sen': Violence, Repression, and Corruption in Cambodia
The K5 program was “extremely unpopular” in Cambodia, said Sin Sen. “No one supported it. Only the poor were sent to K5. When they went there they were sure they would die.”
In
response to Khmer Rouge attacks, the Vietnamese army invaded Cambodia
on December 25, 1978. It reached Phnom Penh on January 7, 1979, then
chased the Khmer Rouge to the Thai border.
Vietnam
installed a new government, mixing Hanoi-trained communists with former
Khmer Rouge officers to run the People’s Republic of Kampuchea (PRK).
The former group included Pen Sovann, who was named the prime minister.
Among the latter group was an obscure, 26-year-old named Hun Sen, who
became the world’s youngest foreign minister. Pen Sovann soon fell afoul
of Hanoi and was arrested. He was replaced by Chan Si, who died in
office in December 1984. Hanoi, impressed with the capacity and loyalty
of the young foreign minister, promoted Hun Sen to the post of PRK prime
minister on January 14, 1985.[120]
Overall, one million or more Cambodians may have been sent to the border. Working conditions were miserable, particularly in the early stages. Virtually no shelter was provided, so workers had to sleep on mats, tarps or on the ground. Food was in short supply. One account cited an alleged internal Vietnamese army report finding that the living conditions of the K5 workers were miserable
The
PRK was a police state, with virtually no civil or political freedoms.
Among the many serious human rights abuses of its rule, few were more
notorious than the Kế hoạch năm or K5 plan. K5 involved the mass
mobilization of Cambodian civilians for labor on the Cambodia-Thai
border and which led to the deaths of many thousands of Cambodians from
disease and landmines.
"One expert concluded that “the K-5 plan probably alienated the Vietnamese from the Khmer people more than any other programme.”
Planned
in early 1983 by the Vietnamese military command for Cambodia, K5
called for a Vietnamese offensive assisted by PRK troops to attack
remnant Pol Pot-led Khmer Rouge and other anti-Vietnamese and anti-PRK
armed forces based along the Cambodia-Thailand border in late 1984, at
the start of the dry season. This was to be followed by construction of
defensive fortifications and obstacles on the Cambodia side of the
border, including the planting of large numbers of landmines.
The goal was to prevent Pol Pot-led Khmer Rouge and other guerrillas from reestablishing their bases and infiltrating Cambodia from Thailand. According to Sin Sen, who became deputy minister of interior of the PRK in 1987 and was a senior member of the security forces until his involvement in a coup attempt in 1994, “The plan was to build a wall like the Berlin Wall along the Thai border.”[121]
“Civilians from Svay Rieng, Prey Veng, Kandal and youth were mobilized to clear the border area. Students were forcibly conscripted into the military. Soldiers tore up student cards and inducted them.… But one group, including Hun Sen’s friends and subordinates, was sent to Battambang instead of the border.”
The goal was to prevent Pol Pot-led Khmer Rouge and other guerrillas from reestablishing their bases and infiltrating Cambodia from Thailand. According to Sin Sen, who became deputy minister of interior of the PRK in 1987 and was a senior member of the security forces until his involvement in a coup attempt in 1994, “The plan was to build a wall like the Berlin Wall along the Thai border.”[121]
Vietnamese
planners decided it would be necessary “to mobilize a very large force
from all classes of the [Cambodian] civilian population” from “the
entire nation” as labor to construct this defensive “wall.” The plan was
for the PRK “military, government, and Party headquarters and agencies
from the national down to the local level to direct, organize, and
manage” the construction project, doing so with Vietnamese military
assistance.[122]
The
military offensive went off successfully, after which the construction
work began. The overwhelming bulk of this was carried out by the
civilian population as planned. However, establishing a comprehensive
effective line of fortifications and obstacles proved considerably more
difficult than expected, especially in many areas of rugged terrain,
forest and jungle. The work continued on a significant scale for a
number of years but was never fully completed.[123]
Le
Duc Tho, the senior Vietnamese official in charge of Cambodia, appears
to have introduced the K5 construction plan to top PRK authorities,
including its Revolutionary People’s Party of Kampuchea (RPPK),
government and armed forces in January 1984. The RPPK Politburo approved
a final version in July 1984. It was carried out under the overall
authority of the RPPK Secretariat and PRK Council of Ministers, via a K5
Leadership Committee comprising RPPK, government and military
officials. This committee was originally headed by the chairman of the
PRK Council of Ministers, Prime Minister Chan Si, until his death in
December 1984.
According
to Sin Sen, “K5 was led by Hun Sen. He was assigned this responsibility
by Vietnam.”[124] Day-to-day responsibility for K5 matters was
reportedly invested in a subordinate standing vice-chairman, who led a
K5 Standing Committee. This was originally Soy Keo, a vice-minister of
national defense who was also concurrently chairman of the armed forces
General Staff. In late 1985, Hun Sen replaced him with Nhim Vanda, a
close confidante and the deputy minister of planning, who later became a
deputy minister of defense.[125]
Meanwhile,
the Council of Ministers assigned provinces, municipalities and
government ministries and departments to provide labor for K5 projects,
according to a quota system.[126] Vietnamese and official PRK sources
portray the project as arduous but legal and not entailing large-scale
fatalities, especially after the authorities corrected initial
shortcomings in the care of the labor force.[127] Soy Keo reported to
the all-RPPK National Assembly in July 1985 on the implementation of the
plan, noting that 90,362 ordinary people were involved in the
construction work. He argued that their deployment was pursuant to
article 9 of the PRK Constitution, which stated that “the people as a
whole participate in national defense.”[128] In subsequent years,
according to official statistics, the number of ordinary people deployed
as workers dropped: 20,034 in 1986-1987 and 8,814 the next year.
However, they were supplemented throughout by militia, cadre and state
employees. Including these would bring the 1986-87 figures to 38,388 and
that of the following year to 13,316.[129]
In
theory, workers were supposed to be paid for their efforts, but most
went involuntarily and were used as forced labor, especially after many
in the first waves came back ill, especially with malaria, with perhaps 5
to 10 percent dying. If official figures were accurate, this would
suggest a death toll from malaria of about 1,000 persons.[130] A report
from deputy health minister Chhea Thang and others who inspected K5
worksites in December 1985 blamed the malaria fatalities on bad weather
that left the workers with little food and low resistance. The report
also blamed the laborers for their own poor hygiene.
Subsequent
reports from the Ministry of Health and the Council of Ministers and to
the latter maintained that counter-measures had greatly reduced the
death toll.[131] Other sources tell a very different story, describing a
highly coercive deployment of a much larger work force and many more
deaths, against which the authorities evidently took few effective
measures. Each province, district, commune and village in the PRK was
assigned a quota of “volunteers” to fill. Force and threats were used to
make reluctant civilians participate.
According
to Kong Korm, the deputy minister of foreign affairs at the start of K5
and later appointed minister of foreign affairs in 1987, “Civilians
from Svay Rieng, Prey Veng, Kandal and youth were mobilized to clear the
border area. Students were forcibly conscripted into the military.
Soldiers tore up student cards and inducted them.… But one group,
including Hun Sen’s friends and subordinates, was sent to Battambang
instead of the border.”[132]
Overall,
one million or more Cambodians may have been sent to the border.
Working conditions were miserable, particularly in the early stages.
Virtually no shelter was provided, so workers had to sleep on mats,
tarps or on the ground. Food was in short supply. One account cited an
alleged internal Vietnamese army report finding that the living
conditions of the K5 workers were miserable: “The main course is salt
and less than thirty grams of dried fish if there is any, for a worker,
and they are ill for a lack of medicines. The report cited corruption as
the major reason for the conditions.”[133]
People
taken from areas of the country with little or no malaria were dumped
into a place with some of the most virulent strains of malaria in the
world. Only 30-40 percent of the workers were given mosquito nets. There
was no medicine and Cambodia’s hospitals were not equipped to deal with
an epidemic. In fact several thousand, possibly tens of thousands, died
of disease. Thousands more died and were disabled by landmines. The
Thai-Cambodia border area had been heavily mined over the years by all
of the armed forces active there. K5 workers were compelled to clear
mine-infested areas without any previous training in spotting mines.
According
to Bartu, “under the guise of removing potential refuge for the
resistance, the programme enabled massive deforestation in Cambodia. In
Takeo province for example much of the damage to the forests began in
the early eighties when about 2000 hectares of trees were cleared.”[134] According to Sin Sen, “Corruption was massive. If 10 tents were provided, only one would arrive.”[135]
Another
troubling aspect of K5 labor conscription, according to academic
research, is that it hit disproportionately at Cambodia’s ethnic Chinese
communities, which were then the target of official PRK discrimination
and died in large numbers at K5 border worksites. This situation
reportedly opened up opportunities for extortion by PRK cadre, or at
least invited bribes from Chinese who paid to have poor Khmer sent to
the border in their place. Some of those who paid bribes claim that they
were then arrested for having done so.[136] Bribery was not confined to
the Chinese community, however, as Cambodians of all ethnicities have
described paying bribes to avoid a deadly assignment.
Senior
ruling party officials interviewed indicate that Hun Sen and other
senior PRK officials were aware that the situation was much worse than
that described in the official reports mentioned above, but that they
decided to downplay the seriousness of the situation and blamed it on
“enemy subversion” of the project.No dissent within the party on the
issue was allowed.[137]
By
the end of the program, Nhim Vanda had become a notorious and unpopular
figure in Cambodia, with both he and Hun Sen blamed by many Cambodians
for engaging in forced labor that led to the deaths and disability of
thousands. Senior Cambodian officials claimed that K5 almost led to the
collapse of the PRK regime.[138] The K5 program was “extremely
unpopular” in Cambodia, said Sin Sen. “No one supported it. Only the
poor were sent to K5. When they went there they were sure they would
die.”[139] One expert concluded that “the K-5 plan probably alienated
the Vietnamese from the Khmer people more than any other
programme.”[140]
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