| U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton speaks at a press conference during the ASEAN Foreign Ministers' Meeting in Phnom Penh, Cambodia, July 12, 2012. |
Scott Stearns – VOA July 13, 2012
PHNOM PENH — U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton is in
Cambodia where she met with Prime Minister Hun Sen to discuss U.S. investment
and Cambodia's outstanding debt.
Cambodia wants the United States to forgive more than $400
million in debt accrued by the US-backed military government of Lon Nol. He
took power in a 1970 coup and borrowed money from Washington at three percent
interest, in part, to feed supporters in Phnom Penh as they were surrounded and
ultimately defeated by the Khmer Rouge.
Prime Minister Hun Sen says that is "dirty debt"
that Cambodia should not have to repay.
Secretary Clinton was asked about the debt following talks
with the prime minister and said that under international law, governments are
responsible for the obligations of their predecessors "even though that
may seem unfair in many instances." Even so, she said she is personally
committed to working with Cambodia to make progress in resolving the debt.
"What we want to do is work with the Cambodian
government to try to resolve these longstanding issues in a way that is fair,
to help the Cambodian government enhance its credit worthiness, increase its
access to international capital markets. We think it will be in Cambodia’s
interest to be able to enter into international financial markets," said
Clinton. "Not be dependent on any one source of funding, but be able to
bargain and work toward real credit worthiness."
One idea is to gradually convert loan repayments to domestic
investments in education and the environment as a form of additional U.S.
development assistance. That has been held up, in part, by the need to
establish means of accountability to ensure that the money goes to help the
Cambodian people.
Clinton told reporters in Phnom Penh that U.S. assistance to
Cambodia has more than doubled over the last decade, to more than $75 million.
There is money to help fight HIV/AIDS, to meet the needs of nearly one-quarter
of Cambodians who are food deprived, and to reduce maternal and child
mortality.
"Sometimes it is a little frustrating, I will admit,
for the United States, because we channel our aid, in so far as possible, to
the people themselves. We want more people fed," Clinton admitted.
"We want more people healthier. We want more men, women, and especially
children to have a better life. So we cannot point to a big building we have
built. But we can point to more children being alive."
Since normalizing economic relations in 1992, U.S. investment
in Cambodia has grown steadily to more than $144 million last year. The
government Council for the Development of Cambodia says that is triple the
figure for 2010.
Cambodian exports to the United States top one billion
dollars annually, mostly garments and footwear.
Clinton is leading the largest-ever delegation of U.S.
business to Cambodia as part of an investment forum targeting members of the
Association of South East Asian Nations. Participating firms include Boeing,
Chevron, Coca-Cola, FedEx, Ford, General Electric, and Proctor and Gamble.
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