Cambodia has all the makings of an idyllic tourist destination: miles of 
coastline, year-round warm weather and a rich cultural heritage. Instead, it is 
a country with a tumultuous past, one that has been caught for decades in the 
middle of warring nations and civil unrest. Used as a buffer zone by both the 
U.S. and the North Vietnamese during the Vietnam War, Cambodia suffered from 
bombs, Communist influence and mounting internal struggles in the 1950s and 
1960s. By the mid-1970s, military extremist Pol Pot and the Communist Party of 
Kampuchea -- also known as the Khmer Rouge -- were rapidly gaining power and 
thus began the destruction of Cambodian society. People were moved from the 
cities into the country to live and work in Pol Pot's version of an agrarian 
utopia. Convinced that Cambodia needed cleansing, Pol Pot and his regime 
systematically executed an estimated two to three million of their own 
countrymen. Former government officials,
 intellectuals, students, businessmen and countless other innocent lives were 
lost during the five-year reign of the Khmer Rouge. A genocide comparable to 
the Holocaust, the Khmer Rouge visited torture, mass executions and starvation 
on the population. Nearly half of Cambodia's 7.3 million people were brutally 
exterminated while the living were left to pick up the pieces.
A closer look at Cambodia today will reveal a much improved picture. Although 
Pol Pot died before he could be held accountable for war crimes, his top 
officials will soon come to trial. The Khmer Rouge has been largely dismantled 
and the fighting between neighboring countries has been all but eliminated. But 
a country littered with landmines, suffering from extreme national poverty and 
battling internal corruption can hardly be considered a thriving nation. Still 
agrarian in nature, a majority of Cambodia's estimated current population of 
13.8 million people subsist on growing rice, corn and other crops. With an 
average life expectancy of 57 years and an average literacy rate of 67 percent, 
there is no question that Cambodia falls far behind many of the more developed 
countries of the world. Today, about 44,000 people have access to the Internet, 
which is about .3 percent of the population -- a seven-fold increase from the 
year 2000. But with an ongoing
 struggle for the basics of survival, how can technology be considered a 
priority by and for the citizens of Cambodia? Is it something superficial that 
would be "nice to have" or is it an essential ingredient for the country's 
future economic prosperity?
A Brighter Future
Open Institute, a non-governmental organization based in Cambodia and headed by 
Spanish engineer Javier Solá takes the view that technology is indeed a key 
ingredient for Cambodia's future well-being. "Technology is an essential part 
of the infrastructure needed for the economical future of Cambodia," explained 
Solá. "Humanitarian help is more and more directed to try to create 
development, and not to solve [immediate] crises. Our project is bringing this 
infrastructure into Cambodia at the right time, as it will be necessary for 
most urban jobs within the next five years."

Part of the answer is The Khmer Software Initiative (KhmerOS) -- 2007 finalist 
in the Stockholm Challenge. With help from this program, the hope is that 
Cambodia will soon be able to open its doors to foreign development and trade.
Khmer Software Initiative
KhmerOS -- initiated in 2004 -- is based on two simple principles: 1) Basic 
technology is essential to development; and 2) The technology must be in the 
national language to avoid minority control. With the country's history and 
current economics, proprietary software companies were not willing to make the 
translation investment so their products could be marketed there.
Cambodians -- with the help of Open Institute -- translated applications such 
as word processing, e-mail, spreadsheets and an Internet browser into Khmer 
using Free and Open Source Software (FOSS). FOSS -- which allows for 
translation, adaptation, modification and free distribution -- became the 
backbone of the programming process. And since power consumption is an 
important consideration in Cambodia, FOSS's low power consumption was crucial 
for sustainability. 
During its first year of operation, 2004, Open Institute translated computer 
applications into the Khmer language. Project workers developed and 
standardized Khmer scripts and fonts, designed and manufactured keyboards and 
printed manuals in Khmer for the applications. Translation proved to be a 
challenge because the Khmer language lacks the equivalent for many words we use 
in the English language. For example, "They have a word for ‘elder sibling' and 
a word for ‘younger sibling' but no word for ‘brother,'" Solá explained. The 
incompatibilities necessitated the use of some English words for clarification 
purposes.
Government and Education
In 2005, Open Institute teamed up with the government's National ICT 
Development Authority (NiDA). Together, the two organizations trained 
approximately 3,000 government officials and 1,000 teachers. For those working 
in administrative government jobs, the new technology meant the possibility of 
using computers for their everyday work for the first time, as using English 
software was not a viable option.
Equally as important was distribution to school teachers and other trainers. 
Because the education system is the fastest vehicle in which to spread 
knowledge to the masses, KhmerOS aimed to educate the younger generation of 
Cambodians through schools and training centers. "The education system produces 
the professionals of the future [and] these professionals will need computer 
skills," said Solá.
Later, in 2006, a National Typing and Document Contest motivated several 
thousand students and professionals to learn how to type Khmer and use other 
applications. Knowledge of the KhmerOS program was spreading nationwide and 
soon schools and government operations all over the country were using the new 
software and technology. As the program matured, its focus shifted to 
accommodate social and cultural needs of the country. Open Institute began 
collaboration with the Cambodian Ministry of Education and by 2008, it became 
mandatory for all high schools with electricity (roughly 30-40 percent) to use 
the new technology. The most significant achievement of the project thus far 
has been its ability to involve the government in a positive and productive 
way, allowing ICT to become fully integrated into public policy.
Sustainability
To ensure that the new technology would have lasting power, KhmerOS made 
long-term sustainability a top priority. The physical elements of the project 
found their own way to sustainability. Technology for the Khmer script 
keyboards and textbooks was transferred to local vendors, who are now 
manufacturing and selling them. Other aspects of the project are also looking 
for interested third parties that will turn portions of the project, that now 
require funding, into businesses that make the system sustainable.
"The most important success factor of the KhmerOS project has been its ability 
to bring together the [developmental] know-how of NGOs with the technological 
expertise of the FOSS community and the experience and vision of the Cambodian 
government," said Solá. "This has interested commercial stakeholders, leading 
to the sustainable low-cost use of local language ICT in education, government 
and local society, strongly reducing the digital divide."
Change is always difficult, even when it brings clear advantages. But when 
change is necessary for survival, bold, and sometimes daunting, steps must be 
taken. By removing the language barrier, technology has been made accessible to 
most of the population and is helping Cambodia move out of the past and into 
the future; a future where information is just a click away.


      
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