---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Gaffar Peang-Meth <[email protected]>
Date: Mon, Nov 15, 2010 at 5:50 AM
Subject: CAMBODIA: "Knock, Knock -- Anybody Inside?"
To:


**


FOR PUBLICATION

AHRC-ETC-039-2010

November 15, 2010

An article by Dr. Gaffar Peang-Meth published by the Asian Human
Rights Commission

*CAMBODIA: "Knock, Knock -- Anybody Inside?"
*
Dr. Gaffar Peang-Meth

As a student of politics, I understand the usefulness of letter
writing, petitioning, appealing to foreign leaders for help. I myself
have used these tools. But not today, I have stood as only an observer
of Khmer democrats who write, petition, appeal to outside agents to
intervene as "elected" dictator Hun Sen, and his ruling Cambodian
People's Party, trample the 19 year old Paris Peace Accords, the
country's Constitution, democracy, human rights, the rule of law.

As one feels feeble and unable to throw off the yoke of a
dictatorship on one's own, one tends to look to others for help. But,
are Khmer democrats and rights activists truly weak and incapable, or
do their entreaties to foreign governments and international agencies
confirm what a Western writer dubbed the "Cambodian dependency
syndrome"?

*Lessons I learned
*
I left the Khmer national resistance 21 years ago this month, after
nine years of struggle for rights and freedom. I spent nearly a decade
working with Khmer nationalists to establish a government for the
country of my birth that would serve its citizens well and respect
their civil rights; rights about which I learned in high school,
college, and graduate school. My belief in the inherent right of
individuals to these freedoms has not waned, but I learned in the
course of my activism that no outside influence can deliver to
oppressed Khmers the rights and the freedom they so badly want; and
that an outside force considers helping only if it sees potential in
the Khmers and an ability to provide a honorable and credible
alternative to the tyranny they oppose.

I left the field in November 1989. At the Khmer-Thai border, the
language of transforming the battlefield into a market place, and
transforming bullets into ballots, was in vogue; national
reconciliation was hopefully anticipated. I had no doubt in my mind
that the world was in the process of changing. Some of the old guard
were nervous about their roles in the change all could sense was
coming; noncommunist resistance officials were busy seeking alignment
and realignment for future political position. Lord Buddha taught:
"Everything changes, nothing remains without change."

Fast forward: From the island of Guam where I began a university
career teaching politics, I told a reporter from Bangkok's English
daily, The Nation, in an interview, to beware of a coup d'etat, and I
wrote in the Far Eastern Economic Review warning that temporary
"political calm" was likely the precedent to a new storm.

*October 2010: A busy month
*
October was a busy month for Khmers who oppose Premier Hun Sen's
dictatorship.

Mental health professionals might define Sen's behaviors as those of
a "baby king" who wants what he wants when he wants it. Sen is a Khmer
Leviathan with absolute powers. America's great founding father, James
Madison, called such a man "a tyrant." Recently, Professor Joel
Brinkley dubbed Sen "a living definition of the word 'impunity'."

This Leviathan has destroyed the democracy and civil rights that the
Paris Peace Accords ending the long civil conflict intended for
Cambodia’s citizens. Cambodians and foreign donors of aid are not
ignorant of Sen's oppressive rule. As I have observed many times, the
more we write and discuss about Premier Sen's government's policies
that have brought suffering to increasing numbers of Khmer citizens,
the homeless, landless, farmless and victimized by gross abuses of
civil rights and about how the world knows what goes on in Sen's
Cambodia, the more things in Cambodia remain the same.

I wrote in this space that Khmer democracy and rights activists must
realize they are on their own in their fight for rights and freedom in
this dog-eat-dog world.

Appeals to idealism, humanity and compassion can evoke emotion and
sentiment, but dictatorships don't crumble this way. In the world of
competitive national interests, no foreign power would risk its
relationships with a ruling dictator in favor of fractious democracy
and rights groups that cannot even agree on a common platform for the
same goal.

*The 19th Anniversary of the Signing of the Paris Peace Accords
*
The Oct. 23, 1991 Final Act of the Paris Accords to restore peace to
Cambodia was adopted by 18 participating governments, including the
four warring Cambodian factions, and representatives of the
non-aligned movement and the United Nations Secretary General and his
special representative. The Accords outlined for Cambodia "a system of
liberal democracy" with an independent judiciary and described what
human rights and fundamental freedoms entailed. The agreements
stipulated the signatories' agreement to maintain, preserve, and
defend Cambodia's sovereignty, independence, territorial integrity and
inviolability, neutrality and national unity.

They would have been the best instrument and hope for Cambodia if
only they had been implemented.

The necessary neutral political environment and the strict neutrality
of Cambodia's administrative agencies were never implemented; the U.N.
Transitional Authority was ineffective; Hun Sen, supported by Vietnam,
but loser of the first U.N. organized general elections in 1993,
threatened a civil war; Cambodia's last god-king, Prince Sihanouk,
sacrificed his own son, Prince Ranariddh, winner of the elections,
when he devised an unworkable "two-head" formula, making Sen, the
loser, prime minister next to Ranarridh, dividing Cambodia. Two
leaders and two cohorts running the same government was a prescription
for failure.

In 1997, Sen launched a military coup against Ranariddh, as the world
watched the birth of a ruthless Khmer Leviathan.

On the occasion of the 19th anniversary of the signing of the
Accords, Cambodian democracy and rights activists called for the
reactivation of the Accords and the abrogation of border treaties
signed with Vietnam by the Hanoi-installed Sen regime. But wasn't it
the regime's elected parliament and Cambodia's king who legitimized
the treaties and their supplements to benefit Vietnam?

*U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon's Visit
*
The Khmer dictator invited the U.N. Secretary General to Cambodia. He
visited the country on Oct. 26-28. On the day Ban Ki-moon arrived in
Cambodia, the Cambodian Center for Human Rights welcomed and
encouraged Ban "to use your visit to publicly address pressing human
rights in Cambodia."

Yet, right in front of a hospital Ban was visiting, 23-year-old Suong
Sophorn of a housing rights group lay in blood-stained clothes, beaten
unconscious by Sen's security forces in United States military
helmets, an example of U.S. aid because he led about 30 Boeng Kak
residents, representing those facing eviction from their homes,
towards Ban's motorcade to hand him a petition.

The best defense is an offense. When Ban was meeting with Sen, the
Khmer Leviathan surprised Ban: The U. N. human rights office in Phnom
Penh would have to close down if its representative, Christophe
Peschoux, accused of acting as a spokesman for the opposition, was not
replaced. In addition, Sen said the U.N. sponsored Khmer Rouge
Tribunal cannot seek more indictments beyond the four top Khmer Rouge
leaders in Trial 2; no Trial 3, as it would bring a civil war!

Although only Sen's security forces and the military have guns, is
Sen worried that he, himself a former Khmer Rouge regional commander,
and his Khmer Rouge comrades now in the government, may be implicated
in the killing fields?

The tribunal hearing charges against former Khmer Rouge leaders
already is a laughing stock. Despite the time and enormous
international resources devoted to the tribunal, it has found guilty
only one lower level Khmer Rouge executioner, Duch, for the death of
up to 2 million people.

Ban, who left Phnom Penh on Oct. 28 for Hanoi, before heading to
Beijing, was given bitter pills by Sen. But, what have the Khmer
activists learned?

Bludgeoned protester Suong Sophorn never made it to Ban's motorcade.
But Sophorn focused the eyes of the world on the brutalities of Sen's
forces. Khmer Web sites, newspapers, Khmer radio broadcasts, are
excellent vehicles to educate, to awaken the conscience of Khmer
officers and soldiers, and Khmer functionaries, to behave less harshly
when directed to mistreat Khmer citizens by Sen and his CPP.

Sophorn is very unlike opposition leader Sam Rainsy, whom former
Senator Ung Bun Ang of the Sam Rainsy Party dubbed a hero "for at
least five seconds," for declaring from exile in Paris after he fled
Sen's arrest in Phnom Penh, "I am willing to die so that the country
can live." Sophorn lay in his blood on a failed mission. Had
opposition party members come out to pick up Sophorn from the ground,
what image that would have projected!

*U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton's Visit

*U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton's turn came on Oct. 30-Nov.
1. Again, the CCHR welcomed and urged her "to show leadership by
encouraging Cambodia to reverse the drift towards authoritarianism."

Radio Free Asia reported that six members of two opposition parties
met Clinton on Nov. 1 at the U.S. ambassador's residence. They asked
Clinton to intervene with Sen to allow Sam Rainsy, sentenced to prison
for a total of 12 years, to return to Cambodia without fear of
imprisonment! A top diplomat, Clinton said that she would follow
closely the situation in Cambodia and would look into Rainsy's case.
But RFA also reported the Sen regime's response: The U.S. "has
absolutely no power to interfere in Cambodia's internal affairs."

Recall, in July 2009 Secretary Clinton signed, under President
Obama's executive authority, the Association of South-East Asian
Nations' 1976 Bali Treaty of Amity and Cooperation, the core of which
supports noninterference in member states internal affairs.

Truly intriguing was what opposition members at the meeting found to
be revelatory: They reported that Secretary Clinton said that in order
to "......beat the ruling party, the opposition parties should unite".
Clinton allegedly said she could not understand "why both parties (the
Sam Rainsy Party and the Human Rights Party) cannot unite." Nay, said
one democrat, Clinton meant a political merger and that the Secretary
"encouraged opposition parties to form a comprehensive political
platform with which to compete against the ruling party."

Son Soubert of the Khmer People's National Liberation Front, e-mailed
front cadres that Clinton encouraged the unity of Khmer democrats and
urged Khmers not to focus on one particular leader but on a common
political platform.

Were these new thoughts, or were the thoughts important because they
came from Secretary Clinton?

At the end of her visit, Secretary Clinton told a press conference
held with Sen's deputy premier Hor Namhong that she was very
optimistic about Cambodia's future. "The last years have been
transformative for this country. And I hope that the United States can
be a good partner and a friend, as the Government and the people of
Cambodia make the necessary steps to improve your democratic
institutions, to improve the economy, to provide the kind of
opportunities that the young people I met with earlier today deserve
to have," said Clinton.

She concluded: "This visit has left me encouraged that our
partnership can deepen and grow to serve both our peoples in the years
to come."

As the Obama administration sees Asia as key to the future and seeks
to balance China's influence in the region, on Nov 1 Secretary Clinton
told students at a meeting: "You don't want to get too dependent on
any country, don't rely too much on China!"

So, when Sen's deputy Namhong said that putting lower-ranking Khmer
Rouge officials on trial in Trial 3, could jeopardize peace and
stability, the Secretary said her priority is to raise $50 million to
prosecute Nuon Chea, Ieng Thirith, Ieng Sary, and Khieu Samphan in
Khmer Rouge Tribunal's Trial 2!

America’s secretary of state has spoken. What did Cambodian
democrats and right activists hear?

*Full Circle
*
This brings me back to my conviction that Cambodian democrats and
rights activists cannot depend on outside agents to win for the
oppressed Cambodians their rights and their freedom. The
responsibility of Cambodia’s democrats is to popularize the idea
that Cambodians themselves must fight for their rights and their
freedom through a disciplined and unwavering struggle, accept to
endure continued repression and suffering, as housing right activist
Sophorn did, in order to highlight the current brutalities. Democrats
must come up with an intelligent common strategic plan for liberation.
The Albert Einstein Institution, dedicated to the defense of freedom,
posits, you don't have to have a charismatic leader to fight
dictatorship.

You must have better thinking!

……………..

The views shared in this article do not necessarily reflect those of
the AHRC, and the AHRC takes no responsibility for them.

About the Author:

Dr. Gaffar Peang-Meth is retired from the University of Guam, where
he taught political science for 13 years. He currently lives in the
United States. He can be contacted at [email protected].

# # #

About AHRC: The Asian Human Rights Commission is a regional
non-governmental organisation monitoring and lobbying human rights
issues in Asia. The Hong Kong-based group was founded in 1984.



<b>AHRC New Weekly Digest - an easy way to receive all your Human Rights
news in just one weekly email - subscribe <a
href="http://internal.ahrchk.net/phplist/?p=subscribe&id=31";>here</a>.</b>
-----------------------------
Asian Human Rights Commission
19/F, Go-Up Commercial Building,
998 Canton Road, Kowloon, Hongkong S.A.R.
Tel: +(852) - 2698-6339 Fax: +(852) - 2698-6367
facebook/twitter/youtube: humanrightsasia


<font color="7f9258"><i>Please consider the environment before printing
this email.</i></font>






--
Powered by PHPlist, www.phplist.com --






--

-- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"Cambodia Discussion (CAMDISC) - www.cambodia.org" group.
This is an unmoderated forum. Please refrain from using foul language. 
Thank you for your understanding. Peace among us and in Cambodia.

To post to this group, send email to [email protected]
To unsubscribe from this group, send email to 
[email protected]
For more options, visit this group at http://groups.google.com/group/camdisc
Learn more - http://www.cambodia.org

Reply via email to