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---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Gaffar Peang-Meth <[email protected]>
Date: Thu, Mar 15, 2012 at 7:12 AM
Subject: CAMBODIA: A survival recipe -- attitude change, practice Buddha's
teaching, engage in nonviolent action
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*FOR PUBLICATION
*AHRC-ETC-009-2012
March 15, 2012

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

*CAMBODIA: A survival recipe -- attitude change, practice Buddha's
teaching, engage in nonviolent action*

My article last month in this space brought comforting and kind words in
e-mails from some Cambodian and non-Cambodian readers, to whom I am
grateful. It's they who encourage me to have hope in Cambodians' abilities
to find ways to effect change.

I continue to receive requests from readers in Cambodia to provide
translations from English of my articles for "Lok Ta, Lok.Yeay, Pou, Mign"
(the elders) to read. I was touched by taxi-driver Svang Huy, a graduate
with a bachelor's degree in English literature, who asked permission to
translate into Khmer my articles compiled in Loyola Marymount University
Professor Sovathana Sokhom's book (2011), *What is Your Ten Minutes
Worth?*I am heartened at the interest expressed by those who clearly
want to
learn. I encouraged Svang Huy not to get hung up with specific words
translation, but to adapt my ideas into Khmer. If he does this, I have
promised to go over his finished product one article at a time.

*Arguments and counterarguments*

Proponents of the "filled stomach" and "stability" perspectives supported
by Hun Sen and the ruling Cambodian Peoples' Party which asserts that
positive change will come only after the people are contented with "full
stomachs" and a cessation of significant political dissent and provide data
and photographs in support of their position. Similarly, regime opponents
highlight areas that sorely need reform and improvement.

A "Cambodia observer" writes, "We must give peace and stability in Cambodia
a chance, while helping to develop Cambodia in the 'appropriate' and
‘equitable' direction." A Cambodian elder scoffs: The current leadership
has been in control "virtually solo" for 33 years, a period during which
forced evictions, land-grabbing, deforestation, the sale of the country's
natural wealth, among others degradations, have steadily increased; fear
and intimidation are used to keep people cowed.

Of interest, Cambodians from around the world are engaged in an Internet
discussion of a little publicized story from Cambodia's Royal University of
Law and Economics (RULE), which issued to its fourth year students a list
of research topics that are prohibited. The list includes, among other
topics, "drug problem in society," "the organization and the working of the
Cambodian Red Cross," "the goal and the legal resolution of land dispute
resolutions in Cambodia," "the resolution of land disputes by the authority
in Cambodia." Oh, dear.

An employer wrote: "I used to interview many university graduates and I
have rarely satisfied with their skills and knowledge. I would say most of
them are uncooked and equipped with poor quality. All in all, my top
question is: How can Cambodia compete with others when ASEAN is integrated
in 2015? Do we take pride of cheap labor cost compared to other members of
ASEAN?"

Earlier this month, the Phnom Penh Post's "A tough place to call home"
reported about a family from Prey Veng province living in Phnom Penh's
cement pipes, circumstances they have called home for the past two years as
they dream of "a better life." A Western visitor to Cambodia writes: "If
you wander around the streets and parks of Phnom Penh, you will run into
refugees from the stagnant and impoverished countryside like this all over
the place. Apparently most of them feel that living in pipes, or even on
the street, is better than returning to the hopeless situation that they
left in Prey Veng, or wherever they came from."

The visitor spoke to a family at the base of Wat Phnom with belongings
beside them still wrapped in a blanket: "They seemed to have no idea what
they were going to do in Phnom Penh but hope that life in the city would be
better than where they came from. It is a sad situation."

*Skyscrapers as development*

Images of bustling Cambodian metropolitan cities, adorned with high rises
and skyscrapers, latest model vehicles, crowded markets and restaurants,
and camera-toting tourists, are equated with progress and development.

Last February 9, at a ribbon-cutting ceremony, Prime Minister Hun Sen told
the nation that the construction of high rises and skyscrapers should not
occur only in Phnom Penh, but all over the country. Again, oh dear!

Critics remind that the Premier also wanted to organize a competition to
reward anyone who builds the highest structure in the country. One wrote:
"High rises don't symbolize a nation's development and progress. It would
be better that the government busies itself improving the well-being, the
standard of living, of the people, their health, the sanitary conditions,
the green development." High rises built without planning turn a pretty
city into chaos, he lamented. Another critic chimed in, "Watch out for
sewage back up!"

*Casinos as development*

Last week, in "China gambles on Cambodia's shrinking forests," Reuters
reported that Chinese entities are transforming Cambodia's 340 square
kilometers national forests, and not for the better. Botum Sakor, home to
tigers, elephants, bears, and gibbons in southwest Koh Kong, is being
re-created into a "city-sized gambling resort (sitting on 89,000 acres of
land) for 'extravagant feasting and revelry,'" with a 64-km highway (some
sections four-lanes wide) by northern China's real-estate company Tianjin
Union Development Group, under a 99-year lease.

The Union Development Group allotted $3.8 billion to build the gambling
resort, dubbed "Hong Kong II." The company plans to build an international
airport, a port for large cruise ships, two reservoirs, condominiums,
hotels, hospitals, golf courses, and the "Angkor Wat on Sea" gambling
casino.

Chinese engineers are housed on worksites guarded by Cambodian soldiers.
Access to the resort area was reported blocked by a park ranger backed by
military police, who provide security for big concessioners. "This is
China," the park ranger told Reuters correspondents who tried to pass.

Reuters quoted Cambodian activist Chut Wutty: "This was all forest once.
But then the government sold the land to rich men," i.e. Union Development
Group. "You think after 99 years this land will be returned to Cambodia?
You think they'll kick the Chinese out? No way. It's forever," Reuters
quoted Wutty.

On a different scale, Cambodia's Khmer Krom expatriate Son Samrach posted a
photo of a contrast. Now sitting side by side, the petite building of the
renowned "Buddhist Institute," a key library and research centre of
Buddhism and the Khmer culture, originally founded by King Sisowath in
1921, is now dwarfed and eclipsed by the monstrous NagaWorld building
complex with an 8-story wing of gaming halls, karaoke lounges, gaming
machines, and a 14-story wing of 500-plus "luxurious Deluxe Rooms and plush
Suites" and a "dedicated spa." NagaWorld boasts to be "the finest
integrated casino-hotel in Indochina, rivaling top Southeast Asian and
world-renowned casinos."

Both, the Institute, built in traditional architectural Khmer style, and
the NagaWorld casino complexes that are illuminated with nightlife lights,
are crowded on the banks of Mekong and Tonle Sap River in the vibrant Phnom
Penh city.

Son Samrach dubbed the structures in the photo he took, "The symbol of the
power of money."

*The Buddha angle, again*

The Cambodian elder, the septuagenarian who sent me the Khmer poem which I
cited in last month's article, thinks many Khmer readers don't understand
the significance of the poem and the thoughts he conveyed. Indeed, some
don't; but the man did hit the nail on the head.

The elder also expressed his view that Cambodians in general are not
interested in "Nibbana" or Nirvana – Khmer called "Chaul Nipean." We are
not the little buddhas, they would say; and they may repeat Buddha's words
but do the opposite. Fair enough.

He is not alone in his feeling. Another Cambodian septuagenarian says
boldly, Cambodians who claim to be Buddhist are not Buddhist in their
action. I recall a Khmer intellectual asking rhetorically in his writing
not long ago whether Buddhism as a faith is only "skin deep" for
Cambodians; he suggested they do some deep soul searching as to who and
what they are.

Actually, Buddha's teaching, if properly understood and practiced, can
boost change; misunderstood and badly practiced, it hinders change. The
fundamental idea of "Nibbana" is the "freedom" from human attachment, the
source of human suffering.

Khmer Buddhist scholars seem never to tire of reminding about the Buddhist
concept of a balanced "Nama-Rupa" or "Mind-Matter": Economic development
(Rupa or the Buddhist "four necessities" of food, shelter, clothing,
medicine) must be balanced with "spiritual" (Nama or mind) development,
i.e., physical improvement is not separate from spiritual freedom. For Lord
Buddha, this is a practical reality.

*Positive change vs. law of impermanence*

A non-Khmer scholar tells a story about two Cambodian "activists" – a
Buddhist monk and a Cambodian human rights worker – both said to be "devout
Buddhists" and both reportedly seeking to "promote positive change in
Cambodia." But their embrace of pre-Buddha's "law of impermanence" or "law
of nature" creates a contradiction in the two persons. Buddha teaches,
"Nothing is permanent"; "Everything that has a beginning has an ending.
Make your peace with that and all will be well." According to the "Law of
Nature," or "Anicca," things happen in their own good time.

The monk and the rights worker think the law of impermanence means things
change and will eventually lead to a better government in Cambodia, because
a good leader – the mystical Preah Batr Thoarmmoek – will emerge to
institute and lead a better government. His reasoning takes me back to my
December article in this space titled "The people must no longer wait for
Preah Batr Dhammik to come to their rescue."

A Khmer Buddhist scholar explains: The "law of impermanence" existed long
before the birth of Buddha in 563 B.C. Buddha did not make this law but he
discovered it. As nothing is permanent, humans' desire for permanency, for
attachment to what cannot be forever, causes their suffering. Therefore,
interfere not with the impermanency of "Nature" – or Dhamma in Pali; Dharma
in Sanskrit. Things will happen at the right time.

In other words, what is going to happen will happen?

Does the "law of impermanence" teach human beings "fatalism" or "fate"? Or
is such an interpretation an excuse for inaction?

The non-Khmer scholar is left frustrated.

By its very definition, social change results in an alteration over time in
behavioral patterns and cultural norms in society, i.e., an alteration of
the structures, institutions, and practices that maintain the "regular" and
"normal" ways in society. How does one seek "positive change" while
rejecting alteration to the status quo ante?

As I am not an expert in Buddhism, I consulted a former Khmer monk, Lok Kru
Bouawat Sithi, a graduate of Thailand's renowned Djittabhawan College, a
Buddhist institution of higher learning. Bouawat Sithi wrote:

"Lord Buddha did not teach his followers to believe in 'fatalism or fate',
and neither is our destiny predetermined or judged by God or an
all-powerful force. Lord Buddha taught us to believe in our own action
'Kharma' and with our own action, we create our own hell (suffering) and
heaven (happiness). Therefore, each of us is the master of our own destiny."

In my writing, here and elsewhere, I have quoted Lord Buddha's "To be idle
is a short road to death"; "No one saves us but ourselves. No one can and
no one may"; and "I do believe in a fate that falls on unless they act."
These words are a far cry from fatalism.

Lord Buddha teaches us about quality thought, analysis, and "reason."
Buddha tells humanity:

"Do not believe in anything simply because you have heard it. Do not
believe in anything simply because it is spoken and rumored by many. Do not
believe in anything simply because it is found written in your religious
books. Do not believe in anything merely on the authority of your teachers
and elders. Do not believe in traditions because they have been handed down
for many generations. But after *observation and analysis*, when you find
that anything agrees with *reason* and *is conducive to the good and
benefit of one and all, then accept it and live up to it.*"

The bottom line is: Cambodia is a Buddhist country with 96.4 percent of the
estimated total population of 14.9 million characterizing themselves as
Buddhist. There are 50,000-plus Khmer Buddhist monks, and 4,000-plus
pagodas or temples scattered throughout the small kingdom roughly the size
of Missouri or Oklahoma.

If Buddha's teachings are understood and followed, a harmonious, peaceful,
progressive Cambodia can be built. Some Khmers fear that Cambodians will
replace the current autocratic regime with another autocracy. If Cambodians
commit to the principles of Theravada Buddhism, the likelihood of that
happening would be greatly diminished.

*Something is changing*

Last month, I wrote about the increasing assertiveness and aggressiveness
of Cambodians when they perceive their rights to have been trampled upon by
an oppressive authority; and about an emerging phenomenon in a deeply
traditional society as Khmer women take to the forefront to demand their
rights and freedom.

Now, something else is new: On February 23 in Cambodia's northeastern
Ratanakiri province, some 300 Tampoun ethnic villagers, armed with sticks,
knives and sickles, immobilized a bulldozer clearing what they said was
their farmland, part of the 9,000 hectares of a 70-year concession of land
granted by the government to the Jing Zhong Ri Cambodia Co. Ltd., for
development of a rubber plantation. The Tampoun villagers marched on the
company's environmental office.

Shots were fired in the air by company personnel, but the villagers did not
stop. They tore apart the office, and captured or kidnapped the
environmental officer and the security guards, two of whom were
moonlighting local police officers and two others who were moonlighting
Royal Cambodian Armed Forces officers. They were all tied them up, paraded
before cameras, and held hostage until the villagers got what they demanded.

The Feb. 27 Phnom Penh Post's "Protesters try new tactics," reported on
those Tampoun villagers, and on protesters in two other areas.

In Svay Rieng province, when some 6,000 people protested at the Kaoway
Sports factory (supplier of PUMA sportswear) to demand a $10 monthly
transport allowance and a daily 50 cent food stipend, three women
protesters were shot, one of whom was critically wounded.

In Kampong Cham province, about 2,000 garment workers protested at the
Medtec factory after authorities failed for four days to implement an
Arbitration Council ruling for Medtec to improve working conditions.

The Phnom Penh Post reported: "Rocks were hurled, fires lit, hostages taken
and the message delivered in no uncertain terms last week. Cambodians are
increasingly willing to use violence against companies that intimidate them
or ignore their demands."

"Twice in Svay Rieng and Kampong Cham provinces garment workers pelted
factories with rocks, shattering windows and ultimately bringing companies
to the negotiating table," according to reports in the Post, which quoted a
woman protester in Kampong Cham: "Workers don't like violence, but workers
don't like employers to oppress us."

In short, the people's patience is not limitless.

On March 2, Svay Rieng province's Bavet district governor Chhouk Bandit was
arrested near the Vietnamese border for his alleged shooting of the three
female protesters. A sub-decree signed by Prime Minister Hun Sen on March 6
ended his governorship. But he was recommended for a new administrative
position; hardly punishment for shooting three protesters.

Radio Free Asia referenced rights groups' allegations of at least five
incidents of armed guards, including police and military police officers,
firing at villagers in land disputes in five provinces over the last few
months.

In Premier Hun Sen's speech last month at the close of the Ministry of
Interior's annual meeting before some 500 high-ranking police officials, he
told them "to pay strong attention to tightening security,".... because
Cambodia is "still a 'fragile' kingdom." Hun Sen is not blind to what goes
on around him.

In the speech Hun Sen took the opportunity to remind foreign investors and
governments with diplomatic relations with Phnom Penh that only he and his
ruling CPP can keep a lid on this fragility; a successful scare tactic he
employs to maintain power.

*Seeking change*

Taxi driver Svang Huy's e-mail to me early this month claimed increasing
numbers of "patriots" in the country are linking up to seek change to the
status quo.

He echoed others in his opinion that the "real patriots" are usually the
poor like him, "not so educated," he says, and all are busy looking to feed
their families, while the regime corrupts those who are malleable with
tactics including "extreme family-ism, selfishness, and opportunities for
immorality," to entice them from joining the poor, whose status the regime
perpetuates in order to preserve its own power.

Like others, Svang Huy's question is not if change will come, but how long
Hun Sen and the CPP can last. Like others, Svang Huy explores the best ways
to speed up the demise of the oppressive regime.

I don't know all Cambodian groups/organizations working in the country and
abroad to effect change. I support efforts to change the status quo in
Cambodia. I am not a politician, and don't care to be one. My political
activism and "actionism" ended when I left the Khmer People's National
Liberation Front at the Khmer-Thai border in late 1989 to pursue a teaching
career in the United States. As an educator, I write to share what I know:
an activism of a different form.

My attachment to republicanism and democratic ideals is known. I don't
expect people to agree with what I say. Disagreement is a healthy aspect of
a democracy. Uncivilized disagreement that seeks to demonize those with
different perspectives and make them enemies is destructive of society and
of ourselves.

Next month, on June 3, 2012, most of Cambodia's 1,633 communities will
consider candidates from 10 political parties (the ruling Cambodian
People's Party, the largest opposition Sam Rainsy Party, and eight others –
Alliance for Democracy Party, Cambodian Nationality Party, Democratic
Movement Party, FUNCINPEC Party, Human Rights Party, Khmer Anti-Poverty
Party, Norodom Ranadiddh Party, Republican Democracy Party) who will
compete for their votes for local offices.

*Cambodia's parliamentary election will take place in 2013.*

An opposition leader, Ms. Mu Sochua, told Radio Free Asia that her party,
the Sam Rainsy Party, is ready for both elections, but she challenged the
CPP: "Does the ruling party dare to compete in free and fair elections? Can
it be called free and fair elections when the leader (Sam Rainsy) of the
main opposition party is excluded from competing?"

Because of Cambodia's "non-free" and "unfair" elections, an environment of
intimidation and fear, and an expectation of rigged elections that would
give victory to the ruling CPP, the Khmer People Power Movement and the
Lotus Revolutionists, both overseas organizations, have called for a
boycott of Cambodia's elections.

It would be one thing if all political parties unanimously boycott the
elections. This would send a formidable message to the world, although Hun
Sen and the CPP would find such action to work for their benefit, assuring
them continuation in office. However, the political parties chose to adhere
to the democratic process by participating in the elections, most knowing
they will lose.

Some Cambodians think Hun Sen and the CPP will be able to hold on to power
for perhaps another two terms. Some young activists in the country claim
they are preparing themselves and their countrymen for the next decade.
What about now?

*Nonviolent action *

Two more terms of Hun Sen and the CPP would be an eternity for many Khmers.

A longtime friend with experience working with the world's developing
peoples at the grassroots level on different continents, who examined
change led by visionary leaders with developed critical masses of
adherents, encourages me to look at the "forced change" in Burma that has
resulted in a race in the country to liberalize and reform the dictatorship.

There was "no critical mass" in Burma to propel change, my friend tells me
and wonders if there is even a critical mass to develop although Burma has
about 60 million people.

Yet, with the Burmese rebelling openly against the building of dams in
Burma by the Chinese; with NGOs and foreign governments near and far
keeping up pressure on the regime for reforms, the military junta became
convinced it was time to talk to democracy icon Aung San Suu Kyi.

Cambodians in the country and abroad and domestic and international rights
groups do pressure the Hun Sen regime for reforms. Yet, the situation in
Cambodia remains as I describe it above.

Lately, I have introduced on this page the suggestion of nonviolent action
as a technique to effect change. One Cambodian at a time seems to see this
as an alternative to disastrous violence.

What is needed urgently is for Cambodians to individually undertake
attitude change, starting with changing old habits, while at the same time
participating in nonviolent resistance.

This brings me to a recipe for Cambodians' survival: Cambodians need a
change in attitude first and foremost, including a reexamination of Lord
Buddha's teachings to make a new Cambodia. When enough Cambodians
understand and follow Buddha's true path, a new society can be developed;
successful dealings with expansionist neighbors to the East and aggressive
neighbors to the West can be initiated; and the generalized fear of
Cambodia's extinction may be assuaged.

Simultaneously, learn more and initiate nonviolent action against those who
oppress us.

I have discussed these three important issues on this page and elsewhere,
and will revisit them at an appropriate time.



……………..

*The AHRC is not responsible for the views shared in this article, which do
not necessarily reflect its own.*

*About the Author**:*

*Dr. Gaffar Peang-Meth is retired from the University of Guam, where he
taught polical 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 that monitors human rights in Asia, documents
violations and advocates for justice and institutional reform to ensure the
protection and promotion of these rights. The Hong Kong-based group was
founded in 1984.*



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