---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Gaffar Peang-Meth <[email protected]>
Date: Tue, Mar 23, 2010 at 10:43 AM
Subject: Author: Systematic overhaul needed
To:


*PACIFIC DAILY NEWS*
March 24, 2010

*Author: Systematic overhaul needed
*
By A. Gaffar Peang-Meth

Lord Buddha teaches, "Everything changes." This eternal truth takes me to,
among many thoughts, German playwright Johann Wolfgang von Goethe's
"Life belongs to the living, and he who lives must be prepared for
changes."

Martin Luther King Jr. said, "The soft-minded man always fears change. He
feels security in the status quo, and he has an almost morbid fear of
the new. For him, the greatest pain is the pain of a new idea."

My columns on Cambodia brought e-mails from Cambodians and non-Cambodians.
Many supported the change in Cambodia in one form or another; some
solicited ideas on how to bring change; some complained my columns left
out this and that; and there were venomous comments from anonymous
senders .

People who reject what doesn't conform to their thinking generally put up a
roadblock against new knowledge.

I have mentioned a Web site by retired Johns Hopkins professor Naranhkiri
Tith, a Cambodian who migrated to the United States in 1960 and later
became a naturalized citizen. He is author of a forthcoming book,
"Internal and External Factors Underlying Cambodia's Ongoing Tragedy
Since Independence (1953-2010): Reflection of a Cambodian Expatriate."
It purports to explain reasons for Cambodia's slow disintegration,
based on "what I knew, observed, and understood about main events and
personalities (practically all notable contemporary Cambodian leaders)
and their role" in Cambodia's tragedy.

Tith says the book's "main purpose" is to "attempt to challenge (the)
various aspects of Cambodian conventional wisdom, and its impact on the
destiny of the Cambodian people and society."

Tith knows his blunt language and hard-hitting style compromise his
popularity with the generally passive, accepting and
non-confrontational Cambodians. And he knows many are interested in
what he has to say.

Tith lists four purposes for his Web site: the search for "real and lasting
justice" for Cambodia's people; the "rebuilding" of a shattered society
on the basis of international legal/judicial standard; the debunking of
the myth of Vietnamese "liberation" of Cambodia; and the publication of
"open and constructive" articles on issues affecting Cambodia's destiny.

The site contains interesting sections: news and analysis; the Khmer Rouge
trial; the role of King Father Sihanouk in the Cambodian tragedy; and
an analysis of the "fundamentals" -- raison d'etre, ideology,
organization, strategy and tactics -- of Vietnam's "Nam Tien"
(southward movement), the understanding of which, Tith says, is
"necessary but not sufficient for a successful roadmap to freedom."

I find Tith's "A Suggested Roadmap to Freedom for the Cambodian People" most
significant.

Tith sees Cambodia as "a failed state," -- systematic and pervasive
corruption; a concentration of wealth and land ownership; a gross abuse
of rights; a politicization of the judiciary; uncontrolled illegal
Vietnamese immigrants. On Cambodia's external problems, he sees a less
problematic future with democratic Thailand than with autocratic and
totalitarian Vietnam.

To break the stronghold on power by Vietnam-supported and Sihanouk-backed
Premier Hun Sen and his ruling Cambodian People's Party, Tith calls for
"isolating Sihanouk" and protection and implementation of Cambodia's
constitution. He suggests Cambodians learn from the experiences of Thai
and Vietnamese societal reforms, and start reforming Cambodia's own
society from within.

Tith sees the "main causes" of Cambodia's economic, institutional, legal,
political and social problems as resting mainly on "the legacy of the
past, especially the institution of the monarchy," which has instilled
in the people "blindness and irrational trust and belief" in the
"god-king" concept.

Combining the monarchy's "pervasive and crushing role" with "the
conservative
nature of the Cambodian society, such as the belief in prophesies and
the rigidity in social organization and behavior," Tith argues, has
produced "inertia and the inability to allow new ideas and capable
leadership, and entrepreneurial spirit to emerge."

What to do?

"Only by a progressive and systematic overhaul of the Cambodian society" can
these problems be improved gradually to enable the people "to survive
and prosper."

Tith sees as important issues: dealing with extreme income inequality
between the "few politically powerful families and friends" and the
peasants; making the rich and the powerful pay due wealth and income
tax; using expected income from oil and gas resources to develop
intellectual and physical infrastructures; dismantling the monopoly of
Vietnamese-owned SOKIMEX company in industrial and financial sectors;
adopting an anti-corruption law; setting up a program of economic
structural diversification backed by reform in the quality and level of
education to bring about an increased level of productivity and
competitiveness; making the judiciary independent and non-political;
and instituting "an honest, capable, and responsible government."

The United Nations and nongovernmental organizations can help here.

Tith says the Cambodian diaspora "can and must play a positive role" in the
countries of their residence "to influence and bring about
international support to Cambodia ... (but) the main effort remains in
the hands of the Cambodian people themselves to rise up and defend
their land and culture."

"Intractable, yes; impossible, no!" Tith says.

Tith's challenge to Cambodian conventional wisdom and call for a systematic
overhaul of society touches the roots of Cambodia's ills.

A. Gaffar Peang-Meth, Ph.D., is retired from the University of Guam, where
he taught political science for 13 years. Write him at [email protected].

http://www.guampdn.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/201003240300/opinion02/3240317

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