---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Gaffar Peang-Meth <[email protected]>
Date: Tue, Dec 7, 2010 at 9:28 AM
Subject: Oppressors must fall if people unite
To:


*PACIFIC DAILY NEWS
* December 8, 2010

*Oppressors must fall if people unite
*
By A. Gaffar Peang-Meth

Some two million people converged in Phnom Penh for Cambodia's annual water
festival, celebrated Nov. 20-22. On Nov. 22, an estimated 5,000 to 8,000
people
jammed the seven-meter-wide, 101-meter-long Diamond Island bridge. As rumors
of
"electric shocks" were heard by those on the bridge, the structure "swayed,"

fear of the bridge's collapse heightened, the crowds pushed and a stampede
resulted in the deaths of more than 350 people, with several hundred others
suffering injury.

Would any responsible government allow such huge crowds on a narrow bridge
without crowd control?

As Cambodians in the country and abroad asked why, and where the
responsibility
lies, they mourned the dead. Long-serving Premier Hun Sen told the nation --

with "crocodile tears," say Khmer analysts -- the stampede was a lesson
learned;
no official would lose his job. It was also announced the government would
provide the equivalent of $12,000 in compensation to the families of each
person
who was killed -- to hide the guilt, some say.

Many called for those with some responsibility for the government's failure
to
resign, but such entreaties fell on deaf ears.

*Complaints
*

My column, "Do complaints serve a purpose?" was dissected by some Khmer
bloggers
in the West Coast. "They do," some argued. But then what? I quoted a Chinese

saying, "Talk doesn't cook rice."

And so, we are, again, complaining, denouncing, pointing fingers, calling
for
justice -- even more passionately than before.
Yet, what have these verbal demands produced? The straw leviathan with shaky

wooden legs stays strong. The irony is, he stays strong and rules ruthlessly

because the most powerful force that can run him out of town -- the people
-- 
isn't yet convinced how those who might replace him would better serve the
people's interests. Democrats have not convinced them they can succeed in
fighting for their rights and freedom.

The leviathan is strong because democrats are weak and in disarray.
**
*Only thing to fear
*
If one wakes up every morning, saying to oneself one cannot succeed, then of

course one will fail. An anonymous Khmer blogger who commented on my column
last
week said positive thinking is beyond the capacity of the sick and the poor.
He
seemed to condemn the sick and the poor to a perpetual sickbed and eternal
poverty -- an encouragement to the leviathan's oppression.

Failure is human and people fail; but it's not the end of the world. Success
is
not irreversible either. Recall Winston Churchill's words, "It's the courage
to
continue that counts."

So decide what you want, make a strong commitment to achieve it and act
resolutely to reach that goal. Actions open doors to many options. Theodore
Roosevelt advised, "Do what you can, with what you have, where you are."

Fear of the leviathan? The Germans say "Fear makes the wolf bigger than he
is."

Edward Yashinsky, a Yiddish poet who survived the Holocaust, wrote: "Fear
not
your enemies, for they can only kill you; fear not your friends, for they
can
only betray you. Fear only the indifferent, who permit the killers and the
betrayers to walk safely on the earth."

But leave the last words to Franklin D. Roosevelt, chiseled on stones in the

Roosevelt memorial in the nation's capital: "The only thing we have to fear
is
fear itself."
**
*Do something
*
My political activism dates back to my college years. When I did my
doctorate in
Ann Arbor, Mich., I supported the Khmer Republic because Vietnamese troops
occupied Khmer territory, used as a springboard in the Vietnam War against
the
Americans and their allies, and because of my attachment to democracy,
individual rights, freedom and the rule of law -- which I wanted to see
flourish
on my native soil. I have not wavered from these ideals.

In 1980-1989, I served in the nationalist Khmer resistance because of
Hanoi's
military occupation of Cambodia and what I wanted to see established in
Cambodia.

The physical battles to improve life for the people of Cambodia must
continue.
With my brain and my pen, I contribute what I can.

I liked German-born American physicist Albert Einstein's words: "The world
is a
dangerous place. Not because of the people who are evil; but because of the
people who don't do anything about it."

I did. Now, others need to do something. Complaints serve a purpose. Actions

make things happen.
**
*Freedom can be won
*
Khmers can win their rights and freedom.

One immediate task is for Khmers to unite around a carefully designed grand
strategy to liberate Cambodia from dictatorship and install a regime of the
people, for the people, and by the people. Recall Secretary of State Hillary

Clinton's urging that Khmer democrats unite behind a comprehensive political

program, rather than behind a political figure.

Khmers need to strengthen independent social groups and institutions --
families, schools, non-government groups. People are empowered when they
find
collective support to achieve a goal.

Khmers must build the people's self-confidence, resistance skills and
determination to liberate themselves, and create a powerful, internal
resistance
determined and willing to endure oppression to deny the tyrants the people's

obedience, submission and cooperation, which they need.

No regime can stand without the people's support.

A. Gaffar Peang-Meth, Ph.D., is retired from the University of Guam. Write
him
at [email protected].

http://www.guampdn.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/201012080400/OPINION02/12080321

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