---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Gaffar Peang-Meth <[email protected]>
Date: Wed, Dec 15, 2010 at 4:18 AM
Subject: CAMBODIA: "A voice from Phnom Penh -- Thinking Gray"
To:




From: AHRC Network <[email protected]>
Date: Tue, Dec 14, 2010 at 10:58 PM
Subject: CAMBODIA: "A voice from Phnom Penh -- Thinking Gray"


FOR PUBLICATION

AHRC-ETC-044-2010

December 15, 2010

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

*CAMBODIA: "A voice from Phnom Penh -- Thinking Gray"

*Last year, a reader e-mailed me from Phnom Penh to say he has enjoyed
reading my columns on the Internet and that he will be the first in
line to sign up for my classes should I return to teaching. Thus,
began a long distance relationship that later brought photos of Khmer
village children and their teacher and big brother, a handsome young
chap -- photos that I attached to my computer screen until today.

Having learned much from and about the young man, Makara, born to a
Khmer father, a soldier with long relationships with Vietnam, and
raised by a grandfather in Sre Kok village, Anlung Romiet, Kandal
province, I asked if I might write a column about his life and his
thinking, which, I said, would benefit Cambodians and non-Cambodians
interested in the Khmer people's future.

As I sent him additional questions, I reminded him that published
materials would remain public in perpetuity; that my article would
bring out friends and adversaries, praise and unkind comments. His
usual prompt responses revealed a quick-witted young graduate of the
Royal University of Phnom Penh with an English literature degree, who
embellished the words I used in my articles to throw back at me: "I
love my motherland, I do what I can, with what I have, which is very
little, where I am, in a country reigned by terror and injustice."

Touche!

*Unlike father unlike son
*
What captivated my attention was what emerged as the story about a
loving father and a respectful son who are so much alike in their
personality traits with strong beliefs, and yet, so dissimilar in
their views of the world around them.

The father was a member of the Khmer military and had long-term
relationships with the historical enemy of all Cambodians, the
Vietnamese, in Cambodia. The son feels a danger in the Vietnamization
of Cambodia. The father appreciates Premier Hun Sen as "the only man
who can control and stabilize Cambodia." The son sees Hun Sen as "a
thorn, the source of the country's many problems as he holds on to
power too long."

*Childhood
*
As his mother lived with his father in Phnom Penh, where he "held a
high position in the Ministry of Defense," Makara, born in 1983, was
raised by his grandfather at Sre Kok.

Makara wrote, "during the communist time (1980-1989)" his family was
"a bit wealthy"; his father earned enough money to buy food, good
clothes, and furniture, for a flat in Phnom Penh -- the regime
provided flats to ranking officials the military and in the
government.

At age 5, Makara moved to live with his parents in Phnom Penh in
1988. But, he remembers, "My life in Phnom Penh was not happy."

The power and influence of Soviet Communism was waning in Eastern
Europe; the Soviets were withdrawing from Afghanistan; and in 1989,
the Vietnamese began to withdraw troops after a decade of military
occupation of Cambodia.

With their withdrawal, Makara's father lost his post in the Ministry
of Defense, allegedly because he was "not flexible enough" with the
new Cambodian rulers. "Then our lives became so hard and difficult,"
Makara said.

In 1991, Makara, then 8, moved back to Sre Kok -- his parents could
not send him to school in Phnom Penh -- and was enrolled in school at
Anlung Romiet: "My life was in the ricefield with cows."

"I loved life in the countryside. We ate Prohok every day." He told
his grandfather he wanted to live in the village forever; the old man
replied, "At this time you want to stay, when older you want to live
only in the city." Makara thinks his grandfather was right.

He remembers being so happy to help his grandfather cut and carry
grass almost every day; and he even thought of becoming a
"professional" oxcart driver as he saw "how cool some guys looked,"
driving the oxcart!

In 1999, while Makara was in high school, his parents sold the flat
in the city and returned to live in Anlung Romiet. Makara moved in to
live with them -- in a wooden house: "My life was still a bit high."
Then, he developed interests in politics and history as his father and
his uncle discussed the kind of "good leaders whom we should follow
and respect."

The English language was appealing to him. For six years, from 1997
to 2002, the year he graduated from high school, Makara took private
English lessons for an hour a day, though

he studied French, "nearly a dead language in Cambodia today," in
public school.

In 2002, he also passed his university entrance exam, and received a
scholarship from the Royal University of Phnom Penh. Now 19, Makara
rented a room in Phnom Penh so he could go to RUPP. His parents
scraped five dollars a week (20,000 riels) to help Makara. In 2006,
Makara received his Bachelor's degree.

*Life's turning points
*
Makara described the years 2002-2006 in Phnom Penh as the years
"society really affected my thinking and reaction. I saw the many
faces of bitterness, and hardships of the poor; I saw how the non-poor
lived." The different subjects he studied at the university "also
affected my thinking, and sharpened my interest more in politics and
society."

While studying at RUPP, he taught English in his spare time in 2003
and earned roughly US$ 15 per month, an earning that rose to 50 in
2004. By 2006, the year he graduated, he was making about 300 a month.


In 2007-2008, Makara started business classes at Cambodia Japan
Cooperation Center; and until August 2010, he was a business
development officer (marketer) for the Far East Manufacture Services
Cambodia Co., Ltd, a United Kingdom-based company. He earned 500 a
month.

Makara knew his potential in business enterprises. Today, he wants to
open two small businesses. To soothe his conscience, which nagged him
to remember that education is the necessary vehicle to improve
society, and that it's education that breeds quality thinking, which
he believes helps to make durable changes, Makara decided he would do
both: Open new businesses and acquire a higher degree.

What a "can do" attitude!

*Balancing reality and idealism

*Makara's father, 62, is now a "retired soldier"; Makara's mother, 50,
is a housewife and a farmer.

Makara described his father as a "real communist … a communist
political lecturer, unrivaled by contemporary high ranking officials."
He sees his father as "incorruptible, helped a lot of poor people …
served public interests rather than his own."

"Educated in Sihanouk time," his father reads and speaks French and
speaks Vietnamese.

Makara said he learned his father was recruited by the Vietnamese
after 1979; that he received "political and military training" for
"probably, two years," in Hochiminh-ville in "1980-1985," and training
with Vietnamese experts at Cambodia's Dey Eith, Kien Svay.

With Vietnamese language skills, his father "traveled to and from
Vietnam routinely"; he recruited Cambodians to train as "military
doctors, mechanics, and so on."

Makara said, his father "worked best with Vietnamese experts," who
trusted his honesty and appreciated his hard work.

Makara complained his father's appreciation of Hun Sen for
"stabilizing the country and ending the civil wars," goes too far. "He
never gets along with me at all on this matter."

Though Makara acknowledges that Sen keeps a lid on chaos in Cambodia,
Sen is not a good leader for Cambodians.

Makara says "I feel so gloomy because lots of Vietnamese are now
living in Cambodia and continue to come live. They are wealthy,
protected by someone in Cambodia, and can't be touched … I feel so
sad to see Vietnamese vote in Cambodia. You can see millions of them
now living in Cambodia, while lots of Cambodians remain uneducated."

Makara's reported dialogue with an old man with vast experiences in
politics and Vietnamese in Cambodia, affirmed Makara's fear of
Cambodia's future in the next 50 years: Vietnamese immigrants and
their children in Cambodia will be all Khmer, who control everything
in the country with the help of today's high ranking officials, who
are actually Vietnamese serving in the Hun Sen government. With
Vietnamese who become Khmer, and Khmer who are Vietnamized, what will
Cambodia become?"

Historical records show 5,000-8,000 Khmer children were removed from
Cambodia and taken to Vietnam by the Viet Minh in the early 1950s as
they were ordered by the Geneva Conference to return to Vietnam.
Today, half a century later, what have those children become if not
Cambodians with Khmer bodies and Vietnamese heads?

*Sick of the elite and the rich
*
Makara insists Cambodia "has good people and good land … but we
have a powerful, selfish, greedy, family-ism (sic.) leader," who holds
on to power too long.

Under Hun Sen's rule, Cambodians, ignorant of modern living and of
what modernity entails, now talk and want "nice villas, brand new
cars, and latest modern equipments," says Makara: "Most of them are
from Ok-nha and high ranking officials' families. If you listen, you
hear them talk only about building villas, owning latest model cars."

The very popular US$ 120,000 Lexus series 2010 vehicles are "rubbish
now," as the 2011 models are available. "Villas, cars, girls," are
their talk; they donate money to Cambodian Red Cross for
"acknowledgments from (first lady) Bun Rany and (Premier) Hun Sen --
which is good for their businesses and careers."

*Thinking gray

*Makara didn't appear to think in all "white" or all "black"; he
talked "gray" -- which appears most realistic.

He's vehement in his dislike of the corruption and injustice of the
Hun Sen regime; but Makara says, not everyone, whether in the current
government or in the opposition, is all "virtuous" or all "evil."
Everywhere, people display a range of behaviors from good to bad and
much in between.

Cambodians in general lack knowledge and information about life and
living in other countries -- says Makara; most Cambodians are poor and
not educated; the mass media and the opposition that can help
enlighten the people, are not doing that.

Makara asserts, the opposition "should not oppose and accuse the
government" at every turn; "No one likes to be blamed all the time."
He admits that the opposition has brought competition to Khmer
politics, but it should educate the people more about "its policies
and programs."

Opposition leader Sam Rainsy is "smart and clever, a western guy who
wants no wealth nor property, he's not greedy … but a bit cowardly
to face Hun Sen," says Makara. "He doesn't need to dare to walk to
prison, but who cares for a leader speaking from abroad? With Sam
Rainsy as leader, Cambodia will prosper. But this is just a long dream
for me."

Makara believes the democrats can be an alternative to Sen and his
cronies, that democratic values and free expression are solid
essential elements of durable stability and order, that there's no
alternative to a good education for all Cambodians.

This reminds me of Burmese human rights icon Aung San Suu Kyi's
recent emphasis on "value change," because "regime change" only
replaces men with other men drawn from the same lot.

*Changes

*Enumerating the changes he wanted to see in Cambodia in order of
importance, Makara says, "First, I would like to see change in the
high echelons of leadership, and even if some replacements come from
the ruling Cambodian People's Party itself, this should not matter,
not all CPP members are bad people, just as not all opposition members
are good."

"Second, I want to see better education, because good education
allows better thinking; actions led by better thinking bring more
durable changes to society."

"Last, I want to see more western companies coming to invest in
Cambodia rather than those from China and Vietnam!"

I find enlightening Makara's views on individual rights and freedom.
He admits they are limited and restricted under Hun Sen. "This is
true, but why not use our heads and think smart. Actually, there's
much more freedom than you imagined for us to exploit to achieve other
things besides things political."

His thought appears to parallel the long established Eastern
philosophy that without stability and order, we cannot even think of
"individual rights and freedom," and that individual rights and
freedom can flourish only in a stable and secure environment.

Ironically, many western governments today have accepted the
importance of maintaining stability and security in today's world.

Nevertheless, we must not forget, stability and order without rights
and freedom constitute a dictatorship; and irresponsible exercise of
rights and freedom is a license for tyranny.

There are other Makaras in Cambodia today. Their thoughts and
reflections are worth consideration by Cambodians and non-Cambodians
interested in Cambodia and her future.

.....................

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]
<mailto:[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.



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