---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Gaffar Peang-Meth <[email protected]>
Date: Sun, Jul 15, 2012 at 7:56 PM
Subject: CAMBODIA: The Emperor wears no clothes
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*FOR PUBLICATION
*AHRC-ETC-020-2012
July 16, 2012

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

*
*CAMBODIA: The Emperor wears no clothes*

It was not in my schedule to write an article for publication today. But I
sensed anticipation by some readers – and perhaps by the Phnom Penh regime
itself. To Cambodians cowed by authorities, this article stands to remind
that rights and justice are worth fighting for, and dictators must know it
is human nature to yearn for civil rights and freedom.

Following publication of my article, "Respect Ideals and Concepts, not
Arbitrary Leaders," in this space on July 1, an open letter – marked For
Publication – from the Kingdom of Cambodia's Ambassador for the United
Kingdom Hor Nambora arrived in my e-mail box. AHRC published the letter
along with editorial comment supportive of democratic ideals. Personally, I
thought it a bit odd that the Ambassador for the United Kingdom sent me the
open letter, rather than Hem Heng, Ambassador to the United States, where I
reside.

But the young Hor, son of Hun Sen's Foreign Minister Hor Namhong, is Hun
Sen's elite diplomat: A holder of a doctorate degree from Budapest; advisor
to the Cambodian government with rank of Minister; and Hun Sen's special
envoy to promote Cambodia's candidacy to the United Nations Security
Council for 2013-2014.

Claiming "it difficult to take seriously someone" like me who "snaps rudely
from the sidelines," he wrote painstakingly, "One can only hope that you
stop writing such virulent criticisms of the democratically-elected
government of Cambodian Prime Minister Samdech Hun Sen and those
organisations such as the Asian Human Rights Commission will stop pandering
to you."

The open letter is an indication that my decades-long advocacy for open,
fair and free elections in Cambodia, described in my essays published here
and elsewhere, has irritated some officials of the Cambodian dictatorship.
The bombastic rhetoric of Ambassador Hor is consistent with the present
elite's authoritarian strand, the a'tma anh (the I-ism) that demands
complete obedience, as did Pol Pot's Angkar-on-High. Yet, Cambodia endorsed
the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights and integrated its
principles into her Constitution.

The Covenant says, "Everyone shall have the right to hold opinions without
interference. Everyone shall have the right to freedom of expression; this
right shall include freedom to seek, receive and impart information and
ideas of all kinds, regardless of frontiers, either orally, in writing or
in print, in the form of art, or through any other media of his choice."

The letter took me to Buddha's words 2,500 years ago: "In a controversy the
instant we feel anger we have already ceased striving for truth, and have
begun striving for ourselves," and "Holding on to anger is like grasping a
hot coal with the intent of throwing it at someone else; you are the one
who gets burned."

Hor wanted his open letter publicized. The AHRC posted it on its website
along with its note reiterating its commitment to the survival of democracy
and human rights through "free exchange of ideas and opinions" expressed in
a "polite manner." It affirmed, "The free expression of views by all people
is the primary way that a democracy can begin to confront and resolve
problems." It calls for a "vigorous democratic discourse on the issues in
Cambodia..." The AHRC note says, "The current situation in Cambodia is not
reflective of the ideal enshrined in Cambodia's Constitution and the
promise made to the Cambodian people; that of a functional liberal
democracy . . . still a distant dream for the Cambodian people."

My e-mail box was quickly filled with messages – for which I am most
grateful – from Cambodians and others inside the country and abroad. I
apologize to the reporter from Cambodia's Voice of Democracy radio for not
providing my response to the young Hor's letter as I don't believe a
polemic serves any cause, and the Ambassador's letter never discussed the
points I raised in my article.

I do not deny that Hun Sen won the recent local Sangkat election and
earlier elections. But winning an election through the liberal use of
threats, intimidation, bribes, and irregularities does not make a
government "democratically elected." The people never voted their
conscience freely and fairly. The international community acknowledges that
the Cambodian elections still fall short of international standards.

Comments I received from Cambodians in the country – in Phnom Penh and
elsewhere – reaffirm to me that in general, Cambodians' quotidian passivity
has long been misinterpreted as acceptance and support of the regime. I
have written of the growing discontent with the status quo as the regime
fails to deal with the "elephant in the room" domestically, and with the
competing interests of foreign powers. Pressed by both the Chinese and
Vietnamese for access to commercial development opportunities, for example,
the government of Hun Sen has resorted to the strategy of offering long
term leases on terms favorable both to the requesting nation and to the
domestic political leaders whose pockets will be lined with the profits.
Similarly, unwilling to provoke a primary benefactor, the Hun Sen
government has declared itself neutral in the fomenting conflict over
jurisdiction in the South China Sea. These actions do not comprise a
foreign policy that can be sustained over time by a nation that hopes to
remain independent.

The bleeding of Cambodia for private profit is undertaken in the name of
development. More than 2 million hectares of Cambodia's rural areas have
been taken away from the population for development of agro-industrial
plantations by foreign firms. The most recent land grabbing involved the
sugar-cane industry. Domestic producers have been stripped of 75,000
hectares of productive land that now is farmed by foreign-owned entities.

The European Union's initiative "Everything but Arms" (EBA) intended to
help the least developed countries by lifting quotas and duties, is now
viewed by activists as serving unintentionally to boost fierce land
grabbing in Cambodia in the sugar industry. Activists called on European
Union's consumers to fight what they refer to as "blood" sugar. Early this
month, rights groups and representatives of affected areas in Cambodian
joined forces in a campaign to urge the world's consumers to boycott Tate
and Lyle Sugars and American Sugar Refining (Domino Sugar brand). A video
and petition are available on the Internet [boycottbloodsugar.net/]. "Crops
have been razed. Animals have been shot. Homes have been burned to the
ground. Thousands of people have been left destitute. Some have been thrown
in jail for daring to protest. Despite the abundant evidence of these
crimes, none of the responsible individuals and companies has been held to
account."

Last week, as representatives from ASEAN countries and from China, Japan,
South Korea, and the United States were meeting in Phnom Penh, Cambodian
military police in riot gear surrounded protesters at Freedom Park. The
Cambodian Center for Human Rights described how Long Panha, a protester and
employee of the Cambodian Confederation of Unions (CCU), was beaten
"viciously across the head with batons. He was pulled to the ground and
held in a prone position, blood gushing from his face, before being hauled
by his arms and legs into the back of a nearby police van…"

In the words of CCHR President Ou Virak, "This incident represents yet
another shameful attempt by the Phnom Penh authorities to silence peaceful
protesters in an effort to present a picture of stability in the country to
visiting dignitaries."

Human Rights Watch Asia Director Brad Adams urged visiting US Secretary of
State Hillary Clinton to tell Hun Sen "in public and private" that closer
ties with the US will not be possible without significant improvements in
Cambodia's deteriorating human rights situation. Cambodians are again
circulating Amy Simmons' "Life in a Cambodian rubbish dump" with photos by
Spanish photojournalist Omar Havana depicting the desperation of children
in Siem Reap – "an astounding sight tourists don't see."

Clearly, the nonviolent actions of brave Khmer men and women in protest of
the Hun Sen regime's brutality and greed are having an impact. The road to
real freedom will be potholed and serpentine, but progress is being made
and will accelerate as more Cambodians in the country and abroad learn and
engage in strategic thinking motivated by democratic values and principles.

In "Lessons of the Arab Spring," Spiegel Online (July 4) published: "The
hope that the Arab world would become democratic as quickly as Eastern
Europe did 20 years ago has not been fulfilled. But fears that the
countries of North Africa and the Middle East – from Morocco in the west to
Oman in the east – would sink into chaos one after another have also not
materialized."

As the Spiegel sees it, the people in the Middle East succumbed to violence
for decades and that's why the dictators have stayed in power for so long.
"But eventually a point was reached, in every conflict in the region, at
which fear changed sides, and at which the effect of violence was reversed.
Instead of producing subjugation, it triggered revolt. It happened under
the shah of Iran in 1978, in Tunisia in 2011 – and now it is happening in
Syria."

And the lessons of the Arab Spring? "For the oppressed, the lesson is:
Perhaps the government will want to kill us all. And for the rulers, the
lesson is: Despite everything, the people do not give up." In other words,
dictators will increase the level of oppression, and the oppressed will not
give up.

Last week, Cambodian Say Savuth, founder and managing director of *
vbuildleaders* center (vbuildleaders.com) presented his first article on
leadership. At a time when Cambodians are seeking one who will be a
Cambodian Nelson Mandela or Aung San Suu Kyi, Say Savuth writes, "Who are
leaders? Each and every one of us is." He explains, "At first stage, we
lead ourselves. Next, we lead team . We can lead team only if we can lead
ourselves well enough. Next, we lead a bigger team. The happier the
followers we have, the more influential we become leaders ." The article
reflects the Buddhist teaching that describes the 10 qualities a leader
should acquire (*Barmei*) in order to become a locus of influence – a
Mandela or a Suu Kyi.

I would like to close by sharing a Danish fairy tale published in 1837 that
seem most fitting as we examine Cambodia, her people, and the international
community:
*
Emperor wears no clothes*

A pair of swindlers told the emperor that they could make dresses from the
most beautiful fabric, fabric with special qualities invisible to people
who are stupid. To ensure that he would not be the stupid one who could not
see the cloth, the emperor sent two trusted men to verify the beauty of the
cloth. These couriers could not see the cloth, but were unwilling to admit
the truth, so they praised the fine threads woven to make the lovely fabric.

The townspeople heard about the cloth. They were interested in learning who
among them was too stupid as not to see the cloth. So when the emperor,
dressed in the new clothes which he never admitted he could not see,
traveled in a procession through the town, the townspeople wildly cheered
and praised the emperor's clothes.

Then a small child shouted: "But he has nothing on!"

The child's words spread quickly from one person to another until everyone
in the town shouted "The emperor has no clothes!"
The emperor heard what the townspeople said. He knew they were right. But
he could not admit he wore no clothes so he continued the procession, naked
and exposed, to its conclusion.


……………..
*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 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 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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