From: Gaffar Peang-Meth <[email protected]>
Date: Thu, Nov 1, 2012 at 10:30 AM
Subject: CAMBODIA: The country must pick up and go on, without the King
Father
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*FOR PUBLICATION
*AHRC-ETC-033-2012
November 1, 2012

*An article by Dr. Gaffar Peang-Meth published by the Asian Human Rights
Commission*
*
CAMBODIA: The country must pick up and go on, without the King Father*

On October 15, an e-mail from a ranking member of Cambodia's royal family,
a good friend from 1970, landed in my box: "Dear Gaffar, I am very sad to
inform you that former King Norodom Sihanouk had just passed away on early
Monday morning, 15 October 2012 at 1:30am in Beijing. He was 89 years old
and would have been 90 on 31 October. With sincerest regards, Your friend."

"Dear M'chas," I responded immediately, "Please accept my condolences to
the royal family for the passing away of the King Father. May He rest in
eternal peace. Warm regards, Gaffar." "Thank you very much for your kind
thoughts," the prince quickly acknowledged. So, I spent my evening in the
US and he spent his daylight in Phnom Penh conversing via e-mail about the
future.

I then watched the daily postings on the Internet of condolences from
Cambodian expatriates, skimmed posted articles by Western journalists and
scholars, as I mused about the predictability of the comments by those
familiar to me -- some defensive of the deceased king's actions, others
critical of them.

The numerous YouTube videos and photos of Cambodians grieving the King as
his body was returned to Phnom Penh in a special plane from Beijing on
October 17 -- and after -- leave no doubt of the Khmer people's (the
elderly, in particular) love and reverence for their King Father.

For three months, the King's body will lie in state at the Royal Palace for
the public to pay their last respects; cremation is scheduled for the first
week of February 2013. A statue of the King Father -- father of Cambodia's
independence from France -- will be erected in a public park east of
Cambodia's Independence Monument.
*
Politics*

Politics divides as well as unites. What one does with politics is
influenced by one's political values and beliefs.

My strong attachment to the principles of republicanism, reinforced by my
US training in political science, plus my political support for the Khmer
Republic, alienated me from some in the royalist faction, and won me some
severe critics, especially among those who never knew me. Ironically, my
association with some members of the royal family was solidified in the
1970s when the Khmer republican spirit took root after former chief of
state Sihanouk was deposed.

In 1981, some Cambodians from the royalist faction and (republican-leaning)
Cambodians of my political spectrum found themselves working together as
"cooperationists," as some foreign circles dubbed them. The political
alliance was developed both at the Khmer-Thai border, where I became a
member of the nationalist Khmer People's National Liberation Front in 1980,
and at the United Nations. We non-communist Cambodians of different
backgrounds closed ranks to lobby for international support for the
struggle against Vietnam's military occupation of Cambodia.

We had clear goals: We disliked the Khmer Rouge, wanted the Vietnamese out
of Cambodia, and found more common ground in our views of the future than
we ever could with the murderous "Pol Potists" or those installed by
Vietnam.

Some of us were chastised by members of our respective parties for daring
to cooperate.

I gave my all in the Khmer national struggle. Prince Sihanouk took
presidency in 1982 of a coalition of Cambodians to fight Vietnam's military
occupiers, who seized Cambodia's capital of Phnom Penh on January 7, 1979.
The Vietnamese installed a puppet regime, and in 1985 made a Khmer Rouge
commander and defector Hun Sen the country's prime minster.

We, non-communists, believed by working together our two noncommunist
factions would be able to keep a Khmer Rouge dominance in check, and
working together in common purpose rather than separately, we would be
better able to pressure Vietnam to withdraw troops and negotiate.

It was during the fight against Vietnam's occupation that I had
opportunities to participate in working sessions with President Sihanouk
(and through social functions met Princess Monique).

Personally, I found Samdech and Neak Moneang to be generous, kind, with
undeniably great amiable personalities. I must admit to having been poked
at by Samdech, who smiled, as he mentioned "putschists" overthrowing him;
and to having received an occasional disapproving look from Samdech
whenever I tangled with Khmer Rouge Khieu Samphan and his party in a
military tripartite meeting. I knew Samdech the President wanted no
conflict that may hurt the national struggle against the Vietnamese.

Cambodia's King Father Sihanouk is dead. In writing this article, I am
reminded of the words of Martin Luther King, Jr.: "There is some good in
the worst of us and some evil in the best of us. When we discover this, we
are less prone to hate our enemies."

Here are two stories of Samdech Sihanouk, one not (yet?) written because it
has not been known. Another is known and is subject to interpretation.
*
Sihanouk and legacy of nationalists' unity
*
A certain political action, if undertaken, may change the face and the
destiny of Cambodia.

Before the proclamation of the tripartite Coalition Government of
Democratic Kampuchea in 1982, Samdech Sihanouk held a meeting in his hotel
suite with KPNLF President Son Sann.

Samdech told Son Sann of Samdech's pleasure to see KPNLF letterhead
carrying the Khmer National Flag -- the same national flag of the Khmer
Monarchy – and the inscription of the Khmer People's National Liberation
Front, which Samdech read in Khmer, *Ronakse
Rumdorss Pol Roath Khmer*.

Samdech said he would like to adopt the same name for his royalist faction,
but since both nationalist movements shared similar goals and values, their
combatants wore the same army uniforms, and many of their officers were
close friends, Samdech saw no problem if the two nationalist movements, the
KPNLF and his own FUNCINPEC or *Front Uni National pour un Cambodge
Indépendant Neutre Pacifique Et Coopératif* or National United Front for an
Independent, Neutral, Peaceful, and Cooperative Cambodia, would be "fused"
into one movement, under the name *Ronakse Rumdorss Pol Roath Khmer*, and
under Son Sann's leadership.

As Samdech Sihanouk spoke, I felt my adrenalin rush as I envisioned a new
historical political development unfolding. My royalist friends who stood
next to me patted my back several times. I was speechless. And then I was
breathless. I heard no response from the KPNLF President.

And it was, again, Samdech Sihanouk in Beijing who, barely two years later,
signed a document approving the creation of a Joint Military Command of the
Khmer People's National Liberation Armed Forces and the royalist *Armee
Nationale Sihanoukienne*. Whoa! A bipartite JMC while the tripartite CGDK
was in existence as the public face of the opposition movement?

The Sihanouk-signed document named KPNLAF General Sak Suthsakhan as JMC
Commander-in-Chief, ANS General Teap Ben as JMC Deputy Commander-in-Chief;
ANS General Tuan Chay as JMC Chief of Staff, and myself, from the KPNLAF,
as JMC Deputy Chief of Staff. The JMC headquarters, located away from both
armies' headquarters, was staffed with KPNLAF and ANS personnel who lived,
shared meals, and worked together under the same roof.

Unfortunately, the Khmer culture of factionalism, discord, exclusiveness,
vindictiveness, practiced in both armies, had a polarizing effect, making
"unity" among Cambodians near impossible. Ironically, Cambodia is a nation
in which some 96 percent of the population are registered as Buddhists,
whose Lord preached love, peace, tolerance and compassion.
*
Reconciliation?*

Moving to the present day, in an October 18 broadcast, the Voice of America
reported self-exiled opposition leader Sam Rainsy's October 17 letter to
dictator Hun Sen "seeking permission" to return to Cambodia in the "spirit
of reconciliation and national unity" to mourn the passing of the King
Father, "and see his face for the last time."

The VOA quoted political analyst Chea Vannath: "The King Father would have
been pleased to see his children have unity, for his children to have
mutual compassion, for his children to mutually forgive each other. All of
these are in the national interest…"

"He can come as he wants," the VOA reported government Information Minister
Khieu Kanharith as saying, "But we cannot give any orders to the court."
Rainsy faces 10 years imprisonment for incitement, disinformation,
defamation and destruction of property, plus an additional two-year jail
term for accusing Hun Sen's foreign minister Hor Namhong of having been a
member of the Khmer Rouge in the late 1970s. Rainsy rejects all the charges
as politically motivated and without foundation.

On October 25, the Cambodia Daily reported Rainsy's request was returned to
him for a third time on the 24th, and quoted Son Soubert, advisor to the
late King Father's son, current King Sihamoni, "Obviously, it shows that
they (the regime) are unwilling to comply with the request," indicating the
king would be happy to let Rainsy return but Hun Sen must approve.

According to Radio Free Asia, Hun Sen's Council of Ministers spokesman Phay
Siphan declared, "I simply consider (Rainsy's requests) to be
advertisements in the newspaper." Yet, the King Father's private secretary
Prince Thomico argued, "Hun Sen has promised to protect the monarchy . . .
(and) if we regard (the King Father) as the father of national
reconciliation, we should release all political prisoners." The problem is
Hun Sen never sees himself as a part of Prince Thomico's "we." The lesson
is Hun Sen interferes with the judiciary when it suits his purposes and
keeps his hands off when it doesn't, and the world community continues to
fund his government yearly to stay in power.

Reconciliation, or restoring friendship or ending variance through
establishing harmony, is not a language to which dictators respond. Unity,
or aggregating two or more parts into one, is not possible with Hun Sen's
dictatorial regime that demands exclusive powers.

On the 29th, the Cambodia Daily reported Kanharith's message that Hun Sen
could not allow Rainsy's return to pay respects to the late King Father
without Rainsy being arrested.
*
A revealing article*

Forty-three-year-old Princess Norodom Soma completed her Master's degree
program in mass communication at California State University in Fresno. She
is the daughter of retired Class One air force officer Prince Norodom
Vatvani, a jet pilot. A Cambodian-American, Ms. Soma worked at CNN
headquarters in Atlanta, Georgia, before she joined the Phnom Penh Post as
a columnist.

Last week, Soma's "We should be united," examines the future Cambodia's
monarchy now that the King Father has passed away: What will happen next?
She is direct: The Khmer royal family has neither political power nor
financial wealth; Cambodia's reigning monarch,
59-year-old Sihamoni, the King Father's son, is only a figurehead, it's the
Hun Sen government that rules the country; the nine-member Throne Council,
comprising Hun Sen and top officials from the National Assembly and the
Senate, all from the ruling Cambodian People's Party, decides who should be
the next king. "The future of the monarchy is in their hands," Soma affirms.

Soma's article is revealing in her description of the late King Father's
memorial ceremony on October 17 when his body arrived from Beijing and lay
inside the Throne Hall of the Royal Palace. The Throne Hall was
"overcrowded" with government officials, delegates and VIPs from Asian
countries giving Soma a feeling of being at "an ASEAN Summit Meeting
instead of a memorial service for a beloved family member."
Soma lamented, "Some members of the Royal Family could not get inside the
Throne Hall of the Royal Palace to pay their respects to their beloved
family member, the late King Father Norodom Sihanouk."

Princess Soma bluntly noted: "I witnessed the division among my own Royal
Family members on the first day of the memorial ceremony . . . We were all
there to mourn the loss of the King Father, but some of my Royal Family
members didn't even speak with one another."
Soma asks: "If we can't get along with our own family, what makes us think
we can bring peace to the country?"

She answers: "With the current ruling party domination, and the division
among Royal Family members, the future of the monarchy looks grim. Fear
only grows in darkness. Once you face fear with light, you win."

Princess Soma speaks of the royal family, but what she says applies as well
to the situation of Cambodians in general.

My royal friend whose e-mail I mentioned at the beginning of this article,
told me people at his end are "very concerned and frightened whether (the
regime's) grip will fall harder on the opposition party and how much more
freedom will be curtailed," now that the King Father, the only voice that
could growl at Hun Sen and his dictatorship, is no more.

I don't think Hun Sen will dispense with the monarchy at this time. I
believe he needs the monarchy ever much more than the monarchy needs him.

Which brings me to the point I repeat often: The time for thinking that
harmony and reconciliation will develop on their own has passed, if ever
such a wish had foundation. The dictator has no intention of cooperating
with those democrats who desire a more open government responsive to the
rule of law. Democrats must increase nonviolent action to undermine and
then put an end to the regime that survives only through oppression, the
selling of national wealth, and the eviction of people from their homes and
their land.
---------------------
*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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