Lawmaker straddles two eras

http://www.phnompenhpost.com/national/lawmaker-straddles-two-eras

As the opposition boycott drags into its second week, you could forgive one
politician for having itchier feet than most.

After all, Long Botta has been waiting for 38 years for his second
political life to begin.

The 70-year-old lawmaker – the Cambodia National Rescue Party’s number two
candidate in Battambang province – won his first parliamentary seat this
election, almost four decades after he last played a political role in the
Kingdom.

An appointed cabinet minister during both the Sihanouk and Lon Nol eras,
Botta was dramatically evacuated from Phnom Penh by helicopter during the
US Navy’s Operation Eagle Pull on April 12, 1975, five days before the
Khmer Rouge took the capital.

“This is a new life for me. I have dreamed about [this] for so many years,
and it happened [so] suddenly,” he says.

Returning to the Kingdom from France in 2005, he became an active member of
the Sam Rainsy Party in 2008 and was asked to be a candidate for the newly
formed CNRP just a few months before the July 28 election.

Botta, who was notified that his family would be evacuated just hours
before US helicopters left Phnom Penh in 1975, sees the recent election as
his final chance to change things in Cambodia.

“One thing I regret is that I have not so many years left.… It’s the last
battle now. [They] have destroyed a country and I cannot accept it. That’s
why I’m back.”

Ruling elites from the US-backed anti-communist Khmer Republic were
priority targets for execution after the Khmer Rouge took the country, and
Botta would almost certainly have been killed if he had stayed behind.

“There is nobody left.… I am the only survivor [from the Lon Nol cabinet],”
he says.

“I was on the top list of people to be killed.”

Survivor’s guilt is one of many things that motivate Botta to continue a
fight against what he believes is essentially the same enemy he faced as a
right-wing politician decades ago.

“Being someone who fought against a dictatorship and communism, I have to
fight for democracy,” he says.

“That’s all I want. I feel too lucky to [have so] much. I cannot enjoy this
kind of life.”

*An opportune departure*
That fateful April morning in 1975, Botta, then minister of culture, was on
his way to an emergency meeting to discuss whether then-Prince Norodom
Sihanouk should be flown back to Phnom Penh from Beijing to take hold of
the crumbling nation.

Over the previous months, as the communists’ onslaught on the capital had
grown increasingly ferocious, the cabinet had been meeting daily.

“The Khmer Rouge were launching missiles over the city every day – 15 to 20
missiles. They would randomly fall in the market.… You could not believe
[what it was like],” Botta says.

Stopping at his office ahead of the meeting that morning, Botta received a
phone call from Timothy Carney, his tennis partner and first-secretary at
the US embassy.

It was 8:15am.

“He said, ‘I have to speak to you in French so there is no confusion. You
and your family have to take your suitcases and join the US ambassador to
leave Cambodia this morning at 9am’.”

“I almost collapsed.”

Knowing his family would be targeted if the Khmer Rouge took the city,
Botta scrambled to pick up his wife and two children.

There was no time to even say goodbye to his parents or other family – all
of whom were later killed.

Although Norodom Boulevard would have been the obvious route to the US
embassy, Botta took the parallel Monivong Boulevard – a seemingly banal
decision that became momentous.

Prime Minister Long Boret had asked the police to stop all ministers trying
to reach the American embassy along Norodom Boulevard to prevent them from
fleeing the Kingdom, Botta says.

“Most [of my colleagues] were killed. Except me, because I chose the right
street,” he says, the disbelief still evident all these years later.

Botta adds, however, that he did not know at that point he would be unable
to return to Cambodia.

“I realised 15 minutes after we left Phnom Penh in the helicopter that the
US was planning to leave the country forever.… I thought to myself,
'Cambodia is over'.”

*The path to politics*
As a young student in the early 1950s, Botta enjoyed the slow pace of life
in the capital.

“Sometimes I see the old pictures.… Around the Sisowath High School there
is nothing around and there are big flowers everywhere.… It’s the period I
enjoyed most in Cambodia,” he says.

His father was the chief medic at Ang Duong Hospital, where the family
would sleep several nights a week while he worked the night shift.

The other hospital medic rotating nightshifts happened to be Sinn
Sisamouth, the legendary Cambodian singer, who at that point, had yet to
break into the big-time.

“He would sing while giving vaccinations. He was close to me … and already
girls used to come to see him at the hospital,” Botta says.

“It was a small bed, but for Sisamouth, it was for ladies, even the
princesses sometimes.”

After sitting the French baccalaureate at the Lycee Descartes in 1960 at
17, Botta won a scholarship to study in Toulouse, France.

But as the only Cambodian at a French university of 10,000 students, he
felt alienated from his home country.

“Once a month, when I got my scholarship money, I would go to a small
Vietnamese restaurant to eat. It was so expensive. I was well-dressed on
payday just to eat a small piece of fish and rice.”

After completing a PhD in nuclear physics in 1967, Botta returned to
Cambodia with his betrothed Long Serey, whom he met in France.

A year later, at the age of 26, he was appointed the director of the
nation’s secondary schools.

Soon after, in 1969, as Cambodia became increasingly entangled in the
neighbouring Vietnam War, Lon Nol appointed the right-leaning Botta as
education secretary in his cabinet.

Despite the rampant and infamous corruption of the general and his
officials, Botta maintains that he personally remained steadfast against
graft – a stance that eventually forced him to resign from the cabinet.

“I told him, 'General, I cannot work as a minister and accept this
corruption. But one day if you need me to fight communism, call me.' I told
him that.”

He says that he was not aware of the Lon Nol-led coup that toppled Sihanouk
in 1970 and installed the Khmer Republic until it happened.

“It was very complicated with Sihanouk. I respected him; he respected me,
too.… We were friendly, but politically, we did not agree,” he says.

According to him, at one public meeting in 1969, Sihanouk proclaimed later
Khmer Rouge head of state Khieu Samphan and Botta as the two most
“incorruptible” people in the Kingdom.

“[Sihanouk] was very complicated. He played left against right.”

In 1973, Lon Nol called him back to be an adviser, and he was appointed as
minister of culture in 1974.

Again, his anti-corruption stance irked others in the government,
especially the generals, who would receive pay for twice the number of
soldiers than were really in their battalions.

“They would ask the postmen to put on uniforms. God, they were
incompetent.… Many times the generals went to ask Lon Nol to dismiss me,”
he says.

Late in 1974, as the Khmer Rouge drew closer to Phnom Penh, Lon Nol called
a cabinet meeting in which Botta claims he was the only one to admit the
general’s position had become untenable.

“I said, ‘Marshal, it’s time for you to take some rest.’

“That night, I did not sleep in my apartment. I asked my bodyguard and
driver to go home. I took my wife and two young children and an M-16 gun
and we went to my office inside the palace and slept there.”
<http://www.phnompenhpost.com/sites/default/files/styles/full-screen/public/6-saukham-koy-arrives%20us.jpg?itok=H1oIf-eV>

*The second coming*
Botta frequently refers to his second political coming as a “new life” and
says many people he meets today assume he had been killed.

“One day, four years ago, I went to the Sisowath High School.… I saw a lady
of 40 years old.… She asked me what I was doing there, and I said I was a
student here in 1959.

“I mentioned my name and she stared at me.… ‘Are you really Long Botta? I
thought you were dead already’.”

Despite preparing to now enter a political fray very different to what he
dealt with in the 1970s, it’s clear that Botta’s formative years in
politics, set against the backdrop of the Cold War and the rise of the
Khmer Rouge, still colour his way of looking at the country.

“I am fighting against the same leadership I was 40 years ago. But today,
it’s reverse. We are now in the countryside where people support us …
[while] before, [the Khmer Rouge] were in the countryside.”
<http://ibuddhi.blogspot.com/2007_12_01_archive.html>

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