Cambodia's New War
[for resources]
by Katrin Redfern
www.thedailybeast.com/b, April
16, 2009
Cambodia is at war again. This time, the
battles surround who will control resources-land, timber, fisheries,
oil-with a corrupt elite taking over the nation's emerging export
economy, while international donors turn a blind eye and 14 million
Cambodians suffer.
A new American president, many Cambodians
hope, might change all that. Sochua Mu, an opposition leader and
founder of the women's movement in Cambodia, recently returned
to the U.S., lobbying Secretary of State Hillary Clinton to take
a firmer line on democracy and human rights in her long-suffering
country. "I needed to see the people in the new administration
to urge them to re-assess U.S. foreign policy," says Sochua
in an interview with The Daily Beast. "Cambodia is a democracy
on paper but in reality a dictatorship. Our party activists are
murdered because they fight for justice-life is still cheap in
Cambodia. Human trafficking, drug trafficking, land grabbing,
and forced evictions are all carried out under the nose of the
government."
Sochua Mu's story is uniquely Cambodian.
Forced to flee for her life at 18 in the early 1970s as the Vietnam
War spilled over the border, she left behind her parents, who
vanished, as did one-quarter of the country's population during
the Khmer Rouge's reign of terror. Sochua wound up in America,
won a scholarship to the University of California at Berkeley,
and worked as a counselor and translator for the Cambodian refugees
who began to trickle over. She eventually became a U.S. citizen.
During the 1980s, she returned to Southeast
Asia, organizing schooling for children and social services for
women in the refugee camps set up by the U.N. on the border between
Thailand and Cambodia. In 1989, she was finally allowed to re-enter
her homeland, "a country in ruins." "I would take
my young children on walks in streets where I learned to bike,
where I wandered with my childhood friends, where I went to school,
all the years of joy, of happiness, of deep feelings of comfort
came back to me," she says. "I came back to help rebuild
a nation. The war and genocide also changed my people. They have
lost their sense of trust for each other, they have become hard
inside and desperate for just daily survival."
Sochua started the first women's organization
in Cambodia, Khemera, designed to poor urban women earn a better
living. She campaigned to include women's rights and concerns
into the country's new constitution, drafted in 1993, and became
involved in efforts to rescue girls caught in Cambodia's thriving
sex trade. In 1998, Sochua ran for election and won a seat in
parliament, taking over the women's affairs ministry, which had
previously been run by men. In a country that considers women
inferior, Sochua mobilized 25,000 female candidates to run for
commune elections in 2002. It was a first for Cambodia, and 900
of them were elected.
She negotiated an agreement with Thailand
that allowed Cambodian women trafficked as sex workers to return
to their home country instead of being jailed. She pioneered the
use of TV commercials to spread the word about trafficking to
vulnerable populations. Her work in Cambodia also supports campaigns
to end domestic violence and the spread of HIV/AIDS, as well as
women's workplace conditions. In 2005, she was nominated for a
Nobel Peace Prize for her work against sex trafficking of women.
Her position in high government put her
in direct conflict with the Cambodia's long-ruling prime minister,
Hun Sen. Rather than participate in the corruption she saw around
her, Sochua Mu renounced the leadership and joined the primary
opposition party in parliament. Last week, Sochua announced that
she is considering legal action against the prime minister for
allegedly using derogatory and threatening language against her
in a speech he made last month during a visit to her parliamentary
district. The speech, widely reported on Cambodian TV and other
media, warned villagers not to seek help from members of the opposition
party, but to approach the ruling Cambodian People's Party, and
allegedly referred to Sochua using a Khmer term cheung kland-a
gangster or unruly person, which has an especially insulting connation
for women.
Her most frequent public disagreement
with Hun Sen surrounds what she sees as a failure to prevent people
in her district from suffering loss of property and livelihoods
at the hands of powerful investors, often with the backing of
local authorities and the military. Most Cambodians still depend
on small-scale agriculture, forest exploitation, and fishing for
their livelihoods but, because of the country's turbulent recent
history, land ownership is generally undocumented and often contested.
As a result, it is easy for the powerful to acquire land to develop.
More than 150,000 Cambodians, according to Sochua, were victims
of forced evictions and land-grabbing in 2007 alone. Studies have
estimated that such concessions cover as much as one-third of
the entire area of Cambodia.
"It is now common practice for powerful
corporations and government officials to utilize armed forces
to push citizens off their rightfully and legally held land,"
says Sochua. "These evictions are often violent, with soldiers
wielding guns, tear gas and Tasers and burning houses to the ground,
while citizens are beaten, maimed and arrested."
Cambodia's economy relies on three principal
sources of income: tourism, agriculture, and textiles. The United
States is the largest overseas market for the latter. As former
U.S. Ambassador to Cambodia Joseph Mussomeli put it, "Levi
Strauss or the Gap could destroy this country on a whim."
George W. Bush's policy, as Sochua saw
it, focused on military and security-centered aid. According to
the U.S. Agency for International Development, the U.S. provided
Cambodia $54 million last year and $700 million total since the
agency opened an office in the country in 1992. Other international
donors, meanwhile, have done little better in holding the Cambodian
government accountable on human rights, preferring "closed-door
diplomacy," as she calls it, to public criticism. "This
practice has yielded next to no reforms," she says, "and
donors continue to be satisfied with token actions taken by the
government to give a façade to democracy and social justice."
Even that oversight is at risk. Chevron
discovered oil offshore several years ago, and the Cambodian government
says it hopes to begin pumping oil in 2011. The IMF estimated
last year that the country could earn as much as $1.7 billion
from oil within 10 years of the date that pumping begins-a big
deal for this poor country, which relies on donors for half of
its annual budget, but also more money that won't carry any accountability.
Some aid agencies have called for a moratorium
on aid until basic governance and transparency frameworks are
in place. Sochua says that won't happen until there's a new regime.
"That can only happen when we have a real election that is
free and fair," she says. "The West should insist on
that, otherwise all the aid they have poured into Cambodia will
not work".
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