Monday, 4 November 2013
by Dr. Gaffar Peang-Meth
November 1, 2013
As Cambodia's government is delegitimized by ongoing political deadlock
resulting from the dispute between the Cambodian People's Party and the
opposition Cambodia National Rescue Party over the outcome of July elections, it is unfortunate that very few Cambodians understand that there can be nowinner in this feud. The country is stuck in stalemate and neither of the parties sees value in compromise for the good of the nation.
It is tragic that the international community that spent four billion
dollars to bring the four Cambodian warring factions under the umbrella
of the 1991 Paris Peace Agreements today appears helpless as the free
and democratic Cambodia envisioned and enshrined in the Agreements is
instead a fractious place whose leader for four decades defiantly clings
to power.
The Khmers, whom Cambodian politicians and international actors
professed to serve, are the real losers in this theater of political
brinksmanship.
I have written before about this political deadlock. I am aware that Cambodian democrats
are disappointed with some of my expressed views, as they have expected
me to uphold the political line of the Cambodia National Rescue Party.
Therein is the nub of a problem when dealing with Cambodians and
politics: Cambodians tend to see others as being with them or against
them. Their political perspectives do not often make room for inclusive
collaboration. They enter the
political arena with fists clenched. Each group blames the other for
the stalemate and a concept that is essential to all functional
relationships – trust – is absent.
Here and there I've quoted the great human rights advocate, 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."
I still have some acquaintances and friends in the Monarchist, Republican, CNRP and CPP circles. Whether I was at Johns Hopkins
or at the University of Guam I told my students I came to build bridges
to connect one side to the other, not to widen further the gaps between
them. I wrote recently about life as a series of choices and
compromises. Humility helps make life more pleasurable; being
considerate of others' opinions and feelings. And so, I espoused in my
writing some time ago the necessity for Cambodian Buddhists to brush up
on their Lord Buddha's teaching as guiding principles in the struggle
for freedom, justice, and the rule of law.
A former political prisoner at Koh Tral during the French rule of Indochina, Boun Chan Mol, published a book in 1973, Charet Khmer, or
Khmer Behavioral Traits, dealing with more than two dozen cultural
traits common among Khmer which he saw as impediments to progress at
best, destructive at worst, and worthy of change.
The trait ranked first among those needing to be changed is Kumnit A'thma Anh, or
the Idea of"I'ism," practiced by Khmer leaders through history, through
which the idea that the leader is the best and only one qualified to
lead is advanced. Chan Mol lamented Khmer leaders' lack of any intention
to develop the capacity of others to become successful leaders. He
appealed to Khmer to be considerate of others' views and to reject a
self-centered opinion that is disrespectful of others. Everyone has
ideas to contribute.
Among other traits, two are worth examining. In Kumnit Sangsoek Suor Pouch, Chan
Mol deals with Khmer behavioral propensities for generational
vendettas. These"blood feuds" are perpetuated even when the reasons for
the original rift are forgotten,
as actors seek to eradicate physically and by undermining their moral
authority all members of families engaged in these long-standing
quarrels.Kumnit Ph'chanh Ph'chal refers
to the destructive propensities: Even in a physical fight when an
opponent is knocked down one rushes to kick him over and over until he
loses consciousness and dies."If the fallen opponent is still breathing,
this is not victory. This is charet Khmer," or a Khmer behavioral trait.
Not all Cambodians like the writing of Boun Chan Mol, who despite his
critique says at the end of his book,"I die for Khmer, am born for
Khmer, and live for Khmer," and expresses a wish to be reborn as Khmer.
Fortunately for Cambodia, the great majority of the country's population
is young and most likely not interested in nor tainted by what their
elders have inherited through time. Unfortunately, many of those elders
from both political parties are in the thick of today's political
impasse.
The question is can this political deadlock be broken? And how?
Absent trust, the gap that separates the two political factions seems
only to have widened. Hardliners on both sides relentlessly push
forward, sure that their party can be the"winner" – A'thma Anh –
regardless of what the other side, or anyone else, thinks or does.
There's only one sun that shines in their universe: their sun. Those in
their party with a different perspective are in danger of having their
loyalty questioned. As the fabric of the political parties is frayed,
the prospect for fruitful negotiations between them is lessened.
In the present Khmer context, Hun Sen and CPP strategists know they
cannot govern Cambodia while half of the electorate takes to the streets
to challenge their rule and demand a leadership change. The CNRP
leadership, too, knows it cannot remain on the political sidelines
basing the party's relevancy on populist policies and mass protests that fortunately have been relatively peaceful and nonviolent until now.
The July 28 election was a wake-up call for Hun Sen and the CPP. The
party and its leaders are not as secure in their roles as they had
thought. Even with 55 parliamentary seats, an increase of nearly 30
seats from the last parliament, the CNRP won an outstanding victory. As
the CPP is a bit off balance, the CNRP is basking in the popularity and
support of a people known culturally to kowtow to authority but who now
are active, vocal, circulating in the streets of the capital, and
expressing their views and grievances against the regime and demanding
leadership change without fear. Both parties eyeball one another and are
carrying their political brinksmanship to an unknown conclusion.
The rhetorical duel between the two parties only fuels their rift. Both
sides are responsible. One side says red, the other says blue. One side
suggests, the other puts up roadblock. Both sides recognize the need to
negotiate, but how can negotiations take place without trust and a
political will to make things happen? How is trust developed if
confidential discussions are leaked and agreements misrepresented for
political purposes? How can talks get underway when the players insist
upon unacceptable pre-conditions?
Meanwhile, the UN and the 18 Paris Peace Accord
signatories must acknowledge that Article 3 of those agreements,
affirming for Cambodians"the rights and freedoms embodied in the
Universal Declaration of Human Rights and other relevant international
human rights instruments" has been trampled upon, yet they conduct
business as usual with the discredited government.
An Anecdote
At a conference on ASEAN attended by academics and ASEAN officials, I
declined a private impromptu lunch meeting sought by a ranking CPP
official. Later, I agreed to meet the official on neutral ground. I
found the gentleman, accompanied by two aides, to be likeable, pleasant,
moderate, and relatively open with his views.
After friendly conversation in Khmer for a period, the official asked if
I would share with him what I see as problems for his government to
tackle as it seeks to bring about reforms. Rather than deal with
individual issues, I spoke more broadly, suggesting that unless Hun Sen
and the CPP believe there is truth in Sam Rainsy's allegations of
election fraud, the prime minister should accede to the request that a
bipartisan committee investigate the assertions of irregularities.
Observing that the official was open to hearing my thoughts, I observed
that his prime minister would have won admiration and support from many
had he seized the moment to create a democratic balance with a CNRP in
the National Assembly as a counter-balance to the Executive branch under
the CPP. Its actions seem to indicate that the CPP has no desire to
reconcile with the CNRP, but to divide and weaken the CNRP by sowing
distrust among its rank and file toward its leadership. I expressed
dissatisfaction with the Machiavellian way the Prime Minister revealed
Sam Rainsy's alleged request for the position of President of the
National Assembly.
My host engaged in a provocative discussion about public and
confidential agreements and asked where I have seen a minority party
presiding over a legislature? I later read that those were actually Hun
Sen's words as he laughed off questions from the press. But, was it not
Hun Sen himself who, after losing a national election supervised by the
UN in 1993, threatened war and had himself appointed Second Prime
Minister after Prince Ranariddh, First Prime Minister, thereby making
the royal government with two heads, and then in 1997, before the next
election, pulled a coup sending Prince Ranariddh fleeing into exile, as
Hun Sen had more than 100 royalist officers and soldiers killed?
That the official was sitting and listening to my diatribe was amazingly
positive to me. He took it well when I suggested he admit that at least
half of the country did not vote for Hun Sen and the CPP, and that
today's Cambodians have demonstrated no fear of authority. The official
responded that this lack of fear among the Khmer was thanks to
Cambodia's embrace of democracy. Not quite the case, but a fair comment,
I thought.
I could not let the meeting conclude without a parting thought: From
what I observed and read, today's CPP is following a course of action
similar to that undertaken by the Lon Nol regime in the 1970s. That
particular strategy led to the disintegration of the Lon Nol government.
Moral of this anecdote: I reminded the smiling official of John F.
Kennedy's words,""Let us never negotiate out of fear. But let us never
fear to negotiate." I also recited a Khmer proverb, Sa'orb Chumpup Leu, or One (will always) encounter what one hates, and Klach chaul oy chit, or Fear something get closer.
The AHRC is not responsible for the views shared in this article, which do not necessarily reflect its own.
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.
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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