PHNOM PENH - Twenty years ago this week
Cambodia entered a brave new dawn. The four Cambodian factions that had fought
a protracted civil war since the fall of the Khmer Rouge regime in 1979 came
together with signatories from 18 countries in Paris to sign the Agreement on a
Comprehensive Political Settlement of the Cambodia Conflict, otherwise known as
the Paris Peace Agreement. It was a document that promised the Cambodian people
peace, stability, democracy and human rights after decades of war and hardship.
The RGC has made some laudable achievements
since signing the Paris Peace Agreement. It presided over the ultimate
disintegration of the Khmer Rouge after more than three decades of war,
slaughter and widespread suffering; it established the Khmer Rouge Tribunal in
an attempt to provide justice to the victims of the genocidal regime; it signed
various international human-rights covenants and treaties; it oversaw
Cambodia's entry into the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN); and
it has achieved a fair degree of economic prosperity and development.
In the fields of democracy and human rights,
however, its accomplishments are less clear. Prime Minister Hun Sen's
government has routinely flouted many of the covenants it has ratified; further
entrenched a pervasive culture of corruption and impunity, allowed the wealth
gap between the elite and vast majority of poverty-ridden Cambodians to widen
alarmingly, and waged a sustained legislative and administrative campaign to
control every aspect of the Cambodian people's lives, showing scant regard for
the rule of law, democratic institutions and human rights and freedoms.
Freedom of expression in Cambodia has been
steadily squeezed, with those wanting to speak openly and protest peacefully
increasingly stifled by legislative and judicial means. Leveraging its strong
parliamentary majority won at the 2008 polls, the governing Cambodian People's
Party (CPP) has passed and continues to pass restrictive laws that play to its
political advantage. The courts, which are under total executive control, often
act as anti-democratic enforcer, implementing draconian measures under a
legislative veil of legitimacy.
For example, the Penal Code, which came into
force in December 2010, maintains the dissemination of "disinformation"
and defamation as criminal offenses punishable by prison terms. These codes
have since been used to silence human-rights activists and others who question
or criticize the RGC's personalities, policies and actions.
Limiting freedom of association has recently
been given government priority. The latest - and most controversial - law in
this legislative campaign is the pending Law on Associations and
Non-Governmental Organizations (LANGO), which is set to impose mandatory
registration requirements on all non-governmental organizations (NGOs) and
community-based organizations while allowing for arbitrary administrative
sanctions, including suspension and closure.
The forthcoming Law on Trade Unions, as
currently drafted, also threatens to deal a serious blow to the right of
freedom of association in Cambodia, imposing onerous registration processes and
reporting obligations on groups of employees.
Under both laws, groups must register their
activities and the very act of forming associations without official approval
will be deemed illegal. Recent events, including the suspension of an NGO
involved in monitoring a government compensation program and the official
harassment and intimidation of other watchdog and advocacy NGOs, suggest that such
laws are part of a wider effort to erode democratic space and silence civil
society.
Without a viable political opposition,
Cambodia now functions as a veritable one-party state. Sam Rainsy, the
eponymous leader of the opposition Sam Rainsy Party, is in exile fleeing a raft
of politically-motivated criminal charges. Kem Sokha, head of the Human Rights
Party, has also come under legal threat. It is not inconceivable that the next
general election in 2013 could be contested without the leaders of the two main
opposition parties.
Hun Sen outlined his intention "to make
the opposition group die" in a speech earlier this year and later pledged
to arrest a government critic whose comments about the Arab Spring were
perceived as an attempt to foment a similar popular uprising in Cambodia.
Rather than limiting the space for opposition
voices, the RGC should ensure that the government's ongoing development is
shared by all, with social development prioritized as much as economic
development. An increasingly educated and technology savvy new generation can
play its part, as young people take advantage of opportunities that their
elders were deprived of by the grim demands of the Khmer Rouge's brutal regime.
A rising professional class envisions Cambodia
as a high-tech, educated, prosperous country playing a leading role in ASEAN.
Under the current regime and restrictions, it's a democratic vision that risks
going unrealized.
There is much that the international community
can do. While the RGC contends that the implementation and protection of
democracy and human rights is a sovereign issue not subject to international
interference, the 18 other signatories of the Paris Peace Agreement - as well
as the United Nations (UN) - are legally bound to protect and promote democracy
and human rights in Cambodia.
These parties can use their economic and
political leverage to ensure that the long-suffering Cambodian people can at
long last enjoy the democracy and human rights that were promised to them two
decades ago.
All stakeholders in Cambodia's future - the
RGC, the signatories to the Paris Peace Agreement, the UN, the donors and the
people of Cambodia - should use this anniversary as an opportunity to ensure
that their substantial commitment and investment is not squandered.
Ou Virak
Ou Virak is president of the Phnom Penh-based
Cambodian Center for Human Rights.
Speaking Freely is an Asia Times Online feature that allows guest writers
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