Heng Sinith/Associated Press
By
GLENYS KINNOCK
The New York Times
Published: October 16, 2012
There’s a lot of hand-wringing in New York right now about what the
United Nations should do to stop brutal, state-looting dictators. A good
place to start would be not to consider them as candidates for a seat
on the Security Council.
On Thursday, Cambodia’s Prime Minister Hun Sen will find out if his
country has won the Council’s Asia-Pacific seat. Cambodia is unlikely to
beat South Korea’s bid, but it shouldn’t be in the running at all.
Cambodia is in the grip of an unprecedented land-grabbing crisis as an
increasingly confident and insatiable elite helps itself to pretty much
any natural resource it wants, ignoring its own laws and bulldozing
local communities and dissenters out of the way. The Security Council
ought to be focusing on tackling these issues, not giving the government
a chance at a seat at the highest table in international
decision-making.
Sadly, such tacit support is not new. For decades, Cambodia’s allies
have turned a blind eye to the systematic stripping of the country’s
rich natural heritage and the violence that comes with it.
In 1998, I was the European Union’s special representative to the
Cambodian national elections. Hun Sen had just consolidated power in a
bloody coup, exiling his co-prime minister and executing at least 100 other opponents.
He was duly re-elected amid talk of reform and prosperity for
Cambodia’s long-suffering population. A boom was indeed possible —
Cambodia is richly blessed with minerals, timber, land and oil. But
progress would have required a government committed to the interests of
its people. Hun Sen and his cronies were manifestly not that government;
but the world bought into the myth, funneling in billions of aid
dollars over the next 15 years.
The social and environmental catastrophe that followed was predictable.
More than two million hectares of land has been transferred to
industrial agricultural companies, mostly from small farmers.
Communities are rarely consulted or compensated when their land is
turned into huge plantations for export crops like rubber or sugar, and
deforestation rates continue to be some of the highest in the region. Half the national budget still comes from aid,
yet donors, some of the most important of whom sit on the Security
Council, have consistently failed to ask what is happening to the
resource wealth that should go to building the schools and hospitals.
Next month, the contrast between this grim reality and the government’s
image abroad will become even more stark, as world leaders arrive in
Phnom Penh for the East Asia Summit. Hundreds of families face eviction
to ensure that the airport can be extended and the red carpet fully
rolled out for delegates, including President Obama.
When asked about the evictions, which locals say they will resist, the
U.S. Embassy in Phnom Penh commented “these are Cambodian government
actions they are taking. It’s not just President Obama coming.”
As such “government actions” have intensified, so has the crackdown
against those who speak out against them. The shooting of a 14-year-old
girl during a forced eviction in May 2012 came just three weeks after
the murder by armed forces of the prominent anti-logging activist Chut
Wutty. Last month, the journalist Hang Serei Oudom was found in the back
of a car with an axe in his head — he’d been investigating timber
cartels in the northeast.
Beatings and intimidation of activists and ordinary citizens are rife,
while the courts seem willing to lock up whomever the regime and its
associates tell them to. Two weeks ago the investigation into Wutty’s
murder was dropped and the regime critic and radio broadcaster Mam
Sonando was jailed for 20 years on trumped up charges of inciting
rebellion.
It is tempting to describe what is happening as a descent into chaos. It
is not chaos: It’s the systematic capture of the state and its
resources and the elimination of free speech by a profoundly corrupt
regime, and it can be stopped. Global Witness, an NGO that works to
expose the corrupt exploitation of natural resources, has long argued
that donor countries could do more to pressure Phnom Penh to implement
promised reforms and stop ignoring its own laws. Such a change would be
good for business too — investors increasingly express concern about the
risk of being associated with corruption and human rights abuses in the
country.
Cambodia’s future won’t turn on its candidacy for the Security Council,
or foreign announcements about the East Asia Summit — its problems run
deeper than that. But the world has consistently failed to speak up for
Cambodia’s people, and this silence has been crucial in sealing their
current fate.
Rather than standing by as Cambodia looks for new ways to secure a
veneer of respectability on the world stage, the United Nations and
member states who provide the country with aid must start asking the
hard questions about what the Cambodian government is up to in its own
beautiful, resource-rich back yard.
Baroness Glenys Kinnock is a member of the House of Lords and of the Global Witness Advisory Board.
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