A Change of Guard

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Thursday 4 July 2013

Pressure grows for US to cut aid to Cambodia សមាជិករដ្ឋសភា និង សមាជិកព្រឹទ្ធសភាអាមេរិកាំងជម្រុញឲ្យរដ្ឋាភិបាលសហរដ្ឋអាមេរិកកាត់ជំនួយដល់រដ្ឋាភិបាលលោក ហ៊ុន សែន

By MATTHEW PENNINGTON
Associated Press 

WASHINGTON -- Lawmakers and human rights activists are pushing for a cut in the more than $70 million in annual U.S. aid to Cambodia if its prime minister, Hun Sen, extends his 28-year rule in unfair elections this month.
Whether one of Asia's longest-serving and most ruthless leaders cares much is another matter.
His political strength has only grown since the last election in 2008 and support from a more generous benefactor, China, has risen. That's fueling fears Hun Sen - no stranger to criticism from Western donors - will ignore calls to ensure the upcoming vote is conducted properly.
The Obama administration has deepened ties with nations across Southeast Asia. It has encouraged the oppressive military regime in nearby Myanmar to open up, but relations with Cambodia have worsened in recent months. During the first visit by a U.S. president there in November, Barack Obama devoted his entire meeting with Hun Sen to human rights and democracy.
It hasn't had the desired effect.
In the run-up to the July 28 elections, opposition lawmakers were expelled from parliament for merging parties to contest the vote. Their exiled leader, Sam Rainsy, has been excluded from the election because of his criminal conviction on charges that are widely regarded as being politically motivated.
The State Department has said the exclusion of Rainsy calls into question the legitimacy of Cambodia's democratic process. There are also doubts over the neutrality of the election commission and the composition of voter rolls.
Lawmakers from both the House and Senate are introducing resolutions seeking to reduce aid, particularly direct assistance to the government, if the State Department does not judge the election to be "credible and competitive."

The resolutions also call for Washington to urge international financial institutions that pour hundreds of millions into Cambodian development, such as the Asian Development Bank, to do the same. The Senate resolution is co-sponsored by influential Republicans Marco Rubio and Lindsey Graham, who sits on a powerful appropriations committee that oversees government spending.
Cambodian government spokesmen declined to comment about that prospect. Ruling party lawmaker Chheang Vun told The Associated Press he had no idea what aid the U.S. gives, "but they did help a lot the opposition party."
Washington denies taking sides, although Rainsy has taken heart from what he sees as a hardening in the U.S. position.
"The U.S. administration has sent the right message to the Cambodian government, that it won't be business as usual for Mr. Hun Sen if the next election is not seen to be acceptable. Then Hun Sen will face condemnation and isolation," he said by phone from his exile in Paris.
But it's not yet clear what action the Obama administration is prepared to take.
Secretary of State John Kerry is preoccupied with the turbulent Middle East, feeding perceptions that the Obama administration's "pivot" to Asia is losing steam. With key assistant secretary positions still open, there's uncertainty about who is running policy toward that region.
Kerry has a long association with Cambodia and Hun Sen. Frank Jannuzi, a former Kerry aide who is now with Amnesty International USA, said his former boss ought to call in a favor or two.
During his tenure on the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, Kerry helped persuade Hun Sen to agree to a U.N.-backed tribunal to try former Khmer Rouge leaders and also supported U.S.-Cambodia trade - now worth nearly $3 billion a year. He pushed security cooperation on the search for the remains of American servicemen missing from the Vietnam War and the training of a counterterrorism unit commanded by Hun Sen's son, who went on to graduate from West Point.
"Kerry has a personal touch with Hun Sen," said Jannuzi. "He ought to use it."
U.S. officials are considering reducing aid, among possible options, though there are differences of opinion over how effective that would be.
Much of the current American aid to Cambodia is for fighting diseases like malaria and AIDS that afflict the nation's poorest, or for supporting nongovernmental groups that are probably the most effective check on government abuses, like land confiscations that have dispossessed tens of thousands of Cambodians.
Concerns over confiscations prompted the World Bank to suspend lending two years ago, yet in large part, Hun Sen has managed to keep international assistance flowing.
In the past decade, Hun Sen has overseen modest economic growth and stability in a country plagued by desperate poverty and nearly destroyed by the genocidal Khmer Rouge rule in the 1970s. And he can look to China for more support. China's loans and grants to Cambodia over the past two decades have totaled about $2.7 billion - compared with $1.2 billion in assistance from the U.S. over that period. Offshore oil and gas reserves are expected to provide more domestic revenue in coming years.
"What outsiders say about his tactics is of little or no concern to Hun Sen," said historian David Chandler, a Cambodia expert at Australia's Monash University. "He knows that there's not much besides scolding that outside nations are willing or able to do."
After Hun Sen toppled his co-prime minister in a 1997 coup and consolidated his dominance, Congress did put restrictions on U.S. aid for a decade. But relations have since expanded, including the start of military contacts in 2006, although that assistance is less than $1 million a year.
John Sifton, Asia advocacy director for Human Rights Watch, who will testify at a congressional hearing Tuesday on Cambodia, expressed confidence the U.S. will cut some aid after the election and said that would be a blow to Hun Sen.
"It's about legitimacy," Sifton said, "not money."
Associated Press writer Sopheng Cheang in Phnom Penh, Cambodia, contributed to this report.

Read more here: http://www.miamiherald.com/2013/07/04/3484514_p2/pressure-grows-for-us-to-cut-aid.html#storylink=cpy

5 comments:

Anonymous said...

IT DEMOCRACY COUNTRY, NOTHING U CAN DO, IF, THEY WANTED TO CUT AIDE ,SO LET IT BE..

IT FREEDOM OF CHOICE,,

NO MATTER, HOW HARD WE TRY, STILL LOSING IT...

Anonymous said...

First it's good & bad:

Good:
1. U.S is still the leaders of a free world, American government policies will have effect in close door diplomatic. Western countries like the EU, North America still listen to the U. S. A.

2. Cambodian main economic growth was still base on garment industries. Almost all of garment were traded with America which has no trade tax on Cambodia products. EU also had similar trade with Czmbodia. If U. S & EU stop this favorable trade agreement with Cambodia. Most Chinese & others business will leave Cambodia. This will put Cambodia economic growth to a halt.

3. Also this will shine light on the legitimitcy of
Hun Sen's powers. Most Democracy countries in the world will reconsider their relation with CPP government.

BAD:
1. Most U.S & EU aides are for humanitarian helps like Cambodia's poor & the helpless. This will HURT the poor & helpless Khmers in immediate future.

2. Which Hun Sen's government never care for
any way. Hun Sen will not be bother by it. China will pick up the slag. This open more windows for corruptions. Less western influenced is better for a corrupted regime like Hun Sen. Less European in Cambodia to keep an eyes on Hun Sen's thugs.

3. UN which still dominated by U.S & EU will find a hard time to support Cambodia in any
case including the current case at ICJ.

This is just my own personal opinions.

bother by loosing this small aides.

Anonymous said...

USA is the democracy country.
she has the rights to express, freedom of expression

however, she can not force cambodia to follow thier foot prints...

Anonymous said...

If the US cannot force Cambodia to respect freedom and expression, let the US cut down the aid and urge all the countries to stop investing in Cambodia like North Korea. You will see how strong is America.
Who care about Cambodian people if they don't care about their own lives by choosing the wrong leader.
I am also Khmer. I work so hard to earn money in the US. I don't want to pay the tax to help the bad leader.

Anonymous said...

5 July 2013 2:47 am, 5 July 2013 6:07 pm, 5 July 2013 3:27 pm, 5 July 2013 4:54 am,

Because you are a Vietnamese/Yuon Dog Eater when you said that and claimed you are a Khmer who talked shitty and negative.