By Stuart Alan Becker
Tuesday, 01 May 2012
Phnom Penh Post
One of Cambodia’s most important Thai investors, Supachai Verapuchong,
articulates a vision of Cambodia as part of a “golden land” that
together with Thailand, Myanmar, Laos and Vietnam will become the
agricultural bread basket of the world with high-speed interconnectivity
of trade, technology and common spirit.
Supachai invoked a vision of the five nations to create once again
the “Suvarnabhumi” in Sanskrit, or “land of gold”, which refers to the
entire Southeast Asian region.
Supachai said about 230 years
after the death of Gautama Buddha, the emperor of India called Ashoka
the Great, (269-232 BC) dedicated the later part of his life to the
spread of Buddhism across Asia, promoting non-violence, love, truth and
vegetarianism.
“This is the first king who sent the monks to
expand Buddhism to this region,” Supachai said. “He was sending the
monks to expand the Buddhism to this land.”
Supachai thinks Ashoka the Great’s vision of a golden land can be embraced today.
“I
feel that Thailand, Cambodia, Myanmar and Laos, and Vietnam, because we
believe in the same thing, can have a wonderful future if we behave
morally. I would like to see the leaders of our region in the ASEAN
economic community talking about these good principles,” he said.
Supachai
first arrived in Cambodia in 1991 when he was 28 and there was very
little infrastructure in Cambodia and very few restaurants, hotels or
coffee shops.
“The distance is only 550 kilometres from Bangkok to here. Why did this happen in our neighbouring country?”
He
invested in Cambodia and built the Royal Phnom Penh Hotel, only to see
it burned down in the anti-Thai riots of 2003. He understood the
complex reasons for the mob action and didn’t fault the Cambodians.
He praises Prime Minister Hun Sen’s response to the mob action and his compensation.
“The
prime minister acted in the right way and the moral way and he
compensated in the right way. I think Hun Sen is a dynamic, reasonable
person. He’s dynamic and has a vision and straightforward person. What I
believe is that without the strength of the government you cannot have
success. The leader has to be strong, especially in a developing
country.”
Supachai built the Phokeethra Country Club in 2004 to
show the Thai investors and Thai people his confidence in Cambodia and
the Cambodian people.
“My goal was to show them we could still be confident in this country and this government. “
Since
he and his team first organised the Johnny Walker golf tournament in
Siem Reap in 2007, foreign visitors have come from around the region and
around the world.
Supachai employs 1,800 people in Cambodia. He
owns the majority shares in the Sofitel hotels both in Phnom Penh and
Siem Reap as well as TV 5, and a pharmaceutical distribution company.
He
says he would like to promote the principles of Buddhism right across
the region so that Ashoka the Great’s vision can be realised once again
right through Southeast Asia as the ASEAN free trade area transforms it.
“You
must not only have success in the business, but also in the family and
keep growing the business in the right way,” Supachai said. “If your
only goal in life is to get rich and you get rich by taking advantage of
someone else, that is not sustainable. If we are talking about the
Buddhism, we cannot fight each other.”
Supachai says he thinks
the whole Southeast Asian region is a very “rich land” and can be one
big, interconnected center of agricultural output.
“We can
control rubber, palm oil, rice and sugar cane. The food supply of the
world is here. Indochina will change a lot in the next 15 to 20 years
and link with China and India,” he said.
“This region will
totally change when the trains come,” he said. “If we give people the
knowledge, the morals and the Buddhism, we will be wealthy and in good
hands with peace and prosperity and the food supply of the world is
here. This is my vision.”
Supachai called on people to make
decisions for the future, not for today and conduct moral business
instead of short-term business for profits.
“If you make the
first shirt button wrong, all the buttons are wrong. Whatever you make a
decision it is for the future. I don’t want the money today; I would
like to make moral business. Don’t hurt any other people.”
Without an underlying morality, terms like gross domestic product are meaningless, he said.
“If
we can make these kinds of inputs in five countries with 240 million
people, we can maintain economic growth and harmony and balance in our
strategy, like having two wheels,” he said. “Half of the world’s
population can fly here in less than five hours.”
Supachai said everybody creates their own lives and their own futures.
“Money
is not the total path. You must to think about giving. When you give to
poor people, what you get in return, you get in your spirit. If you do
bad things, the cancer will spread everywhere. You can create your own
life and your own future. Some people get old but still look young
because of the way they work from their heart. Not from the salary, but
because they are passionate to work.”
To contact the reporter on this story: Stuart Alan Becker at stuart.becker@gmail.com
4 comments:
“Money is not the total path. You must to think about giving. When you give to poor people, what you get in return, you get in your spirit. If you do bad things, the cancer will spread everywhere. You can create your own life and your own future. Some people get old but still look young because of the way they work from their heart. Not from the salary, but because they are passionate to work.”
If money is not the total path, why is AH Hun Sen killing and selling everything to the Vietnamese, the Chinese and to you Siem.
Giving to the poor by taking their land and then taking their house, but give them a bag of rice afterward?
AH Hun Sen has done many bad things. His whole families has killed many people, and committed many crimes, they all have cancers, but they are still allowed to be inflict pain to the nation.
I hope you Siem enjoy the modern slavery of our cheap labor ah Hun Sen ass kisser.
Just love your motto and I understand well your Motto.
This idea was the 1000 yeras old theory of our former great King Jayawarman the VII under the great Khmer Empire.
But it is a long way to go, because not all of the peopl understand your project.
This Siem motto is to use his opportunity to enslave Khmer for their cheap labour skill. His business ties and his congratulation to Hun Sen and his peace offering skill is nothing more than him bending over for Hun Sen men. Any normal Siem can see the attitude of Hun Sen and his men as thugs, but this Siem compares Hun Sen to Buddha?
This guy is great.
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