Friday, 07 September 2012
By Stuart White and Phak Seangly
Phnom Penh Post
In less than a week, 18-year-old Heng
Tina, who has just finished his high-school exam, will take another test
that determines whether he’ll get a scholarship to go to technical
school, a development that would put him one step closer to his dream of
becoming an engineer and designing skyscrapers.
But according to
a law passed in 2006, though never meaningfully enforced, Tina should
be taking exams of a different sort – such as marksmanship and physical
fitness – as a newly minted conscript in the Royal Cambodian Armed
Forces.
Under the law, which many Cambodians – including Tina –
have never heard of, every Cambodian man aged 18 to 23 is obliged to
serve in the armed forces for 18 months.
It is something many say
would do more harm than good, especially considering penal police
director Lieutenant General Mok Chito’s announcement last week that more
than 1,200 RCAF soldiers deserted their posts in the first eight months
of 2012 alone.
According to the US Central Intelligence Agency’s
world fact book, more than 150,000 Cambodian men reach “militarily
significant age”, that is, 16 years old, every year, and conscripting
every 18-year-old male in the Kingdom would cause a significant spike in
the size of the military, despite years-long efforts to trim its size.
“Cambodia
is overloaded with a number of soldiers,” said opposition Sam Rainsy
lawmaker Son Chhay, who has seen troop counts as high as 200,000 –
though he believes the actual number to be closer to 70,000.
Many
of the soldiers that were “demobilised” in the past were simply ghost
soldiers, he said, names on lists meant to swell a battalion’s payroll
so that uncollected pay cheques could be taken by higher-ranking
officers, of whom there are also too many.
“The government has
to clean house . . . I’ve lost count of the generals. There are more
stars on the shoulders of Cambodian soldiers than there are in the sky,”
Chhay said.
And, he added, the military’s already-low pay is
responsible for the trend of soldiers moonlighting as security guards
for private corporations.
Ho Chantrea, a 29-year-old soldier
stationed in Phnom Penh, declined to discuss the particulars of his own
pay, but said that many of his friends took outside security jobs to
augment their income.
“The salary is not enough,” said Chantrea,
adding that he wanted to follow his friends’ example. “I also want to
get extra jobs, but not yet.”
The lowest-ranking soldiers, Chantrea said, make only about $50 a month.
Soam
Chivoan, who, at age 20, is another would-be draftee, said that given
his druthers, he’d stick with the mobile booth he now runs, adding that
even if the army paid better, he’d rather stay put.
That low salary, said Chhay, often has adverse effects.
“That’s why you can see soldiers being used by a private company to intimidate people,” Chhay said.
“There
are so many abuses being raised by so many soldiers already, so you
need soldiers who are qualified … not drunken two- or three-star
generals who will set a bad habit for our young soldiers,” he added.
On
August 31, police official Mok Chito blamed deserters, who he said
often sell their service weapons, for a spike in armed robberies. In
May, the military came under fire from rights groups after a soldier
fatally shot a 14-year-old in a forced land eviction in Kratie
province’s Pro Ma village, and reports of soldiers’ involvement in land
evictions are a near weekly occurrence.
Independent political
analyst Lao Mong Hay warned that adding more soldiers without
significant reforms wasn’t likely to make things any better.
“I
think that it’s not good to have a number of young people familiar with
using guns, that after a while you let loose without discipline,” he
said.
According to Mong Hay, a military that provided
conscripts with a set of skills, and options for the future, could be a
positive development, but the current system would be unlikely to
produce such results.
Furthermore, he said, Cambodia has neither the human nor financial resources for full implementation of the 2006 law.
Nicolas
Agostino, a technical assistant at the rights NGO Adhoc, also expressed
concerns that the law would be unevenly enforced, and could have
adverse political side effects.
“Those who are more well-off or well-connected would be able to evade conscription,” he said.
Multiple
officials in various branches of the Ministry of National Defence,
including the ministry’s policy arm, declined to comment on the
conscription law.
Press and Quick Reaction Unit spokesman Ek Tha
directed questions to Council of Ministers spokesman Phay Siphan, who
said he was unfamiliar with the law.
3 comments:
Its nothing but Hun sen personal's armies,they recruit these young guys to protect him and his families,maybe his Yuon armies desert him or maybe he didn't trust Yuon any more,want to use these young guys instead.Is that well pay? My brother is in army station at Preach Vihea get paid 50 dollars month.Hun sen provide armies got pay 200 dollars a month.That is sad...
i'm proud of them, young men & young women, who loved their countries...
we must encourages them to do more & to loves more of our country, to loves more khmer peoples .,
it is the best motivation ...
It's finally happening, my ideas all along.
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