October 15, 2012
WA Today
By Paul Tighe and Daniel Ten Kate
Shifting allegiances ... Sihanouk attends a ceremony to transfer relics of the Buddha in Phnom Penh in 2002. Photo: AFP
Norodom Sihanouk, the former king of Cambodia who survived
half a century of political manoeuvring in which his country was sucked
into the Vietnam War and endured the murderous regime of Pol Pot, has
died. He was 89.The monarch, who abdicated in 1955 and again 49 years later, died of natural causes in Beijing where he was undergoing medical treatment, Associate Press reported. Sihanouk, who maintained houses in the Chinese capital and Pyongyang, North Korea, suffered from diabetes and prostate cancer.
His principles were self-preservation and terrific patriotismPrince Sisowath Thomico, a royal family member who was also Sihanouk’s assistant, said the former king suffered a heart attack at a Beijing hospital.‘‘His death was a great loss to Cambodia,’’ Thomico said, adding that Sihanouk had dedicated his life ‘‘for the sake of his entire nation, country and for the Cambodian people’’.
Turbulent decades ... Sihanouk meets the Australian
prime minister Gough Whitlam in Beijing as the Vietnam War neared its
end in November 1973.
Notorious for switching allegiances, Sihanouk oversaw
independence from France, broke off relations with the US during the
Vietnam War and weathered two periods of involvement with Pol Pot's
Khmer Rouge, the regime blamed for the deaths of about one in five of
the country's people.
"He has a mixed legacy," said David Chandler, a US diplomat stationed
in Cambodia in the 1950s, who lectures at Monash University. "His
principles were self-preservation and terrific patriotism. He made
people feel that they were worthwhile and their country was worthwhile."
Sihanouk held numerous posts, including prime minister,
president, and leader of various governments-in-exile before returning
to Phnom Penh in 1991 and being appointed constitutional monarch in
1993. He was succeeded in 2004 by his son, King Norodom Sihamoni.
Changing roles ... Sihanouk in 1941. Photo: AP
Norodom Sihanouk was born in Phnom Penh on October 31, 1922,
and educated at the French Lycee in what was then Saigon, Vietnam,
before continuing his studies in France. He was chosen at the age of 18
by the French colonial administration to succeed his grandfather as
king.
The young monarch turned against his colonial backers,
campaigning for and winning full independence in November 1953. He
abdicated in 1955 in favour of his father so that he could enter
politics. As Prince Sihanouk, he set up the Sangkum Reastr Niyum – the
People's Socialist Community party.
"At that point he basically ended royalty in Cambodia,"
Professor Chandler said. "He just didn't want to be king; he wanted to
be the boss."
Dubious allies ... Sihanouk with the Khmer Rouge leader Khieu Samphan in the early 1970s.
Caught up in the competing interests of the Soviet Union, the
US and China, Sihanouk attempted to steer a neutral path in foreign
policy, becoming a founding member of the Non-Aligned Movement. In 1965,
he broke with the US over the Vietnam War, allowing the North
Vietnamese to set up bases in Cambodia.
Ousted in a US-backed coup by his prime minister Lon Nol in
1970, Sihanouk sided with a band of communist resistance fighters known
as the Khmer Rouge. When the group swept to power five years later, he
was appointed nominal head of state.
He resigned in 1976 and was placed under house arrest as the
Khmer Rouge embarked on a radical transformation of Cambodian society.
Pol Pot's government forced the evacuation of the capital and other
urban areas and embarked on a killing spree to eradicate intellectuals
and ideological opponents.
Estimates of the death toll vary, with Amnesty International
putting the number at 1.4 million out of an estimated population of 7.1
million.
Sihanouk, with other Cambodian factions, again forged a
coalition with the Khmer Rouge after Pol Pot was forced from power by
the Vietnamese in January 1979. The group was created to oppose the
Vietnam-backed government of Heng Samrin; a decade of civil war
followed.
"The humble people of Cambodia are the most wonderful in the world," Sihanouk said in 1979, according to the 1980 book Sideshow
by the British journalist William Shawcross. "Their great misfortune is
that they always have terrible leaders who make them suffer. I am not
sure that I was much better myself, but perhaps I was the least bad."
Sihanouk's path back to power began in August 1989 when
Cambodia's factions met under United Nations auspices in Paris.
Agreement was reached on a comprehensive settlement the following year,
and in 1991 Sihanouk returned to Phnom Penh to begin the reconstruction
process ahead of nationwide elections in May 1993.
He largely thumbed his nose at the UN Transitional Authority
in Cambodia, which had executive powers in the run-up to the election,
wrote the journalist Henry Kamm in his book Cambodia: Report From a Stricken Land.
"Where was Sihanouk, the hope of the international community
for persuading Cambodians to make peace and establish badly needed
national solidarity?" Kamm wrote. "He ostentatiously neglected his
chairmanship of the Supreme National Council, hardly honoured his
country with his presence and sent a stream of sarcastic or petulant fax
messages to Phnom Penh from abroad to give vent to his disdain for
Untac."
Aside from politics, Sihanouk was a keen musician and
produced and directed about 20 films – all about Cambodia. He routinely
invited diplomats for lengthy karaoke sessions and maintained a blog.
"I never thought of film-making as a simple amusement or
artistic activity," he wrote in 1995. "I wanted, and still want, to show
my country, its past and contemporary history, its culture, its people,
and express my feelings regarding certain facets of our nation's life.
The star of my films is never an actor. It is always Cambodia."
Bloomberg, AP
9 comments:
From T in Ldn
As a human being, I offer my sincere condolences to N Sihamoni and his family for the loss of his father.
Personally, I think Sihamoni should use this occasion to grant amnesty to all Khmer political prisoners, prisoners of conscience,...,i.e. all non murderers.
From now on, he should also use all the powers granted to him by the constitution to right all the wrongs done by his father from 1975 and show to Hun Sen he's a human being with a conscience and not his puppet.
Let's see if the truth come out. Once you go to hell interrogate by an innocent death judge the truth always come. I lost half of my family member, I'm a traitor to Cambodia because of him. I'm leave Cambodia to the United Stated because of him, but the wound never heal.
Have you ever see a king that like karaoke and playboy like this guy? He into all of these think he forget to take care of his people and land, end up lost lots of land to Vietnam and Thailand.
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Khmerization
Some Foerign newpapers called sihanouk the " Changing prince" or " the prince changeant".
I think those media was right and Sihanouk, as a politician and a leader was also right being a
"chameleon" and changed his ideas according to the world situation and to the interest of the Country.
Sinarook was the prince from Vietnam. He may have been modernised Khmer from the French in his young days, but his huge bald head is what lead the country to loose 3 million lives under his monarchy.
This chameleon prince had done little to protect the lives of those that protected him. He may be buried as a Khmer heroes, but the soul of 3 million Khmer finally took their revenge to see him die on this celebration event.
Happy Pchmum Benh! May Hun Sen be next in line for next year's event!
The hero will never neglected his duties as the head of state or the leader of the country.Sinhanuk was flameboyete forgot his duties not only that he helped with Yiek cong to get even with Gen.Lon Nol for ousted him the result were disasterous beyond repair the country went down hill produced ilbrreed like Pol pot and Hun sen today,all of them were Psychopath's killers of innocent khmers.
Time finally caught up with this king of khmers'communism right on time for Pa'chum ben that mean YUMMABAL/YUMMA REAJ came get him to joint his comrade Ho chi minh/Pol pot in hell,may Abyst keeps them there forever.Next will be Heng dumb rin/ Hun sick Whore Nam Hoang and Svar Kim Hoang that commited treason ceded khmers land to Yuon in recently by using fakes map in Yuon's favor....
Kmenhwatt.
Thank to King Sihanouk , Cambodia obtained its Independance from France in 1953, one year before the International Geneva Conference (1954) which ended the Indochina war.During this conference, Vietnam and Laos were divided in 2 Countries, Communist and non-Communist. Ho Chi Mimh and the Khmer communists or Khmer-Vietminh worked hard at this International Conference to have Cambodia splitted in 2 parts like Vietnam and Laos, but the KHMER delegation led by EXCELLENCY SAM SARY fiercely opposed arguing that CAMBODIA was already independent and so their bad intention had failed. The Geneva Conference recognized the Independane and the Integrity of Cambodia. After the Geneva Conference in 1954 the Khmer Communists or khmer-Vietminh (more than 2 thousands) returned...not to the forest or Cambodia....but to the North Vietnam......and came back only to Cambodia during the 1970's cambodian civil war. Many of them were eliminated by Pol Pot and some have survived....
A great political survivor, the unsinkable prince of politics.
Thank you 2 12 am. Good information, where can we read more?
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