December 20, 2013
An article by Dr. Gaffar Peang-Meth published by the Asian Human Rights Commission
CAMBODIA: Think, act, and become
As we are only days away from the New Year of 2014, I
find it apt and beneficial to end the year of 2013 with this
article.
Someone more philosophical than I wrote that today is
yesterday's future. In the days, weeks, months, and years
past we imagined the kind of tomorrow we would like to see.
Some act to bring about the futures about which they dream.
Others dream and drift, leaving their futures entirely to
others or to chance. We are the product of our thoughts and
imaginations and of our actions or inaction.
Yet, this thought-action process is not new, having been
advocated – as regular readers of this column know
– by Lord Gautama Buddha more than 2,500 years ago.
"Each morning we are born again," says Buddha,
"What we do today is what matters most." Telling
us to concentrate our mind on the present moment, the here
and now, Buddha who says, "I never see what has been
done; I only see what remains to be done," also teaches
us: "Pay no attention to the faults of others, things
done or left undone by others. Consider only what by oneself
is done or left undone." Urging us to "rely on the
essence of your pure Wisdom Mind, not on judgmental
perceptions," Buddha emphasizes, "after
observation and analysis, when you find that anything agrees
with reason and is conducive to the good and benefit of one
and all, then accept it and live up to it."
"All that we are arises with our thoughts. With our
thoughts, we make the world," Buddha teaches. "I
do not believe in a fate that falls on men (and women)
however they act; but I do believe in a fate that falls on
them unless they act." In his preaching, he reminds us,
"No one saves us but ourselves. No one can and no one
may. We ourselves must walk the path."
Buddha's words affirm his belief that we are responsible for what we do or do not do. His teaching to do all good, to avoid evil, and to purify the mind, runs parallel with his philosophy: Think, act, and become.
I have written often in this space about the need for
Cambodians to build their future by urgently and firmly
adopting as their guiding principles and values their (as
most Cambodians are Buddhist) Lord Buddha's teaching. As
they act to achieve their long term goals, implement short
term objectives; make use of the time at the present to
educate, cultivate, and create many thousands of new leaders
at local and national levels with nation-building skills and
capacities.
Perceptions of problems and solutions
Many Cambodian democrats fear Srok Khmer sarb-sone
(Khmer country's disappearance) if "millions" of
Vietnamese immigrants are allowed by the puppet regime in
Phnom Penh, heavily influenced by neighboring Vietnam, to
illegally cross the border and settle in Cambodia; if
Thailand is permitted to encroach from the west; and if Hun
Sen and members of the ruling Cambodian People's Party (CPP)
continue to rob the country of its natural wealth, evict
citizens from their homes and land, deny Cambodians' human
rights, freedom, and justice, among others.
One proposed solution by those who subscribe to the idea
of sarb-sone is the suggestion that the 18 signatory
governments and the United Nations implement the 1991 Paris
Peace Agreements (PPA) as had been intended, conforming to
the stipulations therein to restore human rights, build
democratic pluralism, etc. To the present day, no government
has taken the lead to ensure proper implementation of the
PPA. Foreign governments continue to do business as usual
with a regime condemned by democrats; some governments have
even upgraded their relationships with the Hun Sen
government.
I must admit to being not well considered by some when I
first decided at the end of 1989 to leave the Khmer People's
National Liberation Armed Forces after the visit of a UN
military delegation to the KPNLAF zone. I concluded that the
movement would be left at the mercy of the CPP; and in 1993
I wrote an article about the UN-supervised election as being
neither free nor fair, stating that participation by an
opposition would only legitimize a CPP victory through
irregularities. Twenty years later, the opposition Cambodia
National Rescue Party (CNRP) cries election fraud.
I am in full sympathy with the CNRP over the outcome of
last July's national election. I cannot know the scale of
the election fraud and other irregularities. News, photos
and videos, and communications with Cambodians in Phnom Penh
and elsewhere confirm that the country is in turmoil; that
hundreds of thousands of Cambodians, if not more, have
openly expressed anger at the official outcome. I never
expected Hun Sen and the CPP to agree to any election probe
committee. I admit to losing some Cambodian democrat friends
for writing that the CNRP should not allow its rightful
seats in the National Assembly to remain vacant because of
the ruling party's fraud; that the assembly can be a
powerful forum to push for change despite the ruling party's
resistance, to alert both national and international opinion
on what the opposition does and wants, and to gather more
serious attention and support. Until Hun Sen and the CPP
will be shown the door in 2018, all efforts should be
devoted to leadership development and nation-building.
Alas.
Calling on Premier Hun Sen to step down
The CNRP objected to the official election results that
gave the CPP 68 National Assembly seats, a loss of 24 seats
from 92, and the CNRP 55 seats, an increase from 29. It
accused Hun Sen and the CPP of fraud and irregularities and
demanded an independent probe committee, or it would boycott
the National Assembly. Attempts at negotiation failed; a
political deadlock ensued. Since then, Hun Sen and the CPP
govern even with the National Assembly half empty and choose
to see nothing, hear nothing, and know nothing of what the
opposition proposed.
Several large and impressive mass demonstrations have
occurred nonviolently so far, although a passerby and a
street vendor were killed by police using live bullets. The
CNRP held a mass demonstration in Phnom Penh and one in
Siemreap on Human Rights Day. The CNRP promised a larger
rally on Dec 15 to demand an investigation of election
fraud, and one every Sunday after until the election dispute
is resolved. One wonders if this endless Ramvong
circle dance, in which participants go round and round but
always find themselves in the same place, isn't a most apt
descriptor of the cycle of CNRP demonstrations, which seem
to have become an end in themselves, rather than a tactic in
a larger strategy to gain ground in preparation for greater
success in the next election cycle.
One more notable change: Vocal and more aggressive young
and old-age protesters are now calling publicly on Premier
Hun Sen to step down from power, and CNRP leaders are
calling for a new election. Hun Sen and the CPP must
contemplate political suicide to agree to a new election.
CNRP leaders who feel the pulse of the citizens' impatience
with the deadlock, seemingly have decided to go for broke to
force a new election or the abdication of the current
government in the face of overwhelming protest. The Voice of
America has broadcast in Khmer CNRP Vice President Kem
Sokha's pronouncement on Dec 16 that the opposition gives
the government "three months" – until the
end of March – to hold a new election or it will lead
a "people power" movement hoping to topple the
regime in power. "I cannot stop people's anger if the
government cannot find them justice," Sokha said in a
broadcast by the VOA.
In her website on Dec 17, MP-elect Mu Sochua, CNRP head
of public affairs wrote that today's youth "want rapid
change, the Arab Spring."
"My Real Fear"
Upon the publication of my last article "The future
awaits," a former electrical engineering student in
Illinois, Chou Leang Hak, e-mailed me and some senior
opposition leaders a short article about what "future
awaits" the Khmer people. He also submitted the
article to the Phnom Penh Post.
Hak described his "real fear in the near future that
awaits the Khmers," that "strong man Hun Sen ...
not beautiful but bad," who is engaged in "ill
activities" destructive of Khmer land and its people,
nevertheless fears "the great protests in the days
ahead," and is firmly committed to holding on to
government power at all costs. "In silence, I am
contemplating with fear what may transpire in the days and
months ahead in our homeland, as Hun Sen and his government
will go the extra miles to harm or even kill those who try
to pull them down," Hak wrote. "A cornered tiger
will fiercely attack no matter what. Tears of citizens will
continue to flow because of bad leaders."
In the final analysis
The CNRP is now presumably engaged in its stated
undertaking of nonstop nonviolent demonstrations intended to
force a new election and the resignation of the current
prime minister Hun Sen. Leaving aside the obvious question
of whether large-scale demonstrations can be mounted on a
continuous basis over time, the demonstrations will only be
effective if Hun Sen is compelled to concede that it is in
his own interest to negotiate a resolution. In the meantime,
the CNRP seems to be setting up a circumstance in which
violence is ever more likely to occur. Demonstrators'
emotions can be controlled at a fever pitch only so long.
Armed security forces, feeling threatened, may react. In
this case, Chou Leang Hak's fear is more than realistic.
On the other hand, the CNRP may park at Freedom Park as
long as it desires if its presence produces no consequence
that hurts Hun Sen and the CPP.
Cambodian democrats should stop thinking about
intervention by democratic governments that want to invest
in Cambodia. Here, Lord Buddha was right: "Work out
your own salvation. Do not depend on others." This
brings me back to where I began this article, Buddha's
teaching: "The mind is everything. What we think we
become . . . With our thoughts we make the world."
I wish my readers of all faiths good health and much
happiness in this season of celebration and new beginnings.
May each of us include among our resolutions a commitment to
be deeply thoughtful and act with purpose.
.................
The AHRC is not responsible for the views shared in this article, which do not necessarily reflect its own.
About the Author:
Dr. Gaffar Peang-Meth is retired from the University of Guam, where he taught political science for 13 years. He currently lives in the United States. He can be reached at peangmeth@gmail.com.
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About AHRC: The Asian Human Rights Commission is a regional non-governmental organisation that monitors human rights in Asia, documents violations and advocates for justice and institutional reform to ensure the protection and promotion of these rights. The Hong Kong-based group was founded in 1984.
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