China has provided Cambodia with up to $1 billion in aid, including military aid, and is its largest foreign direct investor, working in hydropower projects, mines and land concessions, she said. “Cambodia is a Chinese de facto proxy within Asean, and China is Cambodia’s top investor, top aid provider, top donor for large infrastructural projects, top trade partner.”
Experts See Cause for Concern in Cambodia-China Relationship
Sok Khemara, VOA Khmer | 12 September 2014
WASHINGTON DC— Cambodia’s close
relationship to China should be a concern for both the United States and
for Asean neighbors, international experts say.
China is a major donor and investor in Cambodia, as it is for many
poor countries in the region, expanding its influence in recent years.
But that relationship could become problematic for the US and
Southeast Asian nations, according to experts who spoke recently at
George Washington University.
The most prominent example of these troubles was Asean’s failure to
reach a simple agreement over the South China Sea issue when Cambodia
was the chair of Asean, experts say. For the first time in its history,
Asean was not able to issue a joint communiqué following meetings in
Phnom Penh, which some say was caused by Cambodia’s backing of Chinese
interests.
“All China asks from Cambodia is support of core Chinese policy
concerns,” said Pek Koong Heng, who heads the Asean Studies Center at
American University. China wants a one-China policy, the exclusion of
Taiwan from politics, a ban on hosting the Dalai Lama, a ban on the
practitioners of Falun Gong and an eye kept on Uyghur Muslim minorities,
she said.
China has provided Cambodia with up to $1 billion in aid, including
military aid, and is its largest foreign direct investor, working in
hydropower projects, mines and land concessions, she said. “Cambodia is a
Chinese de facto proxy within Asean, and China is Cambodia’s top
investor, top aid provider, top donor for large infrastructural
projects, top trade partner.”
Murray Hiebert, chair of Southeast Asian studies at the Center for
Strategic and International Studies, said Chinese investment, especially
land concessions, is a major problem for Cambodia.
“There have been a lot of forced evictions sparking a lot of social
unrest,” he said. “Thousands of people lost their lands to companies
close to the [ruling] party, close to the military, close to Hun Sen,
that are being used for plantations, sugar, rubber, doing some mining.
So, there are a lot of confrontations between farmers who lost their
lands and the government.”
Some US companies meanwhile don’t invest in Cambodia, he said, and
the country faces ongoing macro-economic problems with rule of law,
corruption, a weak transportation system, a lack of skilled labor and a
weak education system.
The US’s diplomatic shift toward Asean has been troubled by Chinese
pressure on Cambodia, especially in regards to human rights and
democracy, observers said.
Marvin Ott, a visiting scholar for Southeast Asia studies at Johns
Hopkins School of Advanced International Studies, said even the Khmer
Rouge tribunal shows Chinese influence. Its scope was not broadened to
include China’s role in the rise of the Khmer Rouge.
“China does not want the Khmer Rouge period given much recollection
because China was deeply implicated and associated with the Khmer Rouge
leadership,” he said. Prime Minster Hun Sen’s reputation was diminished
internationally because of this, Ott said.
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