Peace ["Peece", you mean] But Not Stability, for Cambodia, Experts Warn
Protesters clash with police as they attempt to go toward the Phnom Penh Municipal Court, in central Phnom Penh, file photo.
VOA Khmer | 1 December 2015
PHNOM PENH—Experts warn that
Cambodia still faces the prospect of violence and atrocities, as human
rights abuse and other social injustices persist.
But Cambodia’s leaders still have the “responsibility to protect” the
country’s citizens, according to standards issued by the UN.
The “responsibility to protect” was a norm acknowledged by
international heads of state at the UN in 2005, in an effort to end
genocide, war crimes, ethnic cleansing and other atrocity crimes. It is
not a law, but a political agreement to guide states and their
agreements with each other.
At a meeting to discuss that responsibility in Bangkok recently,
experts said that while [the ruling elites in] Cambodia does enjoy peace, it lacks many of the
foundations of stability.
Pou Sothirak, executive director of Cambodian Institute for
Cooperation and Peace, told VOA Khmer at the sidelines of the
“Responsibility to Protect” workshop in Bangkok last month that
Cambodia’s land disputes are a specific risk.
“Although the Khmer Rouge was toppled and its leaders are on trial,
there are other signs that could become a risk factor if we don’t pay
attention to them,” he said. “For instance, the lack of attention on
land issues, which is not satisfied by many people, could cause social
insecurity and possibly spark demonstrations, leading to violence in
society.”
The lack of good governance and transparency in regards to natural
resource exploitation, along with the wealth gap between the rich and
the poor, can be risk factors, as well, he said.
“Actually the government is trying to maintain political stability in
order to obtain social security and economic growth,” he said.
“However, poverty and the wealth gap between the rich and the poor in
Cambodia still exist. Thus, the government should strive for more
improvement in order to avoid social crisis, in which more and more
people become poor and cause trouble for the society. So poverty can
also be a risk factor.”
The threat of the Khmer Rouge has been extinguished, and Cambodia now
has peace, but that does not mean there is no violence or intimidation.
Kimsour Phirith, a lawmaker for the opposition Cambodia National
Rescue Party who attended the Bangkok workshop, said that Cambodia still
faces the risk of political violence. He pointed to the recent beating
of two lawmakers outside the National Assembly, following
anti-opposition protests, as evidence.
“If the international community does not focus on pushing the
government back on the path of respect for human rights and democratic
foundations, we could fall back onto the path towards atrocity in the
future,” he said. “Particularly, the prime minister often uses rhetoric
through the public media, [saying] that if the Cambodian People’s Party
loses the elections, there will be war. We are concerned that this kind
of language would encourage violence in our society.”
Prime Minister Hun Sen often makes such warnings, recently conjuring
the 2008 border conflict with Thailand as just one example, saying that
conflict would have led to war had the opposition been in power. “If
another party came to power, war would definitely occur,” he said in one
such speech. The Rescue Party, he said, treats the rich as an enemy, as
well as neighboring countries.
That kind of rhetoric can create the risk of more violence, according
to the Framework of Analysis for Atrocity Crimes. Political motives,
particularly those aimed at the attainment or consolidation of power or
acts of incitement or hate targeting particular groups or individuals
create such a risk, according to the framework.
CPP spokesman Sok Eysan told VOA Khmer such warnings from the prime
minister are political realities, based on the policies of the Rescue
Party. He warned that the party would “obliterate investment agreements
and seize the properties of the rich and give them to the poor.”
“So it is clear that war would take place,” he said. “Are the rich
just easily willing to give up what they have for the poor?”
The UN framework, meanwhile, has prescriptions for curbing violence and atrocity crimes.
“Prevention is an ongoing process that requires sustained efforts to
build the resilience of societies to atrocity crimes by ensuring that
the rule of law is respected and that all human rights are protected,
without discrimination; by establishing legitimate and accountable
national institutions; by eliminating corruption; by managing diversity
constructively; and by supporting a strong and diverse civil society and
a pluralistic media,” it says. “Failure by the state to provide such
protection and guarantees to its population can create an environment
conducive to atrocity crimes. In such cases, prevention involves efforts
to halt a likely course of events.”
Noel Morada, director of the Asia Pacific Center for the
Responsibility to Protect, said at the workshop in Bangkok that each
state needs prevention measures in place to prevent atrocities and
violence. In other words, they should not wait for an outbreak of
violence and then turn to the UN for help.
“Don’t forget that there are many crises around the world,” he said.
“The funding of the UN is so limited, even in terms of peacekeeping,
[so] prevention and response on the ground will depend a lot on those
people who are there and educators, civil society people, and
government. They need to engage in national dialogue and discuss,
identify the risk factors in order to prevent. I think the long term
view when it comes to implementing [responsibility to protect] is the
building of capacity, and the stakeholders need to work on this
together.”
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