Wednesday, March 11, 2009

Aid has not helped Cambodia reform

PACIFIC DAILY NEWS
March 11, 2009

Aid has not helped Cambodia reform

A. Gaffar Peang-Meth, Ph.D.
Donors praised political stability -- attained through blatant grabs
for power. Donors praised economic development -- attained through
forced evictions of citizens, sale of natural resources, institution
of a regime of kleptocracy.


Learning is an essential part of life. Eighteenth-century English poet
Alexander Pope writes, "Some people will never learn anything ...
because they understand everything too soon."

A saying goes, "The greatest ignorance is to reject something you know
nothing about." Civil rights leader Martin Luther King Jr. lamented,
"Nothing in all the world is more dangerous than sincere ignorance and
conscientious stupidity."

And American futurist Alvin Toffler warns, "The illiterate of the 21st
century will not be those who cannot read and write, but those who
cannot learn, unlearn and relearn."

But it's not enough just to learn, we must apply. That's how we
develop and grow, avoid others' pitfalls, prepare and build a better
future. In a globalized world, what occurs in one area will affect
other areas, sooner or later, directly or indirectly.

So, when the United Nations Economic and Social Commission for Asia
and the Pacific posits, "Bad governance is being increasingly regarded
as one of the root causes of all evil within our societies," it
behooves all of us to take notice.

"Major donors and international financial institutions are
increasingly basing their aid and loans on the condition that reforms
that ensure 'good governance' are undertaken," ESCAP says, but the
reality is "reforms" are lacking, though aid and loans continue to
flow in.

The London-based environmental watchdog Global Witness charged in its
report, "Country for Sale," for "more than a decade now" international
donors gave the Cambodian regime over 50 percent of the country's
national budget, and pledged nearly ($1 billion) in development aid
for 2009, "yet (donors) failed to use this opportunity to demand new
governance measures."

"Unless this is changed, there is a real risk that the opportunity to
lift a whole generation out of poverty will be squandered," Global
Witness says.

It quotes a statement by the U.N. Special Representative in Cambodia:
"With aid-giving comes the responsibility to ensure that it helps the
people. ... It is not sufficient to ... emphasize adherence to human
rights treaties and protocols (useful as they are). Nor are new laws
or suddenly created institutions the panacea, for the (Cambodian)
government has disregarded laws, or through abuse, turned them to its
own partisan advantage," the statement reads.

The Special Representative and Global Witness were booted out of Cambodia.

Hun Sen can be blamed for bad behavior and bad governance, which
continue because there is no consequence. But enablers of bad behavior
and bad governance are not excused from responsibilities for the
situation.

Cambodia's current governance began as a result of the failure of the
world community to implement the 1991 Paris Peace Accords that
stipulate Cambodia's adherence to "the rights and freedoms embodied in
the Universal Declaration of Human Rights and other relevant
international human rights instruments" -- which, in turn, are
incorporated in Cambodia's constitution. Enablers conceded to Sen's
demand for co-premiership, though he lost the election, and closed
their eyes to unconstitutional power grabs that ended with the 1997
coup d'etat, in which many were killed.

Donors praised political stability -- attained through blatant grabs
for power. Donors praised economic development -- attained through
forced evictions of citizens, sale of natural resources, institution
of a regime of kleptocracy.

Gone are what's necessary for good governance: the rule of law that
requires the promotion of human rights and freedom; legal
impartiality; separation of powers; checks and balances; the
accountability (to the public and institutional stakeholders) that
requires the existence of the rule of law and transparency; equity;
inclusiveness; and responsiveness.

Asia Times Online's Bertil Lintner's "One big happy family in
Cambodia" referenced the Phnom Penh Post's compilation of how
"arranged marriages" produced "growing family ties (that) run all the
way to the top of Cambodia's political pyramid. ... These new family
ties between the children of (cabinet) ministers and top officials
potentially set the stage for the (Cambodian People's Party's) grip on
power to continue for generations."

It is a picture of grotesque concentration of powers, a family hall
for distributing political and economic resources, a stadium for job
seekers, a true Hun Sen Inc. within a larger People's Party Ltd.

Said to be a U.N. "success story," Cambodia is a story of bad
governance, a sad story written with the help of international donors,
apparently more impressed with the Monivong Boulevard's "gleaming new"
Kentucky Fried Chicken, or the 27-story Canadia Bank Tower with health
club and restaurant, than with the health and welfare of the people,
30 percent of whom, Sen says, live below the poverty level today.

Stanford journalism professor Joel Brinkley writes in the March-April
Foreign Affairs Magazine's "Cambodia's Curse" that the 2004 and 2005
comprehensive studies funded by the U.S. embassy in Phnom Penh "showed
in stunning detail that Cambodian government officials steal between
$300 million and $500 million a year (most years, the state's annual
budget is about $1 billion)."

A. Gaffar Peang-Meth, Ph.D., is retired from the University of Guam,
where he taught political science for 13 years. Write him at
peangmeth@yahoo.com.

http://www.guampdn.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/200903110300/OPINION02/903110330

11 comments:

Anonymous said...

A Khmer from abroad and An American guy who can see how improved Cambodia has been, very contradictory to this manipulative politically motivated cynical site. Just listen to the lady, Thida Mam, on her take on the state of the kingdom of Cambodia. Surprising for some of you who are being lied to by your so called friends.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Do2_1SP_ubs&feature=channel_page

Khmer TV CTN promoting sports and arts to steer Khmer youth from the bad life.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tEpwtyqhZmg&feature=channel_page

Just quick examples of the good social promoting that KI never dares to have on its site because this site is in its bone about talking trash about the current Khmer government.

Anonymous said...

Another quote:
He who learns but does not think is lost (the kings), but he who thinks but does not learn is lost (Hun Sen and his advisors)

Anonymous said...

Your current government is the government of the robbers. There is nothing that cannot be seen in Cambodia. It's you who turn your blind eyes to reality.

Anonymous said...

Here are a few quotes from the Buddha:
1-"The fool who knows his foolishness is wise at least so far. But a fool who thinks himself wise, he is called a foll indeed."

2-"If a fool be associated with a wise man even all his life he will perceive the truth as little as a spoon perceives the taste of soop."

3-If an intelligent man be associated for one minutes only with the wise man, he will soon perceive the truth, as the tongue perceives the taste of soop."

Anonymous said...

6:53 AM

It's you who can only talks big online. What else can you do for real? Nothing! Just like how you can't do nothing with your wife or gf and she has to go get her needs fulfilled by other guys more competent? lol

Anonymous said...

It sounds immoral if I answer to you, but since you go that far, let me tell you that your wife will go to get her need fulfillrd by other men. My wife will never. She has very little education, but she's equippeped with high moral standrad. She is the best one in thousands of women!

Anonymous said...

. . .and you can write to cuss me as much as you want, i will never answer to your comment, because it cheapens me to bite back a mad dog.

Anonymous said...

Correction to earlier quote"
"He who learns but does not think is lost(the king family) but her who thinks but does not learn is very very dangerous (Hun Sen and his advisors)."

Anonymous said...

Oh, plug your stinky mouth, Ah Gaffar. Just keep George Washington, Lincoln, ..., and Napoleon to yourself. We Khmer ain't gonna worship any of those moraless people anytime soon. You got that?

Anonymous said...

be careful, people everywhere are quick to take full advantage of cambodia in a chaotic situation. khmer people have to be smarter about it all! god bless cambodia.

Anonymous said...

Mr. A. Gaffar Peang-Meth,

As far as I'm concerned, according to your sharp critics on CPP governance, I'm sure you are aware about moral values. It seems that people who have high education such as you and others (the genuine ones) are “more often than not” having HIGH MORAL STANDARDS, which implies those who don't have a proper education, but only possess fake degrees such as Hun Sen and his cronies and their respective family members don't usually accustomed to MORES.

In fact, not just the above mentioned, but also to those who have phony degrees similarly to the ones in Cambodia who claimed to defend the weak and the poor don't necessarily reflect the reality. People, especially the poor and underprivileged are fallen and deceived because they are manipulated and/or cheated by those who claimed to support and defend them in the name of the advocate of Human Rights.

Mr. A. Gaffar Peang-Meth, I really appreciate your contribution to a betterment of Cambodia and her people. Than you, sir!!!

May God bless Cambodia and her people!