Wednesday, June 15, 2011

The new colonialists

Hun Xen's monstrous mansion in the middle of Phnom Penh
10 Jun 2011
Andrew Cornell
The Australian Financial Review

Donors supply around half Cambodia's annual budget, more than $US1 billion a year - and the government of Hun Sen skims close to half of that amount, building monstrous mansions while less than a fifth of the population have toilets.
From a distance, the floating villages of the vast Tonle Sap lake in Cambodia appear to be mirages. But the shimmering water is real and the huts, makeshift restaurants, workshops - even schools - are indeed afloat. Colourful banners flap in the breeze then, as the hired water taxi nears, there is something else on the water: a distinct, acrid smell.

There are hundreds of such villages on the Tonle Sap, Asia's largest freshwater lake fed by the monsoonal peak of the Mekong River. Some are slums. This one is a slum. Coming closer to the village, other craft, some fishing, some hawking goods, come by and one bumps right up close.

It's a tiny, hardly seaworthy dingy steered by a filthy old man in rags (although he may well only be in his 40s). And next to him is a tiny, naked child, no more than four or five. The child is draped in a snake, it's a smaller python but, next to the child, looks like a giant anaconda and it is thrust towards our taxi. Someone hands over a couple of American dollars and the old man steers the boat away.

It's an extraordinary moment but, in the few hours we spend cruising through these villages, we see another three beggars plying the child-with-snake routine. Other small boats come up ferrying mothers begging for their children or just children alone. The pervasive acrid smell is a mixture of rotting fish and sewerage, and raw humanity. Good luck dining at some of the restaurants with their holding pens offish sitting next to the crocodile display littered with rotten chicken meat.

"These villages move all the time; they move with the [seasonal] rise and fall of the lake; they shift to where there might be work. Some are Khmer [Cambodian] but some are Vietnamese [even though Vietnam is hundreds of kilometres away]," says Nick Butler, a guide with the Sam Veasna Centre, an eco-tourism organisation set up to preserve bird life by providing villages with alternative incomes to slashing forests.


Yet which wealthy westerner could resist a dollar for a snake child? Or, for that matter, the cute, persistent urchins selling guide books and matches at Angkor Wat? Or silk scarves in the old market of Siem Reap? And these are the more humane faces of child labour.

Yet resistance is crucial to Cambodia's development. "Every child out selling guidebooks or begging is not going to school, and education is the long-term future of the country," says Mastercard Worldwide's Elizabeth Duke. Duke, vice president, commerce development, oversees the company's local philanthropy program. "But it is a huge challenge - the kids can make good money and some of the parents are themselves victims of the Khmer Rouge or [are] damaged individuals."

The plight of these children illustrates in microcosm the great challenge for Cambodia and for those nations and organisations who, with the best of intentions, are trying to help it recover from the utter devastation of the Khmer Rouge. For the challenge at a national level is that the more charities and non-government organisations assume responsibility for civil services, for health, education, essential services, the less the notoriously corrupt Cambodian government supplies those services itself.

As international sovereign governance monitor Global Witness argued in its damning 2009 report Country for Sale, Cambodia needs a "model geared towards enabling the country to harness its own resources for development, rather than continuing this cycle of corruption-fuelled aid dependency. For the majority of Cambodia's people, life is short and tough," the agency wrote in its report. Nearly 70 percent of the population subsists on less than $US2 a day, and one in three children under five are underweight for their age.

International aid has propped up basic services in Cambodia for over 15 years and currently provides the equivalent of half the government budget. "Yet Cambodia is rich in timber, minerals and petroleum and, over the past 15 years, the government has leased 45 percent of the country's land to private investors. What happened to these natural resources and where has all the money gone?" asks Global Witness.

Cambodia is indeed still recovering from the catastrophic four-year reign of the Khmer Rouge, which killed an estimated 2 million of its own people, around a quarter of the population, including teachers, monks, civil servants and just about anyone who stood between Pol Pot and his insane plan to return Cambodia to "year zero". Then there was the decade-long war with Vietnam. There are more than 200 registered aid organisations operating within the country, which Is estimated to be the highest per capita number in the world, according to the journal Foreign Affairs. Donors supply around half Cambodia's annual budget, more than $US1 billion a year - and the government of Hun Sen skims close to half of that amount, building monstrous mansions while less than a fifth of the population have toilets.

In Siem Reap, in central Cambodia next to Tonle Sap and the gateway to the Angkor Wat temple complex, the challenge is obvious. A local guide who calls himself "Jim" says he lived in the jungle as a child during the terror of the Khmer Rouge. "It's much better today," he says, "more schools, more work. Much better." But does he trust the government and officials? "No, no, all corrupt, very corrupt; we pay bribes all the time. But still getting better."

Or, as one Khmer legal aid officer told Foreign Affairs regarding the abuse and killing of citizens by Hun Sen's government: "Ten lives or even 100 lives, what's that compared to 2 million? That's still the Cambodian standard, and that's the international standard."

The corruption drags in even companies with highly regarded governance standards, such as BHP Billiton. Although the company itself hasn't confirmed which country is involved in a US Securities Exchange Commission graft investigation from 2009, Global Witness has reported on an abandoned Cambodian bauxite joint venture where BHP was involved. "[The inability to trace where mining fees appear in government accounts] raises questions as to where BHP Billiton's $US1 million payment made in September 2006 has gone, and how companies manage the risk of investing in corrupt environments,” the agency said. BHP has confirmed the payment to the government but said it was legitimate.

Another anti-corruption agency, Transparency International (Tl), scores Cambodia two out of a possible 10on the widely cited Corruption Perception index, against 1.4 for Myanmar (Burma), 2.7 for communist Vietnam and 8.7 for Australia. Moreover, in the past three years, according to Tl's Global Corruption Barometer, 43 percent of people surveyed in Cambodia believed corruption had increased; 27 rated it the same and 30 percent said it had decreased. Tlsaid "a degree of political will for reform exists within the government, but the reality is that those in power have little reason to change a system that has secured them much power and personal wealth. Stricter costs imposed by the donor community would serve to pressure the government and effect real change".

That is a statement which can equally be applied on the social scale when asking a still rudimentary civil society with millions of still traumatised citizens to forego immediate financial gain for longer-term civil health. It is a complex problem; for the non-government organisations, charities and aid workers, every day in Cambodia exposes the moral challenge. In Siem Reap, for example, the easy accessibility of Angkor Wat has created a tourism boom since the country was re-opened for tourism and there's an opportunity for locals to earn American dollars.

One tourist who couldn't step away from the challenge was Tania Palmer, an Australian retail entrepreneur who had read in an airline magazine of a Siem Reap orphanage in need. Straight off the plane, she bought a ticket to Cambodia and within six months had abandoned her Australian business to work with Khmer children. She was driven around Siem Reap by a tuk tuk driver called Rem Poum, who used the money to support his extended family while preparing to become a monk. That career path, too, was abandoned as Palmer and Poum married and set up the Green Gecko Project to help feed and educate orphans and street kids.

“l read this story about orphans sleeping in nets and there wasn't even enough nets - I just felt compelled to look and I'd never been to South-East Asia. It was just so hot and sweaty but I couldn't forget it,a Palmer said. "I came back to Byron Bay but I was so miserable; it just seemed a meaningless life there." Together with Poum, she set up the project and immediately encountered pervasive corruption and prejudice. "We had tiny kids carrying other kids in a sling because they get more money begging that way but they didn't get to keep the money, of course; their families did and some of these families are seriously dysfunctional," Palmer says. "And we wanted these kids to go to school but the schools wouldn't have them because they said they were 'too stinky, too noisy'. When we started here I was accused of being a spy."

The project was named Green Gecko, Palmer says, because geckos are small but have a voice, come out at night and need parental care. Now six years old, Green Gecko cares for 70 children and while no new children have come on board in recent years - simply because Palmer and Poum are at their limit - there was a steep intake in 2006 when the government trucked all the street children out of town for the duration of a Korean travel expo. "Our only plan initially was to get the kids off the street and give them a meal but it is that old saw 'give the man a fish...' so we try to teach them to fish," Palmer says.

The fishing is pragmatic. Khmer martial arts are on the curriculum as many of the children, because of their home life and the state of Cambodia, are likely to encounter the threat of exploitation and abuse. "The Cambodian government says there are no amputees here - but you only have to look around. One of the mothers lived under a tarpaulin and, to earn money, went through rubbish for melon seeds. [Some of] the parents have huge problems, addictions," says Palmer.

The Green Gecko facility today is an inspiringly vibrant operation with playing fields, classrooms, vegetable gardens and a small shop. The children are boisterous but disciplined, articulate and engaging - and, while there's plenty of noise, it's positive not disruptive. With children ranging in age from kindergarten to senior secondary, there is a genuine sense of extended family. When i visited celebrations for the first university place for a student were taking place.

The project is also staffed by volunteers from groups such as the AusAID program and VIDA (Volunteering for International Development from Australia). Palmer says she's very aware of the challenge identified by governance groups to pressure the Cambodian government into providing more for its citizens. "The reality is, though, that won't happen for a long time and there are these needs now," she said.

MasterCard is one corporate which supports Green Gecko through its affiliation with Siem Reap's Hotel de la Paix, by providing reconditioned bicycles.

Each year, the bicycle program provides hundreds of basic but solid bikes to help children get to school or, in the case of a sewing school, an organisation supported by the hotel, young women from the countryside getting to Siem Reap to learn a trade. Khmer society is very patriarchal and the school teaches not just sewing and small business skills but "life lessons", according to Chhun Chhoeurn, acting director of the Life and Hope Association which runs the school. "Sometimes the men don't like to see the women with their own business - it is a bit threatening - so we have to be sensitive. But there is good business opportunities [for women] making wedding costumes and other things for the village," he says.

One student, Chimoi, a typically fine-boned young Khmer woman heard about the sewing school on the radio after she had been injured working on a building site as a labourer - unskilled, unsafe, Insecure employment, typical for uneducated young Khmer women, particularly where there is a development boom as in Siem Reap. "I want to learn to design clothes, embroider. I want to have my own business and, with the school, I can get a [sewing] machine," she says.

The nexus between Green Gecko, the sewing centre, dozens of other aid projects, Hotel de la Paix and MasterCard Is typical of the web of foreign government, non-government, corporate, philanthropic and volunteer support that sustains Cambodian development. Wat Damnak was a royal palace and now houses the Centre for Khmer Studies, the Hotel de la Paix LHA Sewing School and the Life and Hope Association offices. The hotel also supports the Sangkheum Centre for Children, a joint venture of the Italian NGO Progetto Continent and the Cambodian NGO Khmer Angkor Development Organisation.

However, unquestionably good projects, such as Green Gecko and LHA Sewing School, highlight a paradox of aid.

It was articulated clearly in a widely cited Foreign Affairs essay from 2008 (reprinted in The AFR's Review) titled The New Colonialists. "[An armada of non-government organisations] are increasingly taking over key state functions, providing for the health, welfare and safety of citizens [in a range of countries]," the authors, Michael Cohen, Maria Figueroa Küpçü and Parag Khanna from the New American Foundation wrote. "These private actors have become the "new colonialists" of the 21st century. In much the same way [that] European empires once dictated policies across their colonial holdings, the new colonialists - among them international development groups such as Oxfam; humanitarian non-governmental organisations (NGOs) like Médecins Sans Frontières; faith-based organisations such as Mercy Corps; and mega-philanthropies like the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation - direct development strategies and craft government policies for their hosts.

But though the new colonialists are the glue holding society together in many weak states, their presence often deepens the dependency of these states on outsiders. They unquestionably fill vital roles, providing life saving healthcare, educating children and distributing food in countries where the government can't or won't. But, as a consequence, many of these states are failing to develop the skills necessary to run their countries effectively, while others fail back on a global safety net to escape their own accountability.

Jim, the Khmer guide, is pragmatic, though. His country is rife with corruption and nepotism, the judiciary is among the worst takers of bribes, but "for the next generation, we are very hopeful. They will go to school; they will be better". In teaching their children to "fish", Green Gecko's Palmer is committed to raising a generation of Khmer who won't accept corruption and can wean Cambodia off the culture of dependence on aid. Some of the kids now learning to read and write and fend for themselves might once have spent the day on a rotting boat with a python and living in absolute squalor on a raft on Tonle Sap with no hope for the future.

Andrew Cornell is a senior writer with The AFR. The author's itinerary was organised by the Life and Hope Association.

36 comments:

Anonymous said...

because Khmer is dumb, period.

Anonymous said...

អញ់អត់ថាអីទេ ធម្មតាអ្នកដឹកនាំប្រទេសត្រូវតែមាន
ផ្ទៈដ៏ស្អាតដាច់គេដូច្នោៈឯង វាជារឿងធម្មតាទេ។
តែរឿងសំខាន់នោៈគឺកុំលក់ខួរក្បាលទៅឱយយួននិង
សម្លាប់ពលរដ្ឋខ្លួនឯងហើយរំលាយពូជសាសន៍ខ្លួន
ឯង។

Anonymous said...

និយាយពីប្រទេសខ្មែរបច្ចុប្បន្ន ក្រោមការដឹកនាំដ៏ល្ងង់
ខ្លៅរបស់ជនកំលៅអវិជ្ជាឈ្មោះ ហ៊ុន សែន ដូចជាពុំ
ឃើញមានអ្វីជាដុំកំភួន គួរឲ្យកត់សំគាល់សោះ
ឃើញមានខ្លះៗដែរ ភូមិគ្រឹះធំៗ ដីទូលាយៗរាំងរបង
រួចជាស្រេច។ ដូចជាផ្ទះអាយួនងាប់តៃហោងឈ្មោះ
ឡង់ឌីនៅបាវិតអញ្ចឹង វាសង់ផ្ទះចោលគ្មានមនុស្ស
នៅ ស្របពេលដែលប្រជាជនខ្មែររាប់ម៉ឺនគ្រួសារ
កំពុងខ្វះលំនៅដ្ឋាន និងទីជំរកស្នាក់អាស្រ័យ។

Anonymous said...

To 12:18PM

Before you dumb ass says that Khmer is dumb and why don't you try to live in their environment with all the fucken restriction imposed by AH HUN SEN Vietcong slave do good mother fucker! Why don't you! And then come and tell me about it!

Oh what the fuck! This is AH HUN SEN Vietcong slave legacy imposed on Khmer people!

Anonymous said...

Van Ki Moon gets US$ 20 000 000 bribe from Hun Sen. Van Ki Moon works for Hun Sen.

Van Ki Moon accepts Hun Sen bribe US$ 20 000 000 because the rest of Van KI Moon life can't earn that much.

Shame! Shame! on UN leads by Van Ki Moon.

So the dictatorship around the world kill as much their own people as long as all the dictatorship bribe Van Ki Moon US$ 20 000 000 each. After Van Ki Moon retire from UN , He has US$ 120 000 000 in his bank accound.

Anonymous said...

Koh Tral Island must not be forgotten

By Ms. Rattana Keo

Why do Koh Tral Island, known in Vietnam as Phu Quoc, a sea and land area covering proximately over 30,000 km2 [Note: the actual land size of Koh Tral itself is 574 square kilometres (222 sq miles)] have been lost to Vietnam by whose treaty? Why don’t Cambodia government be transparent and explain to Cambodia army at front line and the whole nation about this? Why don't they include this into education system? Why?

Cambodian armies are fighting at front line for 4.6 km2 on the Thai border and what's about over 30,000km2 of Cambodia to Vietnam. Nobody dare to talk about it! Why? Cambodian armies you are decide the fate of your nation, Cambodian army as well as Cambodian people must rethink about this again and again. Is it fair?

Koh Tral Island, the sea and land area of over 30,000 square kilometres have been lost to Vietnam by the 1979 to 1985 treaties. The Cambodian army at front line as well as all Cambodian people must rethink again about these issues. Are Cambodian army fighting to protect the Cambodia Nation or protecting a very small group that own big lands, big properties or only protecting a small group but disguising as protecting the Khmer nation?

The Cambodian army at front lines suffer under rain, wind, bullets, bombs, lack of foods, lack of nutrition and their families have no health care assistance, no securities after they died but a very small group eat well, sleep well, sleep in first class hotel with air conditioning system with message from young girls, have first class medical care from oversea medical treatments, they are billionaires, millionaires who sell out the country to be rich and make the Cambodian people suffer everyday.

Who signed the treaty 1979-1985 that resulted in the loss over 30,000 km2 of Cambodia??? Why they are not being transparent and brave enough to inform all Cambodians and Cambodian army at front line about these issues? Why don't they include Koh Tral (Koh Tral size is bigger than the whole Phom Phen and bigger than Singapore [Note: Singapore's present land size is 704 km2 (271.8 sq mi)]) with heap of great natural resources, in the Cambodian education system?

Look at Hun Sen's families, relatives and friends- they are billionaires, millionaires. Where did they get the money from when we all just got out of war with empty hands [in 1979]? Hun Sen always say in his speeches that Cambodia had just risen up from the ashes of war, just got up from Year Zero with empty hands and how come they are billionaires, millionaires but 90% of innocent Cambodian people are so poor and struggling with their livelihood every day?

Smart Khmer girl Ms. Rattana Keo,

Anonymous said...

ms rattana keo why don't you and your family visit cambodia once day ? we will welcome you at the air port.

Anonymous said...

No problem this house will be soon as musum for Khmer young generation.

Anonymous said...

1:27 PM
because Ms. Rattana is still living in Kos Trall with the Viets. She is not free and can't speak, read or write their own Khmer language.

Anonymous said...

nothing wrong to have big house.
as PM, he deserve to have it

Anonymous said...

Rattana Keo is busy in drug distribution in Cabramatta, western Sydney, she has no time to visit Cambodia. Let her crying out before she goes to Australian prison.

Anonymous said...

Where does Ah Hun Sen get the money to build multi million dollars Villa, while he declared his income is Approx $1000 per month....
I can reconcile his income vs expenditure.
Can Hun Sen answer this?
How much money have the Hun Sen and CPP officail stolen from Cambodia which was meant for Cambodian people?

Anonymous said...

It is normal for PM or Minister have a luxury house like this in Cambodia or elsewhere. Look at a traitor Sam Sary (Sam Rainsy's father) was a deputy Prime Minister during 1960s, he had many luxury villas and a lot of mistresses.

Anonymous said...

Donnor countries who make Khmer poor and work as slave. They care only feeding Hun Sen.

Anonymous said...

I came from country side like Hun Xen, but look at him now, he has luxury mansion that most Khmer people always dream about. If I have a mansion like Hun Xen, most young girls will chasing me, but there will be no chance for Rattana Keo because she is a widow. Sorry for telling you the truth.

Pang Sokheoun

Anonymous said...

hun sen exchanges cambodia to Youn ha noi for everything what he wants.

Anonymous said...

Hun Sen and his whole family fortune is over US$ 100 Billions of American dollars by selling out Cambodia, Cambodian people well fair and health, Cambodian lands mines, gold, oil, forest, Angkor wat, Koh Tral sea lands of over 30 000 km2 to Vietnam as his own property.

Hun Sen is patriot to only Vietnam Nation not Khmer because if you look at Hun Sen father, Hun Sen'swife, Hun Sen's dougter they are look more viet than khmer dark skin at the frontline fighting with Thai.

Anonymous said...

American administration love dictatorship as you as long as you are not against them.

Anonymous said...

ស្តាចមន៏ត្រសក់សីហនុ នៅដល់ក្នុងវាំងនូវ លក់ក្បាលអោយយួន មកសំលាប់ខ្មែរ ដើម្បីការពារ

អំណាច គិតមើលទៅ

Anonymous said...

1:55 PM,

he make money with drog and sell Khmer land to Viet.

Anonymous said...

2:26 PM -

How big is your penis to fuck Yuon's holes?

Anonymous said...

Ban all thing VietNam Vietcong.

We may have some differences among us, but don't fall into the Vietcong trap. Where there is khmer presence, support khmer.

Khmer still loves one another deep down!

Ban all thing vietNam Vietcong.

Anonymous said...

Khmer people! Just go vote. That Mansion house belong to any next or new elected PM. If Hun Sen looses, all the family wealth will return to Khmer people. So go and help vote to save Cambodia.

Anonymous said...

in cambodia, people like big houses, in the west, they like small houses; it's a cultural difference in attitude! what do you expect, really! it doesn't mean they are rich or poor, just means people like to have big houses, that's all, you know!

Anonymous said...

ស្ដេចមួយចំនួន និង ជនផ្ដាច់ការគ្រប់គ្រងប្រទេស
ក្នុងពិភពលោក យល់តែប្រយោជន៍ផ្ទាល់ខ្លួន កេង
កាញ់ប្រវ័ញ្ចសម្បត្តិជាតិ ប្រជាពលរដ្ធនិងបរទេស
ដើម្បីជាសម្បត្តិចក្ររបស់ខ្លួន។
ជនផ្ដាច់ការនៅអ៊ីរ៉ាក់(សាដាំហ៊ុស្សេន)ទុយនេស៊ី
អេហ្ស៊ីប កោះរាជាណាចក្របារ៉ាន់ កម្ពុជា(ហ៊ុន
សែន)ភូមា និង ប្រទេសកម្មុយនិស្តទាំងប្រាំគឺ
ចិន កូរ៉េខាងជើង យួន លាវ និង គុយបា។
ហ៊ុន សែនមានវិមានស្ដុកស្ដម្ភ មានលុយរាប់
កោដិ ដោយលក់ដី លក់កោះ លក់ព្រៃឈើ
រឹបអូសដីរាស្ត្រលក់ឲ្យបរទេស។ល។និង។ល។

Anonymous said...

how can hun xen affords the huge mansion when he receives only 1500 dollars a month salary?

Anonymous said...

IT PAYS TO BE A TOP CRIMINAL, WALKING
FREE, GET BILLIONS FREE MONEY, CONTINUED TO DICTATE AND OPPRESS, GRAB MORE LAND, BEAT/KILL MORE PEOPLE
ENJOY LIFE TO THE FULLEST, ENJOY LIFE OF LUXURY, WHAT MORE COULD YOU'VE ASKED FOR?

From poor Khmer

Anonymous said...

Hun Sen real name was Hun Nall.
His father is Hun Nearng.Dy Pok is
his mother.She sold cakes(nom akor).Hun Sen and his father were
thieves in Krauch chmar,K.Cham.
Both of them stole cows and buffaloes for living.
Hun Sen did not finish high school.
Back in 1970,he left school,ran to
jungle,and became Khmer Rouge.
In Khmer Rouge era,the village leaders,commune leaders,region leaders were drunkards,
cock fighters,fish fighters,and
cow or buffalo thefts.All these before they became Khmer Rouge leaders.
A theft is still a theft.
Hun Sen after become PM is still a
theft.He robs,grabs citizen land,
and etc...and the rest of his officials as same as he is.
Because of these evildoing,he gets
huge amount of $ billions and large
beautiful mansion.

Anonymous said...

No PM Hun Sen builds all his houses with his only salary US$1450 per months as he declare last time. PM Hun Sen saves all his income for his houses from many many years of his working life from only US$1450 per month.

This house is only cost PM HUn Sen US$ 5000 only. so Hun Sen has save for 6 months of his work salary to build this house. Please don't be jealous of Hun Sen successful in his life.

Anonymous said...

Motherfucker Hun Sen! You sell Cambodia out to only Vietnam. You are viet slave, your real nation is vietnam Ho Chi Minh

Anonymous said...

khmer people love big houses, including me, so, buy me a big house and i'll love you forever, ok!

Anonymous said...

Cambodia at the present time is doomed and change won't happen in the near future.

Perhaps the new generation with a new way of looking at things will rush in some changes or significant changes to help Cambodia out of its eternal cycle of corruption and poverty.

Will Cambodia be doomed for ever? Only time can tell.

Cambodia is a nice and beautiful country, but it is doomed by Pol Pot followed immediately by Hun Sen.

Anonymous said...

I slept garage with BMW!

Anonymous said...

1:49 AM

You think Cambodia is poor, there are other countries in South East Asia which are more poor than in Cambodia, such as Indonesia, the Philippine, Vietnam, Laos etc.

Anonymous said...

wait until khmer people wake up, we will become powerful country. cambodia is so beautiful in every way, really! the country is beautiful, the culture is rich and exotic, the tradition is rich and exotic, the khmer language is so beautiful and rich in rhymes, literatures, words, and well organized, etc, etc..., the people are beautiful, the customs and etiquette are beautiful, the khmer architecture are beautiful and baffling, the history was interesting, and the list goes on and on. don't we love cambodia? i love cambodia and all khmer people. god bless cambodia and all our beautiful khmer people and citizens.

Anonymous said...

That why other countries are not giving aid to Cambodia anymore due to this. DFID - UK Department for International Development have stop direct aid to 16 countries and Cambodia is on it's list. Other EU countries are to follow. What been said in Europe and the USA is let China fund Cambodia.