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August 18,
2013
U.S. Aid to Cambodia's Corrupt Military
Cambodia 's military openly and illegally campaigned for former Khmer Rouge commander Prime Minister Hun Sen and the ruling Cambodian People's Party, a repressive communist kleptocracy, and created an atmosphere of voter intimidation in the recent July 28th elections marred by fraud according to Human Rights Watch.
According to the Pnomh Penh Post, last April, Cambodia 's pre-eminent environment activist, Chut Wutty was shot dead by military policemen protecting an illegal logging concession. Three weeks after Wutty's murder, soldiers hired to protect the economic concession of a company murdered a 14-year-old girl. In September, Cambodian investigative journalist Hang Serei Odom was hacked to death and stuffed in the trunk by a military officer protecting another concession.
Tens of thousands of people around the country have been forcibly evicted without compensation, and some killed, in land-grabs, often in connection with economic land concessions granted to powerful foreign-owned companies. Cambodia 's Army, commanded by Hun Sen's son, has a rent-a-cop policy -- an army for hire -- paid by the companies to carry out the evictions and guard their assets. Military trucks provided by the U.S. are used to transport soldiers for evictions and to protect private companies and are often seen hauling illegal timber cut from endangered forests.
It is outrageous that the
United States
supplies millions of dollars of equipment and other aid to
Cambodia 's army
while it engages in such flagrant abuses of human rights.
U.S. military
aid to Cambodia
should be limited to only training its military on preventing human rights
abuses and for disaster response and civic action; and it must be closely
monitored to avoid continued misuse. The Obama Administration attempts to
justify turning a blind eye toward abuses by the Cambodian military on the
necessity to gain influence in
Cambodia in
competition with
China ; a futile
endeavor that it cannot win and a pipe dream at best. When the Obama
administration suspended a shipment of about two dozen military vehicles to
Cambodia in
2010, China
promptly stepped in and donated over 250 military trucks. In October last year,
Cambodia received about 100 tanks and 40 APCs from Ukraine – a shipment that
marked one of the largest ever, suggesting that European arms dealers do not
discriminate against Chinese money.
On Wednesday morning ( 08/14/13 ), a port official confirmed that "more
than 80 tanks and APCs, and... about 100 containers of bullets and mortar
shells," from an Eastern European country arrived at Sihanoukville Autonomous Port. The arrival comes just two weeks after
the Chinese government gave 1,000 handguns and 50,000 rounds of ammunition to
Cambodian police forces. Officials insisted the handover had been inked long
before, but the delivery raised eyebrows among analysts who suggested it had
been timed to coincide with post-election unrest. On Thursday,
eyewitnesses in Preah Sihanouk province said they saw more than 20 heavily armed
vehicles --including at least 16 tanks -- at the
Sihanoukville
Autonomous
Port being transported by truck up
National Road 4.
Cambodia 's
Defense Minister Tea Banh
said that the truckloads of tanks
and mounted rocket launchers seen by witnesses leaving the Port in the direction
of Phnom Penh would be used to
protect the country in the case that someone "tries to destroy the nation."
Where the U.S. has a distinct advantage and can gain influence with the disadvantaged Cambodian people is through providing humanitarian aid and economic development assistance at the grass roots level rather than aid to a morally corrupt regime's military.
And the band plays on.
Michael Benge spent
11 years in Vietnam as a foreign service officer and is a student of South
East Asian politics. He is very active in advocating for human rights, religious
freedom, and democracy for the peoples of the region and has written extensively
on these subjects.
1 comment:
Thank you for the information Michael Benge.
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