Image may be NSFW.
Clik here to view.
Despite the lofty goals of the Paris Peace Agreement, 25 years on, Prime Minister Hun Sen has achieved his own.
BY ALEX WILLEMYNS AND MECH DARAFRIDAY
The Phnom Penh Post, OCTOBER 21, 2016
Amid the winding-down of the Cold War in early December 1987, Prime Minister Hun Sen and Prince Norodom Sihanouk met in the quiet northern French village of Fère-en-Tardenois for their first talks on ending Cambodia’s intractable civil war.
It was an overture that opened the road to the 1991 Paris Peace Agreement – signed 25 years ago on Sunday – and followed two months after Hun Sen’s People’s Republic of Kampuchea (PRK) regime had publicly outlined the details of the pact it sought.
Sihanouk would return to Phnom Penh, the PRK suggested, and take “a high place in the leading state organ” of the regime, while the Vietnamese military battling to overcome Sihanouk’s resistance forces would withdraw and let the PRK run elections.
It was the first acknowledgement that Hun Sen’s pariah republic needed the legitimacy that only the return of the popular former king could bring.
“They have come to understand that if Cambodia wants to recover its full independence, the country needs Sihanouk,” wrote Jacques Bekaert, The Bangkok Post’s correspondent in Cambodia, after the meeting, while noting the terms would never be accepted.
“They know Sihanouk is too realistic and too proud a man to accept simply joining the PRK in exchange for some mostly honorific position,” he wrote.
When the Paris Peace Agreement was finally inked on October 23, 1991, it accordingly included much more than the PRK’s original offer, promising free elections organised by the UN and a resulting liberal democracy with equal participation from all.
Yet if Hun Sen’s regime in 1987 seriously intended to secure the continuation of its total rule with the added legitimacy of a centuries-old monarchy and an opposition no longer heavily armed by foreign powers – a quarter of a century later, they have it.
Far short of the modern democracy promised in 1991, the Cambodian People’s Party – as the old PRK regime renamed itself that year – continues with its fingers deep inside every part of the state, from the courts and bureaucracy to the police and armed forces.
Indeed, from military commander-in-chief Pol Saroeun to his deputies Kun Kim and Meas Sophea to National Police chief Neth Savoeun – and even the Supreme Court’s top judge, Dith Munthy – those who occupy key state institutions are members of the CPP standing committee – the old communist politburo.
“The CPP didn’t ‘capture’ any institutions. It entered a vacuum in 1979, and held onto the institutions it had ‘owned’ since then,” David Chandler, a prominent historian of Cambodia, said yesterday, referring to the year the Khmer Rouge were toppled.
Chandler said he believed it impossible to say if the PRK ever intended to give up power to its rivals when it inked the Paris Peace Agreement – but that by the time the UN-run elections rolled around, it was clear the party knew it could hold what it had built.
“It seems clear to me that its leaders in 1992-93 had no intention of relinquishing power. They were not attracted to the concept of an open election and fully intended, like all Cambodian leaders before them, to remain in power whatever happened,” he said.
“Moreover, the UN did a poor job of replacing or disempowering the government ‘in place’ in Cambodia, which the CPP viewed as a completely legitimate institution.”
Read: The United Nations’ involvement in Cambodia, 25 years on
A 1994 New York Times article on the 1993 election – which Sihanouk’s son Prince Norodom Ranariddh won as leader of Funcinpec – even featured a CPP official expressing shock the royalists did not put up a fight for a real foothold in the deeper state.
“A senior official in the Interior Ministry, which controls administration down to the village level and the pervasive, Communist-style security apparatus, said People’s Party officials were in disarray when their election defeat was announced,” it said.
The official said the CPP “expected the victors to move in and claim the spoils,” according to the article. “But ... because of lack of organization, the royalists never did, and as a result the repressive Communist apparatus remained in place ‘from top to bottom.’”
The opinion was one supported yesterday by Nhek Bun Chhay, a Funcinpec military general who later served as defense minister in a coalition with the CPP, who said the former resistance was never in a position to take over or even share the levers of state.
“The CPP had a strong structure since the past – both the administration of the army and the police – this was the key factor that allowed it to run and control the country so easily up to now,” Bun Chhay said.
“Funcinpec did not have any strong structures, because we came from the border,” he said. “Therefore, we had not yet built any foundations inside the country – and secondly, there was the leadership. We did not have any clear strategies to run the country.”
“We regret that the UN spent more than $2 billion to give an opportunity to Funcinpec, which won the election, to run the country, but it was unavoidable that we could not run the country and would be left without anything.”
The absence of much effort from the UN to separate the CPP from the state it built – despite promises in the Paris Peace Agreement – also helped place the CPP in a position where it could “entrench itself in power,” said Carl Thayer, an emeritus professor at the Australian Defense Force Academy in Canberra.
The resulting imbalance of power – even as Ranariddh headed a coalition with the CPP – would later lead Funcinpec to court the last Khmer Rouge soldiers along the Thai border, angering Hun Sen and leading him to decide he had to remove the prince, Thayer said.
“This contributed to the so-called 1997 coup, the demise of Funcinpec and the entrenchment of the CPP in power,” he explained. With that, the only serious threat to the ruling party was extinguished.
“The UN’s electoral process and the political culture nurtured by the CPP were contradictory,” Thayer continued. “I have often quipped that the UN needed to conduct two consecutive elections in countries like Cambodia for democracy to take root.”
In any case, with the UN long gone, the situation that remained was that the opposition had been disarmed, the government was administering elections and Sihanouk – as king – was relegated to a ceremonial position – all as suggested by the PRK in 1987.
Hun Sen would come to assert the CPP’s vise-grip during the July 1998 election, which, like each successive election, was marred by accusations of fraud, while the UN’s human rights office verified more than 100 political killings in the year before the ballot.
The CPP has since 1993 repeatedly denied it has any control over the institutions of state meant to be neutral, and the party’s spokesman, Sok Eysan, said yesterday that the present state of Cambodia was a testament to its commitment to the 1991 deal.
“From 1993 until now in 2016 ... if we did things wrong, the country would not have such development like it does today. Therefore, our achievements are the result of implementing the spirit of the Paris Peace Agreement,” Eysan said. “That’s inarguable.”
Yet others have disagreed.
The dire results of the Cambodia democracy project led John Sanderson, the commander of the UN’s peacekeeping force for the 1993 elections, to write in 2001 that the multibillion dollar project purchased little more than the right to forget the country.
“So much was promised to the Cambodian people by the United Nations ... that it is all the more poignant they find themselves in a state which remains largely lawless some nine years after the Paris peace agreements,” Sanderson wrote.
For many, the evaluation would remain an accurate reading of the country’s present situation, even on the 25th anniversary of the landmark agreement.
***
BY SHAUN TURTON
A minister attached to Prime Minister Hun Sen yesterday blasted the opposition party for using the Paris Peace Accords to “demonise” the government, calling them “power-thirsty demagogues”.
Uch Kim An was among several speakers at a conference yesterday at the Foreign Ministry to commemorate the pact’s 25th anniversary on Sunday.
In an apparent attack on the Cambodia National Rescue Party, the minister accused “demagogues” of trying to divide the country and “overthrow” the government by accusing it of ceding land to Vietnam, a claim many opposition members have made.
“Twenty five years after the return of peace and national reconciliation and five general elections later, some... power thirsty demagogues have nothing better than the Paris Agreement to demonise the elected government, accusing it of having ceded territories to Vietnam,” Kim An said.
Kim An, a former ambassador to France, also accused some elements of civil society, the media and “foreign agents” of pursuing the same “criminal objectives”, adding that those parties were pushing Cambodia into “blood and fire” for their own interests.
Coming after months of deterioration in Cambodia’s politics, Sunday’s milestone once again thrusts the relevancy of agreements into the limelight and the role of the international community.
Speaking at the conference, Foreign Minister Prak Sokhon defended the government in the face of recent criticism, including a 39-country statement expressing “deep concern” at the political situation, called for “understanding”.
“We are constantly victims of inference in our internal affairs, we ask to be understood and not to be judged; we are keenly mindful of our own weaknesses,” he said.
Besieged by legal cases widely considered politically motivated, the opposition party last month petitioned the embassies of signatory countries to the Paris accords, calling for them to help uphold its provisions protecting human rights and democracy.
“The Agreements will remain relevant until their vision is a reality for all Cambodians,” said CNRP president Sam Rainsy via email.
However, calls for a more active role by the international community face a very different reality from the superpower geopolitics that drove the 1991 agreement, said Sebastian Strangio, author of Hun Sen’s Cambodia.
“The PPAs were essentially put together by the five permanent members of the UN Security Council, who then proceeded to push their Cambodian proxies to sign it,” said Strangio, via email.
“[The agreements] were crafted as a way of disentangling foreign powers from Cambodia, not deepening their involvement. It was a way of putting the country’s destiny back in Cambodian hands, for better or worse.”
In an interview on Wednesday, former Indonesian Ambassador Wiryono Sastrohandoyo, said there was little international actors could do to implement the agreement fully, recalling Hun Sen was a “man who plays politics with guns”.
“Political will is not a matter of political will; it is produced by circumstances,” said the retired diplomat, who assisted the late Indonesian Foreign Minister Ali Alatas during talks preceding the accords.
“My minister was one of the troika team when things developed in the wrong direction there, but what can international personalities do? Not much, except advising, giving views,” he added, referring to a three-man ASEAN team that visited Cambodia in 1997 after Hun Sen ousted Prince Norodom Ranariddh as the first prime minister in bloody factional fighting.
The former Indonesian envoy was among several diplomats involved in the negotiations who addressed yesterday’s conference, along with French Ambassador Jean David Levitte and former Japanese envoy Yukio Imagawa.
In his speech at the conference, Levitte recalled in detail the intensive multi-state negotiations surrounding the accords and suggested they could be used as “inspiration” to approach a settlement of the Syrian conflict.
Ear Sophal, the author of Aid Dependence in Cambodia: How Foreign Assistance Undermines Democracy, said in an email it appeared the world had “moved on” when it came to Cambodia, leaving no chance of further intervention.
“Is Cambodia better off today than it was 25 years ago? Yes. Could it have been even better off? Absolutely,” said Sophal, also an associate professor at Occidental College in Los Angeles.
“Are only the foreign signatories of the Paris Peace Accord to blame? Absolutely not. At some point, Cambodians have got to own the problem. And the problem is lack of rule of law and property rights, never mind democracy.”
Clik here to view.

Despite the lofty goals of the Paris Peace Agreement, 25 years on, Prime Minister Hun Sen has achieved his own.
BY ALEX WILLEMYNS AND MECH DARAFRIDAY
The Phnom Penh Post, OCTOBER 21, 2016
Amid the winding-down of the Cold War in early December 1987, Prime Minister Hun Sen and Prince Norodom Sihanouk met in the quiet northern French village of Fère-en-Tardenois for their first talks on ending Cambodia’s intractable civil war.
It was an overture that opened the road to the 1991 Paris Peace Agreement – signed 25 years ago on Sunday – and followed two months after Hun Sen’s People’s Republic of Kampuchea (PRK) regime had publicly outlined the details of the pact it sought.
Sihanouk would return to Phnom Penh, the PRK suggested, and take “a high place in the leading state organ” of the regime, while the Vietnamese military battling to overcome Sihanouk’s resistance forces would withdraw and let the PRK run elections.
Image may be NSFW. Clik here to view. ![]() |
Cambodian Prime Minister Hun Sen signs the peace treaty on October 23, 1991, in Paris. Gerard Fouet/AFP |
It was the first acknowledgement that Hun Sen’s pariah republic needed the legitimacy that only the return of the popular former king could bring.
“They have come to understand that if Cambodia wants to recover its full independence, the country needs Sihanouk,” wrote Jacques Bekaert, The Bangkok Post’s correspondent in Cambodia, after the meeting, while noting the terms would never be accepted.
“They know Sihanouk is too realistic and too proud a man to accept simply joining the PRK in exchange for some mostly honorific position,” he wrote.
When the Paris Peace Agreement was finally inked on October 23, 1991, it accordingly included much more than the PRK’s original offer, promising free elections organised by the UN and a resulting liberal democracy with equal participation from all.
Yet if Hun Sen’s regime in 1987 seriously intended to secure the continuation of its total rule with the added legitimacy of a centuries-old monarchy and an opposition no longer heavily armed by foreign powers – a quarter of a century later, they have it.
Far short of the modern democracy promised in 1991, the Cambodian People’s Party – as the old PRK regime renamed itself that year – continues with its fingers deep inside every part of the state, from the courts and bureaucracy to the police and armed forces.
Indeed, from military commander-in-chief Pol Saroeun to his deputies Kun Kim and Meas Sophea to National Police chief Neth Savoeun – and even the Supreme Court’s top judge, Dith Munthy – those who occupy key state institutions are members of the CPP standing committee – the old communist politburo.
“The CPP didn’t ‘capture’ any institutions. It entered a vacuum in 1979, and held onto the institutions it had ‘owned’ since then,” David Chandler, a prominent historian of Cambodia, said yesterday, referring to the year the Khmer Rouge were toppled.
Chandler said he believed it impossible to say if the PRK ever intended to give up power to its rivals when it inked the Paris Peace Agreement – but that by the time the UN-run elections rolled around, it was clear the party knew it could hold what it had built.
“It seems clear to me that its leaders in 1992-93 had no intention of relinquishing power. They were not attracted to the concept of an open election and fully intended, like all Cambodian leaders before them, to remain in power whatever happened,” he said.
“Moreover, the UN did a poor job of replacing or disempowering the government ‘in place’ in Cambodia, which the CPP viewed as a completely legitimate institution.”
Read: The United Nations’ involvement in Cambodia, 25 years on
A 1994 New York Times article on the 1993 election – which Sihanouk’s son Prince Norodom Ranariddh won as leader of Funcinpec – even featured a CPP official expressing shock the royalists did not put up a fight for a real foothold in the deeper state.
“A senior official in the Interior Ministry, which controls administration down to the village level and the pervasive, Communist-style security apparatus, said People’s Party officials were in disarray when their election defeat was announced,” it said.
The official said the CPP “expected the victors to move in and claim the spoils,” according to the article. “But ... because of lack of organization, the royalists never did, and as a result the repressive Communist apparatus remained in place ‘from top to bottom.’”
The opinion was one supported yesterday by Nhek Bun Chhay, a Funcinpec military general who later served as defense minister in a coalition with the CPP, who said the former resistance was never in a position to take over or even share the levers of state.
Far short of the modern democracy promised in 1991, the Cambodian People’s Party continues with its fingers deep inside every part of the state
“The CPP had a strong structure since the past – both the administration of the army and the police – this was the key factor that allowed it to run and control the country so easily up to now,” Bun Chhay said.
“Funcinpec did not have any strong structures, because we came from the border,” he said. “Therefore, we had not yet built any foundations inside the country – and secondly, there was the leadership. We did not have any clear strategies to run the country.”
“We regret that the UN spent more than $2 billion to give an opportunity to Funcinpec, which won the election, to run the country, but it was unavoidable that we could not run the country and would be left without anything.”
The absence of much effort from the UN to separate the CPP from the state it built – despite promises in the Paris Peace Agreement – also helped place the CPP in a position where it could “entrench itself in power,” said Carl Thayer, an emeritus professor at the Australian Defense Force Academy in Canberra.
The resulting imbalance of power – even as Ranariddh headed a coalition with the CPP – would later lead Funcinpec to court the last Khmer Rouge soldiers along the Thai border, angering Hun Sen and leading him to decide he had to remove the prince, Thayer said.
“This contributed to the so-called 1997 coup, the demise of Funcinpec and the entrenchment of the CPP in power,” he explained. With that, the only serious threat to the ruling party was extinguished.
“The UN’s electoral process and the political culture nurtured by the CPP were contradictory,” Thayer continued. “I have often quipped that the UN needed to conduct two consecutive elections in countries like Cambodia for democracy to take root.”
Image may be NSFW. Clik here to view. ![]() |
Minister of Foreign Affairs Prak Sokhon speaks in Phnom Penh yesterday as an image from October 23, 1991, is displayed of then-Prince Norodom Sihanouk and Prime Minister Hun Sen in Paris before signing the peace treaty. Hong Menea |
In any case, with the UN long gone, the situation that remained was that the opposition had been disarmed, the government was administering elections and Sihanouk – as king – was relegated to a ceremonial position – all as suggested by the PRK in 1987.
Hun Sen would come to assert the CPP’s vise-grip during the July 1998 election, which, like each successive election, was marred by accusations of fraud, while the UN’s human rights office verified more than 100 political killings in the year before the ballot.
The CPP has since 1993 repeatedly denied it has any control over the institutions of state meant to be neutral, and the party’s spokesman, Sok Eysan, said yesterday that the present state of Cambodia was a testament to its commitment to the 1991 deal.
“From 1993 until now in 2016 ... if we did things wrong, the country would not have such development like it does today. Therefore, our achievements are the result of implementing the spirit of the Paris Peace Agreement,” Eysan said. “That’s inarguable.”
Yet others have disagreed.
The dire results of the Cambodia democracy project led John Sanderson, the commander of the UN’s peacekeeping force for the 1993 elections, to write in 2001 that the multibillion dollar project purchased little more than the right to forget the country.
“So much was promised to the Cambodian people by the United Nations ... that it is all the more poignant they find themselves in a state which remains largely lawless some nine years after the Paris peace agreements,” Sanderson wrote.
For many, the evaluation would remain an accurate reading of the country’s present situation, even on the 25th anniversary of the landmark agreement.
***
Post-accords, the world’s gaze shifted
BY SHAUN TURTON
A minister attached to Prime Minister Hun Sen yesterday blasted the opposition party for using the Paris Peace Accords to “demonise” the government, calling them “power-thirsty demagogues”.
Uch Kim An was among several speakers at a conference yesterday at the Foreign Ministry to commemorate the pact’s 25th anniversary on Sunday.
In an apparent attack on the Cambodia National Rescue Party, the minister accused “demagogues” of trying to divide the country and “overthrow” the government by accusing it of ceding land to Vietnam, a claim many opposition members have made.
“Twenty five years after the return of peace and national reconciliation and five general elections later, some... power thirsty demagogues have nothing better than the Paris Agreement to demonise the elected government, accusing it of having ceded territories to Vietnam,” Kim An said.
Kim An, a former ambassador to France, also accused some elements of civil society, the media and “foreign agents” of pursuing the same “criminal objectives”, adding that those parties were pushing Cambodia into “blood and fire” for their own interests.
Coming after months of deterioration in Cambodia’s politics, Sunday’s milestone once again thrusts the relevancy of agreements into the limelight and the role of the international community.
Speaking at the conference, Foreign Minister Prak Sokhon defended the government in the face of recent criticism, including a 39-country statement expressing “deep concern” at the political situation, called for “understanding”.
“We are constantly victims of inference in our internal affairs, we ask to be understood and not to be judged; we are keenly mindful of our own weaknesses,” he said.
Image may be NSFW. Clik here to view. ![]() |
Minister of Foreign Affairs Prak Sokhon (left) and former French ambassador Jean David Levitte (right) attend an event commemorating the 25th anniversary of the Paris Peace Accords yesterday. Hong Menea |
Besieged by legal cases widely considered politically motivated, the opposition party last month petitioned the embassies of signatory countries to the Paris accords, calling for them to help uphold its provisions protecting human rights and democracy.
“The Agreements will remain relevant until their vision is a reality for all Cambodians,” said CNRP president Sam Rainsy via email.
However, calls for a more active role by the international community face a very different reality from the superpower geopolitics that drove the 1991 agreement, said Sebastian Strangio, author of Hun Sen’s Cambodia.
“The PPAs were essentially put together by the five permanent members of the UN Security Council, who then proceeded to push their Cambodian proxies to sign it,” said Strangio, via email.
“[The agreements] were crafted as a way of disentangling foreign powers from Cambodia, not deepening their involvement. It was a way of putting the country’s destiny back in Cambodian hands, for better or worse.”
Is Cambodia better off today than it was 25 years ago? Yes. Could it have been even better off? Absolutely.
In an interview on Wednesday, former Indonesian Ambassador Wiryono Sastrohandoyo, said there was little international actors could do to implement the agreement fully, recalling Hun Sen was a “man who plays politics with guns”.
“Political will is not a matter of political will; it is produced by circumstances,” said the retired diplomat, who assisted the late Indonesian Foreign Minister Ali Alatas during talks preceding the accords.
“My minister was one of the troika team when things developed in the wrong direction there, but what can international personalities do? Not much, except advising, giving views,” he added, referring to a three-man ASEAN team that visited Cambodia in 1997 after Hun Sen ousted Prince Norodom Ranariddh as the first prime minister in bloody factional fighting.
The former Indonesian envoy was among several diplomats involved in the negotiations who addressed yesterday’s conference, along with French Ambassador Jean David Levitte and former Japanese envoy Yukio Imagawa.
In his speech at the conference, Levitte recalled in detail the intensive multi-state negotiations surrounding the accords and suggested they could be used as “inspiration” to approach a settlement of the Syrian conflict.
Ear Sophal, the author of Aid Dependence in Cambodia: How Foreign Assistance Undermines Democracy, said in an email it appeared the world had “moved on” when it came to Cambodia, leaving no chance of further intervention.
“Is Cambodia better off today than it was 25 years ago? Yes. Could it have been even better off? Absolutely,” said Sophal, also an associate professor at Occidental College in Los Angeles.
“Are only the foreign signatories of the Paris Peace Accord to blame? Absolutely not. At some point, Cambodians have got to own the problem. And the problem is lack of rule of law and property rights, never mind democracy.”