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Dancing in Shadows
Asian Voices A Subseries of Asian/ Pacific Perspectives Series Editor: Mark Selden
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Dancing in Shadows Sihanouk, the Khmer Rouge, and the United Nations in Cambodia BENNY WIDYONO
ROWMAN & LITrLEFIELD PUBLISHERS, INC. Lal//rmn • Boulder' New York· 1;)(01110 • Plymouth, UK
ROWMAN & LITTLEFIELD PUBLISHERS, INC. Published in the United States of America by Rowman & Littk-field Publishers, Inc. A wholly owned subsidiary of The Rowman & Littlefield Publishing Group, Inc. 4501 Forbes I~oulevard, Suite 200, Lanham, Maryland 20706 www.rowmanlittlefield.com Estover Road, Plymouth PL6 7PY, United Kingdom Copyright
e 200s by Rowman & Littlefield Publishers, Inc.
All rights resenwi. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means, ehxtronic, mechanical, photocopy~ ing, recording, or otherwise, without the prior permission of the publisher.
British Library Cataloguing in Publication Information Available Li brary of CQngress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Widyono, Benny, 1936Dancing in shadows: Sihanouk, the Khmer Rouge, and the United Nations in Cambodia I Benny Widyono. p. ern. - (Asian voices) Includes bibliographical references and index. ISBN- 13: 97S-0-7425-5552-5 (doth: alk. paper) ISBN· IO: 0-7425-5552-6 (cloth: alk. paper) ISBN~13: 97S·0-7425·5553·2 (pbk.: alk. paper) [SBN-IO: 0·7425·5553-4 (pbk.: alk. paper) I. Cambodia-Politics and government-1979- 2. United Nations-Cambodia. 3. Widyono, Benny, 1936· 4. Party of Democratic Kampuchea. 5. Norodom Sihanouk, Prince, 1922· L Title. D55S4.SWS3 200S 959.604f3 22 2007020165 Printed in the United States of America
@TM The paper used in this publication meets the minimum requirements of American National Standard for Information Sciences-Permanence of Paper for Printed Library Materials, ANSIfNISO Z39.48·1992.
For my wife, Francisca, and my children, Martin, Ron, Monique, and Dan
A scholar's highest obligation, the phrase had it in the 1960s, was to speak truth to power. It turned out. however, that truth was a tragically relative term in the Cold War era. Many Americans were sent to die by the lens of thousands, while Asians, Latin Americans, and Africans were sentenced to death by the millions because U.S. officials disagreed with foreign leaders about what each believed was true in terms of the needs of their own national i nterests. - Walter LaFeber in (/ foreword to George MeT Kahil!, Southeast Asia: A Testament
Contents
List of Illustrations
IX
Glossary ofAbbreviations and Terms
XI
Fo reword by Ben Kiernan Preface Acknowledgments
XV Il XXV Il XXXI
Part I: The View from t he Field, 1992-1993
When th e World " Invade d" Cam bo d ia
3
2
A Glim pse into the Past
23
3
The Intricat e Dance of Govern ance
41
4
We Stared at Each Other and I Blinked
55
5
The Khmer Rouge Derail Demobilization
75
6
T he Rocky Road to Elect ion s
95
7
A Vote for Peace?
109
Part II: A UN Envoy in Phnom Penh, 1994-1997 8
Not Eno ugh Actors for the Play
137
9
The King Reign s but Do es No t Rule
151
A Mysteri ous Co up Atte m pt
171
10
vii
CONTENTS
Vlll
11
Is There an Asian Model for Development?
189
12
A Puppet Prime Minister?
211
13
Toward a Climax
231
14
The Fina l Showdow n
253
Epilogue
275
Chronology
289
Append ix 1 Deployment of UNTAC
297
Appendix 2 The Roya l Government of Cambodia, November 1993
299
Bibliography
30 1
Index
31 1
Abo ut the Author
323
List of Illustrations
PHOTOS l.l
1.2 1.3 3.1
4.1
4.2 4.3 5. 1 5.2 6.1 7.1
Mine victim in wheelchair: an everyday scene during UNTAC times. UNTAC staffer fixing a safety reflector on a cydo. A giant Soviet-made MI-26 helicopter finally took me and my vehicle to Siem Reap. The two "rulers" of Cambodia during UNTAC: Akashi, head of UNTAC, and Sihanouk, head of SNC. Akashi addresses monthly meeting of provincial directors in Phnom Penh. To his left is Gerard Porcdl, director of Civil Administration. Listening to Radio UNTAC was a favorite pastime everywhere in Cambodia. An UNTAC Information Education Team travels by boat to a Cambodian island to publicize the elections. Soldiers of the Cambodian People's Armed Forces (C PAF), being demobilized. UN M ilitary Observer from the United States plays wi th baby from the Krung-Brau tribe. Khmer Rouge soldier in a zone controlled by the faction. Cambodians returning from refugee camps in Thailand.
10 13
14 42
60 69 69 78 81 99 110
"
LIST
7.2 7.3 7.4 7.5 7.6 8.1 9.1
I I. 1 13.1 14.1
OF ILLUSTRATIONS
Cambodian proud ly displays his registration card against background of UNTAC billboard on the elections. UN vehicles passing beneath ,\ banner publicizing elections in Phnom Penh. Crowds gathering ncar voting booth in Prey Veng province. A woman receiving her ballot from UNTAC electoral stafT. A UN stafT member cOllnting the votcs. Cambodians were excluded from participating in the counting process. A typical Saturday afternoon family outing in the new Cambodia. My first audience with the king. Death threat frolll the Khmer Rouge delivered to my office by a Khmer Rouge messenger. Hu n Sen, left, meeting leng Sary in Pailin. Cambodian Prime Minister Hun Sen, left, talks with Ranariddh, former prime minister and the new president of the National Assembly, on 11uman Rights day, 10 December 1998.
114 116 119 120 122 141 159 195 234
268
MAPS
l.l
3.1 4.1 5.1 7.1 7.2
Cambodia at the time of my arrival in March 1992. Administrative map of Siem Reap province showing population by dist ricts. Deployment of UNTAC military for cantonment and demobilization. Military deployment for electoral support after demobilization failed. Cambod ia repatriation; final destination of returnees. Results of UNTAC elections: Distribution of seats in the Constituen t Assembly.
7 45 62 80 112 123
TABLES
5.1 7.1
Troop strength of the four armies as reported to the United Nations. Cambodian 1993 election results by party.
76 127
Glossary of Abbreviations and Terms
ADB
Asian Development Bank.
Angkar
This was the official name of tbe authority in power under the Khmer Rouge. It simply means Organization.
ANKI
Armee National pour un Kampuchea Independent (Nation:)l Army for an Independent Kampuchea). Formerly known as ANS.
ANS
Armec National Sihanoukienne, or Sihanouk's National
A5EAN
Association of Southeast Asian Nations.
Hangbatt
Bangladesh battalion in UNTAC.
I~LDP
Buddhist Liberal Democratic Party. The political party of
CDC
Cambodian Development Council. The body dealing
CDCF
with foreign aid and fOT{:ign investment. Cambodian Development Cooperation Forum, a Cam-
Army. Changed its name in 1990 to ANKI.
the KPNL F.
bodian government body established in 2007 to coordinate the annual donors meetings, replacing the CG . See
CG. CG
Consultative Group. An annLlal meeting o rganized by the World Bank to coordinate ;urious Singapore-owned Mi Casa apartment building erected in its place. With the boom in tourism in posl-UNTAC Cambodia, the luxurious Cambodiana now has many competitors in the four-star category, including the refurbished colonial-era Hotel Ie Royal, which played an important role in the life of journalists during the Lon Nol period, as depicted in the movie TI,e Killing Fields. 9. ASEAN at the time consisted of six countries: Brunei Darussalam, Indonesia, Malaysia, the Philippines, Singapore, and Thailand.
10. Unpublished communication from Andy Flatt, director of Statistics, Economic and Social Commission for Asia and the Pacific, "T;lble on Per Capita CDI' in Cambodia and Thailand," extracted and processed from UN, ECAFE, Srllrisrim/ Yearbook for Asia and the Far Emr. Mr. Flatl cautioned about the difficulties of making such comparisons, including the usc of the exchange rates employed b)' ECAFE: the Cambodian riel was fixed at thirty-fi\'e to the U.s. dollar, whereas the Thai Baht was floating.
WHEN THE WORLD -INV"OEO- C"MBOOIA
21
11. Michel lgout, PhllOIll Pelill Theil fllld Now, Bangkok: White Lotus, 1993, 147. 12. The 15,9% soldiers came from thirty-four countries, whe reas the 3,359 civilian police came from thirty-two countries. Sec United Nations, The UllilCd NlIIiolls ill Cmll/w(/in, New York, 1995, 27. l-Iereinafter referred to as the B/ilc Book. 13. The problem of stolen cars from Thailand was tackled in 2003 when Cambodia vowed to arrest the owners of right-hand-driven cars who could not provide ownership documents. Yuwadee Tunyasari, UAu tomobile Thefl," Butlgkok POSI, 24 May 2003. 14. Chapters VI and VI[ refer to chapters in the Charter of the United Nations. [5. When I returned to Cambodia in January 2005, regular buses, air-conditioned ones for a $6 fare and non-air-conditioned ones for $4, plied this road regularly, full of Western and Japanese backpackers and NCP workers exploring Cambodia, as the Lonely Planet travel book series had finally discovered one of the most closely guarded secrets in Southeast Asia. 16. For details of UNTAC's deployment, please see appendix I. 17. There was a controversy, which was ne\'er resolved in Phnom Penh, whether as provincial "governor" I was a little Akashi, the chief administrator of UNTAC, in Siem Reap, or a little Porcell, the director of Civil Administration. Sec chapter 4 on t his conI rove rsy. 18. For details see the second part of appendix I. 19. Sanderson was officially appoin ted UNTAC force commander on 9 March 1992, two days before deploying to Cambodia. However, he had already been involved in the planning of the UNTAC mission earlier in New York, funded by the Australian government, but without an official position. A military engineer, he had seen active service in East Malaysia in 1966 and South Vietnam in 1970-1971. See Peter Bartu, ~The Fifth Faction: The United Nations Transitional Authority in Cambodia 1991-93," PhD dissertation, Monash University, 1998, 1. 20. Janet E. Heininger, Peacekeeping ill T"1II5ilioll; The Vlliled NII/iollS ill Cambodia, New York: The Twentieth Centur y Fund Press, 1994,37. 21. Countries that played a major role in the negotiations leading to the Paris Agreements included the five permanent members of the Security Council- the United States, the United Kingdom, France, the Soviet Union, and China-and Australia, Indonesia, Japan, and Thailand.
22
C H AP T ER
22. Sec for instance (proceedings of a S{,lllinar in Singapore on UNTAC which [ attended), Nasscrine Azimi, ed., The UN Tmllsitiollal Alilhority ill Cnmbodi(l ( UNTAC), Debriefing ami Lessons, London: Kluwer International, 1996, 17. 23. They included, among others, Stephen Heder, Judith Ledgerwood, Christophe Pcschoux, Vladimir $ourkov, Ali KiS lanov, Penny Edwards, Jay Jordan, Kate Frieson, and John Marston . Many later became the small core of Cambodian experts in the academic world in the English-speaking West to which I myself now belong.
24. UN document 5/24578, Second Progress Report of Ihe SecrclIlry-Gencral 011 UNTAC, 21 September 1992. 25. UN document 5/24578,6. 26. UN document A/46/903, Fill/weillg of the Ullited Na/iollS Advance Mission in
Cmnvo(/ia alld Pifl(lIIcillg of the United Nlltiolls TmllsitiolJili Authority in Cmllvotlia, 38. This is an important document as it contains the entire deployment plan of VNTAC by personnel and finance . Together with the UNTAC Hmrdvook, it provid('s an overview of the plan ning of VNTAC. Hereinafter cited as UNTAC Piamrillg IIl1d
Fillallcillg. 27. UN document A/46/903, UNTAC Plmrnillg (11111 Fimlllcillg, 46. 28. UN document A/46/903, 46.
1
A Glimpse into the Past
AI this point I feel a strong urge to interrupt my memoir by providing an ae· cou nt of Cambodia's reccnt horrendous past to help both the readers and my· self to better understand the even ts [ saw unfolding before my eyes. THREE PHASES IN CAMBODIA'S TRAGEDY
The catastrophic twenty yC