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SEGURIDAD |
Cambodia’s Failing Democracy
By Ronald Bruce St John | January 23, 2006
The international community has invested well over $5 billion in
Cambodia since 1992 in a flawed attempt to nurture a democratic
system. Following elections in 1993, the power elite in Cambodia
reverted to sordid aspects of traditional political culture, promoting
modernization within an authoritarian model. At a time when some
promote democracy as a panacea for the world's ills, Cambodia offers
object lessons in the pitfalls to be overcome to implant a democratic
system in less-developed political economies.
High Expectations
Following the October 1991 Paris peace accords, elements of the
United Nations Transitional Authority in Cambodia (UNTAC) were operational
by early 1993. UNTAC forces were largely successful in resettling
refugees and organizing nationwide elections, but they enjoyed far
less success in implementing a cease-fire and disarming rival political
groups. In a harbinger of things to come, they also experienced
difficulty in containing violence and guarding human rights.
Given the atmosphere of threat and intimidation, the conduct of
elections in May 1993 was a surprising success. On the opening day
of a six-day polling period, voters lined up in driving monsoon
rains to cast their ballots. By the end of the week, some 97% of
eligible voters had voted in Cambodia's first national election
in 21 years.
Exactly what Cambodians voted for in 1993 remains a controversial
issue. In a country in which no government has ever relinquished
authority without a fight, the Western concept of a loyal opposition
remained an imported idea alien to traditional political culture.
Referring to Hun Sen, leader of the Cambodia People's Party (CPP),
journalist John C. Brown in a June 1993 article in the Phnom Penh
Post rightly suggested “Hun Sen and the CPP understand power
only in absolute terms. Power for them,” he continued, “is
not shared, it is accumulated and protected.”
Sad Reality
The National United Front for an Independent, Neutral, Peaceful,
and Cooperative Cambodia (FUNCINPEC), headed by Prince Ranariddh,
won 45% of the votes in the 1993 elections, compared to only 38%
for CPP. While FUNCINPEC emerged from the polls as the largest and
most successful political party, its plurality in the Constituent
Assembly was three seats short of a majority, forcing it to turn
to CPP to negotiate a power-sharing agreement.
CPP demanded equal power with FUNCINPEC, and the ensuing power-sharing
agreement in theory was a 50-50 arrangement. However, CPP over time
leveraged its power and reach at lower levels of government to outmaneuver
FUNCINPEC, progressively accumulating a disproportionate share of
power. In the process, it became all too clear the political elite
of Cambodia was not as committed to democracy as the Cambodian people.
On the contrary, a series of power-sharing agreements between the
two parties over the next few years, all of which were increasingly
dominated by CPP, made the very idea of power-sharing an oxymoron
in Cambodia .
In July 1997, Hun Sen launched a preemptive coup d'état
against Prince Ranariddh, ransacking FUNCINPEC offices and newspapers
and murdering leaders of both FUNCINPEC and the Khmer Nation Party
(KNP), formed in 1995 by ex-minister Sam Rainsy. As in 1993, electioneering
rhetoric in new national elections in 1998 was couched in the lofty
terms of democratization; however, the electoral process was again
clouded by now familiar dynamics of rivalry and intimidation. In
the end, as veteran Cambodia observer Pierre Lizée later
suggested, the 1998 elections were “not so much a first step
in an overdue process of democratization” as “a movement
full circle to precisely the situation of autocracy which these
elections were supposed to remedy.”
The extent to which CPP was successful in consolidating political
power after 1993 was clear in commune elections held in early 2002.
Benefiting from a prolonged monopoly over local government, a disciplined
political network, and considerable human and financial resources,
CPP won 62% of the votes, 68% of the total seats, and 97% of the
top offices. And a new round of national elections in July 2003
produced fresh gains for CPP. Agreement to a new CPP-FUNCINPEC power-sharing
arrangement in June 2004, after a year-long battle in which opponents
failed to oust Hun Sen, displayed for all to see the strongman's
growing intolerance of dissent.
Violence, Corruption, and Impunity
Hailed at the time as a notable achievement, the UNTAC-sponsored
elections in 1993 failed to establish a foundation for democratic
institutions in an immature body politic. In lieu of change in the
political culture of Cambodia , the elections led to a reassertion
of past political practices. Power brokers after 1993 increasingly
practiced politics as usual, evidencing the absolutism, familism,
and intolerance prevalent in the earlier Sihanouk and Lon Nol eras.
Violence also remained an integral part of Cambodian political
culture. A longtime predilection to force, exemplified by the bas-reliefs
at Angkor and the cruelties of 19 th century uprisings, was in evidence
during and after the 1993 election campaign. Violations of human
rights were widespread, and voices of even mild dissent received
death threats. The U.S. Department of State, in its most recent
review of human rights practices, concluded Cambodia's “human
rights record remained poor.”
On the related issue of corruption, an anti-corruption law drafted
in 1994 remains on the drawing board over a decade later. Even as
civil society groups work to strengthen its provisions, the current
draft fails to meet the requirements of the United Nations Convention
against Corruption, which Cambodia refuses to sign. The U.S. Agency
for International Development (USAID) at the end of 2004 issued
a detailed report, depicting a corruption-ridden Cambodian state
apparatus. Depicting impunity as the “norm,” the report
concludes that “those most at risk are individuals and organizations
that dare to resist corruption.” The European Parliament in
November 2005 called on Cambodia “to engage in political and
institutional reforms to build a democratic state government by
a rule of law,” “to combat effectively the endemic scourges
of corruption,” and “to refuse the current culture of
impunity.”
International Collusion
Despite mounting evidence that democracy was not taking root in
Cambodia, the international community has continued to extend substantial
financial support to the coalition government. The single time financial
aid conditionality was exercised in the period May 1993 to July
1997 involved a question of fiscal transparency as opposed to political
reform. Thereafter, the primary concerns of the International Monetary
Fund (IMF) and World Bank remained economic and social reform. Donors
failed to establish a working group dealing with good governance
and the rule of law until 2000.
In November 2004, the World Bank took its strongest stand to date
in support of political reform in Cambodia, suggesting that future
aid pledges be conditioned on improved governance. In so doing,
the report admitted that Cambodia's aid partners in the past had
too often been part of the problem—not part of the solution.
It said in part, “failure to speak out for Cambodia's poor
with one voice or to link financial and technical support to performance
and outcomes has sent mixed signals to the country's leadership
which has shown itself rather adept at doing just enough to win
donor support.” Earlier reports by the Economic Institute
of Canada, IMF, and USAID reached similar conclusions as to the
need for political reform. Nevertheless, donors at the annual Consultative
Group meeting, which followed issuance of the World Bank report,
pledged $504 million in aid to Cambodia in 2005, raising the post-1993
aid total to over $5 billion.
Conclusions
As the Cambodian experience makes clear, democracy is not synonymous
with holding elections. Well-run elections are a peaceful, efficient
means to allocate power and authority. But one election, or even
many elections, does not necessarily a democracy make. The essence
of Western democracy consists of a separation of powers with checks
and balances within a system of democratic institutions, political
parties, and free elections. The Cambodian elite has yet to embrace
central elements of this process, like power sharing, dissent, and
loyal opposition.
Unfortunately, the international community has largely sanctioned
Cambodia's failures. It has continued to provide substantial quantities
of aid in the face of mounting evidence that even modest democratic
reforms are compromised. To this extent, donor governments have
long been complicit in sustaining the current autocratic order.
From the outset, a central weakness in the donor approach has been
its assumption that the ruling elite desired to initiate reforms
but simply lacked the necessary expertise. Recent experience has
shown the political order in Cambodia to be both intimately familiar
with the process of political competition and determined to retain
political power. No amount of technical assistance could overcome
this reality.
To reduce corruption and violence, Cambodia must curb executive
powers as it develops an honest, independent judiciary and a concomitant
respect for the rule of law. Active political parties remain important
precursors for a sustainable, pluralistic order with a strong educational
system a prerequisite for an effective democratic polity. These
are only a few of the tough issues the international community must
address if it is to succeed in promoting democratization in Cambodia
and in other states with little or no democratic tradition, like
Afghanistan and Iraq.
Ronald Bruce St John, an analyst for Foreign Policy In Focus (www.fpif.org),
is the author of Revolution, Reform, and Regionalism in Southeast
Asia: Cambodia, Laos, and Vietnam (Routledge 2006). This commentary
is adapted from “Democracy in Cambodia: One Decade, US$5 Billion
Later: What Went Wrong?” in the December 2005 issue of Contemporary
Southeast Asia.
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