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Background Note: Cambodia
PROFILE
OFFICIAL NAME:
Kingdom of Cambodia
Geography
Area: 181,040 sq. km. (69,900 sq. mi.); about the size of
Missouri.
Cities: Capital--Phnom Penh (pop. 1.2 million),
Battambang, Siem Reap, Kompong Cham, Kompong Speu, Kompong Thom.
Terrain: Central plain drained by the Tonle Sap (Great Lake) and
Mekong and Bassac Rivers. Forests away from the rivers and the
lake, mountains in the southwest (Cardamom Mountains) and north
(Dangrek Mountains) along the border with Thailand.
Climate: Tropical monsoon with rainy season June-Oct. and dry
season Nov.-May.
People
Nationality: Noun and adjective--Cambodian(s), Khmer.
Population (2007 est.): 13,995,904.
Avg. annual growth rate (2007 est.): 1.72%.
Health: Infant mortality rate--58/1,000. Life
expectancy--59 years male; 63 years female.
Ethnic groups: Cambodian 90%; Vietnamese 5%; Chinese 1%; small
numbers of hill tribes, Chams, and Laotian.
Religions: Theravada Buddhism 95%; Islam; animism; Christian.
Languages: Khmer (official) spoken by more than 95% of the
population; some French still spoken in urban areas; English
increasingly popular as a second language.
Education: Years compulsory--none. Enrollment--primary
school, 91.9%; grades 7 to 9, 26.1%; grades 10 to 12, 9.3%; and
post-secondary, 1.4%. Completion rates--primary school,
46.8%; lower secondary school, 20.57%; upper secondary school,
8.92%; university, 6%. Literacy (total population over
15 that can read and write, 2006)--73.6% (male 84.7%; female
64.1%).
Government
Type: Multiparty democracy under a constitutional monarchy.
Independence: November 9, 1953.
Constitution: September 24, 1993; amended March 6, 1999.
Branches: Executive--King Sihamoni (head of state since
October 29, 2004), appointed prime minister (Hun Sen since
January 14, 1985), six deputy prime ministers, 14 senior
ministers, 28 ministers, 135 secretaries of state, and 146
undersecretaries of state. Legislative--National
Assembly, consisting of 123 elected members; Senate, consisting
of 61 members. Judicial--Supreme Court and lower
courts.
Administrative subdivisions: 20 provinces and 4 municipalities.
Political parties and leaders: Ruling parties--A
coalition government of the Cambodian People's Party (CPP), led
by Samdech Chea Sim, and the National United Front for an
Independent, Neutral, Peaceful, and Cooperative Cambodia
(FUNCINPEC), led by National Assembly President Prince Norodom
Ranariddh. Opposition parties--The Sam Rainsy Party
(SRP), led by Sam Rainsy; several minor parties.
Economy
GDP (2006 est.): $6.6 billion.
Per capita GDP (2005): $448.
Annual growth rate (2006): 10.5%.
Inflation (2006): 5%.
Natural resources: Timber, gemstones, some iron ore, manganese
and phosphate, hydroelectric potential from the Mekong River.
Agriculture (34.2% of GDP, 2005): About 4,848,000 hectares (12
million acres) are unforested land; all are arable with
irrigation, but 2.5 million hectares are cultivated.
Products--rice, rubber, corn, meat, vegetables, dairy
products, sugar, flour.
Industry (26.7% of GDP, 2005): Types--garment and shoe
manufacturing, rice milling, tobacco, fisheries and fishing,
wood and wood products, textiles, cement, some rubber
production, paper and food processing.
Services (39.1% of GDP, 2004 est.): Tourism, telecommunications,
transportation, and construction.
Central government budget (2005): Revenues--$642
million; expenditures--$812 million; foreign
financing--$273 million.
Trade: Exports ($3.45 billion, 2006)--garments, shoes,
cigarettes, natural rubber, rice, pepper, wood, fish. Major
partners--United States, Germany, U.K., Singapore, Japan,
Vietnam. Imports ($3.31 billion, 2006)--fuels,
cigarettes, vehicles, consumer goods, machinery. Major
partners--Thailand, Singapore, China, Hong Kong, Vietnam,
Taiwan, United States.
Economic aid received: Pledges of $601 million in grants and
concessional loans for calendar year 2006. Major donors--Asian
Development Bank (ADB), UN Development Program (UNDP), World
Bank, International Monetary Fund, Australia, Canada, Denmark,
the EU, France, Germany, Italy, Japan, Sweden, Thailand, U.K.,
U.S. According to the Cambodian Government, 95.2% of the $504
million pledged by donors for 2005 was actually disbursed.
Principal foreign commercial investors: Malaysia, Taiwan, U.S.,
China, Korea, Hong Kong, Singapore, and Thailand.
Exchange rate (2006): 4,114 riel per U.S. $1.
GEOGRAPHY
Cambodia is located on mainland Southeast Asia between Thailand
to the west and north and Vietnam to the east. It shares a land
border with Laos in the northeast. Cambodia has a sea coast on
the Gulf of Thailand. The Dangrek Mountain range in the north
and Cardamom Mountains in the southwest form natural boundaries.
Principal physical features include the Tonle Sap lake and the
Mekong and Bassac Rivers. Cambodia remains one of the most
heavily forested countries in the region, although deforestation
continues at an alarming rate.
PEOPLE AND CULTURE
Ninety percent of Cambodia's population is ethnically Cambodian.
Other ethnic groups include Chinese, Vietnamese, hill tribes,
Chams, and Laotian. Theravada Buddhism is the religion of 95% of
the population; Islam, animism, and Christianity also are
practiced. Khmer is the official language and is spoken by more
than 95% of the population. Some French is still spoken in urban
areas, and English is increasingly popular as a second language.
MODERN HISTORY
Although Cambodia had a rich and powerful past under the Hindu
state of Funan and the Kingdom of Angkor, by the mid-19th
century the country was on the verge of dissolution. After
repeated requests for French assistance, a protectorate was
established in 1863. By 1884, Cambodia was a virtual colony;
soon after it was made part of the Indochina Union with Annam,
Tonkin, Cochin-China, and Laos. France continued to control the
country even after the start of World War II through its Vichy
government. In 1945, the Japanese dissolved the colonial
administration, and King Norodom Sihanouk declared an
independent, anti-colonial government under Prime Minister Son
Ngoc Thanh in March 1945. The Allies deposed this government in
October. In January 1953, Sihanouk named his father as regent
and went into self-imposed exile, refusing to return until
Cambodia gained genuine independence.
Full Independence
Sihanouk's actions hastened the French Government's July 4, 1953
announcement of its readiness to grant independence, which came
on November 9, 1953. The situation remained uncertain until a
1954 conference was held in Geneva to settle the
French-Indochina war. All participants, except the United States
and the State of Vietnam, associated themselves (by voice) with
the final declaration. The Cambodian delegation agreed to the
neutrality of the three Indochinese states but insisted on a
provision in the cease-fire agreement that left the Cambodian
Government free to call for outside military assistance should
the Viet Minh or others threaten its territory.
Neutral Cambodia
Neutrality was the central element of Cambodian foreign policy
during the 1950s and 1960s. By the mid-1960s, parts of
Cambodia's eastern provinces were serving as bases for North
Vietnamese Army and Viet Cong (NVA/VC) forces operating against
South Vietnam, and the port of Sihanoukville was being used to
supply them. As NVA/VC activity grew, the United States and
South Vietnam became concerned, and in 1969, the United States
began a series of air raids against NVA/VC base areas inside
Cambodia.
Throughout the 1960s, domestic politics
polarized. Opposition grew within the middle class and among
leftists, including Paris-educated leaders such as Son Sen, Ieng
Sary, and Saloth Sar (later known as Pol Pot), who led an
insurgency under the clandestine Communist Party of Kampuchea (CPK).
The Khmer Republic and the War
In March 1970, Gen. Lon Nol deposed Prince Sihanouk and assumed
power. On October 9, the Cambodian monarchy was abolished, and
the country was renamed the Khmer Republic. Hanoi rejected the
new republic's request for the withdrawal of NVA/VC troops and
began to reinfiltrate some of the 2,000-4,000 Cambodians who had
gone to North Vietnam in 1954. They became a cadre in the
insurgency. The United States moved to provide material
assistance to the new government's armed forces, which were
engaged against both the Khmer Rouge insurgents and NVA/VC
forces. In April 1970, U.S. and South Vietnamese forces entered
Cambodia in a campaign aimed at destroying NVA/VC base areas.
Although a considerable quantity of equipment was seized or
destroyed, NVA/VC forces proved elusive and moved deeper into
Cambodia. NVA/VC units overran many Cambodian Army positions
while the Khmer Rouge expanded their smallscale attacks on lines
of communication.
The Khmer Republic's leadership was plagued by
disunity among its members, the problems of transforming a
30,000-man army into a national combat force of more than
200,000 men, and spreading corruption. The insurgency continued
to grow, with supplies and military support provided by North
Vietnam. But inside Cambodia, Pol Pot and Ieng Sary asserted
their dominance over the Vietnamese-trained communists, many of
whom were purged. At the same time, the Khmer Rouge forces
became stronger and more independent of their Vietnamese
patrons. By 1974, Lon Nol's control was reduced to small
enclaves around the cities and main transportation routes. More
than 2 million refugees from the war lived in Phnom Penh and
other cities.
On New Year's Day 1975, communist troops
launched an offensive that, in 117 days of the hardest fighting
of the war, destroyed the Khmer Republic. Simultaneous attacks
around the perimeter of Phnom Penh pinned down Republican
forces, while other Khmer Rouge units overran fire bases
controlling the vital lower Mekong resupply route. A U.S.-funded
airlift of ammunition and rice ended when Congress refused
additional aid for Cambodia. Phnom Penh surrendered on April 17,
1975--5 days after the U.S. mission evacuated Cambodia.
Democratic Kampuchea
Many Cambodians welcomed the arrival of peace, but the Khmer
Rouge soon turned Cambodia--which it called Democratic Kampuchea
(DK)--into a land of horror. Immediately after its victory, the
new regime ordered the evacuation of all cities and towns,
sending the entire urban population out into the countryside to
till the land. Thousands starved or died of disease during the
evacuation. Many of those forced to evacuate the cities were
resettled in new villages, which lacked food, agricultural
implements, and medical care. Many starved before the first
harvest, and hunger and malnutrition--bordering on
starvation--were constant during those years. Those who resisted
or who questioned orders were immediately executed, as were most
military and civilian leaders of the former regime who failed to
disguise their pasts.
Within the CPK, the Paris-educated
leadership--Pol Pot, Ieng Sary, Nuon Chea, and Son Sen--was in
control, and Pol Pot was made Prime Minister. Prince Sihanouk
was put under virtual house arrest. The new government sought to
restructure Cambodian society completely. Remnants of the old
society were abolished, and Buddhism suppressed.
Agriculture was collectivized, and the
surviving part of the industrial base was abandoned or placed
under state control. Cambodia had neither a currency nor a
banking system. The regime controlled every aspect of life and
reduced everyone to the level of abject obedience through
terror. Torture centers were established, and detailed records
were kept of the thousands murdered there. Public executions of
those considered unreliable or with links to the previous
government were common. Few succeeded in escaping the military
patrols and fleeing the country. Solid estimates of the numbers
who died between 1975 and 1979 are not available, but it is
likely that hundreds of thousands were brutally executed by the
regime. Hundreds of thousands more died of starvation and
disease--both under the Khmer Rouge and during the Vietnamese
invasion in 1978. Estimates of the dead range from 1.7 million
to 3 million, out of a 1975 population estimated at 7.3 million.
Democratic Kampuchea's relations with Vietnam
and Thailand worsened rapidly as a result of border clashes and
ideological differences. While communist, the CPK was fiercely
anti-Vietnamese, and most of its members who had lived in
Vietnam were purged. Democratic Kampuchea established close ties
with China, and the Cambodian-Vietnamese conflict became part of
the Sino-Soviet rivalry, with Moscow backing Vietnam. Border
clashes worsened when Democratic Kampuchea's military attacked
villages in Vietnam.
In mid-1978, Vietnamese forces invaded
Cambodia, advancing about 30 miles before the arrival of the
rainy season. In December 1978, Vietnam announced formation of
the Kampuchean United Front for National Salvation (KUFNS) under
Heng Samrin, a former DK division commander. It was composed of
Khmer communists who had remained in Vietnam after 1975 and
officials from the eastern sector--like Heng Samrin and Hun Sen--who
had fled to Vietnam from Cambodia in 1978. In late December
1978, Vietnamese forces launched a full invasion of Cambodia,
capturing Phnom Penh on January 7, 1979 and driving the remnants
of Democratic Kampuchea's army westward toward Thailand.
The Vietnamese Occupation
On January 10, 1979, the Vietnamese installed Heng Samrin as
head of state in the new People's Republic of Kampuchea (PRK).
The Vietnamese Army continued its pursuit of Pol Pot's Khmer
Rouge forces. At least 600,000 Cambodians displaced during the
Pol Pot era and the Vietnamese invasion began streaming to the
Thai border in search of refuge.
The international community responded with a
massive relief effort coordinated by the United States through
the UN Children's Fund (UNICEF) and the World Food Program. More
than $400 million was provided between 1979 and 1982, of which
the United States contributed nearly $100 million. At one point,
more than 500,000 Cambodians were living along the
Thai-Cambodian border and more than 100,000 in holding centers
inside Thailand.
Vietnam's occupation army of as many as
200,000 troops controlled the major population centers and most
of the countryside from 1979 to September 1989. The Heng Samrin
regime's 30,000 troops were plagued by poor morale and
widespread desertion. Resistance to Vietnam's occupation
continued. A large portion of the Khmer Rouge's military forces
eluded Vietnamese troops and established themselves in remote
regions. The non-communist resistance, consisting of a number of
groups which had been fighting the Khmer Rouge after
1975--including Lon Nol-era soldiers--coalesced in 1979-80 to
form the Khmer People's National Liberation Armed Forces (KPNLAF),
which pledged loyalty to former Prime Minister Son Sann, and
Moulinaka (Movement pour la Liberation Nationale de Kampuchea),
loyal to Prince Sihanouk. In 1979, Son Sann formed the Khmer
People's National Liberation Front (KPNLF) to lead the political
struggle for Cambodia's independence. Prince Sihanouk formed his
own organization, National United Front for an Independent,
Neutral, Peaceful, and Cooperative Cambodia (FUNCINPEC), and its
military arm, the Armee Nationale Sihanoukienne (ANS) in 1981.
Within Cambodia, Vietnam had only limited
success in establishing its client Heng Samrin regime, which was
dependent on Vietnamese advisers at all levels. Security in some
rural areas was tenuous, and major transportation routes were
subject to interdiction by resistance forces. The presence of
Vietnamese throughout the country and their intrusion into
nearly all aspects of Cambodian life alienated much of the
populace. The settlement of Vietnamese nationals, both former
residents and new immigrants, further exacerbated
anti-Vietnamese sentiment. Reports of the numbers involved vary
widely, with some estimates as high as 1 million. By the end of
the decade, Khmer nationalism began to reassert itself against
the traditional Vietnamese enemy. In 1986, Hanoi claimed to have
begun withdrawing part of its occupation forces. At the same
time, Vietnam continued efforts to strengthen its client regime,
the PRK, and its military arm, the Kampuchean People's
Revolutionary Armed Forces (KPRAF). These withdrawals continued
over the next 2 years, and the last Vietnamese troops left
Cambodia in September 1989.
Peace Efforts
From July 30 to August 30, 1989, representatives of 18
countries, the four Cambodian parties, and the UN Secretary
General met in Paris in an effort to negotiate a comprehensive
settlement. They hoped to achieve those objectives seen as
crucial to the future of post-occupation Cambodia--a verified
withdrawal of the remaining Vietnamese occupation troops, the
prevention of the return to power of the Khmer Rouge, and
genuine self-determination for the Cambodian people. A
comprehensive settlement was agreed upon on August 28, 1990.
Cambodia's Renewal
On October 23, 1991, the Paris Conference reconvened to sign a
comprehensive settlement giving the UN full authority to
supervise a cease-fire, repatriate the displaced Khmer along the
border with Thailand, disarm and demobilize the factional
armies, and prepare the country for free and fair elections.
Prince Sihanouk, President of the Supreme National Council of
Cambodia (SNC), and other members of the SNC returned to Phnom
Penh in November 1991, to begin the resettlement process in
Cambodia. The UN Advance Mission for Cambodia (UNAMIC) was
deployed at the same time to maintain liaison among the factions
and begin demining operations to expedite the repatriation of
approximately 370,000 Cambodians from Thailand.
On March 16, 1992, the UN Transitional
Authority in Cambodia (UNTAC) arrived in Cambodia to begin
implementation of the UN Settlement Plan. The UN High
Commissioner for Refugees began fullscale repatriation in March
1992. UNTAC grew into a 22,000-strong civilian and military
peacekeeping force to conduct free and fair elections for a
constituent assembly.
Over 4 million Cambodians (about 90% of
eligible voters) participated in the May 1993 elections,
although the Khmer Rouge or Party of Democratic Kampuchea (PDK),
whose forces were never actually disarmed or demobilized, barred
some people from participating. Prince Ranariddh's FUNCINPEC
Party was the top vote recipient with a 45.5% vote, followed by
Hun Sen's Cambodian People's Party and the Buddhist Liberal
Democratic Party, respectively. FUNCINPEC then entered into a
coalition with the other parties that had participated in the
election. The parties represented in the 120-member assembly
proceeded to draft and approve a new constitution, which was
promulgated September 24, 1993. It established a multiparty
liberal democracy in the framework of a constitutional monarchy,
with the former Prince Sihanouk elevated to King. Prince
Ranariddh and Hun Sen became First and Second Prime Ministers,
respectively, in the Royal Cambodian Government (RGC). The
constitution provides for a wide range of internationally
recognized human rights.
On October 4, 2004, the Cambodian National
Assembly ratified an agreement with the United Nations on the
establishment of a tribunal to try senior leaders responsible
for the atrocities committed by the Khmer Rouge. Donor countries
have pledged the $43 million international share of the
three-year tribunal budget, while the Cambodian government’s
share of the budget is $13.3 million. The tribunal plans to
begin trials of senior Khmer Rouge leaders in 2007.
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