Sunday, February 24, 2013

China and Cambodia, sitting in a tree


One of the most circulated pictures depicting Sino-Cambodian
relations. Prince Sihanouk and Mao Zedong in 1956. Taken
from http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Mao_Sihanouk.jpg

China and Cambodia have had a long, interconnected history. Today, it is China that exerts imperialistic hegemony over Cambodia as opposed to the globe's normal imperialistic culprit: the United States. I am primary focused on the more recent history of Sino-Cambodian relations. Cambodia was first inhabited by people from what is now Southeastern China perhaps as long as 4,000 years ago, although no one is exactly sure (Gerd et. al.). This led to a small minority of ethnic Chinese in Cambodia’s population—many of whom were killed during the Khmer Rouge as they were the elite and intellectual. 

Khmer Rouge and Chinese Official pose together. Taken from
http://www.cambodiatribunal.org/blog/2012/05/sar-kim-lamouth
-proves-amenable-witness-examination-proceeds-smoothly-0
China supported the Khmer Rouge seeing as both Pol Pot and Mao Zedong were trying to instill complete revolutions in both societies. Pol Pot was able to live in what Joel Brinkley, author of Cambodia’s Curse: The Modern History of a Troubled Land, called “a luxury jungle house” due to the copious amount of money he was receiving from China—a lot of it from timber and mining (Brinkley 60). Still today, large mining and forestry projects in Cambodia are due to Chinese patronage and China remains one of the world’s largest importers of tropical timber from the region (Burgos & Ear 624, 631). Deforestation and mining has led to loss of livelihood in the Cambodian people and massive environmental damage.

In the 1990s, China set out to instigate a Chinese cultural revival in Cambodia, even though today only 2.5% of Cambodia has ethnic Chinese background (Burgos & Ear). As academics Burgos and Ear describes, there is a distinct Chinese influence in Cambodian education systems today—even though Brinkley belabors the point that almost all schools in Cambodia are incredibly corrupt and essentially ineffective. There are more Chinese-Cambodian social organizations and even Chinese TV channels than ever before (629). China can exercise this cultural imperialism due to its heavy monetary influence in the Khmer government.

Chinese president Hu Jintao visited Hun Sen in Cambodia
 in 2012. Taken from http://www.kas.de/wf/doc/kas_6420
-1442-1-30.pdf?120411130155
Presently, China gives more than 25% of Cambodia’s aid money, and $6.7 billion of Chinese capital has been used in Cambodia to build roads, dams, and other primary/secondary infrastructure (Brinkley 349).  For example, China offered Cambodia $600 million no strings attached loans for two bridges near Phnom Penh and a modern fiber-optic cable network (Burgos & Ear 624). Prime Minster Hun Sen even said that “loan grants from China have released Cambodia from certain kinds of political pressure from international countries…[Chinese aid] helps strengthen Cambodian political independence” (Brinkley 349). The aid in reality does come with strings attached. In order to receive Chinese monetary support, Cambodia has to support the “one-China” policy on Taiwan as well as comply with what China wishes to implement in Cambodia, even if it might be (or rather often is) detrimental to the Khmer people (Brinkley 349; Burgos & Ear). With China’s supposed “help” come consequences: “unlawful land-grabbing, choking of freedom of expression, illegal logging, unregulated mining, labor abuses, illicit resource exploitation, environmental damages to rivers, lakes, and water-dependent eco-systems” (Burgos & Ear 630). Essentially, the Cambodian government is aware of these consequences and turns a blind eye.

Mekong River in Kratie, Cambodia.
Taken by yours truly in December 2009.
A good example of Chinese imperialism in Cambodia is the hydroelectric dams that China seeks to install. China is currently building a fourth hydroelectric dam at the upper reaches of the Mekong River in China, even though this could have detrimental effects on the other countries, namely Cambodia, Laos, Thailand, and Vietnam, that rely on the Mekong (Burgos & Ear 622). In Cambodia, water contribution from the Mekong is 70% during the dry season and is arguably the one country in the region most reliant on the Mekong (624, 633). China plans to install a hydroelectric dam in Cambodia as well, giving the countryside electricity and potentially opening up the possibility to sell excess energy to Vietnam and Thailand (622). Multiple NGOs and Cambodians, however, claim that the dam is poorly planned and will lead to human rights and environmental abuses (635). The Irrawaddy dolphins that normally thrive in Cambodia’s northern part of the Mekong are at the brink of extinction due to harmful aquatic practices (634). In mid-2004, Mekong River levels were at a record low, and there was a 50% drop in Cambodian fish catch from 2003 (634).  Indeed, only Thailand, Laos, Cambodia, and Vietnam are part of the Mekong River Commission--an organization founded in 1995 to agree upon sustainable development of the Mekong (634). 
See that small little "bump" in the water? That is an
Irrawadday dolphin! Taken by yours truly in December 2009.

According to Burgos and Ear, China sees Cambodia as in a “pivotal geostrategic position” (Burgos & Ear 615).  China needs to secure natural resources to sustain it’s growing and urbanizing population, and Cambodia can supply many of these natural resources. China is “thirsty” for natural resources such as timber, gas, oil, water, rubber, fertile cropland, and minerals (gold, iron ore, and silver), and has already supposedly secured rights to Cambodia’s off shore oil (630).

Regardless of the large amounts of aid that China is bestowing upon Cambodia to “help” the country, the consequences are detrimental and irreversible. It is unlikely that China will help with any of Cambodia’s real deep-rooted problems, and it is unlike that there will be any transparency in any Chinese-Cambodian deals. Cambodia’s repayment to China for their monetary help is to give them anything and everything—at the expense of the Cambodian people.

Works Cited
Brinkley, Joel. Cambodia's Curse: The Modern History of a Troubled Land. New York, New York: PublicAffairs, 2011. Print.

Burgos, Sigfrido & Sophal Ear. "China's Strategic Interests in Cambodia: Influence and Resources." Asian Survey 50.3 (2010): 615-639. Print. 

Gerd, Albrecht et. al. "Circular Earthwork Krek 52/62: Recent Research on the Prehistory of Cambodia." Asian Perspectives 39.1-2 (2000): 20-46. Print.

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