In an appearance at the Stanford Bookstore on Wednesday afternoon,
author and communication professor Joel Brinkley signed copies of his
new book, “Cambodia’s Curse,” offering an inside look into the
difficulties facing the country and discussing his research for the
book.
Brinkley opened the talk by briefly explaining the recent
history of Cambodia, starting with its UN-supervised election in 1992.
Though the election was very successful, with 90 percent of Cambodians
voting, the country quickly fell back into dictatorship — its current
leader, Hun Sen, has ruled the country autocratically since 1997.
Professor Joel Brinkley signs copies of his new book, 'Cambodia's Curse,' at an event at the Bookstore. (JIN ZHU/The Stanford Daily) |
According to Brinkley, Cambodia has become “invisible” to the outside world.
“The
predominant view worldwide has been, ‘Oh, but they’re so much better
off now than they were under the Khmer Rouge,’” he said. “‘No reason to
pay attention any longer.’”
The enduring legacy of the brutal
Khmer Rouge regime, which killed around a quarter of the Cambodian
population during its reign from 1975 to 1979, continues to suppress
Cambodian development up to the present. Brinkley described the
prevalence of post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) and other related
illnesses in the country. Between a quarter and half of all Cambodians
who survived the Khmer Rouge suffer from PTSD and a study revealed that
62 percent of Cambodian emigrants in Long Beach, Calif. have the
disorder, he said.
“Soon that generation will die, you might
think, and everything will okay,” Brinkley said. “Actually, Cambodia is
the only place in the world where it has been demonstrated that PTSD and
the related traumatic illnesses are being passed to a second
generation.”
Brinkley described the dire state of Cambodia’s
economic development — with a per-capita annual income of roughly $650,
the country is one of the world’s poorest, on par with Bangladesh and
Afghanistan. The result of that poverty is a state where 40 percent of
the country’s children are stunted from malnutrition and 10 percent are
wasting.
He pointed to endemic corruption in the government as a
significant contributor to this problem and said that Middle Eastern
dictators like Hosni Mubarak and Muammar Qaddafi are “squeaky clean”
when compared to Hun Sen’s regime.
“The only overweight people you
will find anywhere in the nation walk the halls of government,”
Brinkley said. “Many of them live in mansions the size of hotels. I did a
rough calculation of the size of the deputy prime minister’s mansion — I
estimated it to be around 60,000 square feet.”
Because of
Cambodia’s unique situation and national mentality, Brinkley said he
doubts the country will ever experience an uprising similar to what is
being seen in the Middle East today. He contrasted two recent national
surveys, one that asked about people’s current condition and another
that asked for their satisfaction with their lives. Only 3 percent of
Cambodians reported that they were “thriving,” with 22 percent saying
they were “struggling.” However, 75 to 80 percent reported in the second
survey that they were satisfied with their lives and that their country
was going in the right direction.
Brinkley concluded his talk by
discussing why the outside world, the West in particular, should give
more attention to Cambodia. Beyond ensuring accurate oversight of the
$1.1 billion in aid that goes to the government every year, he said a
strong Cambodia could help in the United States’ search for allies to
counterbalance a rising China.
“China is virtually buying
[Cambodia], spending many billions of dollars building roads, bridges,
dams and infrastructure so that they can get their trucks to natural
resources without any hectoring about democracy and human rights,” he
said. “Shouldn’t it be important to hold on to a state right in the
center of Southeast Asia?”
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