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Cambodia at a Crossroads


Article # : 13957 

Section : CURRENT ISSUES
Issue Date : 2 / 1988  2,304 Words
Author : Michael Johns
Michael Johns is a foreign policy analyst at the Heritage Foundation in Washington, D.C., where he specializes in the Third World and Africa.

       It has been nine years since Hanoi, fresh from its long-fought victory over South Vietnam, expanded its influence west to Cambodia, sending 200,000 troops across the Cambodian border to assume control from the Khmer Rouge government.
       
        Today, the brutal Khmer Rouge regime and its deposed leader, Pol Pot, are bitter memories for most Cambodians, but the Vietnamese troops remain their bitter reality; still occupying the embattled Cambodian nation, they continue to deny the Khmer people the right of self-determination.
       
        Not surprisingly, Cambodia now exhibits the characteristics of many other communist dictatorships: The country faces severe economic turmoil (the average worker's monthly wage is $2); terror is frequently employed against the population; religion is on the verge of extermination; freedom of speech, press, and assembly are denied; people are suffering from starvation and undernourishment; and human rights are systematically violated. To date, 275,000 Cambodians have fled Vietnamese repression for refugee camps in bordering Thailand, and tens of thousands more have picked up weapons hoping to liberate their homeland from the occupying forces. A Cambodian refugee camp, Site 2, where 130,000 refugees now live, is the second-largest home for Cambodians after Phnom Penh. And not unlike the Soviet occupation of Afghanistan, the Vietnamese occupation of Cambodia is evoking both global outrage and significant domestic rebellion.
       
        There are approximately 61,000 Cambodians presently under arms and actively engaged in combat against the occupying Vietnamese military, making this combined resistance movement the second largest in the ... (1996 of 14557 Characters)
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