Breed of mass murderers |
Contributors: Rathana Am
Source: http://www.humanrights.asia/news/ahrc-news/AHRC-ART-047-2012
In Cambodia, you can criticize the government openly, but tomorrow you will be murdered or put in jail. This is such a coward action of the Cambodian government because they do not even dare to confront criticisms.
Upon arriving in Germany, I saw that the roads are very clean, quiet
with very little traffic jam. At that moment, my expression was, “Wow!”
This is a developed country, and everything is so organized and clean.
On the streets, there were few people walking and during my first week
there, I did not see any beggars. I thought to myself, “This is such a
rich country with no poverty”. However, after talking with women in
Courage, I got to know that there is in fact, hidden poverty in Germany.
So I tried to look out for poor people in Germany but I
could not identify them because to me, their skin and faces all looked
the same.
I used to think that all the people in Germany have decent lives and jobs and they do not need to think about what they will have for food the next day. However, I saw it really clearly when I visited a free soup-kitchen. There were many people and mostly, old and middle age that came for their free lunch. In Germany, if the people did not have anything to eat, at least some of them get free food in these soup-kitchens. However, in Cambodia, as well as in Bangladesh, if people do not have money to buy food, they will have to starve or beg in the streets. They know it is because of the corruption in their countries that they have to live in poverty. However, they do not want to go against their governments or ask their governments to be more responsible for the people. Poor people in my country, Cambodia, they do not know much about politics, so it is hard for them to organize themselves or to go against the government.
Chea Phalla, a Cambodian maid rescued from abuse in Malaysia. Her jaw was broken by her employers |
For young Cambodians, if they cannot find jobs, they will migrate
legally or illegally to neighboring countries such as, Malaysia or
Thailand. They will find ways to escape from their poverty rather than
confront the reality directly, so it is really hard for them to go on
strike or ask the government to give them jobs or be responsible for
their unemployment. It is very funny to me that the
Cambodian government promises our people that it will find them
employment abroad as a solution to our joblessness. Now
the Cambodian government is working with South Korea, Malaysia, Qatar
and other Arab states to send laborers to these countries. By doing
this, the government can say blindly that it has reduced youth
unemployment rate in Cambodia. The government does not
however, take responsibility for our migrant workers at all. They do not
care about the condition of our workers in the foreign land.
There were many cases that Cambodian domestic workers who work in
Malaysia were tortured and working in sweatshop-like condition. They do
not have rights. In fact, some of them were used like slaves or
machines.
There was a student’s revolution against the brutal dictatorship of the government before the Pol Pot regime in Cambodia. Even now, we are still living under the dictatorship; still there is no revolution.
Trade union leaders and journalists were murdered, still there is no
reaction and people have become even more scared about taking actions.
Cops’s brutality against striking workers (Photo: Cambodge Soir Hebdo) |
One thing which makes my people calm and quiet is that, there are
many organizations in Cambodia. Mostly, when our youths face problems,
some of them go to these organizations and ask for help. In Germany too,
there are many organizations that are self-organized and self-
financed. For me personally, the self-financed organizations are more
powerful than those, which get their money from international funders or
foreign governments. However, in Cambodia, throughout my experience, there
is no self-organization by the working class people or the poor.
Workers in Cambodia are submissive and oppressed and they are very
scared of their employers. In Germany, I can see that even
though they are also workers, their knowledge are like professors, I am
really admire them for this.
Tep Vong (right), the Buddhist patriarch, was a member of the Communist Politburo |
While discussing with my host family about religion, I got to know
how religion plays a role in Cambodia. In Cambodia, there are many
religious organizations that try to help poor students to pursue higher
education and give food to the poor. They try to help people think good
and not do bad deeds, they teach the people what is good and bad all the
time. They teach the people that good deeds serve the purpose of God. Most
Cambodians believe in God, and say God gives them lives, so God will
also plan and do the next steps in life for them. Then they do not need
to think too much for the future. This distracts people from critically
thinking about the role of the government and what the government is
supposed to do for them. I am not saying that people
should have a religion, but God has given each of us a brain to
critically think. We are poor not because we have not done any good
thing in our previous life. People should use their brains to think why
they are poor even though they have worked very hard.
Throughout history, Germany has faced many problems, such as wars and
labor exploitation, but I am very proud of the workers who are still
fighting and struggling in Germany because they are able to get social
benefits, such as unemployment benefits, vacation, health insurance etc.
due to their hard work. And they continue to fight for better lives for
other people and their younger generations. I think this is the right
thing to do. If we do not fight, we are not going to get what we want.
Before going to Germany, I thought that under the Hitler’s regime,
only Jews were killed. However after visiting Germany, I got to know
that Hitler first killed the communists, the trade unionists
and the opposition parties and he also banned the trade unions in the
country. For example, there were many members in the White Rose movement who were executed. I heard that Hitler
was also from a peasant family, but somehow when he was in power, he
forgot everything and he became greedy with power, so he did everything
to hold on to his power. This is the case for the Cambodian Prime Minister too. I am not looking down on him, but just want to reveal the truth. The
Cambodian Prime Minster is also from a peasant family. When he got the
power, he became very greedy and corrupted. He forgot how difficult it
was when the poor are exploited. He does not care about the welfare of
the poor people, as long as he is holding the power and get the money
from the business people, he pretends to be blind. I hope
that in the future, there will be more people who care about my society
and we can work together with heart and blood to change the society. I
think one day, when the young decide that this kind of system is enough
for them, we will all onto the streets and overthrow this corrupt
government like what has happened in the Arab states today. I was amazed
that people in Germany can criticize their government and other
countries’ governments publicly. In Cambodia, you can
criticize the government openly, but tomorrow you will be murdered or
put in jail. This is such a coward action of the Cambodian government
because they do not even dare to confront criticisms.
There are many different types of women in “Courage”, a grassroots,
women organization that has members from different parts of Germany.
They are women from the working class, professionals, unemployed and
housewives. Each of them is unique and faces their own unique problems.
They come together and discuss their problems they face as women, as
well as problems faced by other under-privileged people in Germany and
around the world. This is very interesting for me; I am experiencing it
for the first time in my life. In Cambodia as well as in Bangladesh, if
you are a professor, mostly your friends are professors and if you are a
worker, mostly your friends are workers. This is a form of class
division that the professor faces that make it difficult for them to
understand the lives of the workers, if they do not try to penetrate the
workers’ lives. I hope that in the future, I can organize such a thing
like Courage in Cambodia and I will try to convince young women to join
this.
Talking about young women, young women are the same everywhere,
mostly they care too much about how they dress up, make up and their
appearances, so they have little time to think and care about the
society. In my country, if I talk about the social problems to young
women, they might think I have gone mad. However, not all women behave
like that; there are some young women who are really interested in
working with social problems. So, from now on I need to learn more and
more about the process of organizing people and convince people. Joining
Courage this summer has given me a tremendous idea about how to
organize the people.
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