Between 1975-79, over 1.7 million Cambodian women, men and children
were killed by the Khmer Rouge, among them my parents. The world
community knew about it but watched from afar. Cambodia has come out of
genocide and on the road to reconstruction but this stage of
reconstruction is stuck and in many ways quickly falling back to point
zero. 30 years after the genocide of the Khmer Rouge, Cambodia has made
some progress but too small.
Over 2,000 innocent Cambodian women die
every year of childbirth, at least one million Cambodian children go to
bed hungry every night, hundreds of thousands Cambodian children and
female youth are ruined in brothels, over 200,000 families have been
brutally forced of their land and homes, and over 75% of Cambodia’s
forests have now been destroyed. Innocent lives of my people could be
saved if justice were served, if top leaders of my broken nation were
less greedy, if development were meant for all.
I left Cambodia as an innocent young adolescent because the Vietnam
war was approaching and hundreds and thousands of sick, wounded and
hungry families were already telling us that Cambodia was lost. I
returned home 18 years later with two young children, to a nation in
ruins. A new beginning gave us hope when the UN came to help Cambodia
organize its first democratic election in 1993. It cost the world
community 2 billion dollars. I became a leader in the women’s movement,
moving communities and walking the peace walk in city streets and dirt
roads to pray for non-violence. I joined politics and became the first
woman to lead the women’s ministry that was lead by a man, campaigned
nationwide to put an end to human trafficking, authored the draft law
on domestic violence, signed treaties with neighboring countries to
protect our women and children from being prosecuted as illegal
migrants but to receive proper treatment as victims of sex slavery.
I witness violence not as a victim but I listen to hundreds and
thousands of women and children speak of the shame, the violation, the
soul that is taken away when violence is afflicted on their bodies and
on their minds. As a politician I always try to take action, to walk to
the villages where life seems to have stopped for centuries, I
challenge the top leadership of the government — I question
international aid.
Today, I am faced with the real possibility of going to jail because
as self-defense I dare to sue the prime minister of Cambodia, a man who
has ruled this nation for 30 years. Having been assaulted to the point
where I stood half exposed in front of men, by a general I caught using
a state car to campaign for the party of the prime minister, I found
myself assaulted again, this time verbally by the prime minister who
compares me to a woman hustler who grabbed men for attention.
Within days my parliamentary immunity will be lifted so the court
can “investigate” my case. This is normal procedure for politicians
from the opposition party or human rights activists or the poor who
cannot bribe court officials. I will be detained in the notorious
prison of “Prey Sar” for as long as the courts wish to take.
Many of my colleagues in the opposition, including my party leader have faced this fate for speaking out.
Cambodia receives close to a billion dollars in 2009 from the
international community, the USA contributing close to 60 million. Is
the world still watching in silence while Cambodia is now ruled by one
man? Is the world afraid to say that its aid is actually taking
Cambodia backwards?
Let no Cambodian children go to bed hungry anymore. Let no Cambodian woman be sold anymore.
We must walk tall despite being people bent from the trauma of the
Khmer Rouge, which is still a part of us. Let us not let our leaders
and the world-community use this trauma to give us justice by the
teaspoon.
Let there be real justice.
Mu Sochua
Elected Member of Parliament
Sam Rainsy Party
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