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Cambodia in General
The
Kingdom of Cambodia (sometimes transliterated
more accurately as Kampuchea) is a Southeast
Asian nation bordered by Vietnam to the east, Laos
to the north, Thailand to the northwest, and the
Gulf of Thailand to the southwest.
Cambodia
has had a pretty bad run of luck for the last
half-millennium or so. Ever since the fall of Angkor
in 1431, the once mighty Khmer Empire has
been plundered by all its neighbors, plus colonial
France as well. After a false dawn of independence
in 1953, Cambodia promptly plunged back into the
horrors of civil war in 1970 to suffer the Khmer
Rouge's incredibly brutal reign of terror,
and only after UN-sponsored elections in 1993 did
the country begin to totter back onto its feet.
Much of
the population still subsists on less than US$1 a
day, the provision of even basic services remains
spotty, and political intrigue remains as complex
and opaque as ever; but the security situation has
improved immeasurably, and increasing numbers of
visitors are rediscovering Cambodia's temples and
beaches. Siem Reap, the gateway to Angkor, now
sports luxury hotels, chic nightspots, ATMs, and an
airport fielding flights from all over the region,
while Sihanoukville is getting good press as an
up-and-coming beach destination. However travel
beyond the most popular tourist destinations is
still an adventure.
History
Following
a five-year struggle, Communist Khmer Rouge forces
captured Phnom Penh in 1975 and ordered the
evacuation of all cities and towns. Over 1 million
displaced people died from execution or enforced
hardships. A 1978 Vietnamese invasion drove the
Khmer Rouge into the countryside and touched off 13
years of fighting. As a result of the devastating
politics of the Khmer Rouge regime, there was
virtually no infrastructure left. Institutions of
higher education, money, and all forms of commerce
industries were non-existent in 1978, so the country
had to be built up from nothing. UN-sponsored
elections in 1993 helped restore some semblance of
normalcy, as did the rapid diminution of the Khmer
Rouge in the mid-1990s. A coalition government,
formed after national elections in 1998, brought
renewed political stability and the surrender of
remaining Khmer Rouge forces.
Economy
The two
pillars of Cambodia's newly-stable economy are
textiles and garments, and tourism. The latter has
grown rapidly with 1 million visitors arriving in
2005. The long-term development of the economy after
decades of war remains a daunting challenge, as the
population (more than half under 20 years of age)
lacks education and productive skills, particularly
in the poverty-ridden countryside, which suffers
from an almost total lack of basic infrastructure.
75% of the population still gets by on subsistence
farming. On the brighter side, the government is
addressing these issues - plus government corruption
- with assistance from bilateral and multilateral
donors.
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