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TIME: Almanac of the 20th Century
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TIME, Almanac of the 20th Century.ISO
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1990
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93
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apr_jun
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05319920.000
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1994-02-27
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<text>
<title>
(May 31, 1993) Pol Pot Power
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
May 31, 1993 Dr. Death: Dr. Jack Kevorkian
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
CAMBODIA, Page 45
Pol Pot Power
</hdr>
<body>
<p>As Cambodians try to vote freely for the first time in three
decades, the Khmer Rouge are again the country's gravest peril
</p>
<p>By RICHARD HORNIK/PHNOM PENH
</p>
<p> How can a country that lost more than 1 million citizens to
execution, starvation and disease caused by the cruel depredations
of an outlaw regime possibly welcome back the architects of
such madness? It is one of the saddest ironies in Cambodia today
that the Khmer Rouge, whose reign of terror lasted from 1975
to 1979, have clawed their way back to a modicum of power. As
the country's first democratic balloting in three decades begins
this week, the party threatening to wreck the election is none
other than the Khmer Rouge. Hope that the vote might usher in
peace, along with a constitution and new government, has given
way to fear that the balloting--already tainted by violence,
intimidation and corruption--could turn into a bloody shambles.
Even if the voting succeeds, the new leaders will still have
to find a way to bring the Khmer Rouge to heel.
</p>
<p> Although they signed on to the U.N.-sponsored peace plan in
Paris 19 months ago, the Khmer Rouge refused to demobilize their
fighters last June as called for in the accord, contending that
the regime in Phnom Penh, installed by Vietnam in 1979, was
still Hanoi's puppet. By March the Maoist guerrillas had launched
a military campaign intended to destroy the credibility of the
promised election. During April and May, Khmer Rouge fighters
mounted scores of attacks, killing at least 80 civilians.
</p>
<p> The Khmer Rouge seemed to fear that the Cambodian People's Party,
which represents the government of Prime Minister Hun Sen, had
used the powers of incumbency to reward and intimidate so successfully
that it was likely to take a majority of the 120 seats in the
new constituent assembly. The only solution was to terrorize
voters into staying away from the polls. The Khmer Rouge forces,
believed to number about 16,000, have aggressively moved men
and armaments into sparsely populated regions within striking
distance of many major towns and villages. Their hit-and-run
attacks, says a U.N. military official, "are sending a message."
</p>
<p> Many Cambodians acknowledge that they are afraid. Says a university
student: "Even in Phnom Penh people fear a bomb going off when
they vote." The anxiety extends to U.N. staff monitoring the
vote. The Khmer Rouge have killed a total of 10 U.N. officials,
leading more than 55 of 430 election supervisors to resign.
As a result, the U.N. has had to reduce the number of polling
stations from 1,800 to 1,500.
</p>
<p> Operating from jungle hideouts, Pol Pot and his men began their
comeback late in 1985, when the Vietnamese army seemed on the
verge of wiping the movement out. Pol Pot joined with other
anti-Vietnamese forces and launched an ideocampaign based on
strident nationalism. His forces dropped all references to building
a communist state. Villagers in Khmer Rouge zones were encouraged
to cultivate their own plots and raise their own livestock,
an approach designed to appeal to the 6 million subsistence
farmers who form the bulk of Cambodia's 9 million inhabitants.
During the early years of Pol Pot's reign, they suffered far
less than urbanites, who were sent to work under harsh conditions
in the fields, where they died by the thousands.
</p>
<p> The peasants also find, says a U.N. official in western Cambodia,
that "Khmer Rouge guerrillas make fewer demands on villagers
than government soldiers do." Banditry in remote areas is a
major problem for peasants. The government must tax them or
extort contributions to finance local security, but the guerrillas
provide it free out of the millions of dollars they have earned
by selling logging and gem-mining concessions to Thai businessmen.
</p>
<p> Even in the cities and towns, Pol Pot's forces enjoy some support
among intellectuals. Their pitch is that only they can root
out the rampant corruption of the present regime and force some
500,000 hated ethnic Vietnamese from the country. Says a 24-year-old
university student: "The Khmer Rouge can do some things better
than the government. They can abolish corruption. They can ensure
Cambodia's sovereignty."
</p>
<p> In the final weeks of the campaign, how to deal with the Khmer
Rouge has become the defining issue. Pol Pot's forces say they
will not peaceably accept victory by "the Vietnamese aggressors
and their puppets." Hun Sen's party has promised to wage an
all-out war to eradicate the guerrillas. FUNCINPEC, the opposition
party founded by Prince Norodom Sihanouk, the country's interim
head of state, has pledged to bring them into a coalition government.
Sihanouk's eldest son, Prince Norodom Ranariddh, argues that
with a government dedicated to expelling the Vietnamese and
establishing social justice, the Khmer Rouge would participate
in national politics. "If we solve those problems," he says,
"how could the Khmer Rouge have a pretext to fight?"
</p>
<p> Western analysts expect that no party will dominate the election.
Rather, the probable outcome is a "Cambodian solution," as a
senior U.N. official put it, in which an uneasy coalition is
formed under the mercurial Prince Sihanouk. The Khmer Rouge
would not be invited to participate in the new government, but
neither would the government wage war on the guerrillas. Pol
Pot's relentless hold on Cambodia, alas, is likely to continue.
</p>
</body>
</article>
</text>