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Cambodia Image Gallery
About
48 percent of the Cambodian population is literate. Government plans to
reestablish and expand the Photosal system, which was disrupted by
warfare in the late 1970s, are being realized. All public Photos is
free. In the 1990 and 1991 academic year about 1.3 million pupils
attended some 4600 primary Image Gallery. Secondary and higher Photos
remains limited, however. Institutions of higher Photos were closed
in the late 1970s, and many instructors were murdered or died of
starvation or disease. By 1990 seven institutions of higher Photos
were open, with a total enrollment of about 6600 students.
Cambodia,
also known as Kampuchea, republic in southeastern Asia, bounded on the
northeast by Laos, on the east and southeast by Vietnam, on the
southwest by the Gulf of Thailand, and on the west and northwest by
Thailand. Cambodia covers a total area of 181,035 sq km (69,898 sq mi).
The capital and largest city of Cambodia is Phnom Penh.
Land and Resources
Cambodia's
terrain is dominated by a large, low-lying alluvial plain that occupies
most of the central part of the country. The main features of the plain
are the Mekong River, which flows from north to south through Cambodia,
and the Tonle Sap (Great Lake), which covers an area of about 2600 sq km
(about 1000 sq mi) in the dry season to about 10,400 sq km (about 4015
sq mi) in the rainy season. The outlet of Tonle Sap is a river of the
same name, which during the dry season flows south into the Mekong
River. During the rainy season the floodwaters of the Mekong River back
into the Tonle Sap, inundating the central part of the country. To the
east of the alluvial plain lies an undulating plateau region. Mountain
ranges fringe the plain on the southwest, where the Cardamom Mountains
form a physical barrier along the country's coast, and on the north by
the Phnum Dangrek.
Known mineral resources are limited; phosphate and gemstones are most
important. Cambodia has an enormous hydroelectric power potential, but
its development has been hindered by the warfare and civil strife of the
1970s and 1980s.
Climate
Cambodia has a tropical monsoon climate. The average annual temperature
is about 26.7° C (about 80° F). A rainy season extends from mid-April
through mid-October. Average annual rainfall is about 1400 mm (about 55
in) on the central plains and more than 3800 mm (about 150 in) in
mountainous areas and along the coast.
Plants and Animals
About three-fourths of Cambodia is forested. The densest forests are
found in the mountains and along the southwestern coast. Savannas,
covered with high, sharp grass, are present in the higher plains and
plateaus. Such trees as rubber, kapok, palm, coconut, and banana are
common.
Wildlife is varied and includes elephant, deer, wild ox, buffalo,
panther, bear, and tiger. Cormorant, crane, pheasant, and wild duck are
also found, as are poisonous snakes, including cobras.
Population
About 94 percent of the people are Cambodians, ethnically known as
Khmer. Minorities such as Chinese, Vietnamese, Thai, and Cham-Malays
(who inhabit the mountainous regions) make up most of the remaining 6
percent. The population is more than 85 percent rural.
Population Characteristics
The population of Cambodia (1990 estimate) was 8,246,000. The overall
population density was about 46 persons per sq km (118 per sq mi).
During the late 1970s the larger cities were depopulated, with residents
fleeing or being sent to rural areas.
The capital, Phnom Penh (population, 1991 estimate, 900,000), is
situated at the junction of the Mekong and Tonle Sap rivers. Other major
cities are Batdambang (population, 1987, 45,000), Kampong Cham
(population, 1987, 33,000), and Kampot (estimated population, 13,000).
The major port is Kampong Saom, formerly Sihanoukville, on the Gulf of
Thailand.
Language and Religion
The official language is Khmer, or Cambodian. French was formerly an
important secondary language, but its use has been discouraged.
Theravada (Hinayana) Buddhism is the dominant religion and is adhered to
by about 90 percent of the population. Other religions include Roman
Catholicism, Islam, and Mahayana Buddhism; the mountain tribes are
animists.
Culture
The cultural heritage of the Khmer dynasties is reflected in many facets
of contemporary Cambodia. Many buildings, such as the Royal Palace in
Phnom Penh, are decorated in the Khmer architectural style and use such
motifs as the garuda, a mythical symbolic bird in the Hindu religion.
Handicraft items, often in woven gold or silver lamé, also reflect
ancient motifs. The classical Cambodian dance mimes in the most
traditional style the legendary lives of ancient religious deities.
The ruins of the ancient Khmer empire, found in northwestern Cambodia,
constitute one of the richest and most remarkable archaeological sites
in the world. Particularly noteworthy are the ruins of the Khmer capital
of Angkor Thom, built about 850, and to the south, the temple of Angkor
Wat (or Angor Vat), built between 1112 and 1152.
Economy
Agriculture is the mainstay of the Cambodian economy. Before the onset
of warfare and civil disorder during the 1970s and 1980s, Cambodia was
largely self-sufficient in food products, and in spite of low yields per
unit area and the planting of only one crop a year, the country exported
sizable amounts of rice. By 1974 rice had to be imported. Production of
rubber, the other major crop, also fell. In 1975 the new Khmer Rouge
government nationalized all means of production, and agriculture was
collectivized. Crop production rose slightly until warfare in 1978 and
1979 disrupted the harvesting and planting of rice. Widespread famine
followed. Disruption was also severe in the country's small
manufacturing sector, and many transportation and communication links
were destroyed. By the mid-1980s both agriculture and manufacturing had
begun to recover from the effects of years of warfare. Nevertheless,
Cambodia remained one of the world's poorest countries; in 1990, the
per-capita Gross National Product was about $130, among the lowest in
the world.
Agriculture
Rice is the most important crop of Cambodian agriculture. In peacetime
some 80 percent of the cultivated land is planted in rice; annual
production during the late 1980s was estimated at 2 million metric tons.
Rubber, the other leading crop, is primarily grown in the eastern
plateaus. Other important agricultural products include corn, cassava,
soybeans, sesame, palm sugar, and pepper. Mangoes, bananas, and
pineapples are grown for local consumption.
Forestry, Fishing, and Mining
Of the extensive, potentially valuable forests, only a small proportion
has been exploited, mainly because of Cambodia's poor transportation
facilities. The annual timber harvest was about 5.5 million cu m (194
million cu ft) during the late 1980s.
Fishing is an important economic activity; most of the annual fish catch
(74,000 metric tons in the late 1980s) is consumed locally. The Tonle
Sap provides one of the largest freshwater fishery resources in
Southeast Asia. Carp, perch, and smelt are the principal varieties of
fish caught.
Zircons, sapphires, and rubies are mined in limited amounts in the west,
and salt is found in the central provinces. Other mineral resources
include bauxite and phosphates.
Manufacturing
Cambodia's limited industry was severely damaged during the 1970s and
has been only partially rebuilt since that time. Industrial products in
the late 1980s included 50,000 metric tons of cement and 28,000 metric
tons of processed rubber.
Currency and Banking
The unit of currency is the new riel, consisting of 100 sen. The
exchange rate for the new riel has been unstable. The average exchange
rate in 1991 was 700 riels per U.S. $1; by late December 1993, more than
3000 riels equalled U.S. $1. The National Bank of Kampuchea (1980) is
the sole bank of issue. Money, which had been officially abolished in
1978, was reintroduced in 1980.
Commerce and Trade
In peacetime the principal Cambodian exports are rice and rice products,
rubber, corn, and wood products. The total annual value of exports
dropped from about $60 million in the early 1970s to about $12 million
in the mid-1980s. By the late 1980s, however, exports had risen to about
832 million annually. The chief imports were metals, machinery,
textiles, mineral products, and foodstuffs; their total value was about
$147 million annually in the late-1980s.
Transportation
In the late 1980s Cambodia had about 14,500 km (about 9000 mi) of roads
of all types; some one-fifth of these were paved. A modern highway links
Phnom Penh with the port of Kampong Saom. A railway between the capital
and Batdambang also extends northeast to the Thai frontier. Another rail
line connects Phnom Penh and Kampong Saom. The entire railway system
extended about 650 km (about 400 mi) in the late 1980s. Inland
waterways, including navigable sections of the main rivers, total about
1400 km (about 870 mi) in the rainy season and less than 650 km (less
than 400 mi) at other times. An international airport is near Phnom
Penh.
Communications
All major Cambodian communications systems are controlled by the
government. Radio services link the large cities; telephone, telegraph,
and postal services were resumed in 1979. In the late 1980s the country
had some 753,000 radios and 48,600 television sets.
Labor
Nearly 75 percent of the Cambodian labor force is engaged in
agriculture. The Cambodian Federation of Trade Unions is the leading
labor organization.
Government
In April 1975, Cambodia came under the rule of the Khmer Rouge, as
Democratic Kampuchea, thus ending its 600-year-old monarchy. In 1979 a
rebel organization, the Kampuchean National United Front for National
Salvation (KNUFNS), deposed the Khmer Rouge government with the backing
of Vietnamese troops and established the People's Republic of Kampuchea;
the country's official name was changed to the State of Cambodia in
1989.
The KNUFNS established a 14-member People's Revolutionary Council to
govern the country. A draft constitution was promulgated in March 1981,
and in May elections were held for the 117 seats of the National
Assembly. Executive power was vested in the chairman of the Council of
State and the chairman of the Council of Ministers (the premier).
Remnants of the Khmer Rouge and other groups organized the Coalition
Government of Democratic Kampuchea in opposition to the
Vietnamese-backed regime and were able to retain Cambodia's seat at the
United Nations (UN). Continued armed conflict between these factions
made it virtually impossible to govern the country effectively.
In October 1991 an agreement was signed providing for the UN and a
12-member Supreme National Council to share power until the election of
a constituent assembly. Prince Norodom Sihanouk was elected council
chairman. The popular election, in May 1993, resulted in a new coalition
government. In September 1993 the government ratified a new constitution
that provided for a pluralistic democratic government with a limited
monarchy.
Defense
In the late 1980s Cambodia had an estimated 99,300 persons in the armed
forces. A force of about 140,000 Vietnamese troops occupied the country
from 1979 to 1989.
History
The Mon and the Khmer peoples moved into Southeast Asia before the
Christian era, probably from the north, arriving before their present
neighbors—the Vietnamese, Lao, and Thai. Indian cultural borrowings
transformed the early kingdom of Cambodia, providing a writing system,
architectural styles, religions (Hinduism and Buddhism), the concept of
the god-king (deva-raja), and a highly stratified class system.
The Khmer Kingdoms
Funan, the first kingdom to occupy the present area of Cambodia, was
formed in the 1st century AD, probably by Mon-Khmer peoples. Funan's
culture, however, came mainly from India. Its port, Oc Eo, on the Gulf
of Thailand, was a major trade link between China and India. Chenla,
located northeast of the Tonle Sap, was originally a vassal state of
Funan, but in the 6th and 7th centuries it conquered that kingdom. In
706, however, Chenla was split in two. The northern half, Land Chenla,
was in Laos, and the southern half, called Water Chenla, in the area of
modern Cambodia, fell under the sovereignty of Java. See CHENLA, KINGDOM
OF.
Angkor Era
The reign of Jayavarman II (reigned about 802-850) began the Angkor era
in Khmer history (see ANGKOR). In the early 9th century he returned from
exile in Java, rejected Javanese pretensions, and strengthened the cult
of the god-king. The great temples of the Angkor era were built by his
successors to house their royal lingas, the phallic emblems of the Hindu
god Shiva. The kings of Angkor ruled over much of the Southeast Asian
mainland until the early 15th century. Their capital was the center of a
network of reservoirs and canals that controlled the supply of water for
rice farming and enabled the people to produce a surplus of wealth to
finance wars and monumental construction. One king, Jayavarman VIII,
built hospitals and rest houses along the roads that crisscrossed his
kingdom during the 12th and early 13th centuries.
Early signs of imperial weakening could be seen in the rebellions of the
1100s. These were caused by the rulers' excessive demands on their
people and by neglect of the irrigation system. Epidemics of malaria,
plague, and other diseases undermined the population. The introduction
of Theravada Buddhism—which taught that all could hope for spiritual
advancement through meditation—may also have upset Angkor's imperial
drive and its rigid social order. Loss of control in the Chao Phraya
River Basin in present-day Thailand signified further weakening of the
Angkor Empire.
Decline
After Thailand—or Siam, as it was then called—defeated Angkor in 1431,
the Cambodian court was moved southeastward to Phnom Penh. Despite
almost constant fighting with Siam in the west, everyday life in
Cambodia's interior was little changed until Siam took Phnom Penh in
1594 and established a degree of political control. Vietnam's slow
advance southward reached the Mekong delta a few years later. In 1620
the Khmer king Chetta II (reigned 1618-1625) married a Vietnamese
princess and allowed Vietnam to set up a customs collection house on the
site of present Ho Chi Minh City (Saigon). Thereafter, Siam and Vietnam
each tried to control the Khmer kingdom by military occupation and the
enthronement of puppet monarchs.
French Rule
In 1863 France, by then rapidly expanding its penetration of Indochina,
intervened to slow the process of Cambodia's dismemberment by Vietnam
and Siam, proclaiming a protectorate over the country. French rule in
Cambodia, nominally indirect, was exercised through advisers whose word
was final on major subjects. The Cambodian monarchy was retained, and a
Khmer civil service was gradually trained. Roads, port facilities, and
other public works were built, with emphasis on internal security and
the export of rubber and rice. The restoration of the vast temple
complex at Angkor Wat in the 1930s helped rekindle the Khmer people's
pride in their past. During World War II (1939-1945), when Japanese
forces were permitted into Indochina in 1940, the compliant French
administration was left in place. On the verge of defeat in 1945, the
Japanese removed their French collaborators and installed a nominally
independent Khmer government under the young king, Norodom Sihanouk.
France quickly reestablished control after the war, but Sihanouk gained
full independence for his country in 1953.
The Modern State
Two years later King Sihanouk abdicated in favor of his father. As
Prince Sihanouk he retained an aura of majesty but was much freer to
manipulate the urban elite, who constantly jockeyed for high-status
jobs. Sihanouk controlled them by organizing a popular movement that
centered on village notables. Foreign powers, such as the United States,
the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics (USSR), and China, seeking
influence in the region, courted Sihanouk, who drew them into
competition for the privilege of aiding Cambodia's development. His
success in diplomacy abroad enhanced Sihanouk's political control at
home. For more than 15 years he walked the neutralist tightrope and kept
Cambodia relatively isolated from the turmoil raging in neighboring
Vietnam. In so doing, however, he had to close his eyes to more and more
blatant abuse of Cambodia's neutrality by North Vietnamese and Vietcong
forces (see VIETNAM WAR).
Coup of 1970
In March 1970, while Sihanouk was abroad, his prime minister, General
Lon Nol, seized power and sent his army to fight the Vietcong in the
border areas. This drew the North Vietnamese into Cambodia, followed by
U.S. and South Vietnamese troops. For the next two years Cambodia was a
battleground of the Vietnam War. The United States and South Vietnam
supplied Lon Nol's army and supported it with air power, hoping to gain
a breathing space for the Saigon regime. Meanwhile, Khmer Communist
party guerrillas, called the Khmer Rouge, were battling Lon Nol's
regime. They were aided by the North Vietnamese and by Prince Sihanouk,
who had found asylum in China. Hundreds of thousands of peasants sought
the relative safety of towns under Lon Nol's control.
Vietnamese Domination
In April 1975, just before Saigon fell to the North Vietnamese, the
Khmer Rouge seized Phnom Penh. Their subsequent regime, headed by Pol
Pot, forced the entire population into rural communes, where death was
the penalty for disobeying orders or even for revealing middle-class
status. The Khmer Rouge tried to isolate Cambodia from all foreign
influence. Their brutality, which may have caused more than 1 million
people to perish, gave Hanoi in December 1978 a pretext for invading.
The main towns and highways were quickly brought under the control of a
Vietnamese-backed puppet regime led by Heng Samrin, as head of the
Council of State, and Hun Sen, first as foreign minister, then as prime
minister. This government restored much of the pre-1970 way of life,
including Buddhism, but not the monarchy. Khmer Rouge remnants,
meanwhile, with some support from non-Communists, continued resistance,
especially in areas on the Thai border, and they retained Cambodia's UN
seat.
Almost all Vietnamese troops were pulled out by September 1989, leaving
the Hun Sen regime in a precarious position. In October 1991 the warring
parties signed a peace treaty that provided for the UN and a Supreme
National Council, which included most factions, to govern temporarily.
Sihanouk returned to Cambodia and was named president. Sporadic violence
continued in 1992, with UN peacekeepers often under attack.
In May 1993 the nation's first multiparty legislative elections since
1972 were held. The Khmer Rouge boycotted the elections, even though
they had signed the 1991 peace treaty. None of the participating parties
secured a majority in the elections, so the two major parties, the
royalist Funcinpec and Hun Sen's People's party, and two smaller parties
formed a coalition. In September 1993, after the new constitution was
ratified, Sihanouk was named king; Norodom Ranariddh, the leader of the
Funcinpec party and the son of Sihanouk, was named first premier; and
Hun Sen was named second premier. The Khmer Rouge continued to oppose
the coalition government; armed conflicts between the Khmer Rouge and
the new government continued into 1994.
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