Follow TV Tropes

Following

Context UsefulNotes / Cambodia

Go To

1[[quoteright:329:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/cb-map_419.gif]]
2[[caption-width-right:329:Less killing fields, more eco-tourism.]]
3
4The place where everybody [[HolidayInCambodia goes on vacation]], Cambodia (Khmer: ''កម្ពុជា, Kampuchea''), officially known as the '''Kingdom of Cambodia''' (Khmer: ''ព្រះរាជាណាចក្រកម្ពុជា, Preăh Réachéanachăk Kămpŭchéa'') is a Southeast Asian country full of tropical jungles, abandoned temples, guerilla warfare, and young women saying “Me love you long time” (''UsefulNotes/{{Vietnam}}ese'' women, mind you). Or at least that’s what the media wants you to think.
5
6The Khmers, the dominant people of the country, built Southeast Asia's earliest civilization. Unlike the [[UsefulNotes/{{Thailand}} Thais]], [[UsefulNotes/{{Laos}} Lao]], [[UsefulNotes/ThatSoutheastAsianCountry Bamars]], or even the Kinh/Viet (who expanded to the Mekong Delta during the historical period), the Khmers are indigenous to the area, and they used to inhabit a much larger territory spanning much of Indochina. They also happen to be the first Southeast Asian ethnic group to adopt both a writing system (based on the Pallava script of Southern India), which was later borrowed by the aforementioned Thais and Lao, and the Dharmic religions Buddhism and Hinduism, which were proliferated with the expansion of said civilization. These combined factors are the reasons why Khmers always seem to pop up in the historiography of all Indochinese countries, and why Old Khmer is considered a SacredLanguage.
7
8Even before the arrival of the Europeans, the Khmer Empire had to face against many regional rivals including the rapidly raising Thai kingdoms and the power-hungry House of Nguyễn, the latter of whom had destroyed and assimilated the Champa (a maritime people related to the [[UsefulNotes/{{Indonesia}} Acehnese]]) buffer zone in the 19th century and started to colonize the southern coast (or Cochinchina, as the French called it), until the Khmers lost all of its Mekong Delta and Isan possessions, leaving a lot of Khmers outside the national territory at the mercy of the invaders. To prevent themselves from being wiped out completely, King Norodom formally invited the French in to make them a part of the French Indochina. When Norodom died, the French began to manipulate the elections of the next kings to ensure the Cambodian submission. Eventually they enthroned King Norodom Sihanouk, thinking they could [[UnwittingPawn manipulate him]]. Unfortunately for them, he was smart enough to realize it and achieved the country’s independence in 1953.
9
10And then all hell broke loose. When UsefulNotes/TheVietnamWar came, Cambodia found itself near the middle of the great tug of war between the Communists in the North and the anti-Communists in the South of Vietnam. Officially Cambodia was neutral, but it soon found itself dragged into the war. First the Chinese, North Vietnamese, and Vietcong guerrillas provided shelter and supplied weapons to a little group they helped found that would later be called the Khmer Rouge, which waged a small but stubborn insurgency against the government starting in 1967. Then, the North Vietnamese and Viet Cong started setting up a truly massive state within a state in the Cambodian borderlands to serve as a springboard and supply base for the NVA, Vietcong, and the Cambodian Communist guerrillas of the Khmer Rouge to attacks in the South and the rest of Cambodia. Getting sick of this arrangement (the government had expected its pro-communist position to ''stop'' foreign intervention, not welcome it via violations of sovereignty and support for insurgents), the Cambodian National Assembly voted to depose the pro-communist monarchy (which was completely legal constitutionally) and requested that all Vietnamese forces leave the country. The North Vietnamese... disagreed, and responded by invading Cambodia, mauling its army, seizing about half of its territory, setting up more bases, and massively stepping up support for the Khmer Rouge. Almost overnight, thanks to North Vietnamese intervention the Khmer Rouge went from a few thousand militia in the boonies to several tens of thousands of trained full-time guerrillas, who in addition to having more arms than they could ever use, were also effectively untouchable thanks to being able to base in the NVA-occupied zones and Laos. The Americans and South Vietnamese, which had previously respected Cambodian neutrality, saw this as the last straw and chased the NVA into Cambodia during the Cambodian campaign; they inflict heavy losses on the NVA, but failed to dislodge them totally and withdrew. The Americans followed this by providing material and air support for the forces of the newly-proclaimed Khmer Republic, while the North Vietnamese continued to provide weapons, training, shelter, and multiple divisions worth of combat troops for the Khmer Rouge. What followed was a brutal civil war between the Republic and the Rouge in which some 300,000 people died. The last “official” battle of the Vietnam War for the USA took place in Cambodia during this time, from May 12-15th, 1975, when Khmer Rouge gunboats seized the American container ship SS ''[[https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mayaguez_incident Mayaguez]]'' in disputed waters and US Marines took the ship back by force, which was messy for both sides.
11
12The civil war ended in 1975 with [[FromBadToWorse the victory of the North Vietnamese and Khmer Rouge rebels]] and their leader, a cruel man named Pol Pot. They renamed the country into [[PeoplesRepublicOfTyranny Democratic Kampuchea]] and soon decided to move the population into the deep countryside on forced marches. Why? To destroy everything and start the nation from YearZero. The harsh conditions, forced labor and [[TheFamine famine]] caused an estimated two million deaths. Considering Cambodia's population at the beginning of Khmer Rouge rule was only about seven million... yeah. The Khmer Rouge also destroyed anything considered Western, including libraries and temples, and their death squads targeted all the ethnic and religious minorities (Chinese, Vietnamese[[labelnote:*]]going by some estimates, the entire ethnic Vietnamese population of Cambodia may have been killed or expelled, making this one of the rare times where a genocide was successful[[/labelnote]], Javanese, Buddhist monks, Muslims, Catholics), anyone with a connection with the old regime and anyone considered an intellectual (usually that meant teachers, anyone who used to work at libraries, universities or hospitals, and [[YouWouldntHitAGuyWithGlasses even anyone who wore]] ''[[YouWouldntHitAGuyWithGlasses eyeglasses]]'' since that was a sign of literacy).
13
14The Khmer Rouge enjoyed broad popular support from among the poor, uneducated peasant masses of village Khmers, who were envious towards "[[CityMouse those city guys]]", which wasn't helped by the fact that a lot of city-dwellers were ethnically Chinese, and were overrepresented in the rich classes. But soon it turned out that [[EvilArmy Khmer Rouge]] in general, and the dictator Pol Pot in particular, didn't make any distinction between two populations. Their motto was "To keep you is no benefit; to destroy you is no loss," and they cheerfully applied it to anyone. Pol Pot's regime led to the death of around 2 million people out of a population of 8 million in the span of little less than four years. It's estimated that as many as 4 million died as a whole (according to the insane mathematics of the regime, they figured that they could whittle the Cambodian population down to 2 million people and still create their agrarian worker's paradise, which might explain the spectacular lack of concern the government showed to the carnage). The Cambodian Genocide has often been described as an auto-genocide, or in [[JustForFun/TVTropesWillRuinYourVocabulary troper speak]], a GenocideFromTheInside.
15
16Pol Pot was also kinda lousy with geography, [[MajoredInWesternHypocrisy despite studying in France]], and believed that he could continue his mad rampages across the border, in the Khmer-speaking areas of UsefulNotes/{{Vietnam}}. Naturally, the Vietnamese (even Vietnamese Khmer, who, despite being a forgotten minority living in the middle of nowhere, and thus bearing the brunt of Vietnamese Communist mismanagement and oppression, at least weren't being exterminated with gardening hoes[[note]]to save bullets[[/note]]) didn't take too kindly to this. A border war quickly erupted and the previous cooperation between the Khmer Rouge and Vietnamese communists evaporated. In 1978, Vietnam invaded Cambodia, [[CurbStompBattle defeating its army and reaching the capital in two weeks]]. The ensuing chaos saw a large number of Khmer refugees fleeing into Thailand to get away from both sides, with many of them later making their way to the United States, where they mostly settled in southern California and central Massachusetts.
17
18Fittingly, yet ''another'' Vietnamese communist invasion resulted in yet ''another'' civil war. The Vietnamese got rid of the Khmer Rouge government and put a {{puppet state}} in its place, run by former Khmer Rouge defectors. In the meantime, Pol Pot and original Khmer Rouge tried to flee to the countryside or abroad, only for Pol Pot to be taken prisoner by a schismatic member of the Khmer Rouge and kept under house arrest until he died under questionable circumstances. But if you would think this would be the end of matters, it wasn't. With most of the hardline nutjobs forced into the background, the Khmer Rouge and the groups that were rapidly splintering off of it had control over chunks of the countryside and were in a position to contest the Vietnamese satellite government. In time [[GambitPileup a third faction]] of royalists called Khmer People’s National Liberation Front appeared on the scene. This civil war, which saw heavy participation of Vietnamese forces on the side of their client, continued in a flurry of low-level skirmishing, plenty of nasty business, man-made famine, and other nightmares until 1991, when an agreement between the parts could be achieved. Another 300,000 people had died violent deaths in Cambodia from 1979 to 1989, with countless others perishing from disease and famine. There remains some low-level Khmer Rouge activity in a few remote areas, but it tends less towards rebellion/terrorism and more towards petty banditry, and is treated accordingly by the authorities.
19
20For reasons that could only make sense in the context of [[UsefulNotes/ColdWar The Cold War]] that we won't mention here, the United States and much of the United Nations sided with China to continue to recognize the Khmer Rouge groups descended from Pol Pot's regime as the legitimate government -- even letting them keep the UN seat for Cambodia -- as opposed to the invading, Soviet-backed, pro-Vietnamese but at least non-batguano crazy regime. One of the first states to break with this policy was Sweden, which withdrew its support after a groundswell of protest from Swedish voters angry that its elected representatives were helping to prop up Pol Pot's zombie.
21
22Cambodia today is a constitutional monarchy (unusual for an ex-communist country, they not only restored the monarchy, but also restored the former monarch, Norodom Sihanouk[[note]]In fairness, Sihanouk loved to be photographed with Mao Zedong and Kim il-Sung[[/note]]). The current monarch is Sihanouk's son Norodom Sihamoni, who succeeded his father upon his abdication in 2004. Interestingly, Cambodia counts as an ElectiveMonarchy, as Sihamoni did not became king because his father was one, instead being selected by the Royal Council of the Throne from among the male descendants of King Ang Duong who are at least 30 years old. It is also a constitutional monarchy in the absolute sense; Sihamoni has zero role in politics, and is mainly seen as a figure of reverence among the people. The real power is in the hands of the Prime Minister, who effectively rules the country as a dictator. The Prime Minister appointed by the Vietnamese, Hun Sen, even once admitted that he wanted to keep power well into old age while maintaining a play theater of constitutional government. However, in 2023, Hun Sen unexpectedly announced his resignation, having appointed his son Hun Manet as his successor. Since 1979, the parliament has been dominated by the Cambodian People's Party, which originated as a revisionist Marxist organization allied with Vietnam and the Soviet Union (in contrast to the Khmer Rouge's pro-China stance) but shifted to right-wing nationalism in 1991, concurrently with the Soviet Union's collapse and the end of the Cold War. Cambodia would abandon the one-party system that had been in place since 1955 the following year, but remains a dominant-party state under the CPP.
23
24The most famous [[LandmarkOfLore landmarks]] are Angkor Wat (the building seen on the flag), a humongous temple complex, home of Buddhist tradition (formerly Hindu) and the killing fields, where the mass killings of the Khmer Rouge took place and the hundreds of skulls are displayed for the whole world to see the atrocities of Pol Pot and his followers.
25
26Cambodia also has a dispute with Thailand about the Preah Vihear Temple, a Hindu temple built during the reign of the Khmer Empire. The temple was awarded by the International Court of Justice to Cambodia, who has claimed it because to its historical significance and the French border lines, but Thailand still refuses to let it go. Regular skirmishes tend to happen around the temple from time to time as a result; usually they try to aim to the other army and miss the temple, though.
27
28!!Cambodia in media and fiction:
29
30* ''Film/TheMissingPicture'': A Cambodian documentary about the Khmer Rouge genocide.
31* ''Film/TheKillingFields'', a British movie about a couple of journalists, an American and a Cambodian, whose friendship is suddenly torn apart by the Khmer Rouge regime. The Cambodian journalist, Dith Pran, was played by a genuine survivor of the genocide, Creator/HaingSNgor.
32* ''Film/FirstTheyKilledMyFather'', Creator/AngelinaJolie's film about the autobiographical account of Loung Ung, who survived the genocide.
33* The documentary ''S-21: The Khmer Rouge Killing Machine'', about the S21 extermination camp.
34* ''Holly'', about an American in Cambodia who discovers the sordid world of child prostitution, and decides to rescue a 12-year-old Vietnamese girl from that grim fate.
35* ''Holy Lola'' is about a French couple who come to Cambodia in order to adopt a baby. The director of the aforementioned documentary ''S-21'' shows up AsHimself to provide a bit of perspective on recent Cambodian history.
36* The Music/DeadKennedys song “Holiday in Cambodia”, the TropeNamer of the [[HolidayInCambodia eponymous trope]], deals in length with the usual stereotype of the zone. It also has mentions of the Khmer Rouge and Pol Pot.
37* Monsoon, one of the [[QuirkyMinibossSquad Winds of Destruction]] from ''VideoGame/MetalGearRisingRevengeance'', is Cambodian and is heavily implied to have suffered extreme trauma during the days of the Pol Pot regime.
38* In ''VideoGame/EternalDarkness'', Mantorok's temple is found in the Angkor Thom region, and one of the playable characters, Ellia, is a Khmer slave girl in the year A.D. 1150. Later on, Dr. Edwin Lindsey, an archaeologist, returns to the same temple, now in ruin and riddled with plant life.
39* ''Anime/PsychoPassTheMovie'' takes place in Cambodia, which seems to be the center of the Southeast Asian Union. The province of Siem Reap is even namedropped at one point as the location of [[LaResistance the rebel base.]]
40* A large portion of Creator/OliverStone's ''Film/{{Nixon}}'' deals with the American invasion of Cambodia and its fallout.
41* In ''Anime/CodeGeass'', the [[FantasticNuke FLEIJA warheads]] are developed at a research agency called the Tromo Institute in Cambodia. Late in the second season, Prince Schneizel and his supporters hide out in Cambodia to plan their next move after [[spoiler: Lelouch usurps the throne of Britannia.]]
42* The two main characters of ''Manga/{{Sanctuary}}'' are Japanese expats who were born and raised in Cambodia, and had to survive the killing fields of Pol Pot's regime.
43* SCP-800, one of the artifacts of the Website/SCPFoundation, is an East Asian scroll bearing a picture which allegorically represents the current geopolitic situation of the region (and changes on its own over the course of history). Here's how it looks at the time of the Khmer Rouge regime:
44-->'''800-9''' (1975-1979): unknown style of painting resembling Khmer stone carving, [DATA EXPUNGED][[note]]In context, those mentions refer to information which are removed outright or deleted, or otherwise only available to those with the highest security clearances. Sometimes serves to cover something squicky, horrifying, or obscene, to add a NothingIsScarier effect. While the website's theme is basically SciFiHorror-CosmicHorrorStory, this specific extract is notable for upping the NightmareFuel of the entry by expurging a horrible, yet ''well-known and perfectly real historical event''.[[/note]]
45* A part of ''Film/LaraCroftTombRaider'' happens in Angkor, Cambodia.
46
47[[AC:The Cambodian flag]]
48https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/cambodia_flag_9159.png
49->Blue and red are traditional colors of Cambodia; at the center is the [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Angkor_Wat Angkor Wat]], obviously the country's most iconic landmark. The Angkor War and the blue and red stripes symbolize Buddhism, the King and the people, respectively.
50----
51[[AC:The Cambodian national anthem]]
52
53->សូមពួកទេព្តា រក្សាមហាក្សត្រយើង
54->ឱ្យបានរុងរឿង ដោយជ័យមង្គលសិរីសួស្តី
55->យើងខ្ញុំព្រះអង្គ សូមជ្រកក្រោមម្លប់ព្រះបារមី
56->នៃព្រះនរបតីវង្ស ក្សត្រាដែលសាងប្រាសាទថ្ម
57->គ្រប់គ្រងដែនខ្មែរ បុរាណថ្កើងថ្កាន។
58
59->ប្រាសាទសិលា កំបាំងកណ្តាលព្រៃ
60->គួរឱ្យស្រមៃ នឹកដល់យសស័ក្តិមហានគរ
61->ជាតិខ្មែរដូចថ្ម គង់វង្សនៅល្អរឹងប៉ឹងជំហរ
62->យើងសង្ឃឹមពរ ភ័ព្វព្រេងសំណាងរបស់កម្ពុជា
63->មហារដ្ឋកើតមាន យូរអង្វែងហើយ។
64
65->គ្រប់វត្តអារាម ឮតែសូរស័ព្ទធម៌
66->សូត្រដោយអំណរ រំឭកគុណពុទ្ធសាសនា
67->ចូរយើងជាអ្នក ជឿជាក់ស្មោះស្ម័គ្រតាមបែបដូនតា
68->គង់តែទេវតា នឹងជួយជ្រោមជ្រែងផ្គត់ផ្គង់ប្រយោជន៍ឱ្យ
69->ដល់ប្រទេសខ្មែរ ជាមហានគរ។
70[[note]]
71->Sūm buak debtā raksā mahāksatr yoeṅ
72->Qoy pān ruṅ rẏaṅ ṭoy jăy maṅgal sirī suastī
73->Yoeṅ khñuṃ braḥ qaṅg sūm jrak krom mláp braḥ Pāramī
74->Nai braḥ Naraptī vaṅs ksatrā ṭael sāṅ prāsād thma
75->Gráp graṅ ṭaen Khmaer purāṇ thkoeṅ thkān.
76
77->Prāsād sīlā kaṃ pāṃṅ kaṇṭāl brai
78->Guar qoy sramai nẏk ṭál yassăkti Mahā Nagar
79->Jāti Khmaer ṭūc thma gáṅ vaṅs nau lqa rẏṅ pʹẏṅ jaṃhar
80->Yoeṅ sāṅghẏm bar bhăbv breṅ saṃṇāṅ rapás Kambujā
81->Mahā raṭṭh koet mān yūr qaṅveṅ hoey.
82
83->Gráp vatt qārām ḹ tae sūr săbd dharm
84->Sūr ṭoy aṃ ṇar raṃ ḹk guṇ buddh sāsnā
85->Cūr yoeṅ jā qnak jẏa jâk smoḥ smăgr tām paep ṭūn tā
86->Gáṅ tae devtā nẏṅ jūy jrom jraeṅ phgád phgaṅ pra yojna° oy
87->Ṭál prades Khmaer jā Mahā Nagar.
88[[/note]]
89
90--
91
92->May the Angels save our king
93->Granting him happiness and prosperity
94->We, his servants, wish to refuge under his completeness
95->Of sovereign's line, ones being to build temples
96->Reigning over old Khmer's glorious land.
97
98->Temples of stone, hidden amid forests
99->Bethought of the mighty great kingdom triumphs
100->Khmer race stands tough and solid as eternal stone
101->We pray for the best upon Kampuchea's destiny
102->A grand nation've ever occurred for.
103
104->Dharma risen, up from monasteries
105->Chant with joy, commemorate of Buddhism
106->Let us be faithful to our ancestors' belief
107->Assuredly, Angels will grant its bounty
108->Toward Khmer's, the grand nation.
109----
110[[AC:Government]]
111* Unitary dominant-party parliamentary elective constitutional monarchy
112** Monarch: Norodom Sihamoni
113** Prime Minister: Hun Manet
114** Senate President: Say Chhum
115** National Assembly President: Khuon Sudary
116----
117[[AC:Miscellaneous]]
118* '''Capital and largest city:''' Phnom Penh (''ភ្នំពេញ, Phnum Pénh'')
119* '''Population:''' 15,552,211
120* '''Area:''' 181,035 km
121 (69,898 sq mi) (88th)
122* '''Currency''': Cambodian riel (៛) (KHR)
123* '''ISO-3166-1 Code:''' KH
124* '''Country calling code:''' 855
125* '''Highest point:''' Phnom Aural (1810 m/5,938 ft) (138th)

Top