|
After long,
Distinguished Political Career, Son Sann Started Anew in 1979
A politician and a well-regarded thinker long before
the apocalypse that engulfed Cambodia in 1975, Son Sann perhaps
redefined himself in the years immediately after the Vietnamese drove
the Khmer Rouge from power, reemerging as a rebel leader in Site 2, one
of the sprawling refugee camps that dotted the Thai-Cambodia border.
In 1979 he scraped together a fighting force from
those fleeing westward to battle the Vietnamese from Thailand. He sent
Dien Del from France to the Thai border early that year, where he said
he recruited 3,000 people to fight and put together a fledgling version
of what later that year would become the Khmer Peoples National
Liberation Front party.
"There were not that many [rebels] but they were
qualified and they were brave," said Dien Del, now a Funcinpec
parliamentarian but then a party commander who began working with Son
Sann in France in 1977.
"[Son Sann] was a good leader. He is a man I
respected." But unlike many of his equals, Son Sann didn't reemerge
as only a warrior.
"Son Sann said to me 'Soldiers are only for
politics,'" recalled Pol Ham, now a Funcinpec parliamentarian but
then a member of the party's executive Commission of Information and an
editor of a KPNLF newspaper.
At other camps refugees were being taught how to
fight and turned back to face the Vietnamese, often with devastating
results.
But Son Sann was looking be yond the war years and at
Site 2 there was created an education system whose legacy is still
evident in the thousands of Cambodians making up the backbone of the
country's civil society.
"I have never seen a resistance camp like Son
Sann's, which had a college and many students receiving [degrees],"
Pol Ham said.
It was Son Sann's push for education that Sok Vann,
an English teacher for the Catholic Organization for Emergency Relief
and Refugees in Battambang, credits for getting him where he is today.
"I was well educated because of his appeals to
other countries for aid to assist students and refugees," Sok Vann
said.
While at Site 2 in 1990 Sok Vann won his
Baccalaureate degree.
"Because of the free education organized by [Son
Sann] I got a job at COERR [after being repatriated in 1992]," Sok
vann said.
Ean Tith's parents died during the Pol Pot regime he
drifted until "I chose the refugee camp under Son Sann as my house
after I was told the food and education were free."
"I'll never forget what he tried to do for me
and other people," said Ean Tith, who like many of those educated
at Sit 2, enjoys the relative stability of working for an NGO.
Even as war raged along the Thai-Cambodian border,
forcing refugees to shift constantly between makeshift camps, school
continued--often without the benefit of teaching materials r shelter,
recalled Lao Mong Hay, a former director of Site 2's Institute of Public
Administration.
"He's a pioneer who paved the way for us as
younger people, including myself, to walk along the democratic
road," Lao Mong Hay, now a well-known democracy advocate, said.
Long before he was a rebel leader Son Sann, who died
of natural cause Tuesday morning in Paris at 89, had a long career in
politics, beginning as deputy governor of Battambang province at the age
of 24. In 1933, he became the first Cambodian to graduate from the Ecole
des Hautes Etudes Commerciales, one of France's elite universities.
When he returned to Cambodia, he became the adviser
of then-Prince Norodom Sihanouk. In 1946, he became finance minister,
and went on to be a cabinet minister 17 different times under the
monarch.
In 1955, Son Sann founded the National Bank of
Cambodia and was governor of the bank until 1967, when he became prime
minister for one year.
In 1968, Son Sann resigned from all his government
positions, citing corruption and the influence of the royal entourage.
When General Lon Nol ousted Prince Sihanouk in a 1970
coup d'etat, Son Sann was initially ;laced under house arrest. He then
spent the next few years trying to gain support to restore Prince
Sihanouk to power, but the takeover by the Khmer Rouge in 1975 rendered
his efforts moot.
The Cambodia Daily, December 23 - 24, 2000 |