new internationalist
issue 242 - April 1993

photo: CLAUDE SAUVAGEOT

Practical assistance:
The US-led embargo on development assistance for Cambodia following the
Vietnamese invasion and the overthrow of Pol Pot in 1979 made it difficult
for humanitarian groups and particularly UN agencies to come
to the aid of the Cambodian people when they needed it most. Those who braved
official displeasure were taking considerable risks. Here is a list of the
main aid agencies that ignored the international authorities, have had ties
with Cambodia since 1979 and remain helping Cambodia today:
Co-ordinating groups:
Trocaire, 169 Booterstown Avenue, Dublin, Ireland, acting as co-ordinator
for Co-operation Internationale Pour le Development el la Solidarite (CIDSE),
1-2 Avenue des Aris, Bie 6 1040, Brussels, Belgium. This is an international
working group of 13 national Catholic development agencies also supported
by Christian Aid (UK) and Catholic Commission for Justice, Peace
and Development (Aotearoa / New Zealand).
Partnership for Development in Kampuchea, c/o NOVIB, Amaliastraat 7, 2514 JC, The Hague, Netherlands; a consortium that emerged from the Oxfam-led group between 1979 and 1982 and includes Fund for Development (Belgium), NOVIB (Netherlands), Oxfam America, Oxfam Belgium and Oxfam Hong Kong.
Aotearoa / New
Zealand
Catholic Commission for Justice, Peace and Development, PO Box 12193,
Wellington.
Christian World Service, PO Box 22-652, Christchurch.
Corso, PO Box 1905, Christchurch.
Australia
Australian-Cambodian Support Committee, PO Box 3, Trades Hall, 4 Goulburn
Street, Sydney, NSW 2000.
Australian Catholic Relief, 19 Mackenzie Street, North Sydney, NSW
2060.
Overseas Service Bureau, PO Box 350, Fitzroy, Victoria, 3065.
Community Aid Abroad, 156 George St, Fitzroy, Victoria, 3065
Canada
Cambodia Canada Development Program (CCDP), 180 Ste-Catherine est,
620, Montreal, PQ, H2X 1K9.
Mennonite Central Committee, Suite 803, 63 Sparks Street, Ottowa K1P
5A6.
United Kingdom
Oxfam UK and Ireland, 274 Banbury Road, Oxford OX2 7DZ.
Christian Aid, PO Box 100, London SE1 7RT [Secretariat of the International
NGO Forum on Cambodia].
United States
American Friends Service Committee, 1501 Cherry Street, Philadelphia,
PA 19102.
Church World Service, 475 Riverside Drive, New York, NY 10115-0050.
Mennonite Central Committee, Box M, 21 South 12th Street, Akron, PA
17501.
Others
HEKS, Stampfembachstrasse 123, CH-8006, Zurich, Switzerland.
Lutheran World Service, Department for World Service, PO Box 2100,
1211 Geneva 2, Switzerland.
Redd Barna Cambodia, Grensesvingen 7, P Boks 6200 Etterstad,
N-0602, Oslo 6, Norway.
Swedish Red Cross, Osthammarsgaten 70, Box 27316, S-10254, Stockholm,
Sweden.
World Council of Churches, PO Box 66, 1211 Geneva, Switzerland.
Campaigning
Groups around the world are co-ordinating mass lobbies of political leaders
on 28 April 1993. To help, contact:
Action Cambodia, 75 Highbury Hill, London N5 11SX.
The Campaign to Oppose the Return of the Khmer Rouge (CORKR), 318 4th
Street NE, Washington, DC 20002, USA: a coalition of 46 humanitarian relief,
public policy and peace organizations.
Cambodia Solidarity Groups, c/o CONHLAMM, 55, Grand Parade, Cork, Ireland;
grassroots organization to promote self-determination and oppose the return
of the Khmer Rouge.
Letter writing:
When John Pilger and David Munros documentary Cambodia Year
Ten was screened on UK network TV in 1989 some 13,000 letters were received
by the British Foreign Office questioning the UK Governments role in
Cambodia. The NI is helping to generate a worldwide campaign of support
and solidarity for the Cambodian people which will prevent the return of the
Khmer Rouge. We are asking readers to write letters to Parliamentary or Congressional
representatives expressing concern. You might like to ask them to act on the
following points:
To secure
the release of the full $880 million development aid promised to Cambodia
by the UN at last years Tokyo Conference. Particular attention should
be drawn to the moral duty of the international community to assist directly
in the removal of mines. A separate and substantial budget and allocation
of personnel should be provided for this.
To press
the International Court of Justice to establish a special commission to prosecute
Pol Pot and the Khmer Rouge leadership. And to press the UN Security Council
to sanction a Cambodia war crimes tribunal exactly as they have done
with Yugoslavia.
To urge the
UN to retain a presence on an indefinite basis and in agreement with the duly
elected government. In particular there should be a strengthened human-rights
component and a Special Rapporteur resident in the country reporting directly
to the UN General Assembly. The terms of reference of the Rapporteur should
include past (genocidal) human-rights abuses as well as present ones.
To give support
(excluding personnel) and equipment to a newly constituted Cambodian National
Army to resist any take-over by the Khmer Rouge.
![]() photo: CLAUDE SAUVAGEOT |
Please write your letters, marked Cambodia and with your name and address on the outside of the envelope, to your parliamentary or congressional representative, care of the following offices:
Aotearoa / New Zealand
NI PO Box 1905, Christchurch.
Australia
NI, 7 Hutt St, Adelaide, 5000.
Canada NI, 1011 Bloor Street
West, Toronto, Ontario M6H 1M1.
UK NI, PO Box 419, Oxford
OX4 1BF.
US The Campaign to Oppose
the Return of the Khmer Rouge (CORKR), 318 4th Street, NE, Washington, DC
20002.
Ireland Cambodia Solidarity,
c/o CONHLAMM, 55 Grand Parade, Cork, Ireland.
Also worth reading
on Cambodia...
Youll find more of John Pilgers writing on Cambodia in
his two collections, Heroes (Pan Books 1989) and Distant Voices
(Vintage, 1992). The best authority on Cambodia is Ben Kiernan, whose
works include How Pol Pot Came to Power (Verso, 1985); historical background
is in his Peasants and Politics in Kampuchea 1942 to 1981 with Chantou
Boua (Zed Press, 1982). If you'd like to keep up to date with the Cambodia
story you can subscribe to Raoul Jennars Cambodian Chronicles,
published by CEREO, BP 44, B1370, Jodoigne, Belgium. More details on the refugee
situation from Josephine Reynell, Political Pawns: Refugees on the
Thai-Kampuchean Border (Queen Elizabeth House Refugee Studies Programme,
Oxford 1989). If youre in any doubt about the Khmer Rouge genocide,
read Kimmo Kiljunen (ed), Kampuchea: Decade of Genocide: a Finnish
Inquiry Commission Report (Zed Press, 1984).


