By Pou Sovachana

The Nation-July 27

Decades of internal conflict and brutality in Cambodia culminated in the deaths of some two million people in the late 1970s, and the destruction of its social fabric during the reign of terror wrought by the Khmer Rouge.  Since then, continuing poverty, widespread corruption, systemic injustice, and human rights violations have perpetuated a climate fear and despair. The signing of Paris Peace Agreements (PPA) in 1991 marked both an end and a new beginning: an end to the civil and interstate wars and the Killing Fields and the beginning of an era of national reconciliation, peace building and development. Most importantly, the PPA brought democracy to Cambodia and enabled the first post-conflict national election to be held in May 1993.

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First published in: The Nation