Wednesday, June 13, 2012

Some Things I don’t like in Cambodia


Some of the things listed below affect me personally, some of them only peripherally, some of them not directly at all. But living in a host country one will always have some kind of peeves. These are some of mine; maybe there are more but let’s not overdo it, right?

Traffic

Much has been said and written about traffic here. For someone who drives daily in Phnom Penh and frequently overland, this is the most unnerving experience in my life in Cambodia. Especially irksome are the motorbikes when they weave in and out of traffic, not bothering with any rules or regulations, let alone common sense.

Nighttime driving on highways is definitely not recommended. The risk of running someone in dark clothes over walking along the road or ramming into an unlighted vehicle is just too great.


Neighbors’ Dogs

Now this is a really troubling feature of living in Phnom Penh. I live in a duplex in gated community where the houses are spaced about 2 m apart. The lot itself is 8 by 16 or so. Many people keep one or more dogs on the premises as an alarm system. These mutts bark at anything that moves in their vicinity. The guards make their rounds every hour or so. Now just imagine what barking concert this causes at nighttime. People have no idea how to train a dog, and that applies to Westerners as well. Of course, they also seem to forget that by barking at anything that moves by the whole purpose of alarming the owners of intruders is defeated, not to mention that keeping a dog in such a small area borders on animal cruelty, as I don’t see their owners ever walking them for exercise.

Neighbors’ Cooking  – Fish Sauce

I myself find Khmer cooking rather bland and simple compared to Chinese or Thai cuisines. They all have in common that they use generous amounts of fish sauce in preparing their dishes. Fish sauce actually does make for a fine flavor in the finished dish but while it is being prepared one has to endure a satanic smell. Fish sauce while being heated up gives off a nauseating smell. In true fashion, my neighbors use it almost every day so I get a good dose of it on a regular basis. I only hasten to close all windows and doors at that time.

Early Morning Noise

It appears that no matter what their jobs people get up early, that is, around 5:30 to 6 o’clock. Immediately, clattering of dishes, pounding of pestles, conversations held in high volume, children playing soccer on the street, motorbikes coming and going, cars honking, and so on, sets in. School minivans with their windows open playing loud music pick up kids. Some people also give their car a quick wash listening to the radio turned almost all the way up while the car doors or windows are open. And not to mention the above described dogs barking. It’s a pure pleasure.


 Lack of Professionalism in Business and the Public Sector

It seems as though most people here haven’t heard of the economic law of supply and demand. They set a an more or less arbitrary price and expect you to pay it, regardless whether or not there is a glut of the item they are selling and the competition might be more reasonably priced. Sometimes this goes even so far that their prices are higher than if you bought the same item abroad and had it shipped and paid import duty.

People try to sell you something without providing the facts, e. g. size, properties, quality, etc. This problem a lot of times stems from the fact that middlemen are involved in a deal of larger items such as land or cars.

Used car dealers in the West lie through their teeth to sell you a car, hence their reputation. Here they lie and are not even aware of it. They simply don’t know what they are selling. For instance, most of them might know the term ‘ABS’, but they really don’t know what it actually is. So if there is a ‘Limited’, there must also be an ‘Unlimited’?

It becomes really frustrating when you are trying to close a bigger deal. Accounting is a foreign word and concept to many people here. This may be good for them as taxes are based on accounting records but how can someone substantiate that a business really does generate that claimed income?

Cambodian government offices are notorious for being unfriendly, arrogant, and absolutely inefficient. You can be lucky if you see the person who you are looking for on your first attempt. Being a government employee always entails the liberty of being absent for long hours to conduct other business.

This even extends to doctors some of whom work for a government hospital but maintain a private practice part of the day. So just going to the hospital during normal office hours can be like a crap game.

Khmer Relatives

Khmer families usually are close-knit groups. Two or three generations often live together in one house. The extended family, that is, uncles, aunts, nephews, nieces, etc. are also seen as much closer members than in the Western family. If you enter a Khmer family as a foreigner, they usually embrace you as a full member. In my view, this unfortunately also applies to the extended family. I don’t consider myself related to my wife’s uncle or her aunt, let alone a cousin twice removed.

In this age of mobile phones people sometimes still have a habit of just dropping in for a quick visit without announcing it. They take it for granted that they can crash at your place for a couple of nights if they happen to need it. Needless to say, they think it is normal to be there for the meals as well. After all, they are family, aren’t they? Of course, this would fall under the category of hospitality but they could at least ask whether or not it is convenient. But the annoying and almost insulting attitude is that you have an obligation to help. I mean I am glad to help out in times of need but being expected to help because even more distant 'relatives' believe this to be my duty exceeds my willingness and generosity. It is also still widespread that older relatives expect respect from you just because they are older than yourself. Never mind, that they may be half-illiterate and used to work as a truck driver.

TV Programming – Khmer channels

I hardly watch Khmer TV but what I see from my wife’s watching, Khmer stations have a long way to go in terms of making interesting shows. Normal fare are Philippine soap operas, Khmer comedians with painted on mustaches (why do they always need that?), and shrieking dialogues, Chinese martial arts or ‘historical’ movies, and endless music shows with what to my ear sound like always the same tunes. There is one new channel that broadcasts music shows virtually the entire time – and it’s always the same singers and the same people dancing.


Constant News on Military and/or Police

Cambodia cannot shed its Communist past, or so it seems. A good segment of the news always covers some definitely insignificant information about the military and/or the police. There you see these high-ranking officers in large numbers busily making notes listening to some general. It also looks like there are no grunts or non-commissioned officers in the Cambodian military. You only see stripes on their epaulets. This type of newscast is typical of Communist countries.

The Role of the Military

This ties in with the previous point. Cambodia is a small country and apart from that dispute with Thailand about Preah Vihear where soldiers were used to uphold Cambodia’s honor it really does not need a military of more than 100,000 men. In case of a real war, Cambodia’s military would be no match with either neighbor. What other threat would there be? The 25% Cambodia is spending on its military could be used much better for different purposes, e. g. education. Of course, on the other hand, the military is a huge job creation program. Poor people who would otherwise be unemployed find a job here. It doesn’t pay much but it feeds and clothes them and gives them shelter too. But everybody who thinks he is somebody needs to be associated with the military; and if it is only through a military license plate. The military altogether enjoys too much presence in Cambodia.

Especially annoying is the power higher ranks believe they have over civilians – at least on the roads. They usurp the roads and streets as if they owned them.

Addiction to Titles and Status

Like many upstarts, Cambodians who have come into money crave to be outwardly recognized as someone special. You can buy titles like Ayadom (Excellency) or Okhna (to which there is no good translation; the Honorable might come closest). So if someone wants to be an advisor to a minister and he has the connections and the money he can call himself advisor to the minister and with it comes the title Ayadom, which greatly impresses more simple-minded people. Ministers and State Secretaries themselves are always referred to as Ayadom in the news, e. g. Minister of Defense Ayadom followed by the name. Businesspeople who acquired the title Okhna are addressed likewise. And again, a general in the military is also automatically an Ayadom and his wife a ‘Lohk Chumteauv. These ladies are then chauffeured around in a large Lexus SUV to do their shopping accompanied by one or two bodyguards who then carry the shopping basket at the Bayon supermarket. Never mind that this ‘lady’ used to be farm girl who can hardly read and write.

The first status symbol is a large car as evidenced by the many full-sized SUVs like the Lexus GX470, its twin the Landcruiser, and for a couple of years now, the Land Rover. Next comes a huge villa in a mixture of traditional Khmer and classical Greek or Roman architecture. Only the real wealthy can afford those, though, because these set you back by a million or more dollars. The ladies have their jewelry to show off. They would rather forego a nice trip abroad to see something of the outside world than not to be able to buy a new piece of jewelry to be admired by her fellow ‘Lohk Chumteauvs’.

Personality Cult Hun Sen and Bun Rany

This cult seems to be perpetrated more by the PM’s sycophantic underlings than by himself. People cannot say anything negative about Hun Sen or his wife Bun Rany for fear of that infamous slander statute. The courts in the U. S. would have been bogged down for years if George Bush had sued all the people who insulted him publicly. Here it seems the PM and his wife are made to be infallible. 

Traveling through the countryside, there is hardly any village without a Hun Sen school. People are led to believe it is Hun Sen who builds all these schools and roads. Just look at some the pictures on TV.

Although former King Sihanouk bestowed the title ‘Samdech’ on Hun Sen, I believe it is used as if he were the king himself. He is always referred to with that honorific. His full title is ‘Samdech Akka Moha Sena Padei Techo, loosely translated as ‘The Great Lord Protector’.

This sounds exaggerated for an elected politician and rather obsequious. I mean this is 2012 and not the the Elizabethan age. Additionally, it surely is a far cry from everybody is equal in former days. The reason he got this title is political but it nevertheless is not appropriate for a democratic leader. He is a plain and ordinary man who made it to the top (not always by democratic means). Couldn’t he be just the PM? He wasn’t highborn or anything, was he? Just the opposite, as he is proud to point out himself. He was a farmer’s boy educated in a Buddhist pagoda. The only thing lacking is huge pictures of the two in public. So far this is thankfully limited to the king’s picture.


Many other things could expand this list but thinking about this I came up with these first, and I must emphasize that my dislike is not in the order shown above. You might be wondering why I don’t include corruption in the list. This is simply because I am not affected by it, or at least I don’t feel I am. The policeman who puts the 10,000 KHR in his pocket doesn’t fall into this category in my mind. He does it because he simply doesn’t get paid enough, and neither does the official who wants $5 or $10 extra for a stamp for the same reason. This problem is cultural and systemic.

Are there things I like about and in Cambodia? Sure. But that is for another post.

14 comments:

Anonymous said...

Bo says:
I actually like the last paragraph better where you talk about Prime Minister Hun Sen and His wife. I think some Cambodians view these two people more like gods. It’s just too much for me. Honestly I don’t like any Khmer politicians, and it doesn’t matter which party they belong to or associate with. I’m pretty sure most people are feeling the same way. That’s one of the reasons people keep selecting the same devil. In another word, they’re rather choosing the devil that they know than the devil that they don’t know as long as there won’t be another civil war. That’s what Sam Rainsy hopes for when he talked to his supporter about the Arab Spring.

Anonymous said...

I agree one hundred percent with you.
This should be a kmer proverb " what's mine is mine. what's yours is mine"

I remember an incident when I offered one of those 5 liters canister of wine to khmer relativse. They practically went beserk and demanded bottled wine. To this day I still wonder why someone didn't get their head smashed by a bottle of wine. Maybe only maybe because we come from a civilised country.
yes there are lots of things disagreeable with cambodians.

Johanes Brian said...
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Johanes Brian said...
This comment has been removed by a blog administrator.
Konh-Khmer said...

Ever Heard of development country ? Thrid world ? second class? ever been in india , china veit name? Oh dont bother afric , Cambodia are much better off, after Civil wars over 50 years, thanks for hate

KJE said...

1:45
Some people simply don't get it. And you are one of them. Pretty dumb comment.

Anonymous said...

1:45

I have lived in India, worked in africa and visited china and vietnam.
Cambodians "could" be better off but they are not.

How to survive in Cambodia? said...

Dont forget that you need to survive in Cambodia! hi hi hi

Anonymous said...

Cambodia is brilliant. Live here and love it or go back home. I know which country I prefer.

Littlegirl said...

Cambodia or anywhere always has weak points and we have to overcome to see it more beautifully.

Anonymous said...

As a Cambodian, I also find it irritating just like the blogger's opinion, but am not going to compare my country to any other country, because each has their own problems and that was how developed country started back then in the early 1900s. Maybe you were busy smoking weed at school and didn't read some history :D

KJE said...

1:14
I am always amazed at how some people come to conclusions that simply can't be drawn from what's written. You are one of them. If you didn't compare and strive to do better as others obviously have done mankind would still be stuck in the stone age.

KJE said...

11:44
It is equally apparent that you don't live in Cambodia. Your comment wouldn't dignify a response if it were not for a general misconception about my blog, my person, and the post itself.
First, more than 60% of the population is under 25 years of age, meaning the country's history is pretty distant for them. The Pol Pot era cannot be an excuse for generations to come. The fact remains that because of the prevalent lack of education within the country's leadership priorities are set wrong and, therefore, the people is not being led, let alone being managed.
People who come here for a visit and only see the polite and smiling faces don't see life how it is in Cambodia.
Having had more than 20 years of experience in and with Cambodia I don't think your are qualified to judge my perception or general status in terms of education or understanding.
The fact remains that Cambodia was much different before their tragic years began in 1972 as any older person will tell you. The eradication of the intelligentsia during the Khmer rouge reign left deep marks in the population that is still felt today inasmuch as many people today are not educated enough to pass on to their children certain characteristics of a more civilized society.
That doesn't mean all is bad but it certainly means that Khmer people by and large lag behind their SE Asian neighbors.

Anonymous said...

Cambodia, socially speaking, LIVES in the Elisabethan age...!
Don't all ow the trappings of 'modernity' to convince you otherwise..
The same applies to all ASEAN countries and beyond.
Most of the world still lives in a semi-feudal time warp..

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