Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Ex-Pol Pot followers espouse capitalism

Khmer Rouge ways left by wayside

- JULIA WALLACE THE NEW YORK TIMES

MALAI, Cambodia — For years, Tep Khunnal was the devoted personal secretary of Pol Pot, staying loyal to the charismati­c ultracommu­nist leader even as the Khmer Rouge movement collapsed around them in the late 1990s.

Forced to reinvent himself after Pol Pot’s death, he fled to the Malai, Cambodia, outpost on the Thai border and began following a different sort of guru: the Austrian-American management theorist and business consultant Peter Drucker.

“I realized that some other countries, in South America, in Japan, they studied Drucker, and they used Drucker’s ideas and made the countries prosperous,” he said.

The residents of the dusty but bustling town are almost all former Khmer Rouge soldiers or cadres and their families, but they have come to embrace capitalism with almost as much vigor as they once fought to destroy class distinctio­ns, free trade and even money itself.

Tep helped lead the way, as a founder of an agricultur­al export company and a small microfinan­ce bank for farmers. He later became the district governor. From that position, he encouraged his constituen­ts to follow in his footsteps.

The local market, fronted by a bright-green sign featuring flying U.S. dollar bills — an advertisem­ent for a telecommun­ications firm — is run by a joint-stock company owned by a group of former Khmer Rouge officials. Inspired by Tep’s original farmer’s bank, there are now six such organizati­ons in Malai.

The success of his agricultur­al venture has spawned about a dozen cassava export firms, most headed by former Khmer Rouge soldiers or followers. Every weekday afternoon, the town’s main road is choked by brightly painted trucks carrying cassava to the border.

“We joined the communists, and now we have joined the capitalist­s, which is much better,” said Dim Sok, a local official.

Dim, 65, was a nearly illiterate farmer when he became a revolution­ary in 1970, fighting in the jungles with the Khmer Rouge for five years before they seized power. In an effort to remake the country into an agrarian utopia, the Khmer Rouge government swept the urban population into the countrysid­e to live like peasants, and smashed up banks and schools. At least 1.7 million people died under their nearly 4-year rule.

When the Khmer Rouge leaders were ousted in 1979, they retreated to stronghold­s like Malai on the western fringes of Cambodia along with thousands of soldiers and supporters. While Pol Pot continued to restrict free enterprise in areas under his control, residents of Malai were allowed to conduct some trade and amass personal property starting in the 1990s.

The area broke away from the Khmer Rouge in 1996, in part to avoid Pol Pot’s attempts to recollecti­vize property, and soon after a few thousand ex-communists raised capital to build the market by issuing shares in a joint-stock company.

Each shareholde­r is entitled to quarterly dividends based on rents paid by vendors. The rate of return is high: Dim said he reaps $10 every three months from an initial investment of around $50.

“It is like a stock market,” he said, beaming.

Dim said he saw no contradict­ion between his current life and the years he spent enforcing an unstinting brand of communism.

“In communist ideology they accuse capitalism of exploiting people,” he said. “But now we are in capitalist society, and there are actually two things that can happen: You can be exploited, but you can also prevent others from exploiting you.”

Many seem to have managed that nimbly.

Nget Saroeun, 62, spent more than two decades as a soldier, much of it waging guerrilla warfare in the hills around Malai. Today, he is a prosperous farmer who vigorously hobbles around his fields, despite having lost a leg in a land mine explosion. He is a fan of the English soccer team Arsenal and likes to check commodity prices and read about new agricultur­al techniques on his smartphone.

“Previously, it was very difficult here,” he said. “It was full of forest. Now it is full of concrete houses.”

He praised Tep for teaching farmers “to meet the demands of the market” by growing new crops like cassava, a tuber that can be processed into starch or animal feed.

Malai was still a malaria-infested jungle stronghold when Tep moved there in 1998, arriving with Pol Pot’s widow, whom he married shortly after his boss’s death.

Along with a barely educated but savvy ex-soldier, Soom Yin, he took out a bank loan to test some of his ideas. Their company bought the area’s first corn-drying machine, imported a new breed of sun-resistant corn from Thailand, and set up a quality-control system for the corn and cassava that moved through their warehouse.

Today, Soom owns the largest export firm in the area and can talk for hours about the minutiae of the cassava trade, from moisture levels to price fluctuatio­ns. In his spare time, he said, he reads books on management.

The Khmer Rouge’s ways are “very old now,” he said. “Even me, I don’t even dream about that anymore. We just do business.”

Tep, 67, retired from government and business a few years ago and now devotes his time to spreading Drucker’s ideas across the country. He teaches at a university in a neighborin­g province and is translatin­g the theorist’s work into Khmer. He has even compiled his favorite bits of Drucker’s wisdom into a small handbook.

“I’m sure that if Cambodia embraces this idea, Cam with bodia will walk in the right way,” he said.

He declined to discuss his finances, but he lives in a large gated compound surrounded by lush gardens. When his stepdaught­er, Pol Pot’s only child, got married in 2014, he threw her a lavish reception featuring French liqueur and glass chandelier­s hanging from pink-and-white tents.

He said he began reading about economics while serving as a Khmer Rouge envoy to the United Nations in the 1980s. Although he liked Milton Friedman, the free-market economist, and Frederick Taylor, who pioneered scientific management, he was most drawn to Drucker’s insistence that employees were central to an enterprise’s success.

“What I find interestin­g for me is that he talks about individual­s, he gives power to individual­s, not to collectivi­sm,” he said of Drucker. “Frederick Taylor in the early 20th century, he talked about efficiency, but Drucker talked about effectiven­ess.”

During a recent lecture, Tep exhorted his students to remember that good management was just as important as good ideas.

“In-no-vation,” he said, using the English word, “means a new idea, but to be successful you need strategy.”

Some of his talking points might have been useful for the Khmer Rouge in its final days, when the movement disintegra­ted into multiple warring factions.

Asked whether Pol Pot had been a good manager, his former aide demurred.

“I don’t want to make any judgment on that,” he said. “Let history do it. I think about the future.”

 ?? The New York Times/OMAR HAVANA ?? Dozens of trucks filled with dried cassava chips line up on the side of a road in Malai, Cambodia, ready to carry their loads across the border into Thailand.
The New York Times/OMAR HAVANA Dozens of trucks filled with dried cassava chips line up on the side of a road in Malai, Cambodia, ready to carry their loads across the border into Thailand.
 ?? The New York Times/OMAR HAVANA ?? With his free market ideas, former Cambodian communist stalwart Tep Khunnal has helped transform Malai, once a malaria-infested jungle stronghold, into a thriving capitalist center.
The New York Times/OMAR HAVANA With his free market ideas, former Cambodian communist stalwart Tep Khunnal has helped transform Malai, once a malaria-infested jungle stronghold, into a thriving capitalist center.

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