Both Younghusband and I have traveled to Cambodia on separate trips in 2003 and traveled the country. We visited Angkor Wat, saw landmine museums, played chess with German ex-pats, and shot AK-47s at the cost of a few dollars. Prostitution was advertised regularly and I was told that drugs were readily available for purchase. There was not a hint of high-rises or skyscrapers in the city of a quarter of a million, with the tallest building being perhaps 8 stories high. In talks with my very learned, bilingual and friendly hotel proprietor, he revealed that he used to be a bureaucrat for the Ministry of Economy, but left when the government couldn’t afford to pay his salary for six months. Compared to nearby Thailand, Malaysia, and even Vietnam and Laos, Cambodia was still poor and chaotic.
But things are changing. The Wall Street Journal recently published an article on Phnom Penh that said it is “tamed and transformed.”
Today, Phnom Penh still has plenty of rough edges and crime. At certain places, visitors can still order “happy pizza,” or pizza with marijuana topping. But in other ways, it’s a different city entirely. But the government has destroyed 200,000 or more firearms through a program in which citizens voluntarily lay down their guns. It has also shut down the military-hardware market and closed some of the most infamous brothels. Foreign cash is pouring in, with some investors calling Phnom Penh “The New Ho Chi Minh City” after the city that’s Vietnam’s emerging center of consumption. Property values have soared and Phnom Penh is getting its first skyscrapers. One Cambodian developer even wants to dredge the Mekong River all the way to Vietnam, some 60 or so miles south, to create a deepwater megaport, and other financiers are planning a satellite city with offices and malls.All that activity has brought more well-heeled visitors and more hotels. The Quay Hotel along the riverfront, opened earlier this year, which calls itself Phnom Penh’s first “carbon-friendly” hotel (it measures carbon emissions and then buys “offsets” through carbon-reduction programs) and features minimalist décor of the “2001: A Space Odyssey” variety, spaces “infused with aromatherapy” and a rooftop wine bar. Other new hotels include the Pavilion, an elegant boutique property in a colonial mansion hidden behind the Royal Palace.
Some have complaints. Many of the hardened expats who have turned Cambodia into their adopted home are upset at the gentrification. Tuk-tuks, the ramshackle taxis used for short trips around town, now sometimes cost $2 instead of $1. Rents have soared and the average Cambodian hasn’t yet seen the benefits, and their incomes remain the lowest in the region. But it’s a start on what should be positive changes.

Comments to this entry
Gordon Craig
November 11, 2008
2:49 am
B
November 11, 2008
1:23 pm
That said, I feel that that PP has a lot going for it - I believe the urban fabric of PP remains surprising strong (say what you want about the French - they build good and lasting cities) and the places seems to ooze a positive attitude and youth to it.
Just me.
Felix Dzerzhinsky
November 11, 2008
1:53 pm
Should they have to go to war with the Thai army over the border the Cambodian RCAF are sure to win. No nation's military is better supplied. They have more Lexus, Mercedes, Hummer and Luxury Landcruisers than anywhere on the planet. Plenty of experience discharging their weapons in fights over women in Karaoke bars or pushing poor people off land to which they have title.
Khmer people are great. It is just a pity they are run by people who have been allowed to carry on the way they do because of aid money provided by tax payers in the developed world.
Curzon
November 12, 2008
1:31 am
Nemi
November 13, 2008
10:06 am
Mark in Ark
November 15, 2008
12:51 pm
They rulers of every state are corrupt and deserve to hang.
YT
November 15, 2008
3:48 pm
Read 'bout how some d***s used to go there as United Nations personnel back in the 90s & trade in girls. As in pimp for 'em. Any factual basis?
Felix Dzerzhinsky
November 16, 2008
3:49 am
http://www.fao.org/ag/againfo/projects/en/pplpi/docarc/wp26.pdf
I particularly like this quote from an anonymous Khmer private entrepreneur:
"Regarding government’s role, he believes that only the government canmake the needed changes. International agencies can advise, but they are not the government, nor are NGOs. His take on the government is fascinating. He calls ministers “takay” which literally means “boss” and the PM is a “bong thom” or “big brother” which is slang for gangster or gang member. He does not consider what is known as the government in Cambodia to be a government. In fact, he thinks it’s a private corporation out there to extract resources and is absolutely not ready to make the necessary reforms so long as it hurts their personal bottom lines."
Seamus
November 20, 2008
2:22 am
I'll have to go check that out for myself sometime.