The
Paris Peace Accords were in 1991, and sought to settle once and for all the political violence that had plagued Cambodia since the 1960s. It was designed to put an end to the civil war in Cambodia, usher out the
occupying Vietnamese army and establish free, fair and peaceful elections. Parties to that accord, namely
Australia,
Brunei,
Cambodia (
People's Republic of Kampuchea and the
CGDK),
Canada,
China,
France,
India,
Indonesia,
Japan,
Laos,
Malaysia, the
Philippines,
Singapore,
Soviet Union,
Thailand,
United Kingdom,
United States,
Vietnam and
Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia, created the Agreement on a Comprehensive Political Settlement of the Cambodia Conflict, a far ranging document that outlined the reconstruction effort. The mandates for that agreement were, as articulated in the nine parts thereof, Arrangements During the Transitional Period, Transitional Period, United Nations, Transitional Authority in Cambodia, Supreme National Council, Withdrawal of Foreign Forces and its Verification, Cease-fire and Cessation of Outside Military Assistance, Elections, Human Rights, International Guarantees, Refugees and Displaced Persons, National Communities, Communes and Representation. The writing of the constitution and the transition to democracy were but a part of the larger disengagement and normalization process outlined at the Paris Peace Accords. Though it was to culminate with the complete transformation of Cambodia to a constitutional democracy, the process was separated into six steps. As outlined by Harvard's Professor Stephen Mark in a report for the
United States Institute of Peace, those steps were: :• Cease-fire, demobilization, and creation of a neutral political environment. :• Election of the Constituent Assembly through a UN-run election, the outcome of which was declared "free and fair" by the SRSG and the Security Council. :• Selection of a drafting committee from among the members of the Constituent Assembly. :• Adoption by the Assembly of the Committee's draft. :• Proclamation by the king of the Constitution. :• Transformation of the Constituent Assembly into the National Assembly. Annex V of the Agreement on a Comprehensive Political Settlement of the Cambodia Conflict, called Principles for a New Constitution for Cambodia, consisted of six principles that were to guide the drafters of the new Cambodian constitution in creating a liberal democracy. They were derived from a
United Nations recommendation issued during the drafting of
Namibia's constitution in 1982. Those Principles were: ::1. The constitution will be the supreme law of the land. It may be amended only by a designated process involving legislative approval, popular referendum, or both. ::2. …the constitution will contain a declaration of fundamental rights, including the rights to life, personal liberty, security, freedom of movement, freedom of religion, assembly and association including political parties and trade unions, due process and
equality before the law, protection from arbitrary deprivation of property or deprivation of private property without just compensation, and freedom from racial, ethnic, religious or sexual discrimination. It will prohibit the retroactive application of criminal law…Aggrieved individuals will be entitled to have the courts adjudicate and enforce these rights. ::3. The constitution will declare Cambodia's status as a sovereign, independent and neutral State, and the national unity of Cambodian people. ::4. The constitution will state that Cambodia will follow a system of liberal democracy, on the basis of pluralism. It will provide for periodic and genuine elections… ::5. An independent judiciary will be established, empowered to enforce the rights provided under the constitution. ::6. The constitution will be adopted by a two-thirds majority of the members of the constituent assembly. The term "liberal democracy," as expressed in the fourth principle, was introduced to the discourse over the constitution apparently by
Prince Sihanouk during previous negotiations with the warring Cambodian factions and international bodies. It has been speculated that he referred to his hopes for the future of Cambodia thus because he assumed that such language was what the American and European parties to the Accords were looking for. It has been noted that "liberal democracy" was far from the political system that he engineered for himself at
independence. That term is nowhere in the final agreement defined, though eight elements of democratic elections are articulated. Those eight elements are: the regular occurrence of elections, "genuine" and manipulation-free elections, guarantee of the right to vote, guarantee of the right to stand for election, universal suffrage, equal suffrage (the equity of each vote), private and secret ballots and the fair ability of all persons and groups to organize for and participate in the electoral process through public discourse. == Constituent Assembly ==