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Japanese Occupation of Cambodia
Japanese Occupation of Cambodia
Historical background
The 1940 - 1941 FrancoThai War left the French Indochinese colonial authorities in a position of weakness. The Vichy government signed an agreement with Japan to allow the Japanese military transit through French Indochina and to station troops in Northern Vietnam up to a limit of 25,000 men.[2] Meanwhile the Thai government, strengthened by virtue of its treaty of friendship with Japan, took advantage of its position and invaded Cambodia's western provinces. Following this invasion, Tokyo hosted the signature of a treaty in March 1941 that compelled the French to relinquish the provinces of Battambang, Siem Reap, as well as a narrow extension of land between the 15th parallel and the Dangrek Mountains[3] in Stung Treng Province. After the Thai state under the pro-Japanese leadership of Field Marshal Plaek Phibunsongkhram occupied those territories, Cambodia had lost almost half a million citizens and one-third of its former surface.[4]
Japanese occupation
In August 1941, the Japanese army entered the French protectorate of Cambodia and established a garrison that numbered 8,000 troops. Despite their military presence, the Japanese authorities allowed Vichy French colonial officials to remain at their administrative posts. On 20 July 1942, there was a major anti-French demonstration in Phnom Penh after a prominent monk, Hem Chieu, was arrested for allegedly preaching seditious sermons to the colonial militia. The French authorities arrested the demonstration's leader, Pach Chhoeun, and exiled him to Con Son, their prison island.[1] Pach Chhoen was a respected Cambodian intellectual, associated with the Institut Bouddhique and founder of Nagaravatta, the first overtly political newspaper in the Khmer language in 1936, along with Sim Var.[5] Another of the men behind Nagaravatta, Son Ngoc Thanh (a Paris-educated magistrate) was also blamed for the demonstration, which the French authorities suspected had been carried out with Japanese encouragement.
Flag of the short-lived Cambodian Pro-Japanese puppet state (March - October 1945)
Japanese occupation of Cambodia Phnom Penh.[6] On 13 March king Sihanouk changed the official name of the country in French from Cambodge to Kampuchea. The new government did away with the romanization of the Khmer language that the French colonial administration was beginning to enforce and officially reinstated the Khmer script. This measure taken by the short-lived governmental authority would be popular and long-lasting, for since then no government in Cambodia has tried to romanize the Khmer language again.[7] Son Ngoc Thanh returned to Cambodia in May. He was initially appointed foreign minister and would become Prime Minister two months later.[8] The Cambodian puppet state of Japan lasted from March to October 1945. The Japanese occupation of Cambodia ended with the official surrender of Japan in August 1945. After Allied military units entered Cambodia, the Japanese military forces present in the country were disarmed and repatriated. The French were able to reimpose the colonial administration in Phnom Penh in October the same year. After arresting Son Ngoc Thanh for collaboration with the Japanese, the French colonial authorities exiled him to France, where he lived in house arrest. Some of his supporters went underground and escaped to Thai-controlled northwestern Cambodia, where they were eventually to join forces in a pro-independence group, the Khmer Issarak. This anti-French, politically heterogeneous nationalist movement was organized with Thai backing, but would later split into factions.[9]
References
[1] Milton Osborne, Sihanouk, Prince of Light, Prince of Darkness. Silkworm 1994 [2] Jean-Philippe Liardet, L'Indochine franaise pendant la Seconde Guerre mondiale; Les accords de septembre 1940 (http:/ / www. net4war. com/ e-revue/ dossiers/ 2gm/ indochine-sgm/ indochine-sgm-01. htm) [3] Jean-Philippe Liardet, L'Indochine franaise pendant la Seconde Guerre mondiale; La guerre contre le Siam, 1940-41 (http:/ / www. net4war. com/ e-revue/ dossiers/ 2gm/ indochine-sgm/ indochine-sgm-02. htm) [4] Cambodia, The Japanese Occupation, 1941-45 (http:/ / www. country-data. com/ cgi-bin/ query/ r-2221. html) [5] Ian Harris, Buddhism and politics in twentieth-century Asia [6] Keat Gin Ooi Southeast Asia: a historical encyclopedia [7] David P. Chandler, A History of Cambodia, Silkworm 1993 [8] Cambodia, The Emergence of Nationalism (http:/ / www. country-data. com/ cgi-bin/ query/ r-2084. html) [9] Cambodia, Appendix B - Major Political and Military Organizations (http:/ / www. country-data. com/ frd/ cs/ cambodia/ kh_appnb. html)
External links
National flags and anthems of Cambodia (http://www.youtube.com/watch?NR=1&v=44YYamdLx-M)
License
Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 Unported //creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/