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Norodom Sihanouk

Norodom Sihanouk (/ˈshənʊk/; Khmer: នរោត្តម សីហនុ, Nôroŭttâm Seihânŭ [nɔroːɗɑm səjhanuʔ]; 31 October 1922 – 15 October 2012) was a Cambodian statesman, Sangkum and FUNCINPEC politician, film director, and composer who led Cambodia in various capacities throughout his long career, most often as both King and Prime Minister of Cambodia. In Cambodia, he is known as Samdech Euv (Khmer: សម្តេចឪ, Sâmdéch Âu [sɑmˈɗac ʔɨw]; meaning "King Father"). During his lifetime, Cambodia was under various regimes, from French colonial rule (until 1953), an independent kingdom (1953–1970), a republic (1970–1975), the Khmer Rouge regime (1975–1979), another communist regime (1979–1989), yet another different communist state (1989–1993) to finally another kingdom (since 1993).

Norodom Sihanouk
Sihanouk in 1983
King of Cambodia
First reign24 April 1941 – 2 March 1955
Coronation3 May 1941
PredecessorSisowath Monivong
SuccessorNorodom Suramarit
Prime ministers
Second reign24 September 1993 – 7 October 2004
PredecessorMonarchy restored;
Himself as Chief of State
SuccessorNorodom Sihamoni
Prime ministers
Chief of State of Cambodia
First rule20 June 1960 – 18 March 1970
PredecessorChuop Hell (acting)
SuccessorCheng Heng (acting)
QueenSisowath Kossamak
Second rule14 June – 24 September 1993
PredecessorChea Sim (as President of the Council of State)
SuccessorHimself as King
President of the State Presidium
Presidency17 April 1975 – 2 April 1976
PredecessorSak Sutsakhan (as Chairman of the Supreme Committee)
SuccessorKhieu Samphan (as Chairman of the State Presidium)
Born(1922-10-31)31 October 1922
Phnom Penh, Cambodia, French Indochina
Died15 October 2012(2012-10-15) (aged 89)
Beijing, China
Burial13 July 2014
Spouse
See list
  • (m. 1942; div. 1946)
  • Sisowath Pongsanmoni
    (m. 1942; div. 1951)
  • Sisowath Monikessan
    (m. 1944; died 1946)
  • (m. 1949; div. 1955)
  • Norodom Thavet Norleak
    (m. 1955; div. 1968)
  • (m. 1955)
Issue
HouseNorodom
FatherNorodom Suramarit
MotherSisowath Kossamak
ReligionTheravada Buddhism
EducationCavalry School
Occupations
Political party
WebsiteOfficial website
Signature
Other offices
President of the Council of Kingdom
In office
October 1955 – January 1956
MonarchNorodom Suramarit
Preceded byPenn Nouth
Succeeded bySim Var
Prime Minister of Cambodia
In office
17 November 1961 – 13 February 1962
PresidentHimself as Chief of State
Preceded byPenn Nouth
Succeeded byNhiek Tioulong (acting)
In office
10 July 1958 – 19 April 1960
MonarchNorodom Suramarit
Preceded bySim Var
Succeeded byPho Proeung
In office
9 April 1957 – 7 July 1957
MonarchNorodom Suramarit
Preceded bySan Yun
Succeeded bySim Var
In office
15 September 1956 – 15 October 1956
MonarchNorodom Suramarit
Preceded byKhim Tit
Succeeded bySan Yun
In office
1 March 1956 – 24 March 1956
MonarchNorodom Suramarit
Preceded byOum Chheang Sun
Succeeded byKhim Tit
In office
3 October 1955 – 5 January 1956
MonarchNorodom Suramarit
Preceded byLeng Ngeth
Succeeded byOum Chheang Sun
In office
7 April 1954 – 18 April 1954
MonarchHimself
Preceded byChan Nak
Succeeded byPenn Nouth
In office
16 June 1952 – 24 January 1953
MonarchHimself
Preceded byHuy Kanthoul
Succeeded byPenn Nouth
In office
28 April 1950 – 30 May 1950
MonarchHimself
Preceded byYem Sambaur
Succeeded bySisowath Monipong
In office
18 March 1945 – 13 August 1945
MonarchHimself
Preceded byPosition established
Succeeded bySon Ngoc Thanh

Sihanouk was the only child of Prince Norodom Suramarit and Princess Sisowath Kossamak, daughter of King Sisowath Monivong. When his grandfather Monivong died in 1941, Sihanouk became king amidst French colonial rule. After the Japanese occupation of Cambodia during World War II, he secured Cambodian independence from France in 1953. He abdicated in 1955 and was succeeded by his father, Suramarit, so as to directly participate in politics. Sihanouk's political organization Sangkum won the general elections that year and he became prime minister of Cambodia. He governed the country under one-party rule and suppressed political dissent. After his father died in 1960, Sihanouk assumed a new position as Head of State of Cambodia.

Officially neutral in foreign relations, Sihanouk was closer to the communist bloc in practice. The Cambodian coup of 1970 ousted him and he fled to China and North Korea, forming a government-in-exile and a resistance movement there. He encouraged Cambodians to fight the new government and backed the Khmer Rouge during the Cambodian Civil War. He returned as figurehead head of state after the Khmer Rouge's victory in 1975. His relations with the new government soured and in 1976 he resigned. He was placed under house arrest until Vietnamese forces overthrew the Khmer Rouge in 1979.

Sihanouk went into exile again and in 1981 formed FUNCINPEC, a resistance party. The following year, he became president of the Coalition Government of Democratic Kampuchea (CGDK), a broad coalition of anti-Vietnamese resistance factions which retained Cambodia's seat at the United Nations, making him Cambodia's internationally recognized head of state. In the late 1980s, informal talks were carried out to end hostilities between the Vietnam-supported People's Republic of Kampuchea and the CGDK. In 1990, the Supreme National Council of Cambodia was formed as a transitional body to oversee Cambodia's sovereign matters, with Sihanouk as its president. The 1991 Paris Peace Accords were signed and the UN Transitional Authority in Cambodia (UNTAC) was established the following year. The UNTAC organized the 1993 Cambodian general elections, and a coalition government, jointly led by his son Norodom Ranariddh and Hun Sen, was subsequently formed. Sihanouk was reinstated as Cambodia's king. He abdicated again in 2004 and the Royal Council of the Throne chose his son Sihamoni as his successor. Sihanouk died in Beijing in 2012.

Between 1941 and 2006, Sihanouk produced and directed 50 films, some of which he acted in. The films, later described as being of low quality, often featured nationalistic elements, as did a number of the songs he wrote. Some of his songs were about his wife Monique, the nations neighboring Cambodia, and the communist leaders who supported him in his exile. In the 2000s Sihanouk held concerts for diplomats in New York City. He also participated in concerts at his palace during his second reign.

Early life and first reign

 
Sihanouk in his coronation regalia, November 1941

Norodom Sihanouk was the only child born of the union between Norodom Suramarit and Sisowath Kossamak.[1] His parents, who heeded the Royal Court Astrologer's advice that he risked dying at a young age if he was raised under parental care, placed him under the care of Kossamak's grandmother, Pat. When Pat died, Kossamak brought Sihanouk to live with his paternal grandfather, Norodom Sutharot. Sutharot delegated parenting responsibilities to his daughter, Norodom Ket Kanyamom.[2]

Sihanouk received his primary education at the François Baudoin school and Nuon Moniram school in Phnom Penh.[3] During this time, he received financial support from his maternal grandfather, Sisowath Monivong, to head an amateur performance troupe and soccer team.[1] In 1936, Sihanouk was sent to Saigon, where he pursued his secondary education at Lycée Chasseloup Laubat, a boarding school.[4]

When the reigning king Monivong died on 23 April 1941 the Governor-General of French Indochina, Jean Decoux, chose Sihanouk to succeed him.[5] Sihanouk's appointment as king was formalised the following day by the Cambodian Crown Council,[6] and his coronation ceremony took place on 3 May 1941.[7] During the Japanese occupation of Cambodia, he dedicated most of his time to sports, filming, and the occasional tour to the countryside.[8] In March 1945 the Japanese military, which had occupied Cambodia since August 1941, dissolved the nominal French colonial administration. Under pressure from the Japanese, Sihanouk proclaimed Cambodia's independence[9] and assumed the position of prime minister while serving as king at the same time.[10]

Pre-independence and self-rule

As prime minister, Sihanouk revoked a decree issued by the last resident superior of Cambodia, Georges Gautier, to romanise the Khmer alphabet.[11] Following the Surrender of Japan in August 1945, nationalist forces loyal to Son Ngoc Thanh launched a coup, which led to Thanh becoming prime minister.[12] When the French returned to Cambodia in October 1945, Thanh was dismissed and replaced by Sihanouk's uncle Sisowath Monireth.[13] Monireth negotiated for greater autonomy in managing Cambodia's internal affairs. A modus vivendi signed in January 1946 granted Cambodia autonomy within the French Union.[14]

A joint French-Cambodian commission was set up after that to draft Cambodia's constitution,[15] and in April 1946 Sihanouk introduced clauses which provided for an elected parliament on the basis of universal male suffrage as well as press freedom.[16] The first constitution was signed into effect by Sihanouk in May 1947.[17] Around this time, Sihanouk made two trips to Saumur, France, where he attended military training at the Armoured Cavalry Branch Training School in 1946, and again in 1948. He was made a reserve captain in the French army.[18]

In early 1949, Sihanouk traveled to Paris with his parents to negotiate with the French government for more autonomy for Cambodia. The modus vivendi was replaced by a new Franco-Khmer treaty, which recognised Cambodia as "independent" within the French Union.[19] In practice, the treaty granted only limited self-rule to Cambodia. While Cambodia was given free rein in managing its foreign ministry and, to a lesser extent, its defence, most of the other ministries remained under French control.[20]

Meanwhile, dissenting legislators from the national assembly attacked the government led by prime minister Penn Nouth over its failure to resolve deepening financial and corruption problems plaguing the country. The dissenting legislators, led by Yem Sambaur, who had defected from the Democrat party in November 1948,[21] deposed Penn Nouth.[22] Yem Sambaur replaced him, but his appointment did not sit well with the Democrats, who in turn pressured Sihanouk to dissolve the national assembly and hold elections.[23]

 
Sihanouk in 1946

Sihanouk, who by now had tired of the political squabbling, dissolved the assembly in September 1949,[24] but opted to rule by decree for the next two years before general elections were held, which the Democrats won.[25] In October 1951, Thanh returned to Cambodia and was received by 100,000 supporters, a spectacle which Sihanouk saw as an affront to his regal authority.[26] Thanh disappeared six months later, presumably to join the Khmer Issarak.[27] Sihanouk ordered the Democrat-led government to arrest Thanh but was ignored.[28]

Subsequently, civil demonstrations against the monarchy and the French broke out in the countryside,[29] alarming Sihanouk, who began to suspect that the Democrats were complicit.[30] In June 1952 Sihanouk dismissed the Democrat nominee Huy Kanthoul and made himself prime minister. A few days later, Sihanouk privately confided in exasperation to the US chargé d'affaires, Thomas Gardiner Corcoran, that parliamentary democracy was unsuitable for Cambodia.[30]

In January 1953, Sihanouk re-appointed Penn Nouth as prime minister before leaving for France. Once there, Sihanouk wrote to French President Vincent Auriol requesting that he grant Cambodia full independence, citing widespread anti-French sentiment among the Cambodian populace.[31] Auriol deferred Sihanouk's request to the French Commissioner for Overseas Territories, Jean Letourneau, who promptly rejected it. Subsequently, Sihanouk traveled to Canada and the United States, where he gave radio interviews to present his case.[32]

He took advantage of the prevailing anti-communist sentiment in those countries, arguing that Cambodia faced a Communist threat similar to that of the Viet Minh in Vietnam, and that the solution was to grant full independence to Cambodia.[32] Sihanouk returned to Cambodia in June 1953, taking up residence in Siem Reap.[33] He organised public rallies calling for Cambodians to fight for independence, and formed a citizenry militia which attracted about 130,000 recruits.[34]

In August 1953, France agreed to cede control over judicial and interior affairs to Cambodia, and in October 1953 the defense ministry as well. At the end of October, Sihanouk went to Phnom Penh,[35] where he declared Cambodia's independence from France on 9 November 1953.[33] In May 1954, Sihanouk sent two of his cabinet ministers, Nhiek Tioulong and Tep Phan, to represent Cambodia at the Geneva Conference.[36] The agreements affirmed Cambodia's independence and allowed it to seek military aid from any country without restrictions.[37]

At the same time, Sihanouk's relations with the governing Democrat party remained strained, as they were wary of his growing political influence.[37] To counter Democrat opposition, Sihanouk held a national referendum to gauge public approval for his efforts to seek national independence.[38] While the results showed 99.8 percent approval, Australian historian Milton Osborne noted that open balloting was carried out and voters were cowed into casting an approval vote under police surveillance.[39]

Sangkum era

Abdication and entry into politics

On 2 March 1955, Sihanouk suddenly abdicated the throne[33][40] and was in turn succeeded by his father, Suramarit.[3] His abdication surprised everyone, including his own parents.[41] In his abdication speech, Sihanouk explained that he was abdicating in order to extricate himself from the "intrigues" of palace life and allow easier access to common folk as an "ordinary citizen". According to Osborne, Sihanouk's abdication earned him the freedom to pursue politics while continuing to enjoy the deference that he had received from his subjects when he was king.[42] In addition, he also feared being cast aside by the government after discovering that his popularity was manufactured by his own officials.[43][41]

In April 1955, before leaving for a summit with Asian and African states in Bandung, Indonesia, Sihanouk announced the formation of his own political party, the Sangkum, and expressed interest in participating in the general elections slated to be held in September 1955. While the Sangkum was, in effect, a political party, Sihanouk argued that the Sangkum should be seen as a political "organisation", and explained that he could accommodate people with differing political orientations on the sole condition that they pledged fealty to the monarchy.[44] The creation of the Sangkum was seen as a move to dissolve the political parties.[45][46]

Sangkum was based on four small, monarchist, rightist parties, including the 'Victorious North-East' party of Dap Chhuon, the Khmer Renovation party of Lon Nol,[47] the People's Party[45] and the Liberal Party.[48] At the same time, Sihanouk was running out of patience with the increasingly leftist Democratic Party and the left-wing Pracheachon, as both had refused to merge into his party and had campaigned against him. He appointed as director of national security Dap Chhuon,[49] who ordered the national police to jail their leaders and break up their election rallies.[50] When elections were held, the Sangkum received 83 percent of all valid votes. They took up all seats in the National Assembly, replacing the Democrats, which had until then been the majority party.[51] The following month, Sihanouk was appointed as prime minister.[52]

Premiership (1955–1960)

 
Meeting in Beijing in 1965: (from left) Mao Zedong, Peng Zhen, Sihanouk, Liu Shaoqi

Once in office, Sihanouk introduced several constitutional changes, including extending suffrage to women, adopting Khmer as the sole official language of the country[53] and making Cambodia a constitutional monarchy by vesting policy-making powers in the prime minister rather than the king.[54] He viewed socialism as an ideal concept for establishing social equality and fostering national cohesion within newly independent Cambodia. In March 1956, he embarked on a national programme of "Buddhist socialism", promoting socialist principles on the one hand while maintaining the kingdom's Buddhist culture on the other.[55]

Between 1955 and 1960, Sihanouk resigned and retook the post of prime minister several times, citing fatigue caused by overwork.[56] The National Assembly nominated experienced politicians such as Sim Var and San Yun to become prime minister whenever Sihanouk took leave, but they similarly relinquished their posts each time, several months into their term,[57] as cabinet ministers repeatedly disagreed over public policy matters.[58]

In May 1955, Sihanouk had accepted military aid from the US.[59] The following January, when he was in the Philippines on a state visit, Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) operatives attempted to sway him into placing Cambodia under Southeast Asia Treaty Organization (SEATO) protection.[60] Subsequently, Sihanouk began to suspect that the US was attempting to undermine his government and that it was lending covert support to the Democratic party, now without parliamentary representation, for that purpose.[61] Sihanouk developed a good impression of China, whose premier, Zhou Enlai, gave him a warm reception on his first visit there in February 1956. They signed a friendship treaty in which China promised US$40 million in economic aid to Cambodia.[62]

When Sihanouk returned from China, Sarit Thanarat and Ngo Dinh Diem, leaders of Thailand and South Vietnam, respectively, both with pro-American sympathies, started to accuse him of pro-Communist sympathies. South Vietnam briefly imposed a trade embargo on Cambodia, preventing trading ships from travelling up the Mekong river to Phnom Penh.[63] While Sihanouk professed that he was pursuing a policy of neutrality, Sarit and Diem remained distrustful of him, more so after he established formal diplomatic relations with China in 1958.[64]

 
Carlos P. Garcia, the then-Vice President of the Philippines in 1956 with Sihanouk
 
Indian Defence Minister V. K. Krishna Menon is seen pictured with Sihanouk

The Democratic party continued to criticize the Sangkum and Sihanouk in their newspaper, much to Sihanouk's consternation.[65] In August 1957 Sihanouk finally lost patience, calling out Democrat leaders for a debate. Five of them attended. At the debate, held at the Royal Palace, Sihanouk spoke in a belligerent tone, challenging the Democrat leaders to present evidence of malfeasance in his government and inviting them to join the Sangkum. The Democrat leaders gave hesitant responses, and, according to American historian David P. Chandler, this gave the audience the impression that they were disloyal to the monarchy.[61]

The debate led to the effective demise of the Democratic party, as its leaders were subsequently beaten up by government soldiers, with Sihanouk's tacit approval.[66] With the Democrats vanquished, Sihanouk focused on preparing for general elections, slated to be held in March 1958. He drafted left-wing politicians, including Hou Yuon, Hu Nim and Chau Seng, to stand as Sangkum candidates, with a view to winning left-wing support from the Pracheachon.[67] The Pracheachon on their part fielded five candidates for the elections. However, four of them withdrew, as they were prevented by the national police from holding any election rallies. When voting took place, the Sangkum won all seats in the national assembly.[68]

In December 1958 Ngo Dinh Nhu, Diem's younger brother and chief adviser, broached the idea of orchestrating a coup to overthrow Sihanouk.[69] Nhu contacted Dap Chhuon, Sihanouk's Interior Minister, who was known for his pro-American sympathies, to prepare for the coup against his boss.[70] Chhuon received covert financial and military assistance from Thailand, South Vietnam, and the CIA.[71] In January 1959 Sihanouk learned of the coup plans through intermediaries who were in contact with Chhuon.[72] The following month, Sihanouk sent the army to capture Chhuon, who was summarily executed as soon as he was captured, effectively ending the coup attempt.[73] Sihanouk then accused South Vietnam and the United States of orchestrating the coup attempt.[74]

Six months later, on 31 August 1959, a small packaged lacquer gift fitted with a parcel bomb was delivered to the royal palace. Norodom Vakrivan, the chief of protocol, was killed instantly when he opened the package. Sihanouk's parents, Suramarit and Kossamak, were sitting in another room not far from Vakrivan. An investigation traced the origin of the parcel bomb to an American military base in Saigon.[75] While Sihanouk publicly accused Ngo Dinh Nhu of masterminding the bomb attack, he secretly suspected that the US was also involved.[76] The incident deepened his distrust of the US.[77]

Initial years as Head of State (1960–1965)

Suramarit, Sihanouk's father, died on 3 April 1960[78] after several months of poor health that Sihanouk blamed upon the shock that his father had received from the parcel bomb attack.[75] The following day, the Cambodian Crown Council met to choose Monireth as regent.[79] Over the next two months, Sihanouk introduced constitutional amendments to create the new post of Head of State of Cambodia, which provided ceremonial powers equivalent to that of the king. A referendum held on 5 June 1960 approved Sihanouk's proposals, and Sihanouk was formally appointed Head of State on 14 June 1960.[80] As the head of state, Sihanouk took over various ceremonial responsibilities of the king, such as holding public audiences[81] and leading the Royal Ploughing Ceremony. At the same time, he continued to play an active role in politics as Sangkum's leader.[82]

 
Sihanouk with US President John F. Kennedy in New York City on 25 September 1961

In 1961 Pracheachon's spokesperson, Non Suon, criticized Sihanouk for failing to tackle inflation, unemployment, and corruption in the country. Non Suon's criticisms gave Sihanouk the impetus to arrest Pracheachon leaders, and, according to him, he had discovered plans by their party to monitor local political developments on behalf of foreign powers.[83] In May 1962 Tou Samouth, Pracheachon's secretary-general, disappeared, and its ideological ally, the Communist Party of Kampuchea, suspected that Samouth had been secretly captured and killed by police.[84] Sihanouk nevertheless allowed Sangkum's left-wing politicians to run again in the 1962 general elections, which they all won.[85] He even appointed two left-wing politicians, Hou Yuon and Khieu Samphan, as secretaries for planning and commerce, respectively, after the election.[86]

In November 1962, Sihanouk called on the US to stop supporting the Khmer Serei, which he believed they had been secretly doing through the CIA. He threatened to reject all economic aid from the US if they failed to respond to his demands,[87] a threat he later carried out on 19 November 1963.[88] At the same time, Sihanouk also nationalised the country's entrepot trade, banking sector, and distillery industries.[89] To oversee policy and regulatory matters on the country's entrepot trade, he set up the National Export-Import Corporation and Statutory Board, better known as "SONEXIM".[90]

When Sarit, Diem, and US president John F. Kennedy died in November and December 1963, Sihanouk rejoiced over their deaths, as he accused them of attempting to destabilise Cambodia. He organised concerts and granted civil servants extra leave time to celebrate the occasion. When the US government protested Sihanouk's celebrations, he responded by recalling the Cambodian ambassador to the US, Nong Kimny.[91]

In early 1964, Sihanouk signed a secret agreement with North Vietnam and the Viet Cong, allowing Chinese military aid meant for them to be delivered through Sihanoukville's port. In turn, the Cambodian army would be paid for delivering food supplies to the Viet Cong, and at the same time skim off 10 percent of all military hardware supplies.[92] In addition, he also allowed the Viet Cong to build a trail through eastern Cambodia, so that their troops could receive war supplies from North Vietnam. The trail later became known as the Sihanouk Trail.[93] When the US learned of Viet Cong presence in eastern Cambodia, they started a bombing campaign,[94] spurring Sihanouk to sever diplomatic ties with the US in May 1965.[93] As a result of this secret agreement, Communist countries, including China, the Soviet Union, and Czechoslovakia, provided military aid to Cambodia.[95]

Continued leadership as Head of State (1966–1970)

 
Sihanouk in 1967

In September 1966, general elections were held,[96] and Sangkum legislators with conservative and right-wing sympathies dominated the national assembly. In turn, they nominated Lon Nol, a military general who shared their political sympathies, as prime minister. However, their choice did not sit well with Sihanouk.[97] To counterbalance conservative and right-wing influence, in October 1966 Sihanouk set up a shadow government made up of Sangkum legislators with left-wing sympathies.[98] At the end of the month, Lon Nol offered to resign from his position, but was stopped from doing so by Sihanouk.[99]

In April 1967, the Samlaut Uprising occurred, with local peasants fighting against government troops in Samlaut, Battambang.[100] As soon as government troops managed to quell the fighting,[101] Sihanouk began to suspect that three left-wing Sangkum legislators – Khieu Samphan, Hou Yuon and Hu Nim – had incited the rebellion.[102] When Sihanouk threatened to charge Khieu Samphan and Hou Yuon before a military tribunal, they fled into the jungle to join the Khmer Rouge, leaving Hu Nim behind.[103]

Lon Nol resigned as prime minister in early May 1967, and Sihanouk appointed Son Sann in his place.[102] At the same time, Sihanouk replaced conservative-leaning ministers appointed by Lon Nol with technocrats and left-leaning politicians.[103] In the later part of the month, after receiving news that the Chinese embassy in Cambodia had published and distributed Communist propaganda to the Cambodian populace praising the Cultural Revolution,[104] Sihanouk accused China of supporting local Chinese Cambodians in engaging in "contraband" and "subversive" activities.[105]

In August 1967, Sihanouk sent to China his Foreign Minister, Norodom Phurissara, who unsuccessfully urged Zhou to stop the Chinese embassy from disseminating Communist propaganda.[106] In response, Sihanouk closed the Cambodia–Chinese Friendship Association in September 1967. When the Chinese government protested,[107] Sihanouk threatened to close the Chinese embassy in Cambodia.[108] Zhou stepped in to placate Sihanouk,[109] and compromised by instructing its embassy to send its publications to Cambodia's information ministry for vetting prior to distribution.[108]

As relations with China worsened, Sihanouk pursued rapprochement with the US. He learned that Kennedy's widow, Jacqueline Kennedy, had expressed a desire to see Angkor Wat.[110] Seeing this as an opportunity to restore relations with the US, Sihanouk invited her to visit Cambodia and personally hosted her visit in October 1967.[111] Jacqueline Kennedy's visit paved the way for Sihanouk to meet with Chester Bowles, the US ambassador to India. To Bowles, Sihanouk expressed his willingness to restore bilateral relations with the US, hinted at the presence of Viet Cong troops in Cambodia, and suggested he would turn a blind eye should US forces enter Cambodia to attack Viet Cong troops retreating into Cambodia from South Vietnam—a practice known as "hot pursuit"—provided that Cambodians were unharmed.[112][113]

Silhanouk told Bowles that he disliked the Vietnamese as a people, saying he had no love for any Vietnamese, red, blue, North or South".[110] Kenton Clymer notes that this statement "cannot reasonably be construed to mean that Sihanouk approved of the intensive, ongoing B-52 bombing raids" the US launched in eastern Cambodia beginning in March 1969 as part of Operation Menu, adding: "In any event, no one asked him. ... Sihanouk was never asked to approve the B-52 bombings, and he never gave his approval."[113] The bombing forced the Viet Cong to flee from their jungle sanctuaries and seek refuge in populated towns and villages.[114]

As a result, Sihanouk became concerned that Cambodia might get drawn into fighting in the Vietnam War. In June 1969, he extended diplomatic recognition to the Provisional Revolutionary Government of the Republic of South Vietnam (PRGSV),[115] hoping that he could get the Viet Cong troops under its charge to leave Cambodia should they win the war. At the same time, he also openly admitted the presence of Viet Cong troops in Cambodia for the first time,[116] prompting the US to restore formal diplomatic relations with Cambodia three months later.[117]

As the Cambodian economy was stagnating due to systemic corruption,[118] Sihanouk opened two casinos – in Phnom Penh and Sihanoukville – in January 1969.[119] While the casinos satisfied his aim of generating state revenues of up to 700 million riels in that year, it also caused a sharp increase in the number of bankruptcies and suicides.[119] In August 1969 Lon Nol was reappointed as Prime Minister, with Sisowath Sirik Matak as his deputy. Two months later, Lon Nol left Cambodia to seek medical treatment, leaving Sirik Matak to run the government. Between October and December 1969, Sirik Matak instituted several policy changes that ran contrary to Sihanouk's wishes, such as allowing private banks to re-open in the country and devaluing the riel. He also encouraged ambassadors to write to Lon Nol directly, instead of going through Sihanouk, angering the latter.[120] In early January 1970, Sihanouk left Cambodia for medical treatment in France.[121] Shortly after he left, Sirik Matak took the opportunity to close down the casinos.[122]

Deposition, GRUNK and Khmer Rouge years

1970 coup

In January 1970, Sihanouk left Cambodia for a two-month holiday in France, spending his time at a luxury resort in the French Riviera.[123] On 11 March 1970, a large protest took place outside the North Vietnamese and Provisional Revolutionary Government of the Republic of South Vietnam embassies, as protesters demanded Viet Cong troops withdraw from Cambodia. The protests turned chaotic, as protesters looted both embassies and set them on fire, alarming Sihanouk.[124] Sihanouk, who was in Paris at the time, considered both returning to quell the protests and visiting Moscow, Beijing, and Hanoi. He opted for the latter, thinking that he could persuade its leaders to recall Viet Cong troops to their jungle sanctuaries, where they had originally established themselves between 1964 and 1969.[125]

Five days later, Oum Mannorine, the half-brother of Sihanouk's wife Monique, was summoned to the National Assembly to answer corruption charges.[126] On that night after the hearing, Mannorine ordered troops under his command to arrest Lon Nol and Sirik Matak, but ended up getting arrested by Lon Nol's troops instead. On 18 March 1970 the National Assembly voted to depose Sihanouk,[127] allowing Lon Nol to assume emergency powers.[128]

 
Sihanouk (left) visiting Romania in 1972, with Romanian President Nicolae Ceaușescu

On that day, Sihanouk was in Moscow meeting Soviet prime minister Alexei Kosygin, who broke the news as he was being driven to the Moscow airport.[129][130] From Moscow, Sihanouk flew to Beijing, where he was received by Zhou Enlai. Zhou arranged for the North Vietnamese Prime Minister, Pham Van Dong to fly to Beijing from Hanoi and meet with Sihanouk.[131] Zhou greeted Sihanouk very warmly, telling him that China still recognized him as the legitimate leader of Cambodia and would be pressuring North Korea, along with several Middle Eastern and African nations, not to recognize Lon Nol's government, saying that once China issued its declaration of support, "the Soviet Union will be embarrassed and will have to reconsider".[132] Both Zhou and Dong encouraged Sihanouk to rebel against Lon Nol and promised him military and financial support.[129]

Uneasy alliance

On 23 March 1970, Sihanouk announced the formation of his resistance movement, the National United Front of Kampuchea (FUNK). He encouraged the Cambodian populace to join him and fight against Lon Nol's government. Sihanouk was revered by the Khmer peasantry as a god-like figure, and his endorsement of the Khmer Rouge had immediate effects.[129] The royal family was so revered that Lon Nol after the coup went to the royal palace, knelt at the feet of the queen mother and begged her forgiveness for deposing her son.[129]

Khmer Rouge soldiers broadcast Sihanouk's message in the Cambodian countryside, which roused demonstrations rooting for his cause that were brutally suppressed by Lon Nol's troops.[133] Sometime later, on 5 May 1970, Sihanouk announced the formation of a government-in-exile known as the Royal Government of the National Union of Kampuchea (GRUNK), leading Communist countries including China, North Vietnam, and North Korea to break relations with the Lon Nol regime.[134] In Phnom Penh, a military trial convened on 2 July 1970, whereby Sihanouk was charged with treason and corruption in his capacity as Head of State. After a three-day trial, the judges ruled Sihanouk guilty of both charges and sentenced to him death in absentia on 5 July 1970.[135]

Between 1970 and 1975, Sihanouk took up residence in state guesthouses at Beijing and Pyongyang, courtesy of the Chinese and North Korean governments, respectively.[136] In February 1973, Sihanouk traveled to Hanoi, where he started on a long journey with Khieu Samphan and other Khmer Rouge leaders. The convoy proceeded along the Ho Chi Minh trail and reached the Cambodian border at Stung Treng Province the following month. From there, they traveled across the provinces of Stung Treng, Preah Vihear, and Siem Reap. Throughout this entire leg of the journey, Sihanouk faced constant bombardment from American planes participating in Operation Freedom Deal.[137] At Siem Reap, Sihanouk visited the temples of Angkor Wat, Banteay Srei, and Bayon.[138] In August 1973, Sirik Matak wrote an open letter calling on Sihanouk to bring the Cambodian Civil War to an end and suggesting the possibility of his return to the country. When the letter reached Sihanouk, he angrily rejected Sirik Matak's entreaties.[139]

After the Khmer Republic fell to the Khmer Rouge on 17 April 1975, a new regime under its charge, Democratic Kampuchea, was formed. Sihanouk was appointed as its Head of State, a ceremonial position.[140] In September 1975,[141] Sihanouk briefly returned to Cambodia to inter the ashes of his mother,[142] before going abroad again to lobby for diplomatic recognition of Democratic Kampuchea.[143] He returned on 31 December 1975 and presided over a meeting to endorse the constitution of Democratic Kampuchea.[144] In February 1976, Khieu Samphan took him on a tour across the Cambodian countryside. Sihanouk was shocked to see the use of forced labour and population displacement carried out by the Khmer Rouge government, known as the Angkar. Following the tour, Sihanouk decided to resign as the Head of State.[145] The Angkar initially rejected his resignation request, though they subsequently accepted it in mid-April 1976, retroactively backdating it to 2 April 1976.[146]

House arrest

From this point onwards Sihanouk was kept under house arrest at the royal palace. In September 1978, he was removed to another apartment in Phnom Penh's suburbs, where he lived until the end of the year.[147] Throughout his confinement, Sihanouk made several unsuccessful requests to the Angkar to travel overseas.[148] Vietnam invaded Cambodia on 22 December 1978. On 1 January 1979, Sihanouk was taken from Phnom Penh to Sisophon, where he stayed for three days until 5 January, when he was taken back to Phnom Penh.[149] Sihanouk was taken to meet Pol Pot, who briefed him on the Angkar's plans to repulse Vietnamese troops.[150]

On 6 January 1979, Sihanouk was allowed to fly to Beijing from Phnom Penh, where he was greeted by Zhou Enlai's successor, Deng Xiaoping.[151] The next day Phnom Penh fell to advancing Vietnamese troops on 7 January 1979. On 9 January 1979, Sihanouk flew from Beijing to New York to attend the UN Security Council, where he simultaneously condemned the Khmer Rouge for orchestrating the Cambodian genocide as well as the Vietnamese occupation of Cambodia.[152] Sihanouk subsequently sought asylum in China after making two unsuccessful asylum applications with the US and France.[153]

 
Sihanouk (right) with his son, Prince Norodom Ranariddh, on an ANS inspection tour during the 1980s

FUNCINPEC and CGDK years

Resistance movement

After the Khmer Rouge regime was overthrown, a new Cambodian government supported by Vietnam, the People's Republic of Kampuchea (PRK), was established. The Chinese leader, Deng Xiaoping, was unhappy[154] with Vietnam's influence over the PRK government. Deng proposed to Sihanouk that he co-operate with the Khmer Rouge to overthrow the PRK government, but the latter rejected it,[155] as he opposed the genocidal policies pursued by the Khmer Rouge while they were in power.[154] In March 1981, Sihanouk established a resistance movement, FUNCINPEC which was complemented by a small resistance army known as Armée Nationale Sihanoukiste [ru] (ANS).[156]

He appointed In Tam, who had briefly served as Prime Minister in the Khmer Republic, as the commander-in-chief of ANS.[157] The ANS needed military aid from China, and Deng seized the opportunity to sway Sihanouk into collaborating with the Khmer Rouge.[158] Sihanouk reluctantly agreed, and started talks in March 1981 with the Khmer Rouge and the Son Sann-led Khmer People's National Liberation Front (KPNLF) on a unified anti-PRK resistance movement.[159]

Negotiations and progression

After several rounds of negotiations mediated by Deng and Singapore's prime minister Lee Kuan Yew,[160] FUNCINPEC, KPNLF, and the Khmer Rouge agreed to form the Coalition Government of Democratic Kampuchea (CGDK) in June 1982. The CGDK was headed by Sihanouk, and functioned as a government-in-exile.[161] The UN defeated a resolution to expel Democratic Kampuchea and admit the PRK, effectively confirming Sihanouk as Cambodia's internationally recognized head of state.[162]

As CGDK chairperson, Sihanouk unsuccessfully negotiated, over the next five years, with the Chinese government to broker a political settlement to end the Vietnamese occupation of Cambodia.[163] During this period, Sihanouk appointed two of his sons, Norodom Chakrapong and Norodom Ranariddh, to lead the ANS. Chakrapong was appointed as the deputy chief-of-staff for the ANS in March 1985,[164] while Ranariddh was minted to the twin positions of commander-in-chief and the chief-of-staff of the ANS in January 1986, replacing Tam.[165]

 
Sihanouk in the Netherlands in 1983
 
US President Ronald Reagan is seen with Sihanouk in 1988

In December 1987, the Prime Minister of the PRK government, Hun Sen, first met with Sihanouk to discuss ending the protracted Cambodian–Vietnamese War.[166] The following July, the then-foreign minister of Indonesia, Ali Alatas, brokered the first round of meetings between the four warring Cambodian factions consisting of FUNCINPEC, Khmer Rouge, KPNLF, and the PRK government over the future of Cambodia. Two more rounds of meetings were held in February and May 1989; since all were held near Jakarta, they became known as the Jakarta Informal Meetings (JIM).[167]

In July 1989, Ali Alatas joined French foreign minister Roland Dumas in opening the Paris Peace Conference, where discussions took place regarding plans for Vietnamese troop withdrawal and power-sharing arrangements in a hypothetical future Cambodian government.[167] The following month, Sihanouk resigned as president of FUNCINPEC[168] but remained in the party as an ordinary member.[169] In September 1990, the United Nations (UN) sponsored the establishment of the Supreme National Council of Cambodia (SNC), an administrative body responsible for overseeing the sovereign affairs of Cambodia for an interim period until UN-sponsored elections were held.[170] The creation of the SNC was subsequently ratified with United Nations Security Council Resolution 668.[171] In July 1991 Sihanouk left FUNCINPEC altogether and was elected as the chairperson of the SNC.[172]

UNTAC administration era

Paris peace accords and return to Cambodia

On 23 October 1991, Sihanouk led the FUNCINPEC, Khmer Rouge, KPNLF, and PRK into signing the Paris Peace Accords. The accords recognised the SNC as a "legitimate representative of Cambodian sovereignty" and created the United Nations Transitional Authority in Cambodia (UNTAC) to serve as a transitional government between 1992 and 1993.[173] In turn, UNTAC was given the mandate to station peacekeeping troops in Cambodia to supervise the disarmament of troops from the four warring Cambodian factions and to carry out national elections by 1993.[174] Sihanouk subsequently returned to Phnom Penh on 14 November 1991. Together with Hun Sen, Sihanouk rode in an open top limousine from Pochentong Airport all the way to the royal palace, greeting city residents who lined the streets to welcome his return.[175]

The UNTAC administration was set up in February 1992, but stumbled in its peacekeeping operations as the Khmer Rouge refused to cooperate in disarmament.[176] In response, Sihanouk urged UNTAC to abandon the Khmer Rouge from the peacekeeping process on two occasions, in July and September 1992. During this period, Sihanouk mostly resided in Siem Reap and occasionally traveled by helicopter to supervise election preparations in KPNLF, FUNCINPEC, and Khmer Rouge resistance bases.[177]

Sihanouk left in November 1992 to seek medical treatment in Beijing,[178] where he stayed for the next six months until his return to Cambodia in May 1993, on the eve of elections.[179] While in Beijing, Sihanouk proposed a Presidential system government for Cambodia to then-UN secretary-general Boutros Boutros-Ghali, but soon dropped the idea after facing opposition from the Khmer Rouge.[180]

1993 elections and pre-monarchical restoration

When general elections were held, FUNCINPEC, now headed by Sihanouk's son Norodom Ranariddh, won, while the Cambodian People's Party (CPP) headed by Hun Sen came in second.[181] The CPP was unhappy with the election results, and on 3 June 1993 Hun Sen and Chea Sim called on Sihanouk to lead the government. Sihanouk complied, and announced the formation of a Provisional National Government (PRG) headed by him, with Hun Sen and Ranariddh as his deputies.[182] Ranariddh was surprised at Sihanouk's announcement, as he had not been informed of his father's plans, and joined Australia, China, the United Kingdom, and the United States in opposing the plan. The following day, Sihanouk rescinded his announcement through a national radio broadcast.[183]

On 14 June 1993, Sihanouk was reinstated as the head of state in a Constituent Assembly session presided over by Ranariddh, who took the opportunity to declare the 1970 coup d'état which overthrew Sihanouk as "illegal".[184] As Head of State, Sihanouk renamed the Cambodian military to its pre-1970 namesake, the Royal Cambodian Armed Forces. He also issued orders to officially rename the country from the State of Cambodia to simply "Cambodia", reinstating "Nokor Reach" as the National Anthem of Cambodia with some minor modifications to its lyrics, and the Cambodian flag to its pre-1970 design.[185]

At the same time, Sihanouk appointed Ranariddh and Hun Sen co-prime ministers, with equal powers.[186] This arrangement, which was provisional, was ratified by the Constituent Assembly on 2 July 1993.[184] On 30 August 1993,[187] Ranariddh and Hun Sen met with Sihanouk and presented two draft constitutions, one of them stipulating a constitutional monarchy headed by a king, and another a republic led by a head of state. Sihanouk opted for the draft stipulating Cambodia a constitutional monarchy,[188] which was ratified by the constituent assembly on 21 September 1993.[189]

Second reign

Monarchical restoration and political influence

The new constitution came into force on 24 September 1993, and Sihanouk was reinstated as the King of Cambodia.[190] A permanent coalition government was formed between FUNCINPEC, CPP and a third political party, the Buddhist Liberal Democratic Party (BLDP). In turn, Sihanouk made Ranariddh and Hun Sen First and Second Prime Ministers, respectively.[191] Shortly after that, Sihanouk left for Beijing, where he spent several months for cancer treatment.[192] In April 1994, Sihanouk returned[193] and the following month called the government to hold new elections so that the Khmer Rouge could be co-opted into the government.

Both Ranariddh and Hun Sen rejected his suggestion,[194][195] but Sihanouk pressed on, and further proposed a national unity government consisting of FUNCINPEC, CPP, and the Khmer Rouge headed by him.[196] Again, both prime ministers rejected Sihanouk's proposal, arguing that Khmer Rouge's past intransigent attitude made the proposal unrealistic.[197][198] Sihanouk backed down, and expressed frustration that Hun Sen and Ranariddh had been ignoring him. As both Norodom Sirivudh[199] and Julio Jeldres, his younger half-brother and official biographer, respectively, saw it, this was a clear sign that the monarchy's ability to exert control over national affairs had diminished, at least vis-a-vis the prime ministers.[200]

 
King Sihanouk meeting with US ambassador Kenneth M. Quinn in March 1996 at the Royal Palace in Phnom Penh

In July 1994, one of his sons, Norodom Chakrapong, led a failed coup attempt to topple the government.[201] Following the coup attempt, Chakrapong took refuge in a hotel in Phnom Penh, but government troops soon discovered his hideout and surrounded the hotel. Chakrapong called Sihanouk, who negotiated with government representatives to allow him to go into exile in Malaysia.[202] The following November, Sirivudh was accused of plotting to assassinate Hun Sen and imprisoned. Sihanouk intervened to have Sirivudh detained at the interior ministry's headquarters, convinced that there was a secret plan to kill the latter if he were to remain in prison.[203] After Sirivudh was relocated to the safer location, Sihanouk appealed to Hun Sen that Sirivudh be allowed to go into exile in France together with his family. Subsequently, Hun Sen accepted his offer.[204]

Relations between the two co-prime ministers, Ranariddh and Hun Sen, deteriorated from March 1996,[205] when the former accused the CPP of repeatedly delaying the allocation process of low-level government posts to FUNCINPECs.[206] Ranariddh threatened to pull out of the coalition government[207] and hold national elections in the same year if his demands were not met,[208] stoking unease among Hun Sen and other CPP officials.[208] The following month, Sihanouk presided over a meeting between several royal family members and senior FUNCINPEC officials in Paris. Sihanouk attempted to reduce tensions between FUNCINPEC and the CPP by assuring that FUNCINPEC would not leave the coalition government and that there were no reactionary elements planning to bring down Hun Sen or the CPP.[209]

In March 1997, Sihanouk expressed his willingness to abdicate the throne, claiming that rising anti-royalist sentiment among the populace was threatening the monarchy's existence.[210] In response, Hun Sen tersely warned Sihanouk that he would introduce constitutional amendments to prohibit members of the royal family from participating in politics if he followed through on his suggestion.[211] As Widyono saw it, Sihanouk remained popular with the Cambodian electorate, and Hun Sen feared that, should he abdicate and enter politics, he would win in any future elections, thereby undercutting CPP's political clout.[210]

In July 1997, violent clashes erupted in Phnom Penh between infantry forces separately allied to the CPP and FUNCINPEC, which effectively led to Ranariddh's ousting after FUNCINPEC forces were defeated.[212] Sihanouk voiced displeasure with Hun Sen for orchestrating the clashes, but refrained from calling Ranariddh's ouster a "coup d'état", a term which FUNCINPEC members used.[213] When the National Assembly elected Ung Huot as the First Prime Minister to replace Ranariddh on 6 August 1997,[214] Sihanouk charged that Ranariddh's ouster was illegal and renewed his offer to abdicate the throne, a plan which did not materialize.[215]

In September 1998, Sihanouk meditated political talks in Siem Reap after the FUNCINPEC and the Sam Rainsy Party (SRP) staged protests against the CPP-led government for irregularities over the 1998 general elections. The talks broke down at the end of the month after Hun Sen narrowly escaped an assassination attempt, which he accused Sam Rainsy of masterminding.[216] Two months later, in November 1998, Sihanouk brokered a second round of political talks between the CPP and FUNCINPEC[217] whereby an agreement was reached for another coalition government between the CPP and FUNCINPEC.[216]

Final years as King

Sihanouk maintained a monthly bulletin in which he wrote commentaries on political issues and posted old photos of Cambodia in the 1950s and 1960s. In 1997 a character known by the name of "Ruom Rith" first appeared in his monthly bulletin, expressing critical comments on Hun Sen and the government. Hun Sen became offended by Ruom Rith's criticisms, and on at least two occasions in 1998 and 2003 persuaded Sihanouk to stop publishing his comments.[218][219] According to Ranariddh, Ruom Rith was an alter ego of Sihanouk, a claim which the latter vehemently denied.[220] In July 2002, Sihanouk expressed concern over the absence of detailed constitutional provisions over the organization and functioning of the Cambodian throne council.[221] When Hun Sen rejected Sihanouk's concern, the latter followed up in September 2002 by threatening to abdicate, so as to force the throne council to convene and elect a new monarch.[222]

In July 2003, general elections were held again, and the CPP won. However, they failed to secure two-thirds of all parliamentary seats, as required by the constitution to form a new government. The two runner-up parties of the election, FUNCINPEC and SRP, blocked the CPP from doing so.[223] Instead, in August 2003 they filed complaints with the Constitutional Council over alleged electoral irregularities.[224] After their complaints were rejected, FUNCINPEC and SRP threatened to boycott the swearing-in ceremony of parliamentarians. Sihanouk coaxed both parties to change their decision, stating that he would abstain from presiding over the ceremony as well if they did not comply with his wishes.[225]

Both parties eventually backed off from their threats, and the swearing-in ceremony was held in October 2003, with Sihanouk in attendance.[226] The CPP, FUNCINPEC, and SRP held additional talks into 2004 to break the political stalemate, but to no avail. At the same time, Sihanouk proposed a unity government jointly led by politicians from all three political parties, which Hun Sen and Ranariddh both rebuffed.[227][228]

In February 2004, Sihanouk advocated and publicly backed same-sex marriage, at a time when the matter was relatively taboo and against Cambodia's backdrop as a conservative society and was praised for his support for the nation's LGBT demographic.[229][230]

Sihanouk also engaged in pursuing philanthropy with his establishment of the "Samdech Euv Team" whose primary purpose is to assist in humanitarian works and projects throughout the country, of which he would later dedicate much of himself during his retirement years.[231]

Abdication and retirement

 
King-father Sihanouk and Queen-Mother Monineath in 2011

On 6 July 2004, in an open letter, Sihanouk announced his plans to abdicate once again. At the same time, he criticised Hun Sen and Ranariddh for ignoring his suggestions on how to resolve the political stalemate of the past year. Meanwhile, Hun Sen and Ranariddh had agreed to introduce a constitutional amendment that provided for an open voting system, requiring parliamentarians to select cabinet ministers and the president of the National Assembly by a show of hands. Sihanouk disapproved of the open voting system, calling upon Senate President Chea Sim not to sign the amendment. When Chea Sim heeded Sihanouk's advice, he was ferried out of the country shortly before the National Assembly convened to vote on the amendment on 15 July.[232]

On 17 July 2004, the CPP and FUNCINPEC agreed to form a coalition government, leaving SRP out as an opposition party.[233] On 6 October 2004, Sihanouk wrote a letter calling for the throne council to convene and select a successor. The National Assembly and Senate both held emergency meetings to pass laws allowing for the abdication of the monarch. On 14 October 2004, the throne council unanimously voted to select Norodom Sihamoni as Sihanouk's successor.[234] Sihamoni was crowned as the King of Cambodia on 29 October 2004.[235]

In March 2005, Sihanouk accused Thailand, Laos, and Vietnam of encroaching into Cambodian territory, through unilateral border demarcation exercises without Cambodian participation. Two months later, Sihanouk formed the Supreme National Council on Border Affairs (SNCBA), which he headed, to address these concerns.[235] While the SRP and Chea Sim expressed support for Sihanouk for the formation of the SNCBA, Hun Sen decided to form a separate body, National Authority on Border Affairs (NABA), to deal with border concerns, with SNCBA to serve only as an advisory body.[236] After Hun Sen signed a border treaty with Vietnam in October 2005, Sihanouk dissolved the SNCBA.[237]

In August 2007, the Cambodian Action Committee for Justice and Equity, a US-based human rights NGO, called for Sihanouk's State immunity to be lifted, so as to allow him to testify in the Extraordinary Chambers in the Courts of Cambodia (ECCC).[238] Sihanouk responded to the call by inviting the ECCC public affairs officer, Peter Foster, for a discussion session on his personal experience under the Khmer Rouge regime.[239] Both Hun Sen and FUNCINPEC criticized the suggestion, with the latter accusing the NGO of being disrespectful.[238] The ECCC subsequently rejected Sihanouk's invitation.[240]

The following year, bilateral relations between Thailand and Cambodia became strained due to overlapping claims on the land area surrounding Preah Vihear Temple. Sihanouk issued a communiqué in July 2008 emphasising the Khmer architecture of the temple as well as ICJ's 1962 ruling of the temple in favour of Cambodia.[241] In August 2009, Sihanouk stated that he would stop posting messages on his personal website as he was getting old, making it difficult for him to keep up with his personal duties.[242] Between 2009 and 2011, Sihanouk spent most of his time in Beijing for medical care. He made a final public appearance in Phnom Penh on his 89th birthday and 20th anniversary of the Paris Peace Accords on 30 October 2011. Thereafter, Sihanouk expressed his intent to stay in Cambodia indefinitely,[243] but returned to Beijing in January 2012 for further medical treatment at the advice of his Chinese doctors.[244]

Death and funeral

 
King-father Norodom Sihanouk's funeral pyre

In January 2012, Sihanouk issued a letter in which he expressed his wish that his body be cremated after his death, and his ashes be interred in a golden urn.[245] A few months later, in September 2012, Sihanouk said that he would not return to Cambodia from Beijing for his 90th birthday, citing fatigue.[246] On 15 October 2012, Sihanouk died of a heart attack at 1:20 am, Phnom Penh time.[247] When the news broke, Sihamoni, Hun Sen, and other government officials flew to Beijing to pay their last respects.[248]

The Cambodian government announced an official mourning period of seven days between 17 and 24 October 2012, and state flags were ordered to fly at one-third height. Two days later, Sihanouk's body was brought back from Beijing on an Air China flight,[249] and about 1.2 million people lined the streets from the airport to the royal palace to witness the return of Sihanouk's cortège.[250]

In late November 2012, Hun Sen said that Sihanouk's funeral and cremation were to be carried out in February 2013. Sihanouk's body lay in state at the royal palace for[251] the next three months until the funeral was held on 1 February 2013.[252] A 6,000-metre (20,000 ft) street procession was held, and Sihanouk's body was subsequently kept at the royal crematorium until 4 February 2013 when his body was cremated.[253]

The following day, the royal family scattered some of Sihanouk's ashes into the Tonle Sap river, while the rest were kept in the palace's throne hall for about a year.[254] In October 2013, a stupa featuring a bronze statue of Sihanouk was inaugurated next to the Independence Monument.[255] In July 2014, Sihanouk's ashes were interred at the silver pagoda next to those of one of his daughters, Kantha Bopha.[256]

Legacy

 
A billboard sign commemorating King-father Sihanouk

Sihanouk was at the forefront of Cambodian public life for more than 60 years, serving in various capacities and was one of the most consequential leaders in modern Cambodian history.[257][258] Indeed, as noted journalist Martin Woollacott of The Guardian said, "No monarch in modern times has embodied the life and fate of his country so completely as Norodom Sihanouk."[259]

This was reflected in him being the Guinness World Record holder for "Most state roles held by a modern royal." In chronological order of positions held, Sihanouk served in the following roles: king, prime minister, head (chief) of state, regent, head of the government-in-exile, president, president-in-exile, head of the government-in-exile, president of the Supreme National Council, head of state, king.[260]

 

Credited as one of the 'great survivors' of contemporary Asian politics and described as a charismatic, albeit mercurial figure,[261][262][263][264] observers viewed Sihanouk's legacy as a complex one that is difficult to adequately quantify with precision with both achievements and failings in near equal measure. Sihanouk himself, once referenced William Shakespeare, as a means to do 'literary justice' to his legacy. David Chandler and Milton Osborne, leading scholars on Cambodia, reflected on this notion, acknowledging that on one hand, as the father of Cambodian independence during the French protectorate era, he deserves great praise for his instrumental efforts that resulted in a self-governing Cambodia. On the other hand, his brief alignment with the Khmer Rouge after his ousting in the 1970 Cambodian coup d'état by Lon Nol, tainted his reputation, although it was believed Sihanouk was not aware of the genocidal intentions of the Khmer Rouge, as he too, was impacted by the regime, with his house arrest and the deaths of several of his family members. Sihanouk would later formally condemn the regime and its worst excesses.[258][265][266][267]

However, as Woollacott noted, given the context of the country's tumultuous history, "to Cambodians, Sihanouk represented continuity when so much in their country had been destroyed. They valued his warmth and his evident concern for his people, while recognising that he had made many mistakes."[268][269] Indeed, Sihanouk's own tumultuous life is sometimes described as mirroring that of his country and he also expressed regret at some of his shortcomings during his time at the helm of Cambodia.[270][271] Chandler and Osborne observed that despite his flaws, he was devoted to his country.[258][272] Moreover, this perspective is echoed by Jamie Metzl, a former Executive Vice President of the Asia Society, who commended Sihanouk's patriotism and remarked that "the totality of his life's work demonstrates an unflappable commitment" to Cambodia, notwithstanding the aforementioned reputational blight.[273]

To that end, he commanded the deep loyalty and respect of Cambodians who "throughout coups, wars, regime changes and famine - even a full-scale genocide", found in Sihanouk, whom they considered as a "God king", as "the one stable influence in their otherwise turbulent lives", which is also underscored by his status as the overarching unifying figure of the country.[257][266][274] This was evident in opinion polling data released by the Cambodian Information Centre for the period between 1986 and 1997, which revealed he was the most popular leader in the country, with an approval rating ranging from a low of 56% to a high of 72%, according to respondents who were surveyed.[275] In fact, according to Henri Locard, a historian specializing in Cambodia, he believes Sihanouk's stature in the overall national consciousness is on the same level as the foremost symbols of Cambodia, such as Angkor and the national flag, calling him as "the symbol of the country."[276]

Artistic works

Film-making

Sihanouk produced about 50 films throughout his lifetime.[277] He developed an interest in the cinema at a young age, which he attributed to frequent trips to the cinema with his parents.[1] Shortly after becoming king in 1941, Sihanouk made a few amateur films,[278] and sent Cambodian students to study film-making in France.[279] When the film Lord Jim was released in 1965, Sihanouk was vexed with the negative portrayal it gave of Cambodia.[280] In response, Sihanouk produced his first feature film, Apsara, in 1966. He went on to produce, direct, and act in eight more films between 1966 and 1969, roping in members of the royal family and military generals to star in his films.[281]

Sihanouk expressed that his films were created with the intent of portraying Cambodia in a positive light.[282] Milton Osborne also noted that the films were filled with Cold War[283] and nationalist propaganda themes.[284] Sihanouk's former adviser, Charles Meyer, said that his films created from the 1960s were of amateur standard, while the director of Reyum Institute, Ly Daravuth, similarly commented in 2006 that his films lacked artistic qualities.[278]

In 1967, one of his films, The Enchanted Forest, was nominated at the 5th Moscow International Film Festival.[285] In 1968, Sihanouk launched the Phnom Penh International Film Festival, which was held for a second time in 1969. In both years, a special award category was designated, the Golden Apsara Prize, of which Sihanouk was its only nominee and winner.[284] After Sihanouk was ousted in 1970, he ceased producing films for the next seventeen years until 1987.[286]

In 1997, Sihanouk received a special jury prize from the International Film Festival of Moscow, where he revealed that he had received a budget ranging from US$20,000 to US$70,000 for each of his film productions from the Cambodian government. Six years later, Sihanouk donated his film archives to the École française d'Extrême-Orient in France and Monash University in Australia.[278] In 2006, he produced his last film, Miss Asina,[279] and then declared his retirement from film-making in May 2010.[287]

Music

Sihanouk wrote at least 48 musical compositions between the late 1940s and the early 1970s,[288] combining both traditional Khmer and Western themes into his works.[289] From the 1940s until the 1960s, Sihanouk's compositions were mostly based on sentimental, romantic and patriotic themes. Sihanouk's romantic songs reflected his numerous romantic liaisons, particularly his relationship with his wife Monique,[290] and compositions such as "My Darling" and "Monica" were dedicated to her. He also wrote nationalistic songs, meant to showcase the beauty of provincial towns and at the same time foster a sense of patriotism and national unity among Cambodians. Notable compositions, such as "Flower of Battambang", "Beauty of Kep City", "Phnom Kulen", and "Phnom Penh", are examples of these. A few of his other compositions, including "Luang Prabang", "Nostalgia of China", and "Goodbye Bogor" were sentimental songs[291] about neighbouring countries including Laos, Indonesia, and China.[292]

After he was ousted as head of state in 1970, Sihanouk wrote several revolutionary-style songs[293] that praised the leaders of Communist countries, including "Hommage Khmer au Maréchal Kim Il Sung" and "Merci, Piste Ho Chi Minh". They were intended to show his gratitude toward the Communist leaders, which had supported GRUNK between 1970 and 1975.[294] From a young age,[1] Sihanouk learned to play several musical instruments including the clarinet, saxophone, piano, and accordion.[285]

In the 1960s, Sihanouk led a musical band made up of his relatives, who would perform French songs and his own personal compositions for diplomats at the royal palace.[295] In his tours across Cambodian provinces, Sihanouk was accompanied by the Royal Military Orchestra and Cambodian pop singers.[292] Later, while Sihanouk was living in exile during the 1980s, he hosted concerts to entertain diplomats whenever he visited the United Nations Headquarters in New York City.[296] After he was reinstated as king in 1993, Sihanouk continued to perform in concerts held at the royal palace on an occasional basis.[297]

Titles and styles

Styles of
King Norodom Sihanouk of Cambodia
 
Reference styleHis Majesty
Spoken styleYour Majesty

Sihanouk was known by many formal and informal titles throughout his lifetime,[298] and as aforementioned, the Guinness Book of World Records identifies Sihanouk as the royal who had served the greatest variety of state and political offices.[299] When Sihanouk became king in 1941, he was bestowed with the official title of "Preah Bat Samdech Preah Norodom Sihanouk Varman" (ព្រះបាទសម្តេចព្រះ នរោត្តម សីហនុ វរ្ម័ន), which he used for both reigns between 1941 and 1955 and again from 1993 to 2004.[7] He reverted to the title of Prince after he abdicated 1955, and in that year was given by his father and successor the title of "Samdech Preah Upayuvareach" (សម្តេចព្រះឧបយុវរាជ),[33] which translates in English as "The Prince who has been King".[300] Starting from the early 1960s when he became the Head of State,[301] Sihanouk was affectionately known to most Cambodians as "Samdech Euv" (សម្តេចឪ),[302] which translates as the "Prince Father" in English.[299]

In 2004, after his second abdication, Sihanouk became known as the King Father of Cambodia,[303] with the official title of "Preah Karuna Preah Bat Sâmdach Preah Norodom Sihanouk Preahmâhaviraksat" (Khmer: ព្រះករុណាព្រះបាទសម្តេចព្រះ នរោត្តម សីហនុ ព្រះមហាវីរក្សត្រ).[299] He was also referred to by another honorific, "His Majesty King Norodom Sihanouk The Great Heroic King King-Father of Khmer independence, territorial integrity and national unity" (ព្រះករុណា ព្រះបាទសម្ដេចព្រះ នរោត្តម សីហនុ ព្រះមហាវីរក្សត្រ ព្រះវររាជបិតាឯករាជ្យ បូរណភាពទឹកដី និងឯកភាពជាតិខ្មែរ).[304]

At the same time, he issued a royal decree requesting to be called "Samdech Ta" (សម្ដេចតា) or "Samdech Ta-tuot" (សម្ដេចតាទួត),[305] which translates as "Grandfather" and "Great-grandfather", respectively, in English.[306] When Sihanouk died in October 2012, he was bestowed by his son Sihamoni with the posthumous title of "Preah Karuna Preah Norodom Sihanouk Preah Borom Ratanakkot" (ព្រះករុណាព្រះនរោត្តម សីហនុ ព្រះបរមរតនកោដ្ឋ), which literally translates as "The King who lies in the Diamond Urn" in English.[307]

Personal life

 
King-father Sihanouk and his wife Queen-mother Norodom Monineath

Sihanouk's name is derived from two Sanskrit words "Siha" (सिंह) and "Hanu" (हनु), which translates as "Lion" and "Jaws", respectively, in English.[308][309] He was fluent in Khmer, French, and English,[310] and also learned Greek and Latin in high school.[311] In his high school days, Sihanouk played football, basketball, volleyball, and also took up horse riding.[1] He suffered from diabetes and depression in the 1960s,[312] which flared up again in the late 1970s while living in captivity under the Khmer Rouge.[313]

In November 1992, Sihanouk suffered a stroke[314] caused by the thickening of the coronary arteries and blood vessels.[315] In 1993, he was diagnosed with B cell lymphoma in the prostate[316] and was treated with chemotherapy and surgery.[317] Sihanouk's lymphoma went into remission in 1995,[318] but returned again in 2005 in the gastric region. He suffered a third bout of lymphoma in 2008,[316] and after prolonged treatment it went into remission the following year.[319]

In 1960, Sihanouk built a personal residence at Chamkarmon District where he lived over the next ten years as the Head of State.[320] Following his overthrow in 1970, Sihanouk took up residence in Beijing, where he lived at the Diaoyutai State Guesthouse in the first year of his stay. In 1971, Sihanouk moved to a larger residence in the city that once housed the French embassy.[321] The residence was equipped with a temperature-adjustable swimming pool,[136] cinema[322] and seven chefs.[323]

In 1974 North Korean leader Kim Il-sung built Changsuwon, a 40-room mansion, for Sihanouk.[324] Changsuwon was built near an artificial lake, and Sihanouk spent time taking boat trips there and also shot a few films within the compound.[325] In August 2008, Sihanouk declared his assets on his website, which according to him consisted of a small house in Siem Reap and 30,000 euros of cash savings stored in a French bank. He also stated that his residences in Beijing and Pyongyang were guesthouses owned by the governments of China and North Korea, respectively, and that they did not belong to him.[326]

Family

 
Sihanouk's spouse, Queen-Mother Norodom Monineath, and their son King Norodom Sihamoni photographed at Sihanouk's funeral. To the extreme left is Sihanouk's half-brother, Prince Norodom Sirivudh.

On 4 March 1955 Sihanouk married Norodom Thavet Norleak, as his official wife, who was a cousin from his mother's side. One day later, he married Paule Monique Izzi, as his secondary consort, who was the daughter of Pomme Peang, a Cambodian, and Jean-François Izzi, a French banker of Italian ancestry.[327] Monique became Sihanouk's lifelong partner;[121] in the 1990s she changed her name to Monineath.[328] Before his these marriages, Sihanouk married unofficially to four other women: Phat Kanhol, Sisowath Pongsanmoni, Sisowath Monikessan, and Mam Manivan Phanivong.[329]

Monikessan died in childbirth in 1946. His marriages to the other four women, including his official wife Thavet Norleak, all ended in divorce.[330] Sihanouk had fourteen children with five different wives. Thavet Norleak bore him no children.[331] During the Khmer Rouge years, five children and fourteen grandchildren disappeared. Sihanouk believed they were killed by the Khmer Rouge.[332][333]

Sihanouk had the following issue:

Name Year of birth Year of death Mother Cause of death
Norodom Buppha Devi 1943 2019 Phat Kanhol
Norodom Yuvaneath 1943 2021 Sisowath Pongsanmoni
Norodom Ranariddh 1944 2021 Phat Kanhol
Norodom Ravivong 1944 1973 Sisowath Pongsanmoni Malaria[334]
Norodom Chakrapong 1945 Sisowath Pongsanmoni
Norodom Naradipo 1946 1976 Sisowath Monikessan Disappeared under Khmer Rouge[335]
Norodom Sorya Roeungsi 1947 1976 Sisowath Pongsanmoni Disappeared under Khmer Rouge[335]
Norodom Kantha Bopha 1948 1952 Sisowath Pongsanmoni Leukemia[334]
Norodom Khemanourak 1949 1975 Sisowath Pongsanmoni Disappeared under Khmer Rouge[336]
Norodom Botum Bopha 1951 1975 Sisowath Pongsanmoni Disappeared under Khmer Rouge[336]
Norodom Sujata 1953 1975 Mam Manivan Disappeared under Khmer Rouge[336]
Norodom Sihamoni 1953 Monique Izzi (Monineath)
Norodom Narindrapong 1954 2003 Monique Izzi (Monineath) Heart attack[337]
Norodom Arunrasmy 1955 Mam Manivan

Ancestry

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Bibliography

Books

  • Burchett, William G.; Norodom, Sihanouk (1973). My War with the CIA: Cambodia's fight for survival. US: Penguin Books. ISBN 0-14-021689-8.
  • Chandler, David P. (1991). The Tragedy of Cambodian History: Politics, War and Revolutions since 1945. US: Yale University Press. ISBN 0-300-05752-0.
  • Chin, Kin Wah (2005). Southeast Asian Affairs. National University of Singapore: Institute of Southeast Asian Studies. ISBN 981-230-306-5.
  • Clymer, Kenton (2013). The United States and Cambodia, 1969–2000: A Troubled Relationship. Routledge. ISBN 978-1-134-34156-6.
  • Findlay, Trevor (1995). (PDF). Stockholm International Peace Research Institute. Solna, Sweden: Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-829186-8. Archived from the original (PDF) on 5 August 2009. Retrieved 22 May 2016.
  • Jeldres, Julio A (2003). The Royal House of Cambodia. Phnom Penh: Monument Books. OCLC 54003889.
  • Jeldres, Julio A (2005). Volume 1 – Shadows Over Angkor: Memoirs of His Majesty King Norodom Sihanouk of Cambodia. Phnom Penh: Monument Books. ISBN 974-92648-6-X.
  • Langguth, A.J. (2000). Our Vietnam The War 1954-1975. Simon & Schuster. ISBN 0743212312.
  • Marlay, Ross; Neher, Clark D. (1999). Patriots and Tyrants: Ten Asian Leaders. Lanham, MD: Rowman & Littlefield. ISBN 0-8476-8442-3.
  • Mehta, Harish C. & Julie B. (2013). Strongman: The Extraordinary Life of Hun Sen. Singapore: Marshall Cavendish International Asia Pte Ltd. ISBN 978-981-4484-60-2.
  • Mehta, Harish C. (2001). Warrior Prince: Norodom Ranariddh, Son of King Sihanouk of Cambodia. Singapore: Graham Brash. ISBN 981-218-086-9.
  • Narong, Men S. (2007). Who's Who, The Most Influential People in Cambodia. Phnom Penh: Media Business Networks. ISBN 978-99950-66-00-0.
  • Osborne, Milton E (1994). Sihanouk Prince of Light, Prince of Darkness. Honolulu: University of Hawaii Press. ISBN 978-0-8248-1639-1.
  • Peou, Sorpong (2000). Intervention and Change in Cambodia: Towards Democracy?. National University of Singapore: Institute of Southeast Asian Studies. ISBN 981-230-042-2.
  • Summers, Laura (2003). The Far East and Australasia. New York: Psychology Press. pp. 227–243. ISBN 1-85743-133-2.
  • Widyono, Benny (2008). Dancing in Shadows: Sihanouk, the Khmer Rouge, and the United Nations in Cambodia. Lanham, MD: Rowman & Littlefield. ISBN 978-0-7425-5553-2.

Reports

  • Baumgärtel, Tilman (2010). (PDF). Department of Media and Communication – Royal University of Phnom Penh. Archived from the original (PDF) on 14 July 2015. Retrieved 8 July 2015.
  • Cohen, Arthur (9 April 1968). (PDF). Central Intelligence Agency. Archived from the original (PDF) on 24 September 2015. Retrieved 18 June 2015.
  • Jeldres, Julio (September 2012). (PDF). Cross-Currents: East Asian History and Culture Review (4): 53–64. Archived from the original (PDF) on 1 October 2015. Retrieved 1 September 2015.
  • Kinetz, Erika; Kimsong, Kay; Wasson, Erik; Chan Thul, Prak (31 October 2006). (PDF). The Cambodia Daily. Archived from the original (PDF) on 10 July 2015. Retrieved 9 July 2015.
  • Scott-Maxwell, Aline (January 2008). "Royal songs and royal singing: Music in the Norodom Sihanouk archival collection, Monash University Library". Fontes Artis Musicae. 5 (1): 180–190. JSTOR 23512420.
  • Wemaere, Séverine (managing director) (1 June 2013). (PDF). Technicolor Film Foundation. Archived from the original (PDF) on 9 July 2015. Retrieved 8 July 2015.

External links

  • Norodom Sihanouk at IMDb
Regnal titles
Preceded by King of Cambodia
1941–1955
Succeeded by
Preceded by
Chea Sim (Regent)
King of Cambodia
1993–2004
Succeeded by
Political offices
Preceded by
New office
Prime Minister of Cambodia
1945
Succeeded by
Preceded by Prime Minister of Cambodia
1950
Succeeded by
Preceded by Prime Minister of Cambodia
1952–1953
Succeeded by
Preceded by Prime Minister of Cambodia
1954
Succeeded by
Preceded by Prime Minister of Cambodia
1955–1956
Succeeded by
Preceded by Prime Minister of Cambodia
1956
Succeeded by
Preceded by Prime Minister of Cambodia
1956
Succeeded by
Preceded by Prime Minister of Cambodia
1957
Succeeded by
Preceded by Prime Minister of Cambodia
1958–1960
Succeeded by
Preceded by Head of State of Cambodia
1960–1970
Succeeded by
Preceded by Prime Minister of Cambodia
1961–1962
Succeeded by
Preceded by President of the State Presidium
1975–1976
Succeeded by

norodom, sihanouk, samdech, redirects, here, other, uses, samdech, disambiguation, this, cambodian, name, surname, norodom, accordance, with, cambodian, custom, this, person, should, referred, given, name, sihanouk, khmer, នរ, តម, ហន, nôroŭttâm, seihânŭ, nɔroː. Samdech Euv redirects here For other uses see Samdech Euv disambiguation In this Cambodian name the surname is Norodom In accordance with Cambodian custom this person should be referred to by the given name Sihanouk Norodom Sihanouk ˈ s iː h e n ʊ k Khmer នរ ត តម ស ហន Noroŭttam Seihanŭ nɔroːɗɑm sejhanuʔ 31 October 1922 15 October 2012 was a Cambodian statesman Sangkum and FUNCINPEC politician film director and composer who led Cambodia in various capacities throughout his long career most often as both King and Prime Minister of Cambodia In Cambodia he is known as Samdech Euv Khmer សម ត ចឪ Samdech Au sɑmˈɗac ʔɨw meaning King Father During his lifetime Cambodia was under various regimes from French colonial rule until 1953 an independent kingdom 1953 1970 a republic 1970 1975 the Khmer Rouge regime 1975 1979 another communist regime 1979 1989 yet another different communist state 1989 1993 to finally another kingdom since 1993 Norodom SihanoukSihanouk in 1983King of CambodiaFirst reign24 April 1941 2 March 1955Coronation3 May 1941PredecessorSisowath MonivongSuccessorNorodom SuramaritPrime ministersSee list HimselfSon Ngoc ThanhSisowath MonirethSisowath YoutevongSisowath WatchayavongChhean VamPenn NouthYem SambaurIeu KoeusSisowath MonipongOum Chheang SunHuy KanthoulChan NakLeng NgethSecond reign24 September 1993 7 October 2004PredecessorMonarchy restored Himself as Chief of StateSuccessorNorodom SihamoniPrime ministersSee list Norodom RanariddhHun SenUng HuotChief of State of CambodiaFirst rule20 June 1960 18 March 1970PredecessorChuop Hell acting SuccessorCheng Heng acting QueenSisowath KossamakSecond rule14 June 24 September 1993PredecessorChea Sim as President of the Council of State SuccessorHimself as KingPresident of the State PresidiumPresidency17 April 1975 2 April 1976PredecessorSak Sutsakhan as Chairman of the Supreme Committee SuccessorKhieu Samphan as Chairman of the State Presidium Born 1922 10 31 31 October 1922Phnom Penh Cambodia French IndochinaDied15 October 2012 2012 10 15 aged 89 Beijing ChinaBurial13 July 2014Silver Pagoda Royal Palace of Cambodia interment of ashes SpouseSee list Phat Kanhol m 1942 div 1946 wbr Sisowath Pongsanmoni m 1942 div 1951 wbr Sisowath Monikessan m 1944 died 1946 wbr Mam Manivan Phanivong m 1949 div 1955 wbr Norodom Thavet Norleak m 1955 div 1968 wbr Norodom Monineath m 1955 wbr IssueSee list Princess Buppha DeviPrince YuvaneathPrince RanariddhPrince RavivongPrince ChakrapongPrince NaradipoPrincess Sorya RoeungsiPrincess Kantha BophaPrince KhemanourakPrincess Botum BophaPrincess SujataKing SihamoniPrince NarindrapongPrincess ArunrasmyHouseNorodomFatherNorodom SuramaritMotherSisowath KossamakReligionTheravada BuddhismEducationCavalry SchoolOccupationsPoliticianfilm directoractoractivistmusicianPolitical partyIndependent 1945 1955 1970 1981 Sangkum 1955 1970 FUNCINPEC 1981 1991 WebsiteOfficial websiteSignatureOther officesPresident of the Council of KingdomIn office October 1955 January 1956MonarchNorodom SuramaritPreceded byPenn NouthSucceeded bySim VarPrime Minister of CambodiaIn office 17 November 1961 13 February 1962PresidentHimself as Chief of StatePreceded byPenn NouthSucceeded byNhiek Tioulong acting In office 10 July 1958 19 April 1960MonarchNorodom SuramaritPreceded bySim VarSucceeded byPho ProeungIn office 9 April 1957 7 July 1957MonarchNorodom SuramaritPreceded bySan YunSucceeded bySim VarIn office 15 September 1956 15 October 1956MonarchNorodom SuramaritPreceded byKhim TitSucceeded bySan YunIn office 1 March 1956 24 March 1956MonarchNorodom SuramaritPreceded byOum Chheang SunSucceeded byKhim TitIn office 3 October 1955 5 January 1956MonarchNorodom SuramaritPreceded byLeng NgethSucceeded byOum Chheang SunIn office 7 April 1954 18 April 1954MonarchHimselfPreceded byChan NakSucceeded byPenn NouthIn office 16 June 1952 24 January 1953MonarchHimselfPreceded byHuy KanthoulSucceeded byPenn NouthIn office 28 April 1950 30 May 1950MonarchHimselfPreceded byYem SambaurSucceeded bySisowath MonipongIn office 18 March 1945 13 August 1945MonarchHimselfPreceded byPosition establishedSucceeded bySon Ngoc ThanhSihanouk was the only child of Prince Norodom Suramarit and Princess Sisowath Kossamak daughter of King Sisowath Monivong When his grandfather Monivong died in 1941 Sihanouk became king amidst French colonial rule After the Japanese occupation of Cambodia during World War II he secured Cambodian independence from France in 1953 He abdicated in 1955 and was succeeded by his father Suramarit so as to directly participate in politics Sihanouk s political organization Sangkum won the general elections that year and he became prime minister of Cambodia He governed the country under one party rule and suppressed political dissent After his father died in 1960 Sihanouk assumed a new position as Head of State of Cambodia Officially neutral in foreign relations Sihanouk was closer to the communist bloc in practice The Cambodian coup of 1970 ousted him and he fled to China and North Korea forming a government in exile and a resistance movement there He encouraged Cambodians to fight the new government and backed the Khmer Rouge during the Cambodian Civil War He returned as figurehead head of state after the Khmer Rouge s victory in 1975 His relations with the new government soured and in 1976 he resigned He was placed under house arrest until Vietnamese forces overthrew the Khmer Rouge in 1979 Sihanouk went into exile again and in 1981 formed FUNCINPEC a resistance party The following year he became president of the Coalition Government of Democratic Kampuchea CGDK a broad coalition of anti Vietnamese resistance factions which retained Cambodia s seat at the United Nations making him Cambodia s internationally recognized head of state In the late 1980s informal talks were carried out to end hostilities between the Vietnam supported People s Republic of Kampuchea and the CGDK In 1990 the Supreme National Council of Cambodia was formed as a transitional body to oversee Cambodia s sovereign matters with Sihanouk as its president The 1991 Paris Peace Accords were signed and the UN Transitional Authority in Cambodia UNTAC was established the following year The UNTAC organized the 1993 Cambodian general elections and a coalition government jointly led by his son Norodom Ranariddh and Hun Sen was subsequently formed Sihanouk was reinstated as Cambodia s king He abdicated again in 2004 and the Royal Council of the Throne chose his son Sihamoni as his successor Sihanouk died in Beijing in 2012 Between 1941 and 2006 Sihanouk produced and directed 50 films some of which he acted in The films later described as being of low quality often featured nationalistic elements as did a number of the songs he wrote Some of his songs were about his wife Monique the nations neighboring Cambodia and the communist leaders who supported him in his exile In the 2000s Sihanouk held concerts for diplomats in New York City He also participated in concerts at his palace during his second reign Contents 1 Early life and first reign 1 1 Pre independence and self rule 2 Sangkum era 2 1 Abdication and entry into politics 2 2 Premiership 1955 1960 2 3 Initial years as Head of State 1960 1965 2 4 Continued leadership as Head of State 1966 1970 3 Deposition GRUNK and Khmer Rouge years 3 1 1970 coup 3 2 Uneasy alliance 3 3 House arrest 4 FUNCINPEC and CGDK years 4 1 Resistance movement 4 2 Negotiations and progression 5 UNTAC administration era 5 1 Paris peace accords and return to Cambodia 5 2 1993 elections and pre monarchical restoration 6 Second reign 6 1 Monarchical restoration and political influence 6 2 Final years as King 7 Abdication and retirement 8 Death and funeral 9 Legacy 10 Artistic works 10 1 Film making 10 2 Music 11 Titles and styles 12 Personal life 12 1 Family 12 2 Ancestry 13 References 14 Bibliography 14 1 Books 14 2 Reports 15 External linksEarly life and first reign EditSee also French protectorate of Cambodia French Indochina and First Indochina War Sihanouk in his coronation regalia November 1941 Norodom Sihanouk was the only child born of the union between Norodom Suramarit and Sisowath Kossamak 1 His parents who heeded the Royal Court Astrologer s advice that he risked dying at a young age if he was raised under parental care placed him under the care of Kossamak s grandmother Pat When Pat died Kossamak brought Sihanouk to live with his paternal grandfather Norodom Sutharot Sutharot delegated parenting responsibilities to his daughter Norodom Ket Kanyamom 2 Sihanouk received his primary education at the Francois Baudoin school and Nuon Moniram school in Phnom Penh 3 During this time he received financial support from his maternal grandfather Sisowath Monivong to head an amateur performance troupe and soccer team 1 In 1936 Sihanouk was sent to Saigon where he pursued his secondary education at Lycee Chasseloup Laubat a boarding school 4 When the reigning king Monivong died on 23 April 1941 the Governor General of French Indochina Jean Decoux chose Sihanouk to succeed him 5 Sihanouk s appointment as king was formalised the following day by the Cambodian Crown Council 6 and his coronation ceremony took place on 3 May 1941 7 During the Japanese occupation of Cambodia he dedicated most of his time to sports filming and the occasional tour to the countryside 8 In March 1945 the Japanese military which had occupied Cambodia since August 1941 dissolved the nominal French colonial administration Under pressure from the Japanese Sihanouk proclaimed Cambodia s independence 9 and assumed the position of prime minister while serving as king at the same time 10 Pre independence and self rule Edit As prime minister Sihanouk revoked a decree issued by the last resident superior of Cambodia Georges Gautier to romanise the Khmer alphabet 11 Following the Surrender of Japan in August 1945 nationalist forces loyal to Son Ngoc Thanh launched a coup which led to Thanh becoming prime minister 12 When the French returned to Cambodia in October 1945 Thanh was dismissed and replaced by Sihanouk s uncle Sisowath Monireth 13 Monireth negotiated for greater autonomy in managing Cambodia s internal affairs A modus vivendi signed in January 1946 granted Cambodia autonomy within the French Union 14 A joint French Cambodian commission was set up after that to draft Cambodia s constitution 15 and in April 1946 Sihanouk introduced clauses which provided for an elected parliament on the basis of universal male suffrage as well as press freedom 16 The first constitution was signed into effect by Sihanouk in May 1947 17 Around this time Sihanouk made two trips to Saumur France where he attended military training at the Armoured Cavalry Branch Training School in 1946 and again in 1948 He was made a reserve captain in the French army 18 In early 1949 Sihanouk traveled to Paris with his parents to negotiate with the French government for more autonomy for Cambodia The modus vivendi was replaced by a new Franco Khmer treaty which recognised Cambodia as independent within the French Union 19 In practice the treaty granted only limited self rule to Cambodia While Cambodia was given free rein in managing its foreign ministry and to a lesser extent its defence most of the other ministries remained under French control 20 Meanwhile dissenting legislators from the national assembly attacked the government led by prime minister Penn Nouth over its failure to resolve deepening financial and corruption problems plaguing the country The dissenting legislators led by Yem Sambaur who had defected from the Democrat party in November 1948 21 deposed Penn Nouth 22 Yem Sambaur replaced him but his appointment did not sit well with the Democrats who in turn pressured Sihanouk to dissolve the national assembly and hold elections 23 Sihanouk in 1946 Sihanouk who by now had tired of the political squabbling dissolved the assembly in September 1949 24 but opted to rule by decree for the next two years before general elections were held which the Democrats won 25 In October 1951 Thanh returned to Cambodia and was received by 100 000 supporters a spectacle which Sihanouk saw as an affront to his regal authority 26 Thanh disappeared six months later presumably to join the Khmer Issarak 27 Sihanouk ordered the Democrat led government to arrest Thanh but was ignored 28 Subsequently civil demonstrations against the monarchy and the French broke out in the countryside 29 alarming Sihanouk who began to suspect that the Democrats were complicit 30 In June 1952 Sihanouk dismissed the Democrat nominee Huy Kanthoul and made himself prime minister A few days later Sihanouk privately confided in exasperation to the US charge d affaires Thomas Gardiner Corcoran that parliamentary democracy was unsuitable for Cambodia 30 In January 1953 Sihanouk re appointed Penn Nouth as prime minister before leaving for France Once there Sihanouk wrote to French President Vincent Auriol requesting that he grant Cambodia full independence citing widespread anti French sentiment among the Cambodian populace 31 Auriol deferred Sihanouk s request to the French Commissioner for Overseas Territories Jean Letourneau who promptly rejected it Subsequently Sihanouk traveled to Canada and the United States where he gave radio interviews to present his case 32 He took advantage of the prevailing anti communist sentiment in those countries arguing that Cambodia faced a Communist threat similar to that of the Viet Minh in Vietnam and that the solution was to grant full independence to Cambodia 32 Sihanouk returned to Cambodia in June 1953 taking up residence in Siem Reap 33 He organised public rallies calling for Cambodians to fight for independence and formed a citizenry militia which attracted about 130 000 recruits 34 In August 1953 France agreed to cede control over judicial and interior affairs to Cambodia and in October 1953 the defense ministry as well At the end of October Sihanouk went to Phnom Penh 35 where he declared Cambodia s independence from France on 9 November 1953 33 In May 1954 Sihanouk sent two of his cabinet ministers Nhiek Tioulong and Tep Phan to represent Cambodia at the Geneva Conference 36 The agreements affirmed Cambodia s independence and allowed it to seek military aid from any country without restrictions 37 At the same time Sihanouk s relations with the governing Democrat party remained strained as they were wary of his growing political influence 37 To counter Democrat opposition Sihanouk held a national referendum to gauge public approval for his efforts to seek national independence 38 While the results showed 99 8 percent approval Australian historian Milton Osborne noted that open balloting was carried out and voters were cowed into casting an approval vote under police surveillance 39 Sangkum era EditMain article Kingdom of Cambodia 1953 1970 Abdication and entry into politics Edit On 2 March 1955 Sihanouk suddenly abdicated the throne 33 40 and was in turn succeeded by his father Suramarit 3 His abdication surprised everyone including his own parents 41 In his abdication speech Sihanouk explained that he was abdicating in order to extricate himself from the intrigues of palace life and allow easier access to common folk as an ordinary citizen According to Osborne Sihanouk s abdication earned him the freedom to pursue politics while continuing to enjoy the deference that he had received from his subjects when he was king 42 In addition he also feared being cast aside by the government after discovering that his popularity was manufactured by his own officials 43 41 In April 1955 before leaving for a summit with Asian and African states in Bandung Indonesia Sihanouk announced the formation of his own political party the Sangkum and expressed interest in participating in the general elections slated to be held in September 1955 While the Sangkum was in effect a political party Sihanouk argued that the Sangkum should be seen as a political organisation and explained that he could accommodate people with differing political orientations on the sole condition that they pledged fealty to the monarchy 44 The creation of the Sangkum was seen as a move to dissolve the political parties 45 46 Sangkum was based on four small monarchist rightist parties including the Victorious North East party of Dap Chhuon the Khmer Renovation party of Lon Nol 47 the People s Party 45 and the Liberal Party 48 At the same time Sihanouk was running out of patience with the increasingly leftist Democratic Party and the left wing Pracheachon as both had refused to merge into his party and had campaigned against him He appointed as director of national security Dap Chhuon 49 who ordered the national police to jail their leaders and break up their election rallies 50 When elections were held the Sangkum received 83 percent of all valid votes They took up all seats in the National Assembly replacing the Democrats which had until then been the majority party 51 The following month Sihanouk was appointed as prime minister 52 Premiership 1955 1960 Edit Meeting in Beijing in 1965 from left Mao Zedong Peng Zhen Sihanouk Liu Shaoqi Once in office Sihanouk introduced several constitutional changes including extending suffrage to women adopting Khmer as the sole official language of the country 53 and making Cambodia a constitutional monarchy by vesting policy making powers in the prime minister rather than the king 54 He viewed socialism as an ideal concept for establishing social equality and fostering national cohesion within newly independent Cambodia In March 1956 he embarked on a national programme of Buddhist socialism promoting socialist principles on the one hand while maintaining the kingdom s Buddhist culture on the other 55 Between 1955 and 1960 Sihanouk resigned and retook the post of prime minister several times citing fatigue caused by overwork 56 The National Assembly nominated experienced politicians such as Sim Var and San Yun to become prime minister whenever Sihanouk took leave but they similarly relinquished their posts each time several months into their term 57 as cabinet ministers repeatedly disagreed over public policy matters 58 In May 1955 Sihanouk had accepted military aid from the US 59 The following January when he was in the Philippines on a state visit Central Intelligence Agency CIA operatives attempted to sway him into placing Cambodia under Southeast Asia Treaty Organization SEATO protection 60 Subsequently Sihanouk began to suspect that the US was attempting to undermine his government and that it was lending covert support to the Democratic party now without parliamentary representation for that purpose 61 Sihanouk developed a good impression of China whose premier Zhou Enlai gave him a warm reception on his first visit there in February 1956 They signed a friendship treaty in which China promised US 40 million in economic aid to Cambodia 62 When Sihanouk returned from China Sarit Thanarat and Ngo Dinh Diem leaders of Thailand and South Vietnam respectively both with pro American sympathies started to accuse him of pro Communist sympathies South Vietnam briefly imposed a trade embargo on Cambodia preventing trading ships from travelling up the Mekong river to Phnom Penh 63 While Sihanouk professed that he was pursuing a policy of neutrality Sarit and Diem remained distrustful of him more so after he established formal diplomatic relations with China in 1958 64 Carlos P Garcia the then Vice President of the Philippines in 1956 with Sihanouk Indian Defence Minister V K Krishna Menon is seen pictured with Sihanouk The Democratic party continued to criticize the Sangkum and Sihanouk in their newspaper much to Sihanouk s consternation 65 In August 1957 Sihanouk finally lost patience calling out Democrat leaders for a debate Five of them attended At the debate held at the Royal Palace Sihanouk spoke in a belligerent tone challenging the Democrat leaders to present evidence of malfeasance in his government and inviting them to join the Sangkum The Democrat leaders gave hesitant responses and according to American historian David P Chandler this gave the audience the impression that they were disloyal to the monarchy 61 The debate led to the effective demise of the Democratic party as its leaders were subsequently beaten up by government soldiers with Sihanouk s tacit approval 66 With the Democrats vanquished Sihanouk focused on preparing for general elections slated to be held in March 1958 He drafted left wing politicians including Hou Yuon Hu Nim and Chau Seng to stand as Sangkum candidates with a view to winning left wing support from the Pracheachon 67 The Pracheachon on their part fielded five candidates for the elections However four of them withdrew as they were prevented by the national police from holding any election rallies When voting took place the Sangkum won all seats in the national assembly 68 In December 1958 Ngo Dinh Nhu Diem s younger brother and chief adviser broached the idea of orchestrating a coup to overthrow Sihanouk 69 Nhu contacted Dap Chhuon Sihanouk s Interior Minister who was known for his pro American sympathies to prepare for the coup against his boss 70 Chhuon received covert financial and military assistance from Thailand South Vietnam and the CIA 71 In January 1959 Sihanouk learned of the coup plans through intermediaries who were in contact with Chhuon 72 The following month Sihanouk sent the army to capture Chhuon who was summarily executed as soon as he was captured effectively ending the coup attempt 73 Sihanouk then accused South Vietnam and the United States of orchestrating the coup attempt 74 Six months later on 31 August 1959 a small packaged lacquer gift fitted with a parcel bomb was delivered to the royal palace Norodom Vakrivan the chief of protocol was killed instantly when he opened the package Sihanouk s parents Suramarit and Kossamak were sitting in another room not far from Vakrivan An investigation traced the origin of the parcel bomb to an American military base in Saigon 75 While Sihanouk publicly accused Ngo Dinh Nhu of masterminding the bomb attack he secretly suspected that the US was also involved 76 The incident deepened his distrust of the US 77 Initial years as Head of State 1960 1965 Edit Suramarit Sihanouk s father died on 3 April 1960 78 after several months of poor health that Sihanouk blamed upon the shock that his father had received from the parcel bomb attack 75 The following day the Cambodian Crown Council met to choose Monireth as regent 79 Over the next two months Sihanouk introduced constitutional amendments to create the new post of Head of State of Cambodia which provided ceremonial powers equivalent to that of the king A referendum held on 5 June 1960 approved Sihanouk s proposals and Sihanouk was formally appointed Head of State on 14 June 1960 80 As the head of state Sihanouk took over various ceremonial responsibilities of the king such as holding public audiences 81 and leading the Royal Ploughing Ceremony At the same time he continued to play an active role in politics as Sangkum s leader 82 Sihanouk with US President John F Kennedy in New York City on 25 September 1961 In 1961 Pracheachon s spokesperson Non Suon criticized Sihanouk for failing to tackle inflation unemployment and corruption in the country Non Suon s criticisms gave Sihanouk the impetus to arrest Pracheachon leaders and according to him he had discovered plans by their party to monitor local political developments on behalf of foreign powers 83 In May 1962 Tou Samouth Pracheachon s secretary general disappeared and its ideological ally the Communist Party of Kampuchea suspected that Samouth had been secretly captured and killed by police 84 Sihanouk nevertheless allowed Sangkum s left wing politicians to run again in the 1962 general elections which they all won 85 He even appointed two left wing politicians Hou Yuon and Khieu Samphan as secretaries for planning and commerce respectively after the election 86 In November 1962 Sihanouk called on the US to stop supporting the Khmer Serei which he believed they had been secretly doing through the CIA He threatened to reject all economic aid from the US if they failed to respond to his demands 87 a threat he later carried out on 19 November 1963 88 At the same time Sihanouk also nationalised the country s entrepot trade banking sector and distillery industries 89 To oversee policy and regulatory matters on the country s entrepot trade he set up the National Export Import Corporation and Statutory Board better known as SONEXIM 90 When Sarit Diem and US president John F Kennedy died in November and December 1963 Sihanouk rejoiced over their deaths as he accused them of attempting to destabilise Cambodia He organised concerts and granted civil servants extra leave time to celebrate the occasion When the US government protested Sihanouk s celebrations he responded by recalling the Cambodian ambassador to the US Nong Kimny 91 In early 1964 Sihanouk signed a secret agreement with North Vietnam and the Viet Cong allowing Chinese military aid meant for them to be delivered through Sihanoukville s port In turn the Cambodian army would be paid for delivering food supplies to the Viet Cong and at the same time skim off 10 percent of all military hardware supplies 92 In addition he also allowed the Viet Cong to build a trail through eastern Cambodia so that their troops could receive war supplies from North Vietnam The trail later became known as the Sihanouk Trail 93 When the US learned of Viet Cong presence in eastern Cambodia they started a bombing campaign 94 spurring Sihanouk to sever diplomatic ties with the US in May 1965 93 As a result of this secret agreement Communist countries including China the Soviet Union and Czechoslovakia provided military aid to Cambodia 95 Continued leadership as Head of State 1966 1970 Edit Sihanouk in 1967 In September 1966 general elections were held 96 and Sangkum legislators with conservative and right wing sympathies dominated the national assembly In turn they nominated Lon Nol a military general who shared their political sympathies as prime minister However their choice did not sit well with Sihanouk 97 To counterbalance conservative and right wing influence in October 1966 Sihanouk set up a shadow government made up of Sangkum legislators with left wing sympathies 98 At the end of the month Lon Nol offered to resign from his position but was stopped from doing so by Sihanouk 99 In April 1967 the Samlaut Uprising occurred with local peasants fighting against government troops in Samlaut Battambang 100 As soon as government troops managed to quell the fighting 101 Sihanouk began to suspect that three left wing Sangkum legislators Khieu Samphan Hou Yuon and Hu Nim had incited the rebellion 102 When Sihanouk threatened to charge Khieu Samphan and Hou Yuon before a military tribunal they fled into the jungle to join the Khmer Rouge leaving Hu Nim behind 103 Lon Nol resigned as prime minister in early May 1967 and Sihanouk appointed Son Sann in his place 102 At the same time Sihanouk replaced conservative leaning ministers appointed by Lon Nol with technocrats and left leaning politicians 103 In the later part of the month after receiving news that the Chinese embassy in Cambodia had published and distributed Communist propaganda to the Cambodian populace praising the Cultural Revolution 104 Sihanouk accused China of supporting local Chinese Cambodians in engaging in contraband and subversive activities 105 In August 1967 Sihanouk sent to China his Foreign Minister Norodom Phurissara who unsuccessfully urged Zhou to stop the Chinese embassy from disseminating Communist propaganda 106 In response Sihanouk closed the Cambodia Chinese Friendship Association in September 1967 When the Chinese government protested 107 Sihanouk threatened to close the Chinese embassy in Cambodia 108 Zhou stepped in to placate Sihanouk 109 and compromised by instructing its embassy to send its publications to Cambodia s information ministry for vetting prior to distribution 108 As relations with China worsened Sihanouk pursued rapprochement with the US He learned that Kennedy s widow Jacqueline Kennedy had expressed a desire to see Angkor Wat 110 Seeing this as an opportunity to restore relations with the US Sihanouk invited her to visit Cambodia and personally hosted her visit in October 1967 111 Jacqueline Kennedy s visit paved the way for Sihanouk to meet with Chester Bowles the US ambassador to India To Bowles Sihanouk expressed his willingness to restore bilateral relations with the US hinted at the presence of Viet Cong troops in Cambodia and suggested he would turn a blind eye should US forces enter Cambodia to attack Viet Cong troops retreating into Cambodia from South Vietnam a practice known as hot pursuit provided that Cambodians were unharmed 112 113 Silhanouk told Bowles that he disliked the Vietnamese as a people saying he had no love for any Vietnamese red blue North or South 110 Kenton Clymer notes that this statement cannot reasonably be construed to mean that Sihanouk approved of the intensive ongoing B 52 bombing raids the US launched in eastern Cambodia beginning in March 1969 as part of Operation Menu adding In any event no one asked him Sihanouk was never asked to approve the B 52 bombings and he never gave his approval 113 The bombing forced the Viet Cong to flee from their jungle sanctuaries and seek refuge in populated towns and villages 114 As a result Sihanouk became concerned that Cambodia might get drawn into fighting in the Vietnam War In June 1969 he extended diplomatic recognition to the Provisional Revolutionary Government of the Republic of South Vietnam PRGSV 115 hoping that he could get the Viet Cong troops under its charge to leave Cambodia should they win the war At the same time he also openly admitted the presence of Viet Cong troops in Cambodia for the first time 116 prompting the US to restore formal diplomatic relations with Cambodia three months later 117 As the Cambodian economy was stagnating due to systemic corruption 118 Sihanouk opened two casinos in Phnom Penh and Sihanoukville in January 1969 119 While the casinos satisfied his aim of generating state revenues of up to 700 million riels in that year it also caused a sharp increase in the number of bankruptcies and suicides 119 In August 1969 Lon Nol was reappointed as Prime Minister with Sisowath Sirik Matak as his deputy Two months later Lon Nol left Cambodia to seek medical treatment leaving Sirik Matak to run the government Between October and December 1969 Sirik Matak instituted several policy changes that ran contrary to Sihanouk s wishes such as allowing private banks to re open in the country and devaluing the riel He also encouraged ambassadors to write to Lon Nol directly instead of going through Sihanouk angering the latter 120 In early January 1970 Sihanouk left Cambodia for medical treatment in France 121 Shortly after he left Sirik Matak took the opportunity to close down the casinos 122 Deposition GRUNK and Khmer Rouge years EditMain article 1970 Cambodian coup d etat 1970 coup Edit In January 1970 Sihanouk left Cambodia for a two month holiday in France spending his time at a luxury resort in the French Riviera 123 On 11 March 1970 a large protest took place outside the North Vietnamese and Provisional Revolutionary Government of the Republic of South Vietnam embassies as protesters demanded Viet Cong troops withdraw from Cambodia The protests turned chaotic as protesters looted both embassies and set them on fire alarming Sihanouk 124 Sihanouk who was in Paris at the time considered both returning to quell the protests and visiting Moscow Beijing and Hanoi He opted for the latter thinking that he could persuade its leaders to recall Viet Cong troops to their jungle sanctuaries where they had originally established themselves between 1964 and 1969 125 Five days later Oum Mannorine the half brother of Sihanouk s wife Monique was summoned to the National Assembly to answer corruption charges 126 On that night after the hearing Mannorine ordered troops under his command to arrest Lon Nol and Sirik Matak but ended up getting arrested by Lon Nol s troops instead On 18 March 1970 the National Assembly voted to depose Sihanouk 127 allowing Lon Nol to assume emergency powers 128 Sihanouk left visiting Romania in 1972 with Romanian President Nicolae Ceaușescu On that day Sihanouk was in Moscow meeting Soviet prime minister Alexei Kosygin who broke the news as he was being driven to the Moscow airport 129 130 From Moscow Sihanouk flew to Beijing where he was received by Zhou Enlai Zhou arranged for the North Vietnamese Prime Minister Pham Van Dong to fly to Beijing from Hanoi and meet with Sihanouk 131 Zhou greeted Sihanouk very warmly telling him that China still recognized him as the legitimate leader of Cambodia and would be pressuring North Korea along with several Middle Eastern and African nations not to recognize Lon Nol s government saying that once China issued its declaration of support the Soviet Union will be embarrassed and will have to reconsider 132 Both Zhou and Dong encouraged Sihanouk to rebel against Lon Nol and promised him military and financial support 129 Uneasy alliance Edit On 23 March 1970 Sihanouk announced the formation of his resistance movement the National United Front of Kampuchea FUNK He encouraged the Cambodian populace to join him and fight against Lon Nol s government Sihanouk was revered by the Khmer peasantry as a god like figure and his endorsement of the Khmer Rouge had immediate effects 129 The royal family was so revered that Lon Nol after the coup went to the royal palace knelt at the feet of the queen mother and begged her forgiveness for deposing her son 129 Khmer Rouge soldiers broadcast Sihanouk s message in the Cambodian countryside which roused demonstrations rooting for his cause that were brutally suppressed by Lon Nol s troops 133 Sometime later on 5 May 1970 Sihanouk announced the formation of a government in exile known as the Royal Government of the National Union of Kampuchea GRUNK leading Communist countries including China North Vietnam and North Korea to break relations with the Lon Nol regime 134 In Phnom Penh a military trial convened on 2 July 1970 whereby Sihanouk was charged with treason and corruption in his capacity as Head of State After a three day trial the judges ruled Sihanouk guilty of both charges and sentenced to him death in absentia on 5 July 1970 135 Between 1970 and 1975 Sihanouk took up residence in state guesthouses at Beijing and Pyongyang courtesy of the Chinese and North Korean governments respectively 136 In February 1973 Sihanouk traveled to Hanoi where he started on a long journey with Khieu Samphan and other Khmer Rouge leaders The convoy proceeded along the Ho Chi Minh trail and reached the Cambodian border at Stung Treng Province the following month From there they traveled across the provinces of Stung Treng Preah Vihear and Siem Reap Throughout this entire leg of the journey Sihanouk faced constant bombardment from American planes participating in Operation Freedom Deal 137 At Siem Reap Sihanouk visited the temples of Angkor Wat Banteay Srei and Bayon 138 In August 1973 Sirik Matak wrote an open letter calling on Sihanouk to bring the Cambodian Civil War to an end and suggesting the possibility of his return to the country When the letter reached Sihanouk he angrily rejected Sirik Matak s entreaties 139 After the Khmer Republic fell to the Khmer Rouge on 17 April 1975 a new regime under its charge Democratic Kampuchea was formed Sihanouk was appointed as its Head of State a ceremonial position 140 In September 1975 141 Sihanouk briefly returned to Cambodia to inter the ashes of his mother 142 before going abroad again to lobby for diplomatic recognition of Democratic Kampuchea 143 He returned on 31 December 1975 and presided over a meeting to endorse the constitution of Democratic Kampuchea 144 In February 1976 Khieu Samphan took him on a tour across the Cambodian countryside Sihanouk was shocked to see the use of forced labour and population displacement carried out by the Khmer Rouge government known as the Angkar Following the tour Sihanouk decided to resign as the Head of State 145 The Angkar initially rejected his resignation request though they subsequently accepted it in mid April 1976 retroactively backdating it to 2 April 1976 146 House arrest Edit From this point onwards Sihanouk was kept under house arrest at the royal palace In September 1978 he was removed to another apartment in Phnom Penh s suburbs where he lived until the end of the year 147 Throughout his confinement Sihanouk made several unsuccessful requests to the Angkar to travel overseas 148 Vietnam invaded Cambodia on 22 December 1978 On 1 January 1979 Sihanouk was taken from Phnom Penh to Sisophon where he stayed for three days until 5 January when he was taken back to Phnom Penh 149 Sihanouk was taken to meet Pol Pot who briefed him on the Angkar s plans to repulse Vietnamese troops 150 On 6 January 1979 Sihanouk was allowed to fly to Beijing from Phnom Penh where he was greeted by Zhou Enlai s successor Deng Xiaoping 151 The next day Phnom Penh fell to advancing Vietnamese troops on 7 January 1979 On 9 January 1979 Sihanouk flew from Beijing to New York to attend the UN Security Council where he simultaneously condemned the Khmer Rouge for orchestrating the Cambodian genocide as well as the Vietnamese occupation of Cambodia 152 Sihanouk subsequently sought asylum in China after making two unsuccessful asylum applications with the US and France 153 Sihanouk right with his son Prince Norodom Ranariddh on an ANS inspection tour during the 1980sFUNCINPEC and CGDK years EditResistance movement Edit After the Khmer Rouge regime was overthrown a new Cambodian government supported by Vietnam the People s Republic of Kampuchea PRK was established The Chinese leader Deng Xiaoping was unhappy 154 with Vietnam s influence over the PRK government Deng proposed to Sihanouk that he co operate with the Khmer Rouge to overthrow the PRK government but the latter rejected it 155 as he opposed the genocidal policies pursued by the Khmer Rouge while they were in power 154 In March 1981 Sihanouk established a resistance movement FUNCINPEC which was complemented by a small resistance army known as Armee Nationale Sihanoukiste ru ANS 156 He appointed In Tam who had briefly served as Prime Minister in the Khmer Republic as the commander in chief of ANS 157 The ANS needed military aid from China and Deng seized the opportunity to sway Sihanouk into collaborating with the Khmer Rouge 158 Sihanouk reluctantly agreed and started talks in March 1981 with the Khmer Rouge and the Son Sann led Khmer People s National Liberation Front KPNLF on a unified anti PRK resistance movement 159 Negotiations and progression Edit After several rounds of negotiations mediated by Deng and Singapore s prime minister Lee Kuan Yew 160 FUNCINPEC KPNLF and the Khmer Rouge agreed to form the Coalition Government of Democratic Kampuchea CGDK in June 1982 The CGDK was headed by Sihanouk and functioned as a government in exile 161 The UN defeated a resolution to expel Democratic Kampuchea and admit the PRK effectively confirming Sihanouk as Cambodia s internationally recognized head of state 162 As CGDK chairperson Sihanouk unsuccessfully negotiated over the next five years with the Chinese government to broker a political settlement to end the Vietnamese occupation of Cambodia 163 During this period Sihanouk appointed two of his sons Norodom Chakrapong and Norodom Ranariddh to lead the ANS Chakrapong was appointed as the deputy chief of staff for the ANS in March 1985 164 while Ranariddh was minted to the twin positions of commander in chief and the chief of staff of the ANS in January 1986 replacing Tam 165 Sihanouk in the Netherlands in 1983 US President Ronald Reagan is seen with Sihanouk in 1988 In December 1987 the Prime Minister of the PRK government Hun Sen first met with Sihanouk to discuss ending the protracted Cambodian Vietnamese War 166 The following July the then foreign minister of Indonesia Ali Alatas brokered the first round of meetings between the four warring Cambodian factions consisting of FUNCINPEC Khmer Rouge KPNLF and the PRK government over the future of Cambodia Two more rounds of meetings were held in February and May 1989 since all were held near Jakarta they became known as the Jakarta Informal Meetings JIM 167 In July 1989 Ali Alatas joined French foreign minister Roland Dumas in opening the Paris Peace Conference where discussions took place regarding plans for Vietnamese troop withdrawal and power sharing arrangements in a hypothetical future Cambodian government 167 The following month Sihanouk resigned as president of FUNCINPEC 168 but remained in the party as an ordinary member 169 In September 1990 the United Nations UN sponsored the establishment of the Supreme National Council of Cambodia SNC an administrative body responsible for overseeing the sovereign affairs of Cambodia for an interim period until UN sponsored elections were held 170 The creation of the SNC was subsequently ratified with United Nations Security Council Resolution 668 171 In July 1991 Sihanouk left FUNCINPEC altogether and was elected as the chairperson of the SNC 172 UNTAC administration era EditParis peace accords and return to Cambodia Edit On 23 October 1991 Sihanouk led the FUNCINPEC Khmer Rouge KPNLF and PRK into signing the Paris Peace Accords The accords recognised the SNC as a legitimate representative of Cambodian sovereignty and created the United Nations Transitional Authority in Cambodia UNTAC to serve as a transitional government between 1992 and 1993 173 In turn UNTAC was given the mandate to station peacekeeping troops in Cambodia to supervise the disarmament of troops from the four warring Cambodian factions and to carry out national elections by 1993 174 Sihanouk subsequently returned to Phnom Penh on 14 November 1991 Together with Hun Sen Sihanouk rode in an open top limousine from Pochentong Airport all the way to the royal palace greeting city residents who lined the streets to welcome his return 175 The UNTAC administration was set up in February 1992 but stumbled in its peacekeeping operations as the Khmer Rouge refused to cooperate in disarmament 176 In response Sihanouk urged UNTAC to abandon the Khmer Rouge from the peacekeeping process on two occasions in July and September 1992 During this period Sihanouk mostly resided in Siem Reap and occasionally traveled by helicopter to supervise election preparations in KPNLF FUNCINPEC and Khmer Rouge resistance bases 177 Sihanouk left in November 1992 to seek medical treatment in Beijing 178 where he stayed for the next six months until his return to Cambodia in May 1993 on the eve of elections 179 While in Beijing Sihanouk proposed a Presidential system government for Cambodia to then UN secretary general Boutros Boutros Ghali but soon dropped the idea after facing opposition from the Khmer Rouge 180 1993 elections and pre monarchical restoration Edit When general elections were held FUNCINPEC now headed by Sihanouk s son Norodom Ranariddh won while the Cambodian People s Party CPP headed by Hun Sen came in second 181 The CPP was unhappy with the election results and on 3 June 1993 Hun Sen and Chea Sim called on Sihanouk to lead the government Sihanouk complied and announced the formation of a Provisional National Government PRG headed by him with Hun Sen and Ranariddh as his deputies 182 Ranariddh was surprised at Sihanouk s announcement as he had not been informed of his father s plans and joined Australia China the United Kingdom and the United States in opposing the plan The following day Sihanouk rescinded his announcement through a national radio broadcast 183 On 14 June 1993 Sihanouk was reinstated as the head of state in a Constituent Assembly session presided over by Ranariddh who took the opportunity to declare the 1970 coup d etat which overthrew Sihanouk as illegal 184 As Head of State Sihanouk renamed the Cambodian military to its pre 1970 namesake the Royal Cambodian Armed Forces He also issued orders to officially rename the country from the State of Cambodia to simply Cambodia reinstating Nokor Reach as the National Anthem of Cambodia with some minor modifications to its lyrics and the Cambodian flag to its pre 1970 design 185 At the same time Sihanouk appointed Ranariddh and Hun Sen co prime ministers with equal powers 186 This arrangement which was provisional was ratified by the Constituent Assembly on 2 July 1993 184 On 30 August 1993 187 Ranariddh and Hun Sen met with Sihanouk and presented two draft constitutions one of them stipulating a constitutional monarchy headed by a king and another a republic led by a head of state Sihanouk opted for the draft stipulating Cambodia a constitutional monarchy 188 which was ratified by the constituent assembly on 21 September 1993 189 Second reign EditMonarchical restoration and political influence Edit The new constitution came into force on 24 September 1993 and Sihanouk was reinstated as the King of Cambodia 190 A permanent coalition government was formed between FUNCINPEC CPP and a third political party the Buddhist Liberal Democratic Party BLDP In turn Sihanouk made Ranariddh and Hun Sen First and Second Prime Ministers respectively 191 Shortly after that Sihanouk left for Beijing where he spent several months for cancer treatment 192 In April 1994 Sihanouk returned 193 and the following month called the government to hold new elections so that the Khmer Rouge could be co opted into the government Both Ranariddh and Hun Sen rejected his suggestion 194 195 but Sihanouk pressed on and further proposed a national unity government consisting of FUNCINPEC CPP and the Khmer Rouge headed by him 196 Again both prime ministers rejected Sihanouk s proposal arguing that Khmer Rouge s past intransigent attitude made the proposal unrealistic 197 198 Sihanouk backed down and expressed frustration that Hun Sen and Ranariddh had been ignoring him As both Norodom Sirivudh 199 and Julio Jeldres his younger half brother and official biographer respectively saw it this was a clear sign that the monarchy s ability to exert control over national affairs had diminished at least vis a vis the prime ministers 200 King Sihanouk meeting with US ambassador Kenneth M Quinn in March 1996 at the Royal Palace in Phnom Penh In July 1994 one of his sons Norodom Chakrapong led a failed coup attempt to topple the government 201 Following the coup attempt Chakrapong took refuge in a hotel in Phnom Penh but government troops soon discovered his hideout and surrounded the hotel Chakrapong called Sihanouk who negotiated with government representatives to allow him to go into exile in Malaysia 202 The following November Sirivudh was accused of plotting to assassinate Hun Sen and imprisoned Sihanouk intervened to have Sirivudh detained at the interior ministry s headquarters convinced that there was a secret plan to kill the latter if he were to remain in prison 203 After Sirivudh was relocated to the safer location Sihanouk appealed to Hun Sen that Sirivudh be allowed to go into exile in France together with his family Subsequently Hun Sen accepted his offer 204 Relations between the two co prime ministers Ranariddh and Hun Sen deteriorated from March 1996 205 when the former accused the CPP of repeatedly delaying the allocation process of low level government posts to FUNCINPECs 206 Ranariddh threatened to pull out of the coalition government 207 and hold national elections in the same year if his demands were not met 208 stoking unease among Hun Sen and other CPP officials 208 The following month Sihanouk presided over a meeting between several royal family members and senior FUNCINPEC officials in Paris Sihanouk attempted to reduce tensions between FUNCINPEC and the CPP by assuring that FUNCINPEC would not leave the coalition government and that there were no reactionary elements planning to bring down Hun Sen or the CPP 209 In March 1997 Sihanouk expressed his willingness to abdicate the throne claiming that rising anti royalist sentiment among the populace was threatening the monarchy s existence 210 In response Hun Sen tersely warned Sihanouk that he would introduce constitutional amendments to prohibit members of the royal family from participating in politics if he followed through on his suggestion 211 As Widyono saw it Sihanouk remained popular with the Cambodian electorate and Hun Sen feared that should he abdicate and enter politics he would win in any future elections thereby undercutting CPP s political clout 210 In July 1997 violent clashes erupted in Phnom Penh between infantry forces separately allied to the CPP and FUNCINPEC which effectively led to Ranariddh s ousting after FUNCINPEC forces were defeated 212 Sihanouk voiced displeasure with Hun Sen for orchestrating the clashes but refrained from calling Ranariddh s ouster a coup d etat a term which FUNCINPEC members used 213 When the National Assembly elected Ung Huot as the First Prime Minister to replace Ranariddh on 6 August 1997 214 Sihanouk charged that Ranariddh s ouster was illegal and renewed his offer to abdicate the throne a plan which did not materialize 215 In September 1998 Sihanouk meditated political talks in Siem Reap after the FUNCINPEC and the Sam Rainsy Party SRP staged protests against the CPP led government for irregularities over the 1998 general elections The talks broke down at the end of the month after Hun Sen narrowly escaped an assassination attempt which he accused Sam Rainsy of masterminding 216 Two months later in November 1998 Sihanouk brokered a second round of political talks between the CPP and FUNCINPEC 217 whereby an agreement was reached for another coalition government between the CPP and FUNCINPEC 216 Final years as King Edit Sihanouk maintained a monthly bulletin in which he wrote commentaries on political issues and posted old photos of Cambodia in the 1950s and 1960s In 1997 a character known by the name of Ruom Rith first appeared in his monthly bulletin expressing critical comments on Hun Sen and the government Hun Sen became offended by Ruom Rith s criticisms and on at least two occasions in 1998 and 2003 persuaded Sihanouk to stop publishing his comments 218 219 According to Ranariddh Ruom Rith was an alter ego of Sihanouk a claim which the latter vehemently denied 220 In July 2002 Sihanouk expressed concern over the absence of detailed constitutional provisions over the organization and functioning of the Cambodian throne council 221 When Hun Sen rejected Sihanouk s concern the latter followed up in September 2002 by threatening to abdicate so as to force the throne council to convene and elect a new monarch 222 In July 2003 general elections were held again and the CPP won However they failed to secure two thirds of all parliamentary seats as required by the constitution to form a new government The two runner up parties of the election FUNCINPEC and SRP blocked the CPP from doing so 223 Instead in August 2003 they filed complaints with the Constitutional Council over alleged electoral irregularities 224 After their complaints were rejected FUNCINPEC and SRP threatened to boycott the swearing in ceremony of parliamentarians Sihanouk coaxed both parties to change their decision stating that he would abstain from presiding over the ceremony as well if they did not comply with his wishes 225 Both parties eventually backed off from their threats and the swearing in ceremony was held in October 2003 with Sihanouk in attendance 226 The CPP FUNCINPEC and SRP held additional talks into 2004 to break the political stalemate but to no avail At the same time Sihanouk proposed a unity government jointly led by politicians from all three political parties which Hun Sen and Ranariddh both rebuffed 227 228 In February 2004 Sihanouk advocated and publicly backed same sex marriage at a time when the matter was relatively taboo and against Cambodia s backdrop as a conservative society and was praised for his support for the nation s LGBT demographic 229 230 Sihanouk also engaged in pursuing philanthropy with his establishment of the Samdech Euv Team whose primary purpose is to assist in humanitarian works and projects throughout the country of which he would later dedicate much of himself during his retirement years 231 Abdication and retirement Edit King father Sihanouk and Queen Mother Monineath in 2011 On 6 July 2004 in an open letter Sihanouk announced his plans to abdicate once again At the same time he criticised Hun Sen and Ranariddh for ignoring his suggestions on how to resolve the political stalemate of the past year Meanwhile Hun Sen and Ranariddh had agreed to introduce a constitutional amendment that provided for an open voting system requiring parliamentarians to select cabinet ministers and the president of the National Assembly by a show of hands Sihanouk disapproved of the open voting system calling upon Senate President Chea Sim not to sign the amendment When Chea Sim heeded Sihanouk s advice he was ferried out of the country shortly before the National Assembly convened to vote on the amendment on 15 July 232 On 17 July 2004 the CPP and FUNCINPEC agreed to form a coalition government leaving SRP out as an opposition party 233 On 6 October 2004 Sihanouk wrote a letter calling for the throne council to convene and select a successor The National Assembly and Senate both held emergency meetings to pass laws allowing for the abdication of the monarch On 14 October 2004 the throne council unanimously voted to select Norodom Sihamoni as Sihanouk s successor 234 Sihamoni was crowned as the King of Cambodia on 29 October 2004 235 In March 2005 Sihanouk accused Thailand Laos and Vietnam of encroaching into Cambodian territory through unilateral border demarcation exercises without Cambodian participation Two months later Sihanouk formed the Supreme National Council on Border Affairs SNCBA which he headed to address these concerns 235 While the SRP and Chea Sim expressed support for Sihanouk for the formation of the SNCBA Hun Sen decided to form a separate body National Authority on Border Affairs NABA to deal with border concerns with SNCBA to serve only as an advisory body 236 After Hun Sen signed a border treaty with Vietnam in October 2005 Sihanouk dissolved the SNCBA 237 In August 2007 the Cambodian Action Committee for Justice and Equity a US based human rights NGO called for Sihanouk s State immunity to be lifted so as to allow him to testify in the Extraordinary Chambers in the Courts of Cambodia ECCC 238 Sihanouk responded to the call by inviting the ECCC public affairs officer Peter Foster for a discussion session on his personal experience under the Khmer Rouge regime 239 Both Hun Sen and FUNCINPEC criticized the suggestion with the latter accusing the NGO of being disrespectful 238 The ECCC subsequently rejected Sihanouk s invitation 240 The following year bilateral relations between Thailand and Cambodia became strained due to overlapping claims on the land area surrounding Preah Vihear Temple Sihanouk issued a communique in July 2008 emphasising the Khmer architecture of the temple as well as ICJ s 1962 ruling of the temple in favour of Cambodia 241 In August 2009 Sihanouk stated that he would stop posting messages on his personal website as he was getting old making it difficult for him to keep up with his personal duties 242 Between 2009 and 2011 Sihanouk spent most of his time in Beijing for medical care He made a final public appearance in Phnom Penh on his 89th birthday and 20th anniversary of the Paris Peace Accords on 30 October 2011 Thereafter Sihanouk expressed his intent to stay in Cambodia indefinitely 243 but returned to Beijing in January 2012 for further medical treatment at the advice of his Chinese doctors 244 Death and funeral EditMain article Death and state funeral of Norodom Sihanouk King father Norodom Sihanouk s funeral pyre In January 2012 Sihanouk issued a letter in which he expressed his wish that his body be cremated after his death and his ashes be interred in a golden urn 245 A few months later in September 2012 Sihanouk said that he would not return to Cambodia from Beijing for his 90th birthday citing fatigue 246 On 15 October 2012 Sihanouk died of a heart attack at 1 20 am Phnom Penh time 247 When the news broke Sihamoni Hun Sen and other government officials flew to Beijing to pay their last respects 248 The Cambodian government announced an official mourning period of seven days between 17 and 24 October 2012 and state flags were ordered to fly at one third height Two days later Sihanouk s body was brought back from Beijing on an Air China flight 249 and about 1 2 million people lined the streets from the airport to the royal palace to witness the return of Sihanouk s cortege 250 In late November 2012 Hun Sen said that Sihanouk s funeral and cremation were to be carried out in February 2013 Sihanouk s body lay in state at the royal palace for 251 the next three months until the funeral was held on 1 February 2013 252 A 6 000 metre 20 000 ft street procession was held and Sihanouk s body was subsequently kept at the royal crematorium until 4 February 2013 when his body was cremated 253 The following day the royal family scattered some of Sihanouk s ashes into the Tonle Sap river while the rest were kept in the palace s throne hall for about a year 254 In October 2013 a stupa featuring a bronze statue of Sihanouk was inaugurated next to the Independence Monument 255 In July 2014 Sihanouk s ashes were interred at the silver pagoda next to those of one of his daughters Kantha Bopha 256 Legacy Edit A billboard sign commemorating King father Sihanouk Sihanouk was at the forefront of Cambodian public life for more than 60 years serving in various capacities and was one of the most consequential leaders in modern Cambodian history 257 258 Indeed as noted journalist Martin Woollacott of The Guardian said No monarch in modern times has embodied the life and fate of his country so completely as Norodom Sihanouk 259 This was reflected in him being the Guinness World Record holder for Most state roles held by a modern royal In chronological order of positions held Sihanouk served in the following roles king prime minister head chief of state regent head of the government in exile president president in exile head of the government in exile president of the Supreme National Council head of state king 260 Norodom Sihanouk Memorial in Phnom Penh Credited as one of the great survivors of contemporary Asian politics and described as a charismatic albeit mercurial figure 261 262 263 264 observers viewed Sihanouk s legacy as a complex one that is difficult to adequately quantify with precision with both achievements and failings in near equal measure Sihanouk himself once referenced William Shakespeare as a means to do literary justice to his legacy David Chandler and Milton Osborne leading scholars on Cambodia reflected on this notion acknowledging that on one hand as the father of Cambodian independence during the French protectorate era he deserves great praise for his instrumental efforts that resulted in a self governing Cambodia On the other hand his brief alignment with the Khmer Rouge after his ousting in the 1970 Cambodian coup d etat by Lon Nol tainted his reputation although it was believed Sihanouk was not aware of the genocidal intentions of the Khmer Rouge as he too was impacted by the regime with his house arrest and the deaths of several of his family members Sihanouk would later formally condemn the regime and its worst excesses 258 265 266 267 However as Woollacott noted given the context of the country s tumultuous history to Cambodians Sihanouk represented continuity when so much in their country had been destroyed They valued his warmth and his evident concern for his people while recognising that he had made many mistakes 268 269 Indeed Sihanouk s own tumultuous life is sometimes described as mirroring that of his country and he also expressed regret at some of his shortcomings during his time at the helm of Cambodia 270 271 Chandler and Osborne observed that despite his flaws he was devoted to his country 258 272 Moreover this perspective is echoed by Jamie Metzl a former Executive Vice President of the Asia Society who commended Sihanouk s patriotism and remarked that the totality of his life s work demonstrates an unflappable commitment to Cambodia notwithstanding the aforementioned reputational blight 273 To that end he commanded the deep loyalty and respect of Cambodians who throughout coups wars regime changes and famine even a full scale genocide found in Sihanouk whom they considered as a God king as the one stable influence in their otherwise turbulent lives which is also underscored by his status as the overarching unifying figure of the country 257 266 274 This was evident in opinion polling data released by the Cambodian Information Centre for the period between 1986 and 1997 which revealed he was the most popular leader in the country with an approval rating ranging from a low of 56 to a high of 72 according to respondents who were surveyed 275 In fact according to Henri Locard a historian specializing in Cambodia he believes Sihanouk s stature in the overall national consciousness is on the same level as the foremost symbols of Cambodia such as Angkor and the national flag calling him as the symbol of the country 276 Artistic works EditFilm making Edit Main article Norodom Sihanouk filmography Sihanouk produced about 50 films throughout his lifetime 277 He developed an interest in the cinema at a young age which he attributed to frequent trips to the cinema with his parents 1 Shortly after becoming king in 1941 Sihanouk made a few amateur films 278 and sent Cambodian students to study film making in France 279 When the film Lord Jim was released in 1965 Sihanouk was vexed with the negative portrayal it gave of Cambodia 280 In response Sihanouk produced his first feature film Apsara in 1966 He went on to produce direct and act in eight more films between 1966 and 1969 roping in members of the royal family and military generals to star in his films 281 Sihanouk expressed that his films were created with the intent of portraying Cambodia in a positive light 282 Milton Osborne also noted that the films were filled with Cold War 283 and nationalist propaganda themes 284 Sihanouk s former adviser Charles Meyer said that his films created from the 1960s were of amateur standard while the director of Reyum Institute Ly Daravuth similarly commented in 2006 that his films lacked artistic qualities 278 In 1967 one of his films The Enchanted Forest was nominated at the 5th Moscow International Film Festival 285 In 1968 Sihanouk launched the Phnom Penh International Film Festival which was held for a second time in 1969 In both years a special award category was designated the Golden Apsara Prize of which Sihanouk was its only nominee and winner 284 After Sihanouk was ousted in 1970 he ceased producing films for the next seventeen years until 1987 286 In 1997 Sihanouk received a special jury prize from the International Film Festival of Moscow where he revealed that he had received a budget ranging from US 20 000 to US 70 000 for each of his film productions from the Cambodian government Six years later Sihanouk donated his film archives to the Ecole francaise d Extreme Orient in France and Monash University in Australia 278 In 2006 he produced his last film Miss Asina 279 and then declared his retirement from film making in May 2010 287 Music Edit Sihanouk wrote at least 48 musical compositions between the late 1940s and the early 1970s 288 combining both traditional Khmer and Western themes into his works 289 From the 1940s until the 1960s Sihanouk s compositions were mostly based on sentimental romantic and patriotic themes Sihanouk s romantic songs reflected his numerous romantic liaisons particularly his relationship with his wife Monique 290 and compositions such as My Darling and Monica were dedicated to her He also wrote nationalistic songs meant to showcase the beauty of provincial towns and at the same time foster a sense of patriotism and national unity among Cambodians Notable compositions such as Flower of Battambang Beauty of Kep City Phnom Kulen and Phnom Penh are examples of these A few of his other compositions including Luang Prabang Nostalgia of China and Goodbye Bogor were sentimental songs 291 about neighbouring countries including Laos Indonesia and China 292 After he was ousted as head of state in 1970 Sihanouk wrote several revolutionary style songs 293 that praised the leaders of Communist countries including Hommage Khmer au Marechal Kim Il Sung and Merci Piste Ho Chi Minh They were intended to show his gratitude toward the Communist leaders which had supported GRUNK between 1970 and 1975 294 From a young age 1 Sihanouk learned to play several musical instruments including the clarinet saxophone piano and accordion 285 In the 1960s Sihanouk led a musical band made up of his relatives who would perform French songs and his own personal compositions for diplomats at the royal palace 295 In his tours across Cambodian provinces Sihanouk was accompanied by the Royal Military Orchestra and Cambodian pop singers 292 Later while Sihanouk was living in exile during the 1980s he hosted concerts to entertain diplomats whenever he visited the United Nations Headquarters in New York City 296 After he was reinstated as king in 1993 Sihanouk continued to perform in concerts held at the royal palace on an occasional basis 297 Titles and styles EditSee also List of honours received by Norodom Sihanouk Styles of King Norodom Sihanouk of Cambodia Reference styleHis MajestySpoken styleYour MajestySihanouk was known by many formal and informal titles throughout his lifetime 298 and as aforementioned the Guinness Book of World Records identifies Sihanouk as the royal who had served the greatest variety of state and political offices 299 When Sihanouk became king in 1941 he was bestowed with the official title of Preah Bat Samdech Preah Norodom Sihanouk Varman ព រ ប ទសម ត ចព រ នរ ត តម ស ហន វរ ម ន which he used for both reigns between 1941 and 1955 and again from 1993 to 2004 7 He reverted to the title of Prince after he abdicated 1955 and in that year was given by his father and successor the title of Samdech Preah Upayuvareach សម ត ចព រ ឧបយ វរ ជ 33 which translates in English as The Prince who has been King 300 Starting from the early 1960s when he became the Head of State 301 Sihanouk was affectionately known to most Cambodians as Samdech Euv សម ត ចឪ 302 which translates as the Prince Father in English 299 In 2004 after his second abdication Sihanouk became known as the King Father of Cambodia 303 with the official title of Preah Karuna Preah Bat Samdach Preah Norodom Sihanouk Preahmahaviraksat Khmer ព រ ករ ណ ព រ ប ទសម ត ចព រ នរ ត តម ស ហន ព រ មហ វ រក សត រ 299 He was also referred to by another honorific His Majesty King Norodom Sihanouk The Great Heroic King King Father of Khmer independence territorial integrity and national unity ព រ ករ ណ ព រ ប ទសម ដ ចព រ នរ ត តម ស ហន ព រ មហ វ រក សត រ ព រ វររ ជប ត ឯករ ជ យ ប រណភ ពទ កដ ន ងឯកភ ពជ ត ខ ម រ 304 At the same time he issued a royal decree requesting to be called Samdech Ta សម ដ ចត or Samdech Ta tuot សម ដ ចត ទ ត 305 which translates as Grandfather and Great grandfather respectively in English 306 When Sihanouk died in October 2012 he was bestowed by his son Sihamoni with the posthumous title of Preah Karuna Preah Norodom Sihanouk Preah Borom Ratanakkot ព រ ករ ណ ព រ នរ ត តម ស ហន ព រ បរមរតនក ដ ឋ which literally translates as The King who lies in the Diamond Urn in English 307 Personal life Edit King father Sihanouk and his wife Queen mother Norodom Monineath Sihanouk s name is derived from two Sanskrit words Siha स ह and Hanu हन which translates as Lion and Jaws respectively in English 308 309 He was fluent in Khmer French and English 310 and also learned Greek and Latin in high school 311 In his high school days Sihanouk played football basketball volleyball and also took up horse riding 1 He suffered from diabetes and depression in the 1960s 312 which flared up again in the late 1970s while living in captivity under the Khmer Rouge 313 In November 1992 Sihanouk suffered a stroke 314 caused by the thickening of the coronary arteries and blood vessels 315 In 1993 he was diagnosed with B cell lymphoma in the prostate 316 and was treated with chemotherapy and surgery 317 Sihanouk s lymphoma went into remission in 1995 318 but returned again in 2005 in the gastric region He suffered a third bout of lymphoma in 2008 316 and after prolonged treatment it went into remission the following year 319 In 1960 Sihanouk built a personal residence at Chamkarmon District where he lived over the next ten years as the Head of State 320 Following his overthrow in 1970 Sihanouk took up residence in Beijing where he lived at the Diaoyutai State Guesthouse in the first year of his stay In 1971 Sihanouk moved to a larger residence in the city that once housed the French embassy 321 The residence was equipped with a temperature adjustable swimming pool 136 cinema 322 and seven chefs 323 In 1974 North Korean leader Kim Il sung built Changsuwon a 40 room mansion for Sihanouk 324 Changsuwon was built near an artificial lake and Sihanouk spent time taking boat trips there and also shot a few films within the compound 325 In August 2008 Sihanouk declared his assets on his website which according to him consisted of a small house in Siem Reap and 30 000 euros of cash savings stored in a French bank He also stated that his residences in Beijing and Pyongyang were guesthouses owned by the governments of China and North Korea respectively and that they did not belong to him 326 Family Edit Sihanouk s spouse Queen Mother Norodom Monineath and their son King Norodom Sihamoni photographed at Sihanouk s funeral To the extreme left is Sihanouk s half brother Prince Norodom Sirivudh On 4 March 1955 Sihanouk married Norodom Thavet Norleak as his official wife who was a cousin from his mother s side One day later he married Paule Monique Izzi as his secondary consort who was the daughter of Pomme Peang a Cambodian and Jean Francois Izzi a French banker of Italian ancestry 327 Monique became Sihanouk s lifelong partner 121 in the 1990s she changed her name to Monineath 328 Before his these marriages Sihanouk married unofficially to four other women Phat Kanhol Sisowath Pongsanmoni Sisowath Monikessan and Mam Manivan Phanivong 329 Monikessan died in childbirth in 1946 His marriages to the other four women including his official wife Thavet Norleak all ended in divorce 330 Sihanouk had fourteen children with five different wives Thavet Norleak bore him no children 331 During the Khmer Rouge years five children and fourteen grandchildren disappeared Sihanouk believed they were killed by the Khmer Rouge 332 333 Sihanouk had the following issue Name Year of birth Year of death Mother Cause of deathNorodom Buppha Devi 1943 2019 Phat KanholNorodom Yuvaneath 1943 2021 Sisowath PongsanmoniNorodom Ranariddh 1944 2021 Phat KanholNorodom Ravivong 1944 1973 Sisowath Pongsanmoni Malaria 334 Norodom Chakrapong 1945 Sisowath PongsanmoniNorodom Naradipo 1946 1976 Sisowath Monikessan Disappeared under Khmer Rouge 335 Norodom Sorya Roeungsi 1947 1976 Sisowath Pongsanmoni Disappeared under Khmer Rouge 335 Norodom Kantha Bopha 1948 1952 Sisowath Pongsanmoni Leukemia 334 Norodom Khemanourak 1949 1975 Sisowath Pongsanmoni Disappeared under Khmer Rouge 336 Norodom Botum Bopha 1951 1975 Sisowath Pongsanmoni Disappeared under Khmer Rouge 336 Norodom Sujata 1953 1975 Mam Manivan Disappeared under Khmer Rouge 336 Norodom Sihamoni 1953 Monique Izzi Monineath Norodom Narindrapong 1954 2003 Monique Izzi Monineath Heart attack 337 Norodom Arunrasmy 1955 Mam ManivanAncestry Edit Ancestors of Norodom Sihanouk 338 16 Ang Duong8 Norodom of Cambodia17 Pen4 Norodom Sothearos18 Battambang bureaucrat9 Bossaba Yem2 Norodom Suramarit20 Ang Duong 16 10 Norodom of Cambodia 8 21 Pen 17 5 Norodom Phangangam22 Lothia Sa11 Bopha Nuon1 Norodom Sihanouk24 Ang Duong 16 12 Sisowath of Cambodia25 Neang Pou6 Sisowath Monivong26 A bureaucrat13 Van3 Sisowath Kossamak28 Norodom of Cambodia 8 14 Norodom Hassakan7 Norodom Kanviman Norleak Tevi30 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Troubled Relationship Routledge ISBN 978 1 134 34156 6 Findlay Trevor 1995 Cambodia The Legacy and Lessons of UNTAC SIPRI Research Report No 9 PDF Stockholm International Peace Research Institute Solna Sweden Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 829186 8 Archived from the original PDF on 5 August 2009 Retrieved 22 May 2016 Jeldres Julio A 2003 The Royal House of Cambodia Phnom Penh Monument Books OCLC 54003889 Jeldres Julio A 2005 Volume 1 Shadows Over Angkor Memoirs of His Majesty King Norodom Sihanouk of Cambodia Phnom Penh Monument Books ISBN 974 92648 6 X Langguth A J 2000 Our Vietnam The War 1954 1975 Simon amp Schuster ISBN 0743212312 Marlay Ross Neher Clark D 1999 Patriots and Tyrants Ten Asian Leaders Lanham MD Rowman amp Littlefield ISBN 0 8476 8442 3 Mehta Harish C amp Julie B 2013 Strongman The Extraordinary Life of Hun Sen Singapore Marshall Cavendish International Asia Pte Ltd ISBN 978 981 4484 60 2 Mehta Harish C 2001 Warrior Prince Norodom Ranariddh Son of King Sihanouk of Cambodia Singapore Graham Brash ISBN 981 218 086 9 Narong Men S 2007 Who s Who The Most Influential People in Cambodia Phnom Penh Media Business Networks ISBN 978 99950 66 00 0 Osborne Milton E 1994 Sihanouk Prince of Light Prince of Darkness Honolulu University of Hawaii Press ISBN 978 0 8248 1639 1 Peou Sorpong 2000 Intervention and Change in Cambodia Towards Democracy National University of Singapore Institute of Southeast Asian Studies ISBN 981 230 042 2 Summers Laura 2003 The Far East and Australasia New York Psychology Press pp 227 243 ISBN 1 85743 133 2 Widyono Benny 2008 Dancing in Shadows Sihanouk the Khmer Rouge and the United Nations in Cambodia Lanham MD Rowman amp Littlefield ISBN 978 0 7425 5553 2 Reports Edit Baumgartel Tilman 2010 KON The Cinema of Cambodia PDF Department of Media and Communication Royal University of Phnom Penh Archived from the original PDF on 14 July 2015 Retrieved 8 July 2015 Cohen Arthur 9 April 1968 Intelligence Report Ten Years of Chinese Communist Foreign Policy PDF Central Intelligence Agency Archived from the original PDF on 24 September 2015 Retrieved 18 June 2015 Jeldres Julio September 2012 A Personal Reflection on Norodom Sihanouk and Zhou Enlai An Extraordinary Friendship on the Fringes of the Cold War PDF Cross Currents East Asian History and Culture Review 4 53 64 Archived from the original PDF on 1 October 2015 Retrieved 1 September 2015 Kinetz Erika Kimsong Kay Wasson Erik Chan Thul Prak 31 October 2006 His Majesty s Norodom Sihanouk s 84th Birthday A special supplement to The Cambodia Daily PDF The Cambodia Daily Archived from the original PDF on 10 July 2015 Retrieved 9 July 2015 Scott Maxwell Aline January 2008 Royal songs and royal singing Music in the Norodom Sihanouk archival collection Monash University Library Fontes Artis Musicae 5 1 180 190 JSTOR 23512420 Wemaere Severine managing director 1 June 2013 Memory International Film Heritage Festival PDF Technicolor Film Foundation Archived from the original PDF on 9 July 2015 Retrieved 8 July 2015 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Norodom Sihanouk Wikiquote has quotations related to Norodom Sihanouk Norodom Sihanouk at IMDbRegnal titlesPreceded bySisowath Monivong King of Cambodia1941 1955 Succeeded byNorodom SuramaritPreceded byChea Sim Regent King of Cambodia1993 2004 Succeeded byNorodom SihamoniPolitical officesPreceded byNew office Prime Minister of Cambodia1945 Succeeded bySon Ngoc ThanhPreceded byYem Sambaur Prime Minister of Cambodia1950 Succeeded bySisowath MonipongPreceded byHuy Kanthoul Prime Minister of Cambodia1952 1953 Succeeded byPenn NouthPreceded byChan Nak Prime Minister of Cambodia1954 Succeeded byPenn NouthPreceded byLeng Ngeth Prime Minister of Cambodia1955 1956 Succeeded byOum Chheang SunPreceded byOum Chheang Sun Prime Minister of Cambodia1956 Succeeded byKhim TitPreceded byKhim Tit Prime Minister of Cambodia1956 Succeeded bySan YunPreceded bySan Yun Prime Minister of Cambodia1957 Succeeded bySim VarPreceded bySim Var Prime Minister of Cambodia1958 1960 Succeeded byPho ProeungPreceded byChuop Hell Head of State of Cambodia1960 1970 Succeeded byCheng HengPreceded byPenn Nouth Prime Minister of Cambodia1961 1962 Succeeded byNhiek TioulongPreceded bySak Sutsakhan President of the State Presidium1975 1976 Succeeded byKhieu Samphan Portals Asia Biography Cambodia History Politics War Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Norodom Sihanouk amp oldid 1142624867, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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