CN Mandarin to become mandatory language in Cambodian high schools - Educators worry the move will further boost Chinese influence in the country

Mandarin to become mandatory language in Cambodian high schools

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An agreement with China to include mandatory Mandarin language classes in Cambodia’s public secondary schools has Cambodian educators worried about growing Chinese influence that will undermine the kingdom’s culture and sovereignty.

On Wednesday, the two governments signed a memorandum of understanding in Phnom Penh to introduce the new subject to students from 7th to 12th grade, one of 18 agreements signed during a ceremony between Cambodian Prime Minister Hun Sen and visiting Chinese Premier Li Keqiang.

In response to the move, teachers and political observers say the Cambodian government should strengthen its national culture instead, so citizens will not imitate foreign cultures, especially that of China.

The new requirement would serve only to increase Beijing’s influence in Cambodia, said Rong Chhun, an adviser to the Cambodian Independent Teachers’ Association and a member of the Cambodia Watchdog Council.

"It is about political influence,” he said. China “wants to mainstream its culture as well as political influence to dominate Cambodia because there is competition in the region, and we know that Cambodia is now in geopolitical competition with the great powers in the world.”

As an alternative, Rong Chhun suggested that the Ministry of Education, Youth and Sport set up separate language schools so that students can choose whether they want to study Chinese.

Currently, Cambodia offers English and French language instruction in its education curriculum throughout the country from grade four to 12. Korean classes are offered from grade seven to nine in six high schools.

Em Sovannara, an academic expert in political science and international relations, said the inclusion of Mandarin in the state education curriculum is similar to the Soviet era, when Cambodian school children had to learn Russian and Vietnamese.

“If the Cambodian people do not maintain their strong cultural identity, they will be vulnerable to the imitation of East Asian and Chinese cultures,” he said. “And so, it can [lead] to the loss of our cultural balance if the Cambodian people have little understanding of our culture.”

RFA could not reach Ministry of Education spokesman Ros Sovacha or Cambodia government spokesman Phay Siphan for comment on Thursday.

However, Ros Sovacha told a domestic pro-government news outlet that the memorandum of understanding would boost Cambodian-Chinese ties. He also said the ministry would conduct a pilot phase, offering Chinese language classes in 20 high schools in two or three provinces, while also expanding Korean language instruction to six high schools in Phnom Penh.
 
Lol this was inevitable if you've seen how the Chinese have fucked up the Cambodian cities by building casinos everywhere. The locals I know absolutely hate the mainlanders, since they also tend to be hopped up on drugs and alcohol when they're not under China's draconian laws. Pretty sad all around (:_(

This video of workers in Cambodia escaping from being held captive probably says a lot:

 
While learning Mandarin would increase future odds of business being successful in Cambodia due to relationships being formed by the two countries currently, I sense China eventually trying to erase Cambodian identity because of China's tendency to intentionally influence countries close to its borders.
 
Sounds like they need to take a page from Japan's playbook and have their own Sonnō jōi.

Would be funny seeing the Chinese get all pissy about being called barbarians.
 
Makes much more sense than teaching French does.
 
I don't think this will be very effective. Cambodian isn't a tonal language, and it has an alphabet, so it's basically just as hard for them to learn Chinese as an English speaker, unlike Thai or Japanese people who speak languages that are similar in some way.
Considering the fact that English and French people struggle to learn each others languages after 6-10 years of classes, I think this is just gonna be a waste of money.
 
I don't think a full course is necessary, just essential phrases like "I will have your rent payment by end of week Honorable Mr. Wong," and "your food delivery is here Ms. Chang, thank you for ordering with Grubhub, please rate four stars and don't forget the tip!"
 
Lol this was inevitable if you've seen how the Chinese have fucked up the Cambodian cities by building casinos everywhere. The locals I know absolutely hate the mainlanders, since they also tend to be hopped up on drugs and alcohol when they're not under China's draconian laws. Pretty sad all around (:_(

This video of workers in Cambodia escaping from being held captive probably says a lot:



They also fucked up Cambodia by backing the Khmer Rouge (despite the Khmer Rouge genociding Chinese people for being the merchant class).
 
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I would be fine with it being optional, but fuck being MANDATORY. I am pissed enough as a native English speaker how my language is forced down countless throats.
 
While learning Mandarin would increase future odds of business being successful in Cambodia due to relationships being formed by the two countries currently, I sense China eventually trying to erase Cambodian identity because of China's tendency to intentionally influence countries close to its borders.
Won't , my parents had mandatory Russian in school from grade 5, i had similar with English at grade 5. This just gets people up to barely conversational level . It starts basically middle school age as additional classes over 5 years. That will get you at best B1 level which begginer intermediate . This is just preparing your workforce to work for china and bring in remittances.
 
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