In many places in the world today, citizens are engaged in a historic struggle to democratize their societies, often under conditions of
extreme difficulty and danger. One such place is Cambodia. The country was traumatized by decades of war and the genocide
perpetrated by the Khmer Rouge, which left 1.7 million Cambodians dead. The country took its first step to establishing a "multi-party
liberal democracy" when it proclaimed a new constitution and embarked on its first democratic elections in 1993. Cambodians have
gone through five national and local elections since then. But democracy's progress has been slow and turbulent, and elections have
been undermined by factionalism, fraud, violence, and the threat of a return to authoritarian rule. Many know that the central challenge
is for Cambodians to claim the electoral process as their own, by protecting it as an instrument for building a democracy. One of those
who have bravely stepped up to this challenge is a Cambodian engineer named Koul Panha.
Koul knows firsthand what brutalities are possible in the absence of a true democracy. He was eight years old when his father and
relatives were killed by the Khmer Rouge. The indescribable trauma impelled him to dedicate himself to changing his society. He
finished his university degree, taught in Phnom Penh, and was already involved in the human rights movement even in the time of the
dictatorship. When Cambodia embarked on its first free elections in 1993, he joined the non-partisan Task Force on Cambodian
Elections, and was one of the organizers when this task force became the Committee for Free and Fair Elections (COMFREL) in 1997.
Koul assumed the role of COMFREL executive director in 1998; returning home after earning a master's degree in the Politics of
Alternative Development, he threw himself full-time into COMFREL's mission of assuring that Cambodian elections are free and fair.
Under Koul's leadership, COMFREL has become the country's leading independent organization on electoral issues. It aggressively
campaigns for responsible voting and electoral reforms, using all available media. In protecting the 2008 electoral process, COMFREL
and its partners trained and deployed over ten thousand volunteers, covering 60 percent of the country's polling stations. For the first
time in Cambodia, a citizens' parallel "quick count," initiated by COMFREL, helped forestall the manipulation of results by
establishing voting trends three days after the elections. They have also proactively campaigned for the wider political participation of
women, who constitute half of Cambodia's population, a campaign that has seen a subsequent increase of women in public office.
Based in Phnom Penh, COMFREL maintains a nationwide network of partners and has mobilized, since its inception, over fifty
thousand election volunteers; more than 150,000 Cambodians have participated in COMFREL's training programs, workshops and
other activities. This is an impressive show of civic participation in a democracy still so young. Even more significant is how
COMFREL has gone beyond elections--into post-election issues of governance. It actively lobbies for reforms in matters like election
campaign finance and the national budget. In 2003 it initiated Parliamentary Watch, which monitors the performance of legislators and
officials using benchmarks and concrete indicators in grading government performance at both local and national levels. COMFREL's
monitoring reports are publicly disseminated.
Democracy in Cambodia remains fragile, and the situation complex and dangerous. Koul has experienced harassment, and he knows he
has to walk a tightrope for COMFREL to continue doing its work. But despite the legitimate fears of friends and family, he remains
committed to using every inch of democratic space to empower his people in building a homeland that is democratic and free. Recalling
the tragic experience of millions of Cambodians and his own family, the soft-spoken Koul says: "I think Cambodia has suffered enough.
This pushes me to do something as a citizen of Cambodia, to make sure the suffering does not happen again."
In electing Koul Panha to receive the 2011 Ramon Magsaysay Award, the board of trustees recognizes his determined and courageous
leadership of the sustained campaign to build an enlightened, organized and vigilant citizenry who will ensure fair and free elections--
as well as demand accountable governance by their elected officials--in Cambodia's nascent democracy.