A treaty was signed in 1863 by King Norodom and was approved by his counterpart Napoleon III. Cambodia officially became a protectorate of the French empire on 11 August 1863. In October 1949, the Maoist dictator Pol Pot (Saloth Sâr) went to Paris to join the French Communist Party and returns home to his native Cambodia in the summer of 1953.[1] Cambodia gained its independence in November 1953, thanks to Prince Norodom Sihanouk.[2]
France and Cambodia enjoy close relations, stemming partly from the days of the French Protectorate and partly from the role played by France in the signing of the peace agreements in Paris in 1991,[3] and further cemented by the French language. These relations are gradually adapting to Cambodia's growing integration into its regional environment and its progress towards the status of a Middle Income Country, hopefully by 2020. The "Orientation and Cooperation Document" signed in 2010, steers our cooperation towards the following goal: "supporting economic growth and job creation in Cambodia by developing human capital and promoting French private investment".[4]
France has one of the largest Cambodian diaspora communities outside the United States, largely because of the refugees who fled Cambodia who escaped the Khmer Rouge in the 1970s.[6] As of 2015, there are around 80,000 Cambodians living in France.[7] A Cambodian restaurant Le Petit Cambodge was among the sites of the November 2015 Paris attacks, though it is unclear whether any Cambodians were among those killed.[8]
^Forest, Alain (1 March 1993). "Chapter 1: Les années d'impuissance coloniale". Le Cambodge et la colonisation française [Histoire d'une colonisation sans heurts (1897 - 1920)] (in French). Editions L'Harmattan. pp. 6–12. ISBN9782858021390.
^Sihanouk, Norodom; Lacouture, Jean (1972). L'Indochine vue de Pékin [Entretiens] (in French). Éditions du Seuil. p. 53.
^Levy, Tali; Greenberg, Melanie; Barton, John H.; McGuinness, Margaret E. (1 December 1999). "The 1991 Cambodia Settlements Agreements". Words over War [Mediation and Arbitration to Prevent Deadly Conflict]. Rowman & Littlefield. pp. 139–142. ISBN978-0847698929.