Showing posts with label Corruption. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Corruption. Show all posts

Wednesday, November 17, 2010

PM accuses officials of eyeing park

By May Titthara
The Phnom Penh Post

PRIME Minister Hun Sen has accused officials of encroaching on land in Thma Da National Park, located in Pursat province’s Veal Veng district, and warned that those who do so in the future would be subjected to “strict measurements”.

A statement issued on Friday afternoon by the Council of Ministers notes that Hun Sen raised the issue during its weekly meeting earlier in the day. It does not specify how many officials might have encroached on land in the national park, nor does it name any officials.

Council of Ministers spokesman Phay Siphan could not be reached for comment on the issue yesterday.

“I will take strict measurements against any people who do not respect this recommendation,” Hun Sen is quoted as saying in the statement.

Pursat provincial governor Chhay Sareth said yesterday that he had heard some officials were “preparing” to claim some of the land, but that he did not know what government bodies they worked for.

He said that some former Khmer Rouge families were permitted to live within the park.

Veal Veng district governor Chhe Chhiv said he did not believe any high-ranking officials were involved in plans to take over some of the park.
Because much of the park is dense forest and parts of it are contaminated with land mines, he said, the only threat to the land would likely come from soldiers looking to undertake small-scale farming.

“That land is covered by forest and mines under the ground, so there are no high-ranking officials involved in this,” he said.

Last year, a group of 195 families in Veal Veng district asked the Ministry of Environment to carve out a social land concession from the park. Math Osman, a representative of the families, said yesterday that the request had been denied.

Since then, he said, local environment officials have sold off sections of the land.

“They have sold the land to people who want to buy it – 1 hectare is from US$700 to $1,500 depending on its condition,” he said.

Thai Chinda, the head of the provincial Environment Department, declined to comment on the issue yesterday.

Sunday, March 7, 2010

Corruption Law Moves to Assembly for Debate




The National Assembly will begin debate next week on an anti-corruption law that was 15 years in the making, with opposition lawmakers and rights groups pointing to weaknesses they say must be addressed.
The National Assembly will convene March 10 to debate the law, which moved from the Council of Ministers Feb 24.
Opposition lawmaker Son Chhay, of the Sam Rainsy Party, said the upcoming date for debate was too soon to allow proper study of the draft.
Donors have pushed for the passage of anti-corruption legislation for years, with the US claiming Cambodia loses $500 million per year to such practices. The announcement of the draft comes following the training of government officials by the US last month.
“Corruption is an obstacle of national economic development, the strengthening of the rule of law, democracy, social stability and poverty,” Prime Minister Hun Sen wrote in a note to the National Assembly accompanying the draft law. “Fighting against corruption is part of government reform for good governance, to strengthen the rule of law and sustainable economic development and poverty reduction.”
The draft law has 57 articles, covering all forms of corruption, for government offices, businesses and non-governmental agencies. It creates an independent Anti-Corruption Council and an anti-corruption unit under the Council of Ministers.
The 11-seat Anti-Corruption Council will consist of political appointees chosen one each by the king, Senate and National Assembly and eight by different executive offices. The president of the council will hold the rank of deputy prime minister. It is mainly an oversight body.
The Council of Ministers’ anti-corruption unit will be led by a senior minister and will investigate corruption allegations and research corruption offenses in ministries, public institutions, government offices and the private sector, according to the draft. The unit will also be in charge of the government’s strategy to fight corruption and will receive complaints.
The draft law requires all government officials to disclose their assets and debts to the unit, including the Senate, National Assembly, the prime minister, military personnel and police. It also requires “the leadership” of non-governmental organizations to disclose their assets. The disclosures are sealed to the public but accessible by the anti-corruption unit “as necessary.”
The draft empowers the court to seize as state property interests and assets of those found guilty of corruption. Maximum jail time on corruption charges would be 15 years.
The draft law has created worries among the opposition and rights groups, who say the Council should not be chosen by political appointment but should include unbiased members.
“We want the Council to comprise independent, neutral, capable and well-known persons to work to fight against corruption,” said Thun Saray, head of the rights group Adhoc.
“This law will be used to pressure and suppress opposition businessmen in the private sector,” Son Chhay said.

Monday, February 22, 2010

SRP submits an anti-corruption private member's bill to parliament

By Khmerization
Source: RFI

Mr. Son Chhay (pictured), an MP from the opposition Sam Rainsy Party (SRP), has submitted his anti-corruption private member's bill to parliament for consideration after the government-drafted anti-corruption bill has been delayed for 14 years, reports Radio France Internationale.

Mr. Son Chhay's private member's bill, called the Advisory Council for the Elimination of Corruption, which contains 19 pages, 7 chapters and 41 articles, was submitted toparliament on the 22nd of February.

Mr. Son Chhay said he decided to submit his own private member's bill becuase the government took too long to approve the long-awaited bill and because corruption is notably on the rise since it was firstly drafted in 1996.

Mr. Cheam Yeap, a senior MP from the ruling Cambodian People's Party, said Mr. Son Chhay's bill had reached the parliament, but said that it has no chance of approval because the bill was written by using laws and ideas from developed countries which does not suit the Cambodian situations.

The government-drafted bill was approved by the Council of Ministers on 11 December 2009 and is scheduled to be submitted to parliament for approval in April 2010. This bill imposes a 1 month to 15 years jail term for corruption and requires all office-holders to declare their assets before taking office. However, the details of the bill remain a secret and opposition politicians as well as members of the civil society have called for an open and transparent debates of this secretly-kept controversial bill and for its details to be publicly revealed before approval.

Wednesday, February 17, 2010

US Provides Training To Curb Corruption


VOA Khmer


The US on Wednesday provided training to 62 Cambodian officials in an effort to combat widespread national corruption.
The US estimates Cambodia loses $500 million a year to the practices of kickbacks, bribery and other forms of corruption.
The three-day training will “really influence a change to the quality of our work,” said Om Yienteng, a senior government adviser and head of the nation’s anti-corruption unit.
The Council of Ministers passed a much-anticipated anti-corruption law in November but has yet to send it to the National Assembly for debate and passage into law.

Kampong Speu village accuses official of corruption

May Titthara

Phnom Penh Post

AROUND 100 villagers protested in front of the Kampong Speu provincial governor’s office Monday, demanding their village chief be dismissed amid allegations of corruption.

The group, from the Daek Phleung village in Samrong Tong district, told the Post that since Chab Chhon was appointed village chief in September 2009, he had been pocketing profits from the sale of public land, a claim he vehemently denies.

Readmore

Tuesday, February 9, 2010

Corruption hurting business: vendors

May Titthara

Phnom Penh Post

MARKET vendors at a Kampong Cham border crossing claim corrupt Cambodian border police are demanding too much money from Vietnamese customers, forcing them to accept lower prices for their goods.

The vendors have sent an official complaint to Prime Minister Hun Sen demanding an end to the practice, according to Lim Hong Chheang, who said he represents vendors at the Trapeang Phlong border crossing.

The payments “force Vietnamese vendors to buy Cambodian farmers’ produce at lower-than-market prices”, Lim Hong Chheang said.

Border officials demand 50 riels per kilogram of goods that the Vietnamese customers try to bring home, he said. The practice reportedly forces vendors to sell their offerings at a lower price: Dried cassava that might ordinarily fetch a price of 650 riels per kilogram, for example, now brings only 600 riels per kilogram.

“This corruption doesn’t affect just me,” Lim Hong Chheang said.

“It affects all the vendors’ standards of living. This isn’t new, either. It’s happened for a long time. We have enough evidence to file a complaint.”

Lim Hong Chheang also said that border officials were charging truck drivers 130,000 riels (US$31) to cross the border.

Claims rejected
But the official in charge of the Trapeang Phlong border checkpoint disputed the allegations.

“I haven’t heard about this issue,” said Oum Thalot, calling the matter a “personal problem” between the vendors and their landlord.

Oum Thalot said he was concerned that the villagers’ complaint had been filed.

Neang Sovath, the provincial coordinator for local rights group Adhoc in Kampong Cham, said he has never received a complaint regarding the matter from the province’s vendors.

Tuesday, February 2, 2010

Police brutality alleged

May Titthara
Phnom Penh Post

TWO men in Dangkor district have accused Krang Thnong commune police officers of beating them unconscious last week during a party celebrating the end of the rice harvest and detaining them for five days until their families paid US$600 for their release.

Sok Than, 28, one of the two men who were arrested, said the officers were drunk and fired shots in the air to warn other partygoers against coming to their aid.

His father, Chhom Chhoun, said he had given the $600 payment to officers on Thursday.

But commune police chief Mak Mey said the men had provoked the fight with the police officers, and denied that the officers had acted inappropriately.

“These two men were fighting during the dance, and so we brought them to the police station,” he said.