Showing posts with label Donor countries. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Donor countries. Show all posts

Monday, May 31, 2010

"We need from abroad more than $1.05 billion a year": Tuon Thavrak

Cambodia aims for 6 pct GDP growth with donor help

PHNOM PENH, May 31 (Reuters) - Cambodia's parliament approved a five-year plan for the economy on Monday that aims for 6 percent growth a year with the help of about $6 billion from donors, who are meeting in Phnom Penh this week to discuss aid.

Gross domestic product grew 0.1 percent last year, Planning Minister Chhay Than told the National Assembly on Monday, and to achieve the growth target in coming years a total of $6.28 billion would be needed to support development efforts.

Tuon Thavrak, director-general of the planning ministry, told reporters during a break in the session that most of that sum would have to come from aid donors.

"We need about $6 billion, so roughly every year we need about $1.2 billion," he said. "We have our own money in the national budget, but only about $200 million a year. We need from abroad more than $1.05 billion a year."

Government ministers will discuss these plans at a meeting with rich country donors and agencies such as the World Bank and Asian Development Bank on June 2-3.

Finance Minister Keat Chhon said in a recent speech that donors were expected to give the country $1 billion this year, roughly the same as the $990 million in 2009.

(Reporting by Prak Chan Thul; Editing by Alan Raybould)

SRP Recommendations to the Cambodian Development Cooperation Forum


FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE CONTACT: 012 788 999
30 May, 2010

SRP Recommendations to the Cambodian Development Cooperation Forum

PHNOM PENH – The Sam Rainsy Party praises and acknowledges the efforts of CDCF mechanism for consulting with development partners and civil society. SRP also praises the goals of the National Strategic Development Plan (NSDP) 2009-2013, and acknowledges the progress made in the areas of health, education, child protection and disability since the last consultation in December of 2008.

Despite the hard work on the part of the CDCF partners, work remains in many key sectors.
A crucial first step is to strengthen enforcement of existing legislation and policies. In order to meet Cambodia’s international human rights obligations and to implement the NSDP and the 2008 CDCF Joint Monitoring Indicators(JMIs) in the areas of Health, Education, Agriculture, Land Reform, Good Governance, and the Electoral Process, the RGC should make these additional actions priorities in the next year:

Health: Access to health care for people living below the poverty line can be achieved with the elimination of user fees. Quality of care can be improved with higher investment in training and a living wage for medical staff. The fundamental principles of access to quality health care for the poor must be strictly upheld. Access must be addressed for people with disabilities according to the Disability Law.

Education: The student survival rate in primary schools in the academic year 2007-2008 was only 33.1%. At the secondary and tertiary level, access continues to be unacceptably low, especially for girls, poor children, and the indigenous peoples. As in the health sector, training of teachers and supervisors and adequate living salaries and elimination of all forms of corruption, including school fees must be closely monitored. Human and natural resources must improve: the deployment of teachers must be prioritized, as well as school construction/repair.
Agriculture: The RGC needs to focus on human resources development in rural areas, funding for agricultural technology research, small-scale, decentralized family farms, using mixed crops and combined organic/chemical farming, as well as the development of farmers’ cooperatives employing the youth.

Land Reform: At least 60% of rural families are landless or land-poor. Slow titling of private and indigenous community land has lead to land disputes with economic concessionaires claiming title. Economic Land Concessions that exceed the size allowed under the law are being issued, often before the land is classified and registered as State private property. Lawful possessors are displaced and arrests of villagers are common. Speed of registration of Indigenous Persons communities as legal entities, and titling of land must be increased, and a moratorium on evictions and arrests should be implemented until all land is formally adjudicated according to the law. The RGC should document all ELCs given to-date in a centralized and accessible space. It should also strengthen the independence of the Cadastral Commission and courts at all levels adjudicating land disputes.

Good Governance:
  • Public Finance Reform: The public remains uninformed and unheard regarding financial matters, specifically in procurement. An up-to-date debt monitoring system has yet to be implemented, thus publication of debt information should be prioritized in 2010/11 and publications of monitoring statements should be added. Commune Development Funds must be made transparent to the people at the commune level by holding monthly community meetings as defined in the Commune Management Law.
  • Access to information: The RGC has drafted the Policy Framework on the Rights Access to Information (August 2007). However, there is a need for a clear mandate and timeframe for the development of this law. Any form of threat and/or intimidation of the public, civil society and opposition MPs against receiving information must be seen as an obstruction to the right to information.
  • Anti-corruption: The adopted law does not meet international standards, did not allow for adequate public participation in its drafting, and there remains a lack of clear plans for implementation. Also, no substantial actions have been yet taken towards strengthening education on and dissemination of corruption-related regulations, the cases of corruption of public officials have not been followed-up publicly in a rigorous and systematic way by an independent judicial system, public support and participation is still obstructed in the name of "national security and order", and by anti-corruption mechanisms put in place.
  • Legal and Judicial Reform: The RGC should focus on the development of a sound legal framework and modernization of the law, as well as by implementing measures to enhance competence, independence and impartiality of the judiciary.
  • Extractive Industry Revenue Management: Measures must be taken to increase transparency in the Extractive Industries, such as reviewing current mining concessions and grants and require all companies to publish licensing information.
Electoral Process: Reforms are still necessary to address problems with the right to vote which begins at the registration stage. The UNDP coordination and efforts to address the shortfalls of past elections should receive wide support.

Gender-Based Violence: Rape cases are increasing at an alarming rate throughout the country. Victims of sexual assaults have limited access to justice. Actions must be taken to help victims break the silence by taking measures to monitor the practice of compensation which is often negotiated and facilitated by local authorities. Gender justice is further hindered by corruption in the judiciary.

###
The SRP is an opposition party dedicated to establishing a just and fair society by amplifying the voice of the people. SRP’s position is guided by principles of sustainable and inclusive development that provides a fair share of growth for all Cambodians as of right, not out of charity. To read the full statement, please go to: www.samrainsyparty.org.

Saturday, October 31, 2009

Cambodia gives big boost to military budget

14% of the national budget will be allocated to defense, including the upkeep of Brigade B-70 (Left), Hun Sen's private bodyguards unit, in stark contrast to the 1.7% budget spent on agriculture, Cambodia's economic backbone

By Ek Madra

PHNOM PENH, Oct 31 (Reuters) - Cambodia, one of Southeast Asia's poorest countries, plans to boost defense and security spending by 23 percent next year, its budget showed on Saturday, raising the prospect of a clash with the IMF.

Cambodia plans to spend $274 million on defense and security next year, up from $223 million this year, the budget showed. The total budget for calendar 2010 was $1.97 billion, which meant the military was allocated about 14 percent of total spending.

That compares with 1.7 percent spent on agriculture, the backbone of Cambodia's economy, and 0.7 percent on water resources. About 1.7 percent was set aside for rural development.

Military spending is a sensitive topic in Cambodia because of the millions of dollars of donor money flowing into the country, largely to social programmes.

"This big budget for defense is meant for preventative measures in response to international conflicts," said government spokesman Phay Siphan.

Siphan said the spending was unrelated to tensions with neighbouring Thailand over land surrounding a 900-year-old, cliff-top Hindu temple known as Preah Vihear. Skirmishes in the border area have killed seven troops in the past year.

Thailand is challenging a U.N. decision to make the temple a world heritage site under Cambodian jurisdiction. Cambodia was awarded the temple in a 1962 international court ruling that did not determine who owns 1.8 square miles (4.6 sq km) next to it.

The International Monetary Fund (IMF) criticised Cambodia last year for its military spending, leading the Cambodian government to cut back its defense budget during a debate in parliament after questioning by the IMF.

"Donors will not be happy," Ou Vireak, head of the Cambodian Center for Human Rights, said of the latest military budget.

He said Prime Minister Hun Sen was likely trying to whip up nationalist support by projecting an image of a strong military at a time of heightened tension with Thailand.

"By doing so, he is turning the country effectively into a military state," he said.

(Editing by Jason Szep and Dean Yates)

Thursday, December 04, 2008

Donors pledge $900 mln to Cambodia for 2009

PHNOM PENH, Dec 4 (Reuters) - International donors have pledged $900 million in aid to Cambodia for 2009, a hefty increase on the $600 million that has been offered in the past, a senior finance ministry official said on Thursday.

Hang Chuon Naron, secretary-general of the Finance Ministry, told Reuters that Japan remained the war-scarred southeast Asian country's biggest donor. He did not explain the reason for the increase in the aid package.

(Reporting by Ek Madra; Writing by Ed Cropley; Editing by Alan Raybould)

Opposition Underscores Reforms for Donors


By Heng Reaksmey, VOA Khmer
Phnom Penh
03 December 2008



Cambodia is facing increasing difficulties from the global financial crisis and an erosion of democratic principals, two opposition parties said Wednesday, producing a list of critiques for donors to consider ahead of an annual meeting Thursday.

The National Assembly minority, consisting of the Sam Rainsy and Human Rights parties, urged donors to consider four points ahead of the meeting: parliamentary reforms, the adoption of a long-awaited anti-corruption law, local governance and “problems of decentralization,” and the implementation of the land law.

“The high-level meetings between the Royal Government of Cambodia and its development partners…comes at a very critical moment, as Cambodia, like other countries in the world, is facing the impact of the world economic crisis,” the minority parties said. “This [donor meeting] also comes at a time when democracy in Cambodia is further eroding, following the 2008 parliamentary election, much criticized by local and international observers for falling short of international standards.”

The annual Cambodian Development Cooperation Forum, where aid is discussed and pledged, begins Thursday, and Cambodia is expected to seek around $500 million in aid. The government received $690 million in 2007.

Speaking to a government meeting on finance reform on Wednesday night, Prime Minister Hun Sen highlighted four points of his own: the governments commitment to “sustainable peace, political stability, security and social order;… long-term sustainable economic growth;… equitable distribution of opportunities and fruits of economic growth; [and] environmental sustainability.”

Tuesday, December 02, 2008

It's that time of the year again: Begging season is now open

Cambodia to negotiate for international aid

02 December 2008

By Ky Soklim
Cambodge Soir Hebdo
Translated from French by Tola Ek
Click here to read the article in French

Representatives of donor countries and the Cambodian government will meet in Phnom Penh between 3 and 6 December. On the agenda: negotiation on the amount of aid and loan granted for the 2009 fiscal year.

Development partners and government officials will hold a three-day-meeting on the council for the development of Cambodia, at the government palace building. This yearly meeting allows the various partners to evaluate the needs, the development perspectives and to examine the efficiency of the management for the funds and the cooperation provided.

Since 1993 and since the holding of the first general election, the government received $500 million each year to help the country in its reconstruction and development. In 2008, $690 million in aid was provided in term of donations and loans. According to Cheam Yeap, the chairman of the National Assembly economy and finance committee, “International aid allows Cambodia to reduce poverty. We hope to obtain about the same amount of funding in 2009 as that of last year.” However, in view of the worldwide financial and economic crisis, some economists are doubtful about the possibility of obtaining such amount from the donors.

On the other hand, opposition parties and several NGOs demand for an end to international aid. According to the latter, the solution to the country development must go through a more efficient tax collection and an intensified fight against corruption. Therefore, according to the opposition and the NGOs, it is up to the government to act.

Wednesday, November 26, 2008

Cambodia's donors risk disaster with blind eye to poor governance of country's oil and minerals

London, 25 November 2008
Global Witness

For immediate release

Cambodia's international donors must insist on improved governance and transparency of Cambodia's oil and mining sectors at the upcoming Cambodia Development Cooperation Forum, anti-graft watchdog Global Witness said today. Governance of the sector is so poor that the donors risk losing the best chance in a generation to lift Cambodia out of poverty as well as wasting taxpayers' money from donor countries.

Ambassadors from donor countries - which provide the equivalent of half of Cambodia's annual budget - are scheduled to meet in Phnom Penh next week for a yearly review of the government's progress in meeting reform targets set at their last meeting. Hardly any of the commitments made by the Cambodian government for improving governance and human rights in the past five years have been met, yet development aid has continued to flow (see attached chart).

"Cambodia is on the verge of a petroleum and minerals windfall, but both sectors are already exhibiting early warning signs of the corruption, nepotism and state capture which plagued Cambodia's forest sector," said Global Witness Campaigns Director Gavin Hayman. "With the imminent arrival of significant revenue from oil and mining, 2008 could be the donors' last chance to use their leverage to put conditions in place to improve the lot of the average Cambodian."

Global Witness has surveyed Cambodia's oil and mining sectors and found that the small number of elite powerbrokers who run the state have sold off potentially valuable concessions to foreign companies in a manner that is non-transparent and highly dubious. So far, at least 60 mineral exploration licenses have been allocated to private companies, many of which are owned or beneficially controlled by members of Cambodia's political and military elite. All of the offshore oil concessions in Cambodian territory have been allocated and at least one of Cambodia's onshore oil blocks in the Tonle Sap basin has been granted for exploration.

To date, basic transparency or anti-corruption provisions in the allocation of the state's public assets have not been met. The government has not held any public open-bidding rounds for oil or mining rights, has failed to publish information on which companies have been awarded access to the resources, and has backtracked on endorsement of the Extractive Industries Transparency Initiative (EITI).

"Decisions are being made now about the allocation of the country's oil and mineral resource wealth, which will determine whether the revenue generated moves the country out of poverty or headlong into the resource curse. It's crunch time for the donors," added Hayman.

Global Witness is calling for donors to insist on a moratorium on the granting of any new concessions in the oil and mining sectors until the government has the basic legal, social and environmental framework in place to manage them and the revenues produced. Also, given the complete lack of transparency in the industry to date, a review of all existing concessions is needed to ensure Cambodia is getting a fair deal.

Global Witness plans to publish a report on Cambodia's extractive industries in early 2009.

For further information please call +44 207 561 6385 or +44 7872 600870

Wednesday, March 05, 2008

Donors Must Put Pressures on the Government Regarding Land Issues

Land eviction scenes
4th March 2008
By Khim Sarong
Radio Free Asia

Translated from Khmer to English by Khmerization

The International Federation of Human Right Alliance said that donor countries and donor organisations must make the cambodian government accountable for the forced evictions of the people from their lands and homes.

In a statement from France, issued on the 3rd of March 2008, Mrs. Souhayr Belhassen, President of the International Federation of Human Alliance said that, the same as during her recent visit to Cambodia, she is appealing to the international donors to put pressures on the Cambodian authority to resolve all critical issues of forced evictions as a priority. And the international community must stress clearly about this issue to the Cambodian authority.

The statement comes one day after the meeting between the Cambodian government and the international donors which takes place on the 4th of March.

That meeting will discuss a wide range of issues, including the issue of land disputes.

The statement further stated that, on top of that, the donor countries must publicly state their strong supports for the continued presence of the UN human right envoy in Cambodia and they must stress on the importance of the strong co-operations between the Cambodian government and the UN human right envoy of the day.

Tuesday, December 11, 2007

UN envoy calls for judicial reform, donor responsibility in Cambodia

Monday, December 10, 2007

Phnom Penh (dpa) - Cambodia's poor face a judicial system that favours the rich and educated, and major donors should lobby for change, the UN special envoy for human rights to Cambodia said Monday.

Yash Ghai ended a 10-day fact-finding trip not facilitated by the government, due to his critical reports.

"Here I have found people very muted. People seem to be very reluctant to take on Hun Sen and the government," he said.

"I am puzzled by why people seem to be so frightened of this government - but maybe they are not frightened. Maybe I am just a tourist, as I have often been called by this man," he said, referring to Prime Minister Hun Sen.

But Ghai did not reserve his criticism for the government alone, saying those who gave aid to the country must also take some responsibility "because they are such large donors." Around half of Cambodia's budget is based on donor aid.

Ghai said he was distressed that some embassies and foreign governments had "publicly disowned what I have said."

He said was most concerned about reforming the justice system.

"We need to look at the whole structure of laws - for people who don't understand modern economies, who don't read and write," he said.

Saturday, December 08, 2007

Human Rights in Cambodia: The Charade of Justice Report 2007


December 2007
Licadho

The Cambodian justice system has failed. Despite the UNTAC intervention and 15 years of aid to legal and judicial reform, in 2007 the primary functions of the courts continue to be to:
  1. Persecute political opponents and other critics of the government,
  2. Perpetuate impunity for state actors and their associates,
  3. Protect the economic interests of the rich and powerful
This report examines the performance of the Cambodian judiciary since the Consultative Group (CG) donor meeting of 2-3 March 2006. It seeks to point out patterns in injustice and impunity, highlight the Cambodian government’s ongoing lack of tangible action to promote rule of law, and to urge the international community to revise its strategies in assistance to legal and judicial reform.

Saturday, June 23, 2007

Cambodia Keeps Taking, Gives Little

A Cambodian beggar with her sister walks in a market in search of alms in the capital city Phnom Penh. (Photo: Khem Sovannarak/AFP/Getty)

Friday, Jun. 22, 2007
By Hannah Beech/Bangkok
Time Magazine (USA)


Why do the rich nations keep funneling millions of dollars every year to a corrupt country like Cambodia? Each summer, at around this time, for more than a decade, international donors have pledged huge sums to prop up the impoverished Southeast Asian nation. The donors unveil a goody bag of financial aid contingent on the country tackling endemic problems like corruption, human-rights violations and environmental degradation. And each year, like ritual, longtime Cambodian Prime Minister Hun Sen dutifully pledges to clean up the government's act. Alas, also like ritual, little or nothing happens. Yet somehow the entire ceremony repeats itself year after year.

On Wednesday, June 20, foreign donors — a collection of foreign governments, multinational banks and various U.N. agencies — promised to funnel $689 million of aid to Cambodia, a 15% increase from last year and an amount roughly equivalent to half the nation's annual budget. This year, they did issue statements chastising the Hun Sen government for failing to adequately battle widespread graft. Cambodia ranks No. 151 out of 163 nations surveyed in Transparency International's 2006 government corruption index. Addressing donor representatives gathered in the Cambodian capital Phnom Penh this month, Hun Sen promised that long-delayed anti-corruption legislation would be passed "as soon as possible." The statement was a virtual carbon copy of what he had pledged last year.

Foreign aid has long been employed as a political tool, with varying levels of success. Rich economies get to feel good about sharing their wealth with the less fortunate. At the same time, western nations dole out cash to poorer economies in hopes of encouraging budding democratization efforts. But if anything, Cambodia has continued to backslide. A Hun Sen-backed coup in 1997 removed Co-Prime Minister Prince Norodom Ranariddh. Opposition party members are regularly harassed. And a July 2006 deadline imposed by Hun Sen himself for introducing a draft of anti-corruption legislation passed with no evidence of any such document.

The country's economy has grown (more than 10% last year, due in part to tourism and the textile industry). But wealth appears to be concentrated in the hands of the few. Earlier this month, the international watchdog organization Global Witness released the findings of a three-year investigation that accuses a network of Hun Sen's relatives and friends of having made tens of millions of dollars from illegal logging. (Several of those implicated by Global Witness have denied the allegations, and the watchdog's report itself has been banned from domestic distribution by the Cambodian government.) In the report, Global Witness castigates the international donor community for facilitating what it labels a deeply corrupt Cambodian ruling class: "Donor support has failed to produce reforms that would make the government more accountable to its citizens. Instead, the government is successfully exploiting international aid as a source of political legitimacy."

The trouble is that Cambodia does not have to depend only on Western donors to help it patch together its economy and government. There is China. Unlike other foreign governments, China puts few strings on its aid, and its generosity in doling out funds for the Cambodian government now rivals Western munificence. Last year, Hun Sen publicly praised Cambodia's "most trustworthy friend" China for its pledge of $600 million in aid and loans; this month, the Cambodian Prime Minister went on to thank the Communist giant for giving money without "order[ing] us to do this or that" — presumably in contrast to pesky requests for reform from other international benefactors. "China has changed the game," says Sok Hach, director of the independent Economic Institute of Cambodia. "Their attitude toward aid has decreased the leverage of the rest of the world."

Further diluting international influence is the potential of oil and gas revenues to transform Cambodia's still largely agrarian economy. Two years ago, Chevron announced the discovery of offshore oil reserves in Cambodia. If natural-resources dollars do start flowing in 2010, as some expect, the country may for the first time enjoy a major revenue source that could help it stand on its own feet. Yet, in countries like Nigeria, oil money has only served to enrich a tiny minority while leaving the rest of the country impoverished. And the alternate source of income may only make it more difficult for Western efforts to tie aid to improved Cambodian governance.

Nevertheless, some human-rights groups blame the donor community for their consistent unwillingness to pull aid when their pleas for reform aren't met. "The donors' list of conditions hardly changes over time, and the government simply ignores them year after year," says Brad Adams, Asia director of New York-based Human Rights Watch. "Hun Sen continues to run circles around the donors, making the same empty promises every year and laughing all the way to the bank."

Friday, June 22, 2007

Promises, promises

Logged off (Photo: Global Witness)

Jun 21st 2007
BANGKOK AND PHNOM PENH
The Economist


Hun Sen runs rings round his donors

THIS week saw an annual ritual acted out between Cambodia's government and its ravening hordes of foreign donors. The donors tut-tut at the government's breaking of last year's promises to curb corruption and human-rights abuses. The government trots out the same promises all over again. The donors laud its modest achievements in other areas. Then they announce another big dollop of aid. This year the foreign governments, multilateral agencies and charities pledged $690m, 15% more than last year, thanks to China's decision to join the annual aid-pledging process, thus adding its donations to the total.

The promised aid exceeds the Cambodian government's entire annual tax revenue. Fortunately, in light of how much public money is looted by corrupt officials, most will go directly to poverty-cutting projects without passing through government coffers. As ever, the prime minister, Hun Sen, promised that an anti-corruption law, stuck in parliament for years despite his big majority, would soon be passed. The donors know that the law might make little difference, given how erratically the country's existing laws are applied, especially to those in government circles. But it would at least look like progress.

Not all is bad in Mr Hun Sen's government. Its openness to trade, investment and tourism has boosted economic growth to almost 11%. Public finances are on a sounder footing, and education and health services are slowly improving. Deaths and disappearances of government opponents have almost ceased in recent years. But there is little progress on curbing graft and other abuses.

This was illustrated earlier this month when Global Witness, an environmentalist group, published a detailed dossier alleging involvement in illegal logging by people close to the government. The group spent months seeking responses from those it named. Rather than reply, they waited until the report was published and then reacted in their customary, hysterical manner. The prime minister's brother, Hun Neng, a provincial governor mentioned in it, said that if anyone from Global Witness returned to Cambodia he would “beat him on the head until it broke.”

There was a similarly aggressive reaction to a report this month by Yash Ghai, the United Nations' human-rights envoy to Cambodia, which said assassinations, land-grabbing and other abuses were going unpunished. As in previous years, Mr Hun Sen preferred not to respond to the allegations, but fired off a barrage of personal insults at the envoy.

It is only recently that Mr Hun Sen stopped treating the donor governments and agencies with similar contempt. At least he has stopped biting the hands that feed Cambodia. But, says Erik Illes of SIDA, Sweden's foreign-aid agency, there is “growing frustration” at the lack of progress on corruption and human rights. Mr Hun Sen reminds Western donors that if they get too demanding, he can always rely on China to provide soft loans without strings. The big oil revenues that Cambodia will start earning in the next few years will also reduce foreign donors' leverage, laments Mr Illes.

However, argues Mike Davis of Global Witness, the prime minister craves international respectability as well as cash, and China alone cannot give him this. So the donors, if they united to make tougher demands, could make it clearer that his behaviour is beyond civilised bounds. The trouble is that donor governments and multilateral organisations often assign inexperienced staff to Cambodia. That makes it easier for Mr Hun Sen to bully them into silence.

All Parties Agree: Cambodia Needs the Aid

Mony, VOA Khmer
Original report from Phnom Penh
21/06/2007

"Taking aid money was 'not begging'" - Heng Samrin National Assembly President
Ruling and opposition party officials who are usually at odds with one another agree on at least one thing: Cambodia needs the aid money it gets from donors each year.

Billions of dollars in aid have poured into Cambodia since UN-sponsored elections in 1993, and donors agreed Wednesday to give $690 million more. Rights groups said they were disappointed with donors, who continue to give aid to the government without holding it fast to policies of good governance.

While disagreements exist over how much oversight should go along with the aid, no one denies that Cambodia needs the money. Infrastructure, health, education and other institutions remain weak, wracked by war and neglect. Officials said after this week's meeting they intended to direct more money at those problems.

Critics said that without strong anti-corruption measures, aid money doesn't go where it is needed most, and instead finds the pockets of corrupt officials. Meanwhile, the problems of land-grabbing and rights abuse remain, and an anti-corruption law is stagnant.

With corruption siphoning off much needed funds for development, Cambodia risked becoming a permanent aid recipient, critics said, which threatened to turn the country into a beggar nation.

Lawmakers from both sides of the aisle Thursday said the money was necessary, but some took umbrage with the beggar analogy.

Taking aid money was "not begging," National Assembly President Heng Samrin said. "This is [getting] help from those countries."

National Assembly Finance Committee Chairman Chiem Yeap declined to forecast when Cambodia might stop relying on aid, in grants or loans from foreign governments or development banks.

"It is not different from women having babies. When they feel better, the midwives leave," he said. "We see that we should do things ourselves. But right after the war, our economic infrastructure was down, and we reconstructed our country. It is still not enough for our farmers' necessities, so we cannot pull ourselves away from foreign aid."

Thursday, June 21, 2007

Groups unimpressed by Cambodian aid donors [- Chapey master Kong Nai will be evicted from his home also]

21/06/2007
Australian Broadcasting Corporation

Cambodia's international donors have pledged $US690 million in aid to the impoverished nation for the next year.

The pledge came after Prime Minister Hun Sen, told the meeting he would get 'in touch' with fight against corruption and land disputes.

But it hasn't impressed the human rights organisations that work with Cambodia's poorest populations who say donors should demand action and not rhetoric.

Bill Bainbridge reports for Radio Australia's Connect Asia programme that master musician Kong Nai lives on the land that once held the National Theatre of Performing Arts in Phnom Penh.

He is one of many artists who established a community on the site after they lost their homes during the devastation of the Pol Pot years.

But now Nai and the rest of his community face eviction. In 2005 their land and that of communities surrounding them, on prime Phnom Penh real estate, was illegally sold.

Now he says he has no idea where he will live.

Human rights organisation Licadho filmed Nai's story. Their Director Naly Pilorge says land grabbing in Cambodia has exploded in recent years.

"Its often done with very little notice, no participation from the communities, and often very violently with the use of weapons and machinary and often the people that are doing the evictions are company guards usually with the authorities, whether the village chief or riot police," Naly Pilorge said.

Aid: The making of a "beggar" Nation

Aid Without Reform Could Make Cambodia a 'Beggar' Nation, Activist Says

Sok Khemara, VOA Khmer
Original report from Washington
20/06/2007


Aid without reform and strict guidelines puts Cambodia at risk to become a beggar nation, solely reliant forever on foreign aid and incapable of one day functioning independently, Seng Theary, executive director of the Center for Social Development said Wednesday.

The consultative group of donors Wednesday pledged to give Cambodia $690 million in aid in 2007, raising questions about the number of years Cambodia will be reliant on aid, on how future generations will pay off foreign loans and whether the government was doing a good job with the money.

Governments must not forget that the aid is money from individual foreign taxpayers, so it should be 100 percent relevant to the Cambodian people, Seng Theary said in a VOA Khmer interview. This alone should make the annual aid pledges important to many people.

"There should be strong conditions," she said. Without them, reform won't take place. "That's why we need the donors to do more."

Continued aid without reform risked turning Cambodia into a "beggar," she said.

Projects undertaken by the government that don't succeed should be scrutinized by donors, and poor projects should not receive funding, she said.

Donors need to make sure the aid is being properly spent, and, if it isn't, they should be ready to cut it off, Seng Theary said.

Even as the aid comes in, the government ignored calls from rights groups for greater transparency on government expenditures and debt, she said.

Donors Pledge $690 Million in Aid Increase

VOA Khmer Stringers
Original report from Phnom Penh
20/06/2007

International donors pledged $689 million in aid Wednesday, a 15 percent increase from last year, despite pressure from rights groups that aid be tied to better governance.

Elated Cambodian officials said they had received more than they expected and would spend the money on health, education and infrastructure.

Donors called for the passage of a long-stalled anti-corruption law and said they expected reforms to move faster with the added money.

China, which in past years has not participated in the consultative group meeting, contributed $91 million this year. Japan, Cambodia's largest donor, pledged $112 million.

The aid was tied to conditions pushing the government to pass an anti-corruption law that has been stagnant for years.

Finance Minister Keat Chhon told a local newspaper the amount of aid reflected donors' trust in Cambodia's financial management improvements.

"Why is the amount so much? Because the government has made a lot of effort for strengthening financial management, and the development partners saw our efforts," he said.

The consultative group is made up of 18 donors including the US, Germany, Japan, South Korea, the Asian Development Bank, the European Commission, the International Monetary Fund, the United Nations Development Program and the World Bank.

World Bank Country Director Ian Porter called the anti-corruption law "very important" for Cambodia's good governance issues and said donors wanted "to ensure that Cambodia continues to have a good record in terms of growth and poverty reduction."

"The reforms will move ahead faster, particularly areas related actually to…good governance," German Ambassador Pius Fischer told reporters after the meeting.

Mu Sochua, Sam Rainsy Party secretary-general, said donor countries should take responsibility when giving aid, "so that it will go to the Cambodian people."

Her concerns were echoed by others in the rights community, who see continued aid without restrictions as potentially harmful.

"I hope that this time the donor countries take the problem that is a concern to the whole country to the government and ask the government to show results according to the government's promises," said Kek Galabru, founder of the rights group Licadho.

Wednesday, June 20, 2007

Mounted donations mirror donor country's consistent confidence in Cambodia [especially China]

2007-06-20
By Xia Lin & Long Heng
"Additionally, Hun Sen told the givers that his Cambodian People's Party (CPP) is confident to win the next general election in 2008 and the national policy will then keep consistent."
PHNOM PENH, June 20 (Xinhua) -- Donor countries here on Wednesday pledged 15 percent more donations for Cambodia in 2007 over 2006, verifying their rising trust and confidence in the impoverished kingdom and its government.

Cambodia is expected to receive over 689 million U.S. dollars in aid from its donor countries in 2007 and the amount will almost stay the same in 2008 and 2009, said Cambodian Minister of Finance and Economy Keat Chhon at a press conference held upon the conclusion of the two-day First Cambodian Development Cooperation Forum (CDCF).

"The finance will be spent on strengthening the country's overall development" and especially implementing the Millennium Development Goals (MDG) in the sectors of good governance, clean water and sanitation, he added.

Meanwhile, according to the government's statement issued on Wednesday at CDCF, or the donor countries' annual meeting, in 2007Japan alone will provide Cambodia with over 112 million U.S. dollars, remaining the largest donor country for Cambodia, while the European Union (EU) will give more than 170 million U.S. dollars.

Earlier this month during his 15th visit to Japan, Prime Minister Hun Sen signed an investment protection agreement with the Japanese government in order to promote its investment status in Cambodia.

This year's rise of donations comes along with the kingdom's achievements of consistent economic boom in the past decade.

According to the government's report, the average annual economic growth rate of Cambodia was 9.8 percent between 1994 and 2006. The macro economic stability peaked in 2005 as the economic growth rate then reached 13.4 percent and later in 2006 slightly down to 10.4 percent.

In addition, said the government's statistics, the income per capita doubled from 249 U.S. dollars in 1994 to 500 U.S. dollars in 2005, and the foreign currency reserves increased from 100 million U.S. dollars in 1994 to one billion U.S. dollars in 2006.

However, on the other side of the coin, with the donations turning out to be much higher than last year's 601 million U.S. dollars, the Cambodian government again scored a victory over the opposition force, NGOs and some foreign countries and organizations, who repeatedly criticized it as too corrupt to deserve the donor countries' trust.

On Tuesday while inaugurating CDCF, Hun Sen assured the participants in this regard with high-profile vows to iron out corruption within his government.

"We have always fight corruption with concrete measures and the government is determined to adopt anti-corruption law as soon as possible," he told the representatives, adding that corruption is "cancer of the society" and must be fought with real actions.

"Even we don't have anti-corruption law yet, we take strict actions to fight corrupt officials," he said.

Recently, he added, seven government officials were punished over illegal logging, two arrested and put into jail for seizing private properties, one accused of conspiracy in state land grabbing and destroying forestry, one another accused of destroying natural resources and ruining environment, and 11 others jailed over cutting forestry illegally in Ratanakiri province.

Additionally, Hun Sen told the givers that his Cambodian People's Party (CPP) is confident to win the next general election in 2008 and the national policy will then keep consistent.

"Now Cambodia has about 60 political parties. If CPP wins the next general election, I will continue to lead the country as premier," he said.

The next donor countries' meeting, namely the Second CDCF, is expected to be held in December 2008, two or three months after the general election is wrapped up, he added.

Hun Sen has been country leader since 1985 and transformed Cambodia from a war-torn land into a kingdom with its poverty rate decreasing from 47 percent in 1993 to 35 percent in 2004.

Keat Chhon is all smiles after successfully fooling Aid Donors one more time

Cambodian Finance Minister Keat Chhon, smiles at the end of foreign donors meeting in Phnom Penh, Cambodia, Wednesday, June 20, 2007. Foreign donors pledged US$689 million (euro 514 million) in aid for Cambodia on Wednesday, but also castigated Prime Minister Hun Sen's government for failing to tackle chronic corruption in the impoverished country. (AP Photo/Heng Sinith)

Hun Sen's latest concession land seizure "show" always work like a charm with aid donors

Jun 20, 2007
DPA
"Cambodia had taken pleasing steps to combat the problem, seizing five land concessions deemed illegal and suspending or disciplining more than 50 officials for corrupt practices in the past year" - Pius Fischer, German Ambassador to Cambodia
Phnom Penh - Despite heavy political pressure from human rights groups, donors significantly increased total aid pledges to Cambodia Wednesday to nearly 690 million dollars at an annual meeting in a move the government said recognized its ongoing efforts at reform.

Donors at the two-day Cambodia Development Cooperation Forum largely kept their pledges in line with previous years, granting 689.21 million dollars in grants and loans. The total included both direct government funding and indirect funding to non-government organizations, according to Finance Minister Keat Chhon.

The overall increase on the 601 million dollars pledged by donors in 2006 came despite demands from rights groups for donors to demand more for their money. They said widespread rights abuses and endemic corruption continue virtually unchecked in Cambodia.

It was bumped up by a contribution of 91 million dollars by China, which has previously refused to be involved with the meeting. Although it did not send a delegation, Chhon said it had made the pledge via official diplomatic channels. Japan remained the most generous donor, pledging 112 million dollars for 2007.

The German ambassador to Cambodia, Pius Fischer, said that although corruption remained a 'cancer of this society,' Cambodia had taken pleasing steps to combat the problem, seizing five land concessions deemed illegal and suspending or disciplining more than 50 officials for corrupt practices in the past year.

Germany, which is also the chair of the European Union (EU) this year, pledged 21 million dollars for 2007, although Fischer said total disbursment may actually be even higher. EU countries pledged a total of 170.2 million dollars for the year and nearly half a billion over three years.

No breakdown of the total into what constituted loans and what constituted grants was made available. Chhon said the total included direct funding for the government and indirect funding through non-government organisations.

Last week, the UN human rights envoy to Cambodia, Yash Ghai, delivered a stinging report in Geneva, and the government recently came under harsh criticism for banning a critical report on illegal logging by London-based Global Witness, but Fischer said donor funding was a complex process which 'should be interpreted more long term than short term,' and donors had seen overall progress as positive.

The forum meeting involved key donors to Cambodia, including the United States, Germany, Japan, South Korea, the Asian Development Bank, the European Commission, the International Monetary Fund, the United Nations Development Programme and the World Bank.

Government officials said the funds are primarily earmarked for the development of infrastructure, such as rural development and irrigation projects, as well as improving the fledgling health system, which remains in disarray after 30 years of civil war.

The World Bank estimates 70 per cent of Cambodians remained dependent on agriculture but the country also has one of the fastest rates of urbanization in the region. According to the IMF, its economy also grew 10.4 per cent last year and was expected to continue to grow at a rate of about 9 per cent in 2007.

Eight foreigners were briefly detained but later released during the meeting after a protest urging the release of two men who rights groups said have been falsely jailed for 20 years for the murder of unionist Chea Vichea.