Showing posts with label Police corruption. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Police corruption. Show all posts

Monday, April 23, 2012

សម័យដែក ចោរ ចំរើនអស្ចារ្យពេស្យាចាររីក​ស្គុះស្គាយ​ - Development of ... prostitution under Hun Xen

Prostitutes outside a brothel
មតិ​រាស្ត្រ​: ការរកស៊ី​ផ្លូវភេទ​រីក​ដូច​ផ្សិត​

ថ្ងៃទី 22 មេសា 2012
ដោយ: សុផល
CEN

ភ្នំពេញ: ​នៅក្នុង​ទីក្រុង​ភ្នំពេញ​មាន​កន្លែង​រកស៊ី​ជួញដូរ​ផ្លូវភេទ​ច្រើន​រីក​ស្គុះស្គាយ​ដូច​ផ្សិត ហើយក៏​គ្មាន​អាជ្ញាធរ​ណា​ធ្វើការ​បង្ក្រាប​ឲ្យ​មាន​ប្រសិទ្ធភាព​នោះទេ។ ​រីឯ​ទីតាំង​ខ្លះ​គេ​រកស៊ី​លួចលាក់​តាម​គ្រប់​រូបភាព​ដែលមាន​ធ្វើទៅបាន​។ ដោយ​មានការ​ផ្សំគំនិត​ពី​សំណាក់​មន្ត្រី​មូលដ្ឋាន ជា​ខ្នងបង្អែកដើម្បី​ជួយ​ការពារ​ដល់​ពួកនាងៗ​ដោយ​ដាក់​ខែ សំរាប់​ឆ្នាំងបាយ​របស់​ពួកគេ។ ​ការរកស៊ី​មាន​ខ្សែសង្វាក់​បែបនេះ​មិន​ងាយ​អ្នកណា​បំបែក​បានឡើយ​។

តាម​ការសង្កេត​ជាទូទៅ​ស្រី្ត​ភាគច្រើន​ដែល​ចូលចិត្ត​រកស៊ី​របរ​អត់​ដើម​នេះ ជា​កូនអ្នកក្រីក្រ​មកពី​ជនបទ ពុំបាន​រៀនសូត្រ​ជ្រៅជ្រះ​ខ្ពង់ខ្ពស់ ហើយ​ស្ម័គ្រចិត្ត​ប្រកបមុខរបរ​នេះ​ដោយ​ខ្លួនឯង​។ ម្យ៉ាងទៀត​ស្ត្រី​ខ្លះ​បាន​ចាញ់បោក​មេខ្យល់​ដែល​បោក​យកមក​ពី​ជនបទ​ដោយ​ថា មករក​ការងារ​ធ្វើ​នៅ​ភ្នំពេញ ឬក៏​ទៅធ្វើ​ការ​តាម​រោងចក្រ ឬ​ហាង​ធំៗ។ ​ខ្លះ​ត្រូវគេ​មេខ្យល់​បោក​យកទៅលក់​ឲ្យ​តាៗ ក្នុង​តំលៃ​សមរម្យ ឬ​លក់​បន្ត​គ្នា​ពី​ថៅកែ​បន​មួយ​ទៅ​ថៅកែ​ផ្ទះបន​មួយ​ដូច​សត្វ​ធាតុ​។​

Friday, April 15, 2011

US department defends human trafficking report

April 15, 2011
ABC Radio Australia
CDEBACA: One of the problems that we have in the entire region, whether it's in Cambodia or in other countries is that the good work of police forces, prosecutors, national coordinators who work with the non-government organisations to come up with ways to attack human trafficking are then undercut by official corruption. We have a high ranking police official who owns the bar where the women are being held as slaves, when you have a government official who owns the plantation where the people are being made to cut down the palm oil and things like that. It totally undercuts what we're trying to accomplish, so not just in Cambodia, but in other areas of the region we see corruption as being an anchor that drags behind the effort.
Each year the US State Department puts out a report detailing the human trafficking situation around the world and grading countries on how well they are addressing the problem.

The report separates nations into categories or tiers, and the rankings can cause diplomatic friction. For example Singapore was furious last year when it was placed on the Tier Two Watch List for countries that don't meet the standards of a US law, the Trafficking Victims Protection Act, and are not doing enough in the eyes of the State Department to reform.

US Senator Jim Webb has recently criticised the rankings, saying the method for compiling it lacked clarity and that it caused "confusion and resentment" among Asian nations. Tier One lists countries that meet the standards of US legislation called the Trafficking Victims Protection Act. Tier Two is for countries that don't meet the US standards but are trying. The Tier Two Watch List is for those that aren't considered to be trying hard enough. In Asia that includes Bangladesh, China, India, the Philippines and Sri Lanka plus newcomers Afghanistan, Brunei, Laos, Singapore, Thailand and Vietnam. And Tier Three, the worst perfomers on combating human trafficking, includes Papua New Guinea, North Korea and Burma.

Presenter: Liam Cochrane
Speaker: Luis CdeBaca, Ambassador-at-Large, State Department's Office to Monitor and Combat Trafficking In Persons

CDEBACA: Well the United States has been issuing the anti-trafficking report now for ten years, the passage of how anti-trafficking law in the year 2000. Our anti-trafficking law passed about a month before the United Nations acted in Palermo in the modern updating of the slavery conventions and what that did was it focused not on the movement of people around the world, but rather on the slavery and exploitation. And so the United States rather than waiting for the United Nations or any other multilateral organisations to an assessment or an evaluation, again 200 taken evaluation. It guides our diplomacy, it guides our programs and it guides the training and technical assistance that we're able to give countries around the world to fight modern slavery.

COCHRANE: And that diplomacy is ruffled at times with the release of the report and the various tiers of the list. Do you think that the trafficking report should be balanced against wider diplomatic sensitivities?

Friday, March 18, 2011

As Rape Cases Rise, Officials Searching for Causes

Lim Mony, deputy head of the women’s section for the rights group Adhoc, and Hor Malin, undersecretary of state for the Ministry of Women’s Affairs, on "Hello VOA" Monday. (Photo: by Chun Sakada)
Pich Samnang, VOA Khmer
Phnom Penh Thursday, 17 March 2011
“In some cases, when victims come forward with complaints against the offender, police demand money from them.”
Cambodia’s rising number of rape cases is fueled by impunity and poverty, among other factors, a rights activist said Monday.

“There has been injustice as the impunity for some offenders still exists,” Lim Mony, deputy head of the women’s section for the rights group Adhoc, told “Hello VOA” Monday. “Another factor is poverty within families, where victims are sent away from home to work or to herd cattle in the fields.”

Pornography, drug use and unemployment are also underlying factors to rapes, she said.

The reported number of rape cases across the country continues to rise. Adhoc recorded 501 cases, far more than one each day, in 2010, and increase over 460 in 2009 and 419 in 2008. Of those, nearly three quarters involved underage girls, Lim Mony said.

Thursday, February 03, 2011

Sochua seeks report on ex-police chief

(Photo: RFA)
Thursday, 03 February 2011
Tep Nimol
The Phnom Penh Post

National Assembly President Heng Samrin has accepted a letter of inquiry from the Sam Rainsy Party seeking clarification on the investigation of the temporary release of a former Ratanakkiri police chief convicted of illegal logging.

The letter, submitted by SRP lawmaker Mu Sochua on January 28 and returned bearing the signature of Heng Samrin on Tuesday, urged Minister of the Interior Sar Kheng to issue a report on the ministry’s investigation of the release of Yoeung Baloung, now serving a 13-year sentence in Prey Sar prison.

Khiev Sophak, a spokesman for the ministry, said on Tuesday that he had no knowledge of the letter and could not comment on whether or not Sar Kheng would address the issue.

Yoeung Baloung was released from prison on January 15 to attend an ethnic festival, according to a ministry official, during which he was involved in a car accident that left three people injured.

Cops and butcher try to rustle villager's roasted pig [... Corruption is rampant in Cambodia]

Feb 3, 2011
DPA

Phnom Penh - A Cambodian villager claimed police and a local butcher colluded to try and confiscate a tasty home-grown pig he had prepared for a Chinese New Year feast, local media reported Thursday.

Yam Bo told the Phnom Penh Post newspaper he had strapped the 14-kilogram roasted porker to his motorbike Wednesday and was driving to his niece's home when he was stopped in the western town of Battambang.

'Four police officers and several staff members from the butcher's shop demanded 100 dollars because they said I was transporting a pig without a letter of permission (from the local butcher),' he said of the incident, which took place just ahead of the Chinese New Year celebrations starting Wednesday evening.

Monday, October 26, 2009

Former top Cambodian anti-drug official charged

October 26, 2009
ABC Radio Australia

The former head of the anti-drug trafficking bureau in the Cambodian capital, Phnom Penh, has been charged for possessing 100-thousand US dollars worth of methamphetamine. Touch Muysor has been suspended after a joint investigation by local authorities and America's Federal Bureau of Investigation.

Presenter: David Boyle
Speakers: Kea Chhay, defence lawyer; Son Chhay, Opposition Sam Rainsy MP; Dr Anand Chaudhuri, United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime



BOYLE: Touch Muysor once held one of the highest positions in the Cambodia police force... Now he's facing drug and corruption charges. $US100,000 worth of methamphetamines was found in Touch Muysor's office. He's the second senior police officer this month to be charged with drug related offences. His lawyer, Kea Chhay, says his client was just doing his job.

KEA CHHAY: "I think he keeps the drugs in his office so I think he was working at his judicial office - it's part of his work".

BOYLE: Kea Chhay refused to br drawn further on the case but said Touch Muysor denied any wrong doing. The charges are a result of an extensive investigation by the FBI and local law enforcement. It will be alleged Touch Muysor received bribes from local drug dealers. Opposition Sam Rainsy MP Son Chhay says corruption problems are entrenched in local authorities and he's welcomed American involvement in investigations.

SON CHHAY: "It is a really complicated kind of business to deal with in Cambodia due to corruption, due to the kind of gang or group of business involved in drug in this country who have linked themselves to the very high ranking officials in government. It would not be easy for even a good official who works in combating drugs to be able to do anything. Thanks to the FBI and others who have been working with the department authority, combating drugs authority, who have been pushing that the government must do something. "

BOYLE: The National Authority For Combating Drugs is the key instrument Cambodia's government uses to prevent drug trafficking. Radio Australia was unable to contact the Cambodian government, but the head of the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime, Dr Anand Chaudhuri, says the arrest of Touch Muysor is evidence that Cambodia is now taking drug prevention very seriously.

CHAUDHURI: "This is evidence of the police capacity of enforcing drug prevention - they're not even leaving their own kind. You see it's a very good example of the Prime Minister and the Deputy Prime Minister taking an active interest, not today, but over a long period of time."

BOYLE: Dr Chaudhuri has heaped praise on the Cambodian Government's adoption of radical new strategies in tackling drugs, which he says are unique within mainland South East Asia. He says foreign partners like the Australian Federal Police have been instrumental in helping the government improve their drug policy.

CHAUDHURI:"There's no reason to leave out the importance Australia has placed in the Asia Pacific region as a whole on this matter and the role of Australia in supporting government to look at this problem. It's a completely new direction. Now, they're switching gears and going in for a three year action plan in which they are considering drug users as victims. Now this is a very, very important milestone in Cambodia. Cambodia is probably one of the only countries with no harm reduction policy, but still having needle syringe exchange programs going on in their capital city. They want to observe the results and they are very happy with the Australian Narcotics Control Department - the ANCD's report on needle exchange programs. They, the royal government of Cambodia, had a five year action plan which is ending this year and that action plan was targeting the supply of drugs, and they've done an efficient job on that."

Monday, October 19, 2009

Phnom Penh's anti-drugs chief charged with possession, bribery

Mon, 19 Oct 2009
DPA

Phnom Penh - The head of Phnom Penh's anti-drugs police team has been charged with illegal possession of drugs and taking bribes from arrested drug dealers, national media reported Monday. Lieutenant-Colonel Touch Muysor was suspended earlier this month after police found thousands of amphetamine tablets in his office.

A court prosecutor told the Cambodia Daily newspaper that Lt-Col Touch was formally charged over the weekend, but had been under suspicion since 2005.

The prosecutor said one charge relates to possession of drugs, while the other is for taking bribes to ensure that the cases of arrested dealers were shelved before even making it to court.

Lt-Col Touch is the second ranking officer in Cambodia's drugs force to be arrested this month. On October 2, Bun Pov, a lieutenant in the national anti-drugs police force, was arrested just one week into the job after police raided his home and found 18 kilograms of heroin and methamphetamine tablets.

The US Federal Bureau of Investigation was involved in a series of arrests the same day which saw seven dealers apprehended. However police would not say whether any of the cases were linked.

Cambodia has long been seen as a regional transit point for drugs shipments.

Monday, May 18, 2009

Cambodia's national police: Role model of supreme corruption under Hun Sen's regime?

Cambodian PM calls on national police to be role model of protector of people's interest

PHNOM PENH, May 18 (Xinhua) -- Cambodian Prime Minister Hun Sen called on police force to be a role model in order to protect the interest of the people, the official Agence Kampuchea Presse (AKP)reported on Monday.

"Police force needs to be a role model and right implementer just, sincere and unbiased in order to protect righteous interest of the people and assist people facing difficulties at all time and every where," AKP quoted premier's recent message as saying.

The premier made the message to commemorate the 64th anniversary of the creation of Cambodian national police force which was formed on May 16, 1945.

In his message, the prime minister acknowledged the national police force at all levels for their hard work and sacrifice to bring about national security both inside Cambodian territory and along its border.

Hun Sen also prayed for and deeply thanked to the souls of the fallen police forces and expressed his respect to their children, spouses and parents who had allowed those heroic forces to serve the country and continue to support all government's activities to achieve the present development.

Though Cambodia is now peaceful, he said, all police forces should keep up with the good practice to ensure the country's sustainable and dynamic poverty reduction measure and to bring more physical and emotional peace for Cambodians.

Wednesday, December 31, 2008

Maybe Sar Kheng should preach anti-corruption to his CPP fellows first before scolding the cops

Sar Kheng upbraids police for corruption

Tuesday, 30 December 2008

Written by Vong Sokheng
The Phnom Penh Post


INTERIOR Minister Sar Kheng lashed out at his subordinates, accusing them of mismanagement and corruption in a speech last week.

Sar Kheng told about 300 police officers on Friday that funds earmarked for salaries were being siphoned by corrupt and incompetent officials.

"[Corruption] is a serious mistake and means they are stealing from the ministry and stealing official salaries by enlarging the budget. These mistakes will not be tolerated," Sar Kheng said.

Cambodia ranks near the bottom of corruption watchdog Transparency International's Corruption Perceptions Index, at 166 out of 180 countries.

Sar Kheng, who is also a deputy prime minister, lambasted corruption in procurement of uniforms, petrol and rice. He called on all levels of the police financial department to reduce unnecessary spending on electricity, water and building upkeep.

"These were issues the ministry has to be concerned about. We have to reform financial management for 2009," Sar Kheng said.

"When we get the budget under control, the ministry will be able to increase salaries for police officers."

He also announced reforms in the ministry's rice distribution scheme that gave police officers bags of rice on top of their salaries.

The new system would provide 2,800 riel for each kilogram of rice given under the old system. A local police official speaking on condition of anonymity said officers receive between 10 and 20 kilograms of rice on top of the current salary of between $45 and $55 per month, depending on rank.

Wednesday, August 27, 2008

Traffic Crashes More Serious in 2008: Police

Phnom Penh Deputy Traffic Police Chief Chev Hak and Meas Chandy, road safety coordinator for Handicap Cambodia

By Sok Khemara, VOA Khmer
Washington
26 August 2008



Traffic officials and police said Monday excessive speeds on the roads were leading to more deadly accidents this year.

In the first five months of 2008, 10,555 people were injured in traffic accidents while 645 were killed, said Meas Chandy, road safety coordinator for Handicap Cambodia.

In the previous year, more than 2,000 people were injured in the same period, but only 616 died, Meas Chandy said, as a guest on "Hello VOA."

The increase of deaths was the result of "over-speed and drunken driving," said Phnom Penh Deputy Traffic Police Chief Chev Hak, also as a guest on the show.

Cambodia has the highest rate of traffic accidents in Southeast Asia, Chev Hak said.

Meas Chandy urged drivers to wear a helmet, which can greatly reduce the chances of dying in a traffic accident.

Responding to complaints that traffic police shake down Phnom Penh drivers for bribes, Chev Hak said the policy of the traffic policy was to fine officers up to 6 million riel, or $1,500, for illegally demanding money.

Friday, June 13, 2008

In Cambodia, 89% of encounters with traffic police resulted in a bribe: Don't worry, the IRI survey said Cambodia is moving in the right direction

Petty corruption hits as hard as grand one

13 Jun, 2008
Tina Edwin
The Economic Times Bureau (India)


NEW DELHI: In Cambodia, a survey found that 89% of encounters with traffic police resulted in a bribe. The average bribe from a household was around $9.

A study in Bangladesh of 3,000 households shows that 97% of household that bought land had to pay bribes for land registration . So had 88% of the households who mutated their land ownership, 85% who collected land related documents, and so on.

A survey of Bangladesh, India, Nepal, Pakistan and Sri Lanka found that health workers often demand bribes for admission to hospital , to provide bed or to give subsidised medicines. In one Indian city, a social audit revealed more than half the respondent had to pay bribes in government hospitals.

In a survey in Rajasthan, nurses were to be found in their posts in villages only 12% of the time. Rates of absenteeism are also typically higher in rural areas, not only because of the lack of supervision but also because staff find it more difficult to get to work or are discouraged by the prospect of using clinics that lack equipment or drugs or are in poor state of repairs.

In China, in 2003 audits of nearly 3,000 primary and 1,500 secondary schools in Jiangxi found 125 cases of illegally collected fees worth $2 million. Nationwide the government uncovered over $20 million in illegally collected school fees.

In Indonesia, less than a fourth of total logging operations, estimated at $6.6 billion, is legal.
THIS IS only an illustrative list of the petty corruption that affects everyday life of people living in the Asia Pacific region . And, in all these instances, it is the poor who pay a bigger price.

“The real price of corruption is not paid in currency. The true costs are eroded opportunities , increased marginalisation of the disadvantaged and feelings of injustice,” says a United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) report, Tackling Corruption, Transforming Lives, released on Thursday.

The report attempts to look at corruption from a human development perspective and how it undermines efforts to reduce poverty — by diverting goods and services targeted for the poor to well-off and well-connected households who can afford to bribe officials. “The poor also lose out when they have to pay bribes, since they can only afford small amount, which represent high proportion of their income.”

Although corruption can be categorised into two forms, grand and petty, the report notes that it is in the petty form larger number of people are affected. “Petty corruption can be just as, if not more, crushing as grand corruption, hitting hard especially at the poor,” it notes.

In that form, corruption involves smaller amounts but more frequent transactions: lower level public officials demanding speed money to issue licences , for example to allow full access to schools, hospitals or public utilities. “Hence calling it petty is really a misnomer.”

Tackling corruption is a responsibility that must be shared by governments, the private sector, international organisations, civil society and the media, UNDP regional programme coordinator Anuradha K Rajivan, who led the team that compiled the report, notes in the preface. “Individuals must also assert themselves as citizens and consumers. As corruption is not confined to country borders, it is necessary for solutions to be a global responsibility to be shared by multinational companies, international banks and aid agencies alike.”

Unfortunately, the myth that nothing can be done to curb corruption seems to be nearly as pervasive as corruption itself, Ms Rajivan notes. However, instances such as use digital cameras to record attendance of teachers in rural schools in Rajasthan prove otherwise — attendance of teachers improved by a third.

Overall, in the Asia Pacific region, the least trusted are the police, followed by judiciary and tax offices. The report suggest that it would be wiser to focus on a few specific areas . These could be police, social services and natural resources, from a human development perspective.

It says that countries would need to address the problem at all levels of government and private sector — reforming institutions and processes so as to reduce the opportunities for corruption while creating effective systems for detecting malpractices and punishing offenders.

It has also drawn up a seven-point agenda that countries could adopt to tackle corruption , although it says appropriate measures for a specific country would depend on national circumstances and local complexities.

Nevertheless, it states that countries in the region should — join with international efforts such as United Nations Convention Against Corruption, and the Stolen Assets Recovery Initiative; establish benchmarks of quality; strengthen the civil services; encourage codes of conduct in the private sector; establish the right to information; exploit new technology; and support citizen action.

That apart, the report cautions countries against assuming that the corruption would diminish as their economies grow. “International experience suggests otherwise,” it says.

Saturday, March 15, 2008

Hun Sen: Police control stations to ask for bribes are sprouting back up again

Hun Sen reminds about the “road inspection” problems which the officials claim to have forgotten

Saturday, March 15, 2008
Koh Santepheap
Translated from Khmer by Heng Soy

Hun Sen warned again about the “road inspection” problems set up by “second-hand” (i.e., not officially sanctioned by the government) control police officers. He said that this problem is rearing back up, and it did not disappear yet.

Hun Sen said that, near Chhlong district, there is a control station, and in Kampong Cham, near the digging by the paved road, there is one place where bribes are being asked also. Hun Sen requested to government officials: “Take a look at them, they are all over the place. I am pointing these 2 locations for you to see only, near the border between Kampong Cham and Kratie provinces.”

Hun Sen made these remarks in the afternoon of 13 March during his presence at the closing of the Ministry of Interior conference. Hun Sen indicated that, there is no problem dealing with police officers taking bribes, all that needs to be done is to take off their title. He said that roads were built for orderly traffic, but these cops turn them into a bribe-request location instead. He said that TVK broadcast about this issue every day, but, they don’t watch it, and even the newspapers are reporting about these control stations, but the government officials do not read about them. Hun Sen added: “When the high-ranking officials go down to inspect, their cars are blaring the siren sound, so that when those who set up the control stations hear about it, they just took off because they are mobile control stations.”

Hun Sen said that he used to make the request (to shut down these control stations), but, now, he shouldn’t make any request anymore. Hun Sen asked: “Are you running out of food to eat if you stop taking bribes from taxicabs for one day? This is a negative point that will lead to other problems…”

Hun Sen asked the provincial officials to take a look at this issue, and not to wait until the PM yells for them to take a short-lived measure, fighting this issue must be done constantly. In the case of “road inspection,” Hun Sen ordered all city and provincial officials to pay attention to them, and to clean up these “second-hand” control stations. He said government officials should post a sign in front of their office doors to remind themselves to get rid of these control stations. According to Hun Sen’s warning, officials working in an area where there is a second-hand control station, will be removed from their position, however, no such punishment has been metered out yet. Some believed that if, in spite of warning, these police officers are still doing it, then it is time that they should be dealt with so they take responsibility for their action.

Thursday, March 13, 2008

German gets 15 years for Cambodia child sex abuse

Thu Mar 13, 2008

PHNOM PENH (Reuters) - A Cambodian court sentenced a German man to 15 years in jail on Thursday for the sexual abuse of a 14-year-old girl, the latest foreigner to be caught in the southeast Asian nation's drive to stop child sex tourism.

Walter Munz, 61 and from Stuttgart, was arrested last year in a Phnom Penh guest house and accused of sharing a bed with the street girl and sexually abusing her four times.

The white-haired Munz, who appeared before the court in prison overalls, denied the charge and said he had been giving her $60 a month for school fees and food.

"I did nothing wrong. I will the appeal the case," he said as he was led away in handcuffs.

Poverty-stricken Cambodia has long had a reputation as a haven for paedophiles and perverts, due in large part to its corrupt police force and courts. Child rights groups are campaigning hard for Phnom Penh to take the problem seriously.

Thursday, February 21, 2008

It Doesn’t Surprise Me: Police Viewed as Most Corrupt

"Angkor Wat concession, land concessions to foreigners, illegal logging and even appointing defectors from other parties who joined his own party to high paid government positions is tantamount to corruption because it is squandering public money for one’s own interests."

"Cambodia at presence is poor not because Cambodia is poor in potential, but poor because of the mismanagement and corruption of our leaders."
Wednesday, February 20, 2008
Editorial by Khmerization
Originally posted at http://khmerization.blogspot.com

Corruption has become part of the Khmer society and has been practised by the Khmer office-holders for as long as one can remember. It has embedded in the mentality of our leaders, public servants and office-holders that taking bribes is the norm and that it is not tantamount to corruption but, rather, it is a charge or a fee for the service rendered, forgetting that they have already been paid from the tax-payers‘ money to serve the people. This mentality is completely wrong!

Coming back to the survey by Transparency International, reported in the article below, it doesn’t surprised me of the responses. Corruption, as I mentioned earlier, has existed in the Khmer society for generations. But it was not at the level that we are seeing under the current government.

Corruption had existed in every society, white, black or yellow. The only difference is the will to tackle or to curb it from becoming a social ill. In the Western countries corruption, if not completely eliminated, had been effectively curbed to minimal. With political will, well-established, strong and independent institutions, corruption had been almost completely brought to a halt. Corrupt officials, no matter what positions they hold, even the prime minister, will be prosecuted.

On the contrary, corruption in Cambodia has been allowed to go on and go on, on a large scale without any political will to tackle it. This is so because corruption in Cambodia has been practised from the top leadership down to the bottom ladder. From prime minister down to the grassroots officials corruption has been practised openly. Angkor Wat concession, land concessions to foreigners, illegal logging and even appointing defectors from other parties who joined his own party to high paid government positions is tantamount to corruption because it is squandering public money for one’s own interests.

Cambodia at presence is poor not because Cambodia is poor in potential, but poor because of the mismanagement and corruption of our leaders. Corruption has drained state treasury dried. It has costed the country $500 million dollars annually which would have been put to better use in infrastructure building, health and education. Our education and health systems are at dilapidated states. Patients are forced to pay phenomenal amount to use public healthcare and hospitals. Students are forced to pay a huge sum of money to enrol and to bribe their teachers.

This level of corruption must not be allowed to go on. One of the way to reduce, not eliminate it because it is not possible, is to change the government and our leaders. I heard people were saying that “all the Cambodian leaders are the same. They are all corrupt. Why should we change the leaders?” While their statements are correct to a certain extent, I do not agree that they are all the same and that we should not change the leaders. In the Western democracies, take America for example, the leaders have been changed every so often that sometimes it is difficult to remember them. And their countries are progressing so impressively.

Those who said that “all Khmer leaders are corrupt and shouldn’t be replaced” are resisting change and advocating dictatorship. These kinds of people have interests at stake if changes are to occur. Change in Cambodia must take place and take place sooner rather than later.

Police Viewed as Most Corrupt: Survey

Cambodia police chief: General Hok Lundy (Photo: AFP)

By Chun Sakada, VOA Khmer
Phnom Penh
20 February 2008

"I would like to completely deny corruption in the police and judicial institutions ... But we recognize there are corrupt individuals in those institutions..." - Lt. Gen. Khieu Sopheak, spokesman for the Ministry of Interior
Cambodians view the police and judiciary as more corrupt than other government and non-government agencies, according to a survey released Wednesday.

In its annual corruption survey, Transparency International said more than half of Cambodian interactions with police and registry and permit services in 2007 resulted in bribes paid.

In four out of ten contacts with police or such services, bribes were requested, the group said.

Transparency International, via market research group TNS, surveyed 1,016 Cambodian adults in face-to-face interviews in five cities and provinces: Battambang, Kampong Cham, Phnom Penh, Siem Reap and Sihanoukville.

"Corruption is considered a serious problem by the Cambodians," a Transparency International statement said. "Four in ten respondents believe that the level of corruption will rise in the coming years. The fear is strongest in rural and remote areas and among low income groups."

"I would like to completely deny corruption in the police and judicial institutions," said Lt. Gen. Khieu Sopheak, spokesman for the Ministry of Interior. "But we recognize there are corrupt individuals in those institutions, and we have punished corrupt individuals with both administrative and legal measures."

Cambodia loses an estimated $500 million per year to its national budget due to corruption, but the government has yet to pass a much-awaited anti-corruption law.

Tuesday, December 04, 2007

Through Film "Holly," the Pervasive Nature of a Perverse Trade

By Sok Khemara, VOA Khmer
Original reports from Washington
30 November 2007


"Holly," a feature-length film that screened in Washington Wednesday, tells a gritty story of Cambodia's rampant sex trade through the eyes of a 12-year-old girl and the Western man she tries to convince to marry her, or at least rescue her.

The story, which was filmed across Cambodia's brothel districts, including the notorious Svay Pak, paints a vivid, raw picture of the trade, which continues to thrive in across the country, thanks to corruption and collaboration by police, crime syndicates, traffickers and thugs.

Guy Jacobson, who produced and co-wrote the film, said he was inspired to act by the film after he was approached in 2002 by a clutch of young girls, some as young as five years old, soliciting him for sex. The scenario was appalling and incited him to action, he said. It became a verbatim scene in the film as well.

Holly (Thuy Nguyen), a 12-year-old Vietnamese girl who has been trafficked to Svay Pak, meets a card gambler named Patrick (Ron Livingston), and tries to convince him to marry her. He says she's too young and sets out to learn how he might save her. Along the way, he learns how pervasive the practice is and how hard it is to bring a girl out of it.

The US State Department estimates 800,000 people are trafficked internationally each year, and millions more within national borders are sold into the sex industry. Human trafficking earns millions of dollars per year for corrupt officials and organized crime syndicates.

Jacobson said he received death threats as he tried to make his film, and had to hire 40 men armed with AK-47s to protect him and his crew as they shot.

"When we arrived in Cambodia, we got a call from Interpol saying, 'You guys are crazy. You are in the most dangerous place in the world, making a move about this issue…. Get the hell out of Cambodia,'" he said.

"We were at war trying to make this film," he said.

Interpol's chief officer in Cambodia, Brig. Gen. Keo Van Than, declined to comment on specific threats, saying he was not in his position at the time. "It seems there is not threat," he said.

The two-hour film contains many scenes of drama and suffering, showing police in uniform associating with owners of the brothel and extorting of money, on duty.

Ministry of Interior spokesman Lt. Gen. Khieu Sopheak said the film had "two faces," one to reflect reality and another to harm police credibility.

No country has a perfect police force above corruption, he said. "The Ministry of Interior has always taken legal action for individual police officials who commit illegal acts," he said.

The film also shows foreign tourists who find sexual entertainment under Cambodia's red-lights, where goons who protect brothels "arrest" girls in public without fear and where legal action is non-existent.

Holly and Patrick are stuck in a world with few solutions and few answers. Holly asks Patrick to buy her out of the brothel for $1,000, saying she loves him and wants to marry him. She tries to escape by other means, and, in once scene, literally finds herself in a mine field. Patrick does what he can but finds himself as mired as Holly.

"The movie will be very helpful to people around the world who are ordinary citizens, to make them stop and realize that it is the demand for commercial sexual exploitation which makes it possible for pimps, exploiters, traffickers and corrupt officials to do the harm that they do," said Ambassador Mark Lagon, director of the US State Department's Office to Monitor and Combat Trafficking in Persons, who opened the screening in front of about 300 audience members.

A Vietnamese student from Georgetown University in the audience who asked not to be named said the film portrayed the "horrible" reality of human trafficking in Southeast Asia but said she was reminded that the trade is everywhere.

Governments need to take the issue more seriously, she said.

Bill Livermore, a representative of LexisNexis, which helped support the film, told VOA Khmer that in the last five or ten years, organized crime was growing "rapidly" and was very profitable, helped along by human trafficking.

The US government meanwhile has put Cambodia on a watch list of governments that are not doing enough to curb trafficking. Cambodia was sanctioned as one of the worst offenders at one time, but it has made some arrests in recent years of sex traffickers.

Lagon welcomed the recent arrest of a Russian businessman in Sihanoukville on charges of debauchery, but he said the US wanted to see better enforcement of trafficking laws.

"That's a step forward," he said, "but we want to see more."

Friday, November 16, 2007

Only 2-3% of police take bribes from criminal suspects???

Police chief admits 2-3% of police take bribes from criminal suspects

By Cheang Sokha
Phnom Penh Post, Issue 16 / 23, November 16 - 29, 2007

Once again, the city police flunk the corruption test. Two weeks ago it was the traffic police. This time it's the police who are supposed to be carrying out the arrest warrants for robbery.

The Phnom Penh Municipal Court confirmed last week for the Post that more than 1,000 arrest warrants issued by the court dating back to 2004 have not been carried out by the police, amid allegations that police routinely solicit bribes from suspected criminals' families to evade arrest.

"The court had the role to issue warrants and the police are the enforcer in arresting suspects," said Municipal Court Chief Chev Keng. "So far more than 1,000 cases remain in the hands of police."

Keng made his comments following a report by local newspaper Kampuchea Thmey which quoted a court official as saying the rising number of armed robberies in Phnom Penh and on the outskirts of the city are a result of the failed arrest warrants.

"Some arrest warrants police carried out properly," the unnamed official said. "But some others they did not, in exchange for monthly bribery."

The court official said many of the cases are criminal cases of robbery, or other types of theft such as pickpockets.

Asked by the Post about the allegations, Phnom Penh police commissioner Touch Naroth said it was true that some police are guilty.

"I recognized that only 2 or 3 percent of them did that, but with minor crimes, not serious crimes," he said.

Naruth also said the police cannot get all the suspects because they move from place to place to escape arrest.

"We are working hard to keep social security," Naroth said. "If we do not arrest the perpetrators, the problem will come back to the police, not to the court."

He said compared with last year, crime is down 30% in Phnom Penh.

Meanwhile at Phnom Penh municipal hall, Governor Kep Chuktema said authorities are ashamed they cannot crack down on repeated robberies of the so called AK-47 Group, which threatens people in the suburbs. Many of the AK-47 robberies occurred in Dangkor district of Phnom Penh, in Kandal Stung and Ang Snuol district of Kandal and recently spread to Kampong Speu province but police never arrest and bring them to jail.

"The case of AK-47 rifle robbery is a new issue for police but sooner or later they will be arrested," said police chief Naruth.

Sok Sam Oeun, executive director of Cambodian Defenders' Project, said the court should investigate irregularities in the work of police after arrest warrants are issued to make sure police are enforcing them, but in reality the courts are sometimes to blame.

"When irregularities happen involving a perpetrator neither the court nor police dare to take responsibility." Sam Oeun said sometimes courts issue warrants without waiting for a police request, which is contrary to procedure.

In 2005, the Ministry of Interior found nearly 200 court cases within Phnom Penh municipal court that had irregularities regarding the release of suspects.

Prime Minister Hun Sen's "iron fist" campaign to reform the court system was initiated due to these kind of problems. As part of that, eight Phnom Penh municipal court judges and prosecutors were expelled, suspended and rotated. However a year later they were re-appointed to work in different courtrooms by the Supreme Council of Magistracy, chaired by King Norodom Sihamoni.

Friday, September 28, 2007

Cops warned not to accept bribes

Thursday, September 27, 2007
Everyday.com.kh
Translated from Khmer by Heng Soy

General Touch Naroth , the Phnom Penh police commissioner, warned his police officers that they will be removed from their position in punishment for accepting bribes from people who needs to obtain their identification cards, or address books. During a meeting of police officers, Touch Naroth said that any police officers who are continuing to demand bribes from people who come to apply for their identification cards or address books, will be removed from their position and will be punished with jail time just like (what the law did to) the underground society. Touch Naroth’s reaction came after it was learnt that a small group of police officers are demanding from people between $10 to $150 before providing them with identification cards or address books. As he is issuing his order to local police officers telling them to stop demanding bribes from people, Touch Naroth also advised his local police officers to push the population to apply for their identification cards starting from 26 September, so they can vote during the upcoming 2008 general election.

Saturday, June 23, 2007

Experts to FBI: Be Wary of Tradeoffs With New Office

Special Agent Thomas Fuentes, who is in charge of the FBI's overseas offices, says rights advocates should be happy to see the Bureau's new office in Phnom Penh.

Brian Calvert, VOA Khmer
Original report from Washington
22/06/2007


[Editor's note: this is the second in a two-part series examining the FBI's new office in Phnom Penh]

The US Federal Bureau of Investigation's expanded presence in Cambodia has renewed a broader debate over human rights in the war on terror, and observers warn that the US agency could be judged hashly by history.

The FBI is one of the US's leading counterterrorism agencies. Its new office in Phnom Penh drew fire from rights groups who said their job was made harder by the FBI's approval of Cambodia's security apparatus. Security experts say there are good reasons for the office, but the FBI must be careful to vet who it works with.

"It's a very slippery slope, especially in a country like Cambodia where there is so much corruption," said Zachary Abuza, a professor of political science at Simmons College in Boston and an expert on Southeast Asia.

The FBI should be careful dealing with Cambodia, he said, although the Bureau's presence could be positive.

"You like to think that they will have influence and be able to improve the quality of the services you are working with," he said. "And sometimes it works and sometimes it doesn't."

Cambodia is a major transshipment point for people, money and drugs in Southeast Asia, Abuza said, areas of interest for both the US State and Justice departments and a good reason to have an office in Cambodia, as the FBI seeks to expand the number of legal attaches around the world.

Meanwhile, the FBI's presence is not likely to make things worse, said Michael O'Hanlon, a foreign policy expert at the Brookings Institution in Washington. The danger for the US, he said, is guilt by association with Cambodian rights abusers.

"I do think there's a risk that we will be seen as complicit in any future abuses they commit," he said. "And so that's the tradeoff."

Washington has likely determined that smart Cambodian policy means tending a working relationship, O'Hanlon said, even if it means giving abusive officials greater legitimacy. However, the FBI should not overreach.

"I think you also have to keep your own expectations in check, and the FBI should be careful here with its own rhetoric," O'Hanlon said. "They don't want to oversell the benefits of this collaboration for Cambodia's own quality of governance."

Thomas Fuentes, Special Agent in Charge of Overseas Operations for the Federal Bureau of Investigation, manages 75 offices around the world. The newest of these opened in Cambodia in March.

Fuentes said in a recent interview that so far the cooperation with Cambodian police has been productive. Fifty police trained with the FBI in the US Embassy last year, even before the new office opened in the capital. Although Fuentes won't give details, he said agencies from the two countries have ongoing investigations into a self-described anti-Hun Sen movement, the Cambodian Freedom Fighters, and the agencies have thwarted active terror plots.

So far, however, there is little evidence the FBI is entering a critical relationship with the Cambodian police.

"As a matter of course, we expect that we're going to have a relationship with a professional, honest, law-abiding police agency, and to date our relationship with the Cambodian National Police has been at the highest level of professionalism," Fuentes said.

It's that kind of rosy view that rights workers like Brad Adams, the Asia director for Human Rights Watch, are warning against.

"There is absolutely nothing professional about the Cambodian police," Adams said. "I mean, they are headed by a man who has been involved in extrajudicial executions, drug trafficking, human trafficking. His chief deputies are people who have well-documented records of the very same thing. That's an appalling statement, to suggest that they've been operating at the highest level of professionalism with the Cambodian police. That's nonsense. And any Cambodian who heard that would be shocked, because the police have a terrible reputation in the country, of being completely corrupt, and abusing people, not protecting them."

Lao Mong Hay, a Cambodian researcher at Hong Kong's Asian Human Rights Commission, indicated that in recent years, the FBI's own reputation has been damaged by the US's insistence to detain terror suspects at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba.

"Lately, the FBI, with regard to counterterrorism, has not been known as respecting human rights very well," he said.

Whether the FBI can overcome these concerns, in a country where human rights receive scant attention already, remains to be seen. For now, the office is an open question, a small attaché in the US Embassy, searching for terrorists and criminals, and not, it is hoped, befriending them.

Thursday, May 31, 2007

When corruption begets cheating: Fake police colonel dupes real police

The arrested cheater

The confiscated fake uniform (Photo: Ratanak, Koh Santepheap newspaper)

Thursday, May 31, 2007
Fake police colonel dupes real police

Koh Santepheap newspaper

Phnom Penh City – A man was arrested by the Tuol Kok district police working in cooperation with the Phsar Depot 2 police force, on 29 May at midnight. The arrest was made in front of the Long Huor guest house, and the man is accused of pretending to be a police colonel and deputy-director of the personnel office of the Ministry of Interior. He is also accused of cheating police officers by asking them money in exchange for his help to obtain promotion and (police) position. During the arrest, the police confiscated a uniform and insignia, as well as a number of documents and name tag used by the suspect to cheat. The name tag bears the name of Men Chandara, a colonel working as the deputy-director of the personnel office of the Ministry of Interior.

The police said that the name of the accused man is Ung Chandara, aka Khin Chandara, aka Men Chandara, he is 37-year-old and came from Kompong Chhnang province. He currently lives at the Long Huor guest house where he is conducting his cheating activities against police officers. After confirming that he is a fake police officer, the Tuol Kok police, in cooperation with the local police, waited for the suspect in front of Long Huor guest house until he arrived from a banquet.

A source indicated that the suspect wore a police uniform with a colonel insignia. He pretended to be the deputy-director of the personnel office of the Ministry of Interior and cheated on many police officers, each of the police officers lost between $200 to $300, when the suspect claimed that he would help facilitate their promotion, or would get them a police position, whereas in reality, he is a fake police officer. The suspect used to be a monk at a pagoda in Kompong Chhnang, and after leaving the order, he came up with this cheating scheme. After the arrest, a police officer came forward to complaint that he was cheated of $220 by the suspect who promised to help him be promoted from master sergeant to lieutenant. Several other police officers also fell for this cheating scheme, as well as a number of people who wanted to become a police officer. The suspect is currently being questioned by the police regarding this cheating scheme.