In a strongly worded article, outgoing US
Ambassador William Todd has called on the Cambodian government to properly
consider controversial new legislation governing NGOs, trade unions and the
internet, a call welcomed by civil society representatives yesterday.
In the
piece, published on Sunday and written during an ongoing trade mission to the
United States, Todd expressed his pleasure at the interest in Cambodia he has
encountered from businesses there, but warned: “To take advantage of this
interest, Cambodia must project an image that attracts foreign investment,
technology and human resources.”
“Cambodia’s
image is affected” by the controversial legislation, he cautioned, backing a
“call to action” from the 27-nation Community of Democracies – an
intergovernmental coalition – which has urged the Cambodian government to
release a copy of the proposed NGO law and implement it thorough consultation
with civil society.
“As the
Cambodian government considers the next steps, it is important to realise that
the world is watching,” he writes.
The plea
comes after years of wrangling over the draft NGO law, and less than two weeks
after 272 local and international NGOs released a joint statement demanding the
government immediately suspend plans to adopt it, fearing it will curb
organisations’ freedom of movement.
Speaking
yesterday, local rights groups welcomed Todd’s message.
“Every
voice in this movement is important,” said Adhoc technical assistant Stella
Anastasia. “We hope the international attention will push the government to
move towards the right direction.”
That
message was reinforced by Cooperation Committee for Cambodia’s head of
communications Sin Putheary, who demanded “a meaningful consultation with civil
society”.
Meanwhile,
Human Rights Watch – which published its own strongly worded rebuke of the
draft NGO law last month – highlighted the fears that continue to swirl around
the legislation.
“All of
these draft laws purportedly contain highly problematic, rights abusing
provisions that raise questions about whether they should be passed at all,”
said Asia division deputy director Phil Robertson.
In April,
Prime Minister Hun Sen said the NGO law could be passed this month, despite the
fact consultation with civil society representatives only took place during a
previous draft.
But
speaking yesterday, government spokesman Phay Siphan insisted the most recent
draft would be made available to NGOs, but must first be reviewed by the
Council of Ministers and signed off on by the prime minister.
“When it
becomes an official draft law it goes to the National Assembly,” he said. “Then
there will be some consultation with NGOs.”
Siphan
also defended the cybercrime law, insisting it would only bring the country’s
laws up to speed with legislation seen elsewhere in the world.
“It’s
aimed at hackers, not at freedom of expression,” he said.
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