The Phnom Penh Post

Corruption complaints halved

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regarding public service,” he said. “But complaints in relation to the state budget remain high.”

Yet representa­tives of civil society groups who cover corruption yesterday said they were not so sure the drop in complaints was anything to celebrate.

The number of complaints to the ACU may have actually dropped simply because no one had any faith that the government unit would ever do anything, said Mam Sitha, executive director of the Human Rights Organizati­on for Transparen­cy and Peace.

“Complaints from people have been ignored or dealt with ineffectiv­ely, and that makes people lose trust in this institutio­n,” Sitha said. “This institutio­n just deals with the cases they want to. So, citizens are fed up and that made the number of complaints drop.”

Often when the ACU receives complaints of corruption, it seeks the official’s explanatio­n. It then publishes the response on its website, and considers the case closed. Sitha said it was therefore little wonder people were filing fewer and fewer complaints. “The ACU should not just receive the complaint and call the accused to clarify it, and then let it be. They have to investigat­e with other sources,” Sitha explained. “This institutio­n just tries to make itself look good rather than serving the national interest.”

Preap Kol, country director for Transparen­cy Internatio­nal, whose Corruption Perception­s Index last year ranked Cambodia as having the highest perceived levels of corruption in Southeast Asia, said that he, too, wondered if people simply had no faith in the ACU. “In general, I have found that corruption in the open and in the public service has dropped in recent years – for example for making national identifica­tion cards, family books, residency books, or other services under the Ministry of Interior,” Kol said.

“But for the drop in complaints, there is still the question: Is this because of a drop in corruption, or because people do not believe that there would be any result from their complaints?” he said. “This needs to be studied or surveyed with the people to find out.”

The ACU was establishe­d in 2010 and – despite Cambodia frequently coming in at the bottom of global corruption indices – it has so far only prosecuted a case against one truly top-level government official: Moek Dara, the former national anti-drug czar. It also last year arrested Suth Dina, Cambodia’s ambassador to South Korea, over accusation­s of graft.

San Chey, director of the Affiliated Network for Social Accountabi­lity, said that Yentieng, who was formerly one of Prime Minister Hun Sen’s closest advisers, should go after more top-level officials if he wants to rebuild the ACU’s credibilit­y.

“High-level corruption, I believe, is still big,” Chey said. “In infrastruc­ture, for example, we suspect that there is heavy corruption [in the form of ] collusion between the companies and government officials.”

“Also in natural resource management, like in forestry, I suspect that there is still a lot of corruption,” he explained. “We want to see the ACU hit these areas, which involve millions of dollars.”

However, Yentieng said the ACU was proud of its recent performanc­e and unfazed by any criticism. “Recently, there have been a lot of internatio­nal institutio­ns who came to check our law performanc­e,” he said, adding that the reports had been positive and that the critics should check themselves. “The ACU is not the tool of any person – it is the tool of law.”

 ?? SUPPLIED ?? ACU members met earlier this week to discuss what they characteri­sed as a recent drop in corruption.
SUPPLIED ACU members met earlier this week to discuss what they characteri­sed as a recent drop in corruption.

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