The Phnom Penh Post

Global Witness slams forum for hosting PM

- Andrew Nachemson

GL O B A L Wi t n e s s slammed the World Economic Forum (WEF) onWednesda­y for allowing Prime Minister Hun Sen to host an event at this year’s meeting, accusing it of providing “a platform for brutal tyrants to find new internatio­nal business partners”.

In a release, the group urged the WEF to turn away Hun Sen and other “despots”, based on human rights violations. The group also repeated claims from their 2016 investigat­ion that Hun Sen and his family “own or control . . . most of Cambodia’s most lucrative industries”.

The WEF meeting is an annual gathering in Davos, Switzerlan­d, of business leaders, economists and political leaders to discuss various world issues.

“The Davos summit claims to be ‘committed to improving the state of the world’. If this is true, it should close its doors to despots like Hun Sen,” said Global Witness representa­tive Alice Harrison in the press release.

In response, government spokesman Phay Siphan took to Facebook yesterday, calling Global Witness “a devil NGO” and praising Hun Sen’s “internatio­nal and dynamic leadership”.

JustinWood, head of theWEF’s Asia-Pacific department, said Harrison’s characteri­sation of his organisati­on was “inaccurate”.

“We are a platform that brings together all stakeholde­rs in society to work collective­ly on big challenges,” he said via email yesterday. Wood also explained that the WEF’s partnershi­p with the Cambodian government allowed his organisati­on to work on projects that benefit all Cambodians, such as infrastruc­ture developmen­t.

Later this year, Cambodia will host the WEF’s ASEAN summit, something that Wan-Hea Lee, the UN’s human rights representa­tive in Cambodia, said could help draw attention to rights issues in the business sector. “Corruption, in particular, has been identified as a key impediment to the ease of doing business in Cambodia. The conference could serve to encourage improvemen­ts in this area.”

Opposition party spokesman, Yim Sovann, also accused the ruling party of human rights violations, but he stopped short of echoing Global Witness’s call for a ban on participat­ing in the WEF. “We want to attract good investors to Cambodia,” he acknowledg­ed yesterday.

“[TheWEF] should advise him to improve the political and business environmen­t.”

Harrison said she supported efforts to develop Cambodia but warned that funds are often misused. “We would urge WEF to conduct thorough checks to ensure that their support is genuinely helping the people who need it, and not enriching the country’s elites.”

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