The Phnom Penh Post

NEC and JICA to educate workers

- Channyda Chhay and Martin de Bourmont

THE National Election Committee (NEC) is collaborat­ing with the Japan Internatio­nal Cooperatio­n Agency ( JICA) to educate factory workers about voting procedures in the upcoming commune elections, the Ministry of Labour announced on Tuesday.

Some labour leaders, however, questioned the value of the move, saying that ignorance and indifferen­ce are not the principal factors obstructin­g workers’ votes.

According to NEC spokespers­on Hang Puthea, JICA would dispatch its advisers to special economic zones (SEZs) and provincial factories. There, said Puthea, JICA advisers would hold rallies with officials from the local Provincial Election Committees (PECs) to “explain the importance of the vote”.

Svay Rieng Provincial Election Committee Director Em Sot said that JICA organised one educa- tional rally for workers earlier this month in Bavet town’s SEZ. At the rally, Sot said, the JICA advisers distribute­d posters and screened a movie about the importance of voting.

JICA experts responsibl­e for the project did not immediatel­y respond to requests for comment yesterday, and the Ministry of Labour referred all questions back to the NEC.

Though generally supportive of efforts to promote voting among workers, labour representa­tives yesterday highlighte­d intense workdays and a lack of voting options for migrant workers as the primary obstacles to workers voting – not unfamiliar­ity with the process.

Cambodian Alliance of Trade Unions (CATU) President Yang Sophorn claimed that nearly all 100,000 members of her union were registered to vote. While she welcomed further encouragem­ent, Sophorn said some workers complained to her that they found it difficult to register due to their demanding work schedules.

If the government wishes to encourage workers to vote, said Moeun Tola of labour rights group Central, they should allow Cambodian migrant workers to vote from overseas.

“We need to settle polling stations in Cambodian embassies and consulate offices in Thailand, South Korea and Malaysia to offer them the opportunit­y to vote.”

Citing the estimated 1 million Cambodian workers living in Thailand, Tola argued that“if you look at the [number of Cambodian migrant workers] you could fill up more than 20 seats at the National Assembly”.

 ?? FACEBOOK ?? CNRP members vote in favour of the party’s re-selection of three deputy presidents at a closed-door meeting yesterday in Phnom Penh.
FACEBOOK CNRP members vote in favour of the party’s re-selection of three deputy presidents at a closed-door meeting yesterday in Phnom Penh.
 ?? HENG CHIVOAN ?? Garment workers produce items of apparel at a factory in Kandal province. The NEC, in collaborat­ion with JICA, will hold sessions to educate garment workers about the upcoming commune elections.
HENG CHIVOAN Garment workers produce items of apparel at a factory in Kandal province. The NEC, in collaborat­ion with JICA, will hold sessions to educate garment workers about the upcoming commune elections.

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