The Phnom Penh Post

Few NGOs compliant with law

- Kong Meta and Leonie Kijewski

THOUSANDS of organisati­ons have failed to meet the deadline for filing their financial reports under the controvers­ial Law on Associatio­ns and NGOs (Lango), according to a ministry official.

Chhim Kan, director of the Interior Ministry’s Department of Associatio­ns and Political Parties, said that of the total 5,199 associatio­ns and NGOs registered with the ministry, just 621 had submitted any documentat­ion.

Lango came into force in 2015 and was met with criticism by internatio­nal and local organisati­ons, who feared it could curtail freedom of speech and the activities of legitimate NGOs. New filing requiremen­ts – which include annual and financial reports – were imposed this year, with a September 30 deadline.

Kan said just 196 associatio­ns and 425 NGOs had filed before the deadline, despite what he described as clear requiremen­ts. “The law already defines what they need to fill in,” he said.

But some NGO representa­tives reached by The Post seemed hazy about the process.

You Leak, project manager at the NGO Cambodian Farmer Economic Developmen­t, said the organisati­on hadn’t submitted any documents because they thought they should submit them at the end of the year along with their annual report.

“We want to send all of them all at once,” he said. “I asked other partner NGOs and they also said they’ll send them all at once.”

Meas Chanthan, executive director of Cooperatio­n for Social Services and Developmen­t, said he thought they didn’t have to submit any documents because his organisati­on doesn’t receive any donor funds. “If we have no funds . . . how can we have informatio­n to submit to the ministry?” he asked.

The Interior Ministry’s Kan yesterday promised consequenc­es for failing to submit reports but said noncomplia­nt organisati­ons would still be allowed to operate. “There is administra­tive punishment for violating the law,” he said.

According to Article 30 of Lango, associatio­ns and NGOs might be temporaril­y suspended after a first warning if they fail to submit the documents. If documents are still not filed, the organisati­ons could be deleted from the Interior Ministry’s register.

Kan said the ministry would send out notificati­ons requesting documents “very soon”, though he didn’t give an exact date.

Soeung Saroeun, director of the Cooperatio­n Committee for Cambodia, said he suspected the majority of registered organisa- tions had ceased functionin­g, citing a 2012 survey his NGO conducted that found only a third on the registry were active. He called for the ministry to create mechanisms helping organisati­ons comply with the law as opposed to just levying fines.

Chak Sopheap, director of Cambodian Center for Human Rights, said the rules for NGOs were onerous for small organisati­ons.

“The Lango imposes burdensome reporting requiremen­ts, something for which many associatio­ns and NGOs, and in particular small ones, may not have the material or financial resources for. One can only hope that the administra­tive provisions of the Lango will not, once again, be used as a pretext to close down, suspend, or otherwise negatively impact NGOs and associatio­ns,” she wrote in an email.

 ??  ?? Activists and NGO members march in 2015 to protest against the controvers­ial Law on Associatio­ns and Non-Government­al Organisati­ons.
Activists and NGO members march in 2015 to protest against the controvers­ial Law on Associatio­ns and Non-Government­al Organisati­ons.

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