The Phnom Penh Post

Memo hints at EBA concern

As Hun Sen goads West, minister quietly notes massive cost of sanctions

- Hor Kimsay and Ananth Baliga

WITH Prime Minister Hun Sen publicly daring Western countries to impose sanctions in response to the recent dissolutio­n of the country’s main opposition, the minister of commerce has quietly expressed concern at the staggering customs bill Cambodia would incur should the EU suspend its preferenti­al trade treatment, a leaked letter to the premier shows.

Internatio­nal pressure on the Cambodian government has been mounting following the Supreme Court’s near-universall­y condemned decision last month to dissolve the Cambodia National Rescue Party – the only viable competitor to Hun Sen’s longruling Cambodian People’s Party. The EU and US have already pulled funding for Cambodia’s National Election Committee, with the US also announcing visa restrictio­ns on individual­s involved in “underminin­g democracy”.

The EU Parliament on Friday passed a resolution calling for a review of Cambodia’s Everything But Arms (EBA) trade preference­s, even suggesting a temporary withdrawal. The EBA allows tariff-free imports to the economic bloc on account of Cambodia’s least developed country status.

The resolution prompted a fiery response from Hun Sen, who on Sunday said he would not be a “dog that acts just for only a bone or a piece of meat”,

and dared the EU to “cut it!”

However, in a leaked letter dated December 4, Commerce Minister Pan Sorasak informs the prime minister that removal of these preference­s would incur a $676 million tariff cost based on the $6.2 billion in exports to the EU in 2016. Suspension of preferenti­al access to the US market for certain goods would incur a $10 million bill, he added.

Reached yesterday, Sorasak did not deny the authentici­ty of the letter, but downplayed its significan­ce.

“It is just an official document sent to Samdech [Hun Sen] for sharing some informatio­n,” he said, refusing to comment further on the contents of the letter.

Maintainin­g a sombre tone throughout, Sorasak notes in his letter that the tariff payments to the US are “just small”, but goes on to point to the exponentia­lly higher payments to the EU, before noting that the sector employs more than 400,000 workers.

The minister also suggests that the government should lobby “friendly” EU member states.

“Cambodia should lobby any friendly countries that are members of EU through diplomatic and business networks, because the EU mostly has soft [response] and more understand­ing of Cambodia’s situation,” the letter reads.

Government spokesman Phay Siphan also declined to comment on the letter’s contents, but said removal of the EBA would be a slow process and that he did not expect the EU to take a knee-jerk decision. “As per my experience,

 ?? SUPPLIED ?? Commerce Minister Pan Sorasak speaks at an event earlier this year.
SUPPLIED Commerce Minister Pan Sorasak speaks at an event earlier this year.

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