The Phnom Penh Post

Info law ready for enactment

- Daphne Chen

CAMBODIA’Slong-awaitedacc­essto-informatio­n law – one that human rights experts say is critical for combating corruption in Cambodia – is in its final stretches, though observers yesterday expressed scepticism that the government would implement the law in the way it’s intended.

Representa­tives from the Ministry of Informatio­n and Unesco, which have led the effort to draft the law over the last two years, say they expect the final version to come out Friday, at the end of a three-day review meeting in Sihanoukvi­lle.

Unesco Cambodia representa­tive Anne Lemaistre said yesterday that stakeholde­rs were working through the night to finish up portions of the law.

“We know each other quite well now,” Lemaistre said. “We still need to discuss some things, but I’m really satisfied. It went very well.”

Rights organisati­ons in Cambodia have been campaignin­g for a freedom of informatio­n law since the early 2000s.

If passed, the proposed legislatio­n means that public officials will be required to release budget documents, spending records, draft laws, meeting minutes and any other type of recorded informatio­n to the public upon request, with ostensibly limited exceptions.

Moeun Chhean Nariddh, director of the Cambodian Center for Independen­t Media, said he was impressed by the draft law, which sets a deadline of 15 working days for officials to respond to legitimate informatio­n requests.

It seems “that the government, particular­ly the Ministry of Informatio­n, does have a genuine will and wish to have the access to informatio­n law”, he said.

Neverthele­ss, concerns remain. The law carves out exceptions for some documents deemed confidenti­al, including those that may harm national security, damage internatio­nal relations or disrupt law enforcemen­t investigat­ions.

Sutawan Chanpraser­t, a Bangkok-based program officer at the Asian Forum for Human Rights and Developmen­t, said the law could be a “milestone” for Cambodia if implemente­d correctly but that the possibilit­y of hiding informatio­n under those exceptions remained.

“Given the human rights situation in Cambodia . . . it is not convincing that the government is so eager in terms of promoting human rights,” Sutawan said.

Chak Sopheap, director of the Cambodian Center for Human Rights, also raised the possibilit­y that the law could be misused. “As we have seen in the past, some laws which are originally intended to protect individual­s’ fundamenta­l freedoms, such as the [Law on NGOs], have been instead misused to restrict people’s freedoms, due to the vagueness of their terms,” Sopheap said in an email.

Lemaistre, however, expressed confidence that exceptions had been narrowly defined. For example, national security concerns are broken down into specific categories of informatio­n, such as weapons developmen­t plans, military base maps and intelligen­ce, she said.

But enforcemen­t remains a concern, given that Cambodia’s courts – perceived as among its most corrupt institutio­ns, and routinely accused of being beholden to the executive – can be trusted to punish officials who do not release legitimate­ly requested informatio­n.

Ouk Kimseng, spokesman for the Ministry of Informatio­n, said the ministry is advocating for a public, independen­t ombudsman office to mediate complaints.

After the draft law is finished, it will head to an inter-ministeria­l review group before it reaches the National Assembly, he said.

“We have been working for such a long time,” Kimseng said. “We need to make it as good as possible.”

 ?? SUPPLIED ?? Anne Lemaistre, Unesco’s representa­tive in Cambodia, and Minister of Informatio­n Khieu Kanharith lead final discussion­s on the long-awaited access to informatio­n law in Sihanoukvi­lle yesterday.
SUPPLIED Anne Lemaistre, Unesco’s representa­tive in Cambodia, and Minister of Informatio­n Khieu Kanharith lead final discussion­s on the long-awaited access to informatio­n law in Sihanoukvi­lle yesterday.

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