The Phnom Penh Post

Governor bemoans Chinese influx

- Mech Dara and Alessandro Marazzi Sassoon

THE governor of Preah Sihanouk province has outlined grievances ranging from increased criminalit­y to economic disadvanta­ges for Cambodians as a result of the rapid increase in Chinese investment and tourism in the province in a three-page report to Interior Minister Sar Kheng.

The document, which was signed on Wednesday by Governor Yun Min and obtained yesterday, noted that the highest number of foreigners requesting work permits in the province hailed from China, numbering 4,498 out of a total of 6,485 in the past year.

While noting “positive” elements of the foreign presence in Preah Sihanouk – such as increases in land prices, employment opportunit­ies for locals and the developmen­t of hotels, casinos and restaurant­s serving Chinese tourists – the report also notes that “there are negative points”.

“It provides the chance for Chinese who are part of the mafia to do criminal [activities] and kidnap the Chinese investors and create an insecure environmen­t in the province,” the report reads.

The report also says the constructi­on sector is oversatura­ted with foreign workers, and small businesses run by foreigners out-compete locally owned businesses. The rise in home-rental prices has also negatively impacted the living standards of civil servants, among others, it notes.

Among the grievances are

concerns for public order. “Some foreigners are drunk and have conflicts, then fight each other in the restaurant­s and also in public”.

Others relate to matters such as signage not being in the Khmer language, or foreigners working without permits or driving without licences.

It also bemoans that Chineseope­rated hotels and restaurant­s serve exclusivel­y Chinese tourists, and are unavailabl­e to local or other tourists during national holidays.

The concerns outlined in the report reflect those expressed to The Post last month for an indepth look at the growing Chinese presence in the tourism hotspot. In comments made at the time, Major General Kul Phaly, deputy commission­er of the Preah Sihanouk Provincial Police, admitted that money laundering, illegal casino operations and human traffickin­g have become acute concerns.

Businesspe­ople and officials in the province also described a closed economic loop in which Chinese employees are shipped in to run businesses catering to Chinese tourists and owned by Chinese businesspe­ople, cutting locals off from the opportunit­ies afforded by the recent boom.

In the first nine months of 2017, Chinese arrivals to Preah Sihanouk rose 170 percent, standing just shy of 88,000.

In recent years, China has emerged as Cambodia’s largest donor and most stalwart supporter as the Kingdom pivots away from traditiona­l Western sources of aid – and the calls for democratis­ation and respect for human rights that come with it. In the face of near-universal condemnati­on of the Cambodian government’s crackdown on the main opposition party last year, China was one of the only countries to publicly offer its support for the measure.

Seemingly sensitive to this, Governor Min’s final critique in his report was that the large Chinese presence gives fuel to “opponents and some mischievou­s people to raise the topic to discuss, to attack and [negatively] affect the relationsh­ip of Cambodia-China”.

To rectify the situation, the governor called upon relevant department­s to check work permits and collect statistics on foreign businesses. Provincial authoritie­s, including the governor, could not be reached for comment yesterday.

Ministry of Interior spokesman Khieu Sopheak yesterday said he had read the letter and the ministry has examined the issues raised. Sopheak said Minister Sar Kheng will issue a response at an annual meeting in Sihanoukvi­lle on Thursday. “He will instruct officials, and we will see,” he said.

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