The Phnom Penh Post

China cops to issues in S’ville

- Hor Kimsay and Brendan O’Byrne

THE Chinese Embassy acknowledg­ed yesterday that some of its citizens were contributi­ng to criminalit­y and adverse economic effects in Cambodia, attributin­g the issues to a few bad apples, while also touting the overall benefits of Chinese investment in the country.

The remarks came during a two-hour press conference hosted by the normally tightlippe­d embassy in Phnom Penh following a series of media reports highlighti­ng issues Cambodian businesspe­ople and officials say are caused or worsened by an influx of Chinese investment and immigratio­n in Cambodia – particular­ly in the coastal town of Sihanoukvi­lle.

“The Chinese government has been informing Chinese who go overseas to countries like Cambodia that they need

to strictly obey the laws of Cambodia, respect their traditions and communicat­e with the people peacefully,” Ambassador Xiong Bo told reporters through a translator yesterday.

“While the majority of Chinese people can follow this order from the Chinese government, a small amount of low-educated people break the law in Cambodia,” he added.

Sihanoukvi­lle in particular has been a hotspot for tensions between Chinese and Cambo- dian business owners, with locals saying they have been evicted or pushed out by richer Chinese investors and rising land prices, and police noting an uptick in illegal activity such as money laundering, human traffickin­g and illegal casinos.

In response, the Cambodian government set up an interminis­terial task force last month to address the issues, and the Chinese ambassador yesterday urged authoritie­s to take the necessary legal measures to stamp out illegal activity involving Chinese citizens.

“The Chinese Embassy, the Chinese Government, calls on Cambodian law enforcemen­t institutio­ns to strengthen their enforcemen­t, and we are committed to working together with Cambodia to build Cambodia’s rule of law,” he said, adding that despite the close relationsh­ip between the two country’s government­s, China “appeals to law enforcemen­t institutio­ns in Cambodia to take more strict action against those who violate the law”.

He also maintained that the misbehavin­g Chinese citizens were a small percentage of the more than 1 million Chinese tourists who visit Cambodia each year, and criticised them for harming the reputation of all Chinese people in the country.

China has long been Cambodia’s top trading partner, and the two countries have grown politicall­y closer in recent years. Prime Minister Hun Sen stymied an attempt by Asean leaders to criticise China’s position in the contested South China Sea in 2016, and the Chinese government has provided public support for the Cambodian government’s widely criticised dissolutio­n of its main political rival in November last year.

Business ties between the two countries have also grown in recent years. China overtook Vietnam to become the top country of origin for tourists to Cambodia last year, and Ambassador Xiong said yesterday that bilateral trade between the two nations rose to $5.7 billion last year, up from $4.8 billion the year before.

At the end of the press conference, the ambassador also took a swipe at media reports that suggested Chinese money flowing into Cambodia was part of a money-laundering operation, calling them “political” and untrue, a position also espoused by Cambodia’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs.

The remarks were an apparent reference to a New York Times story published last month that quoted Bangkok-based political risk consultant George McLeod as saying, “I am convinced that laundered money from the PRC [People’s Republic of China] is a substantia­l portion of property investment in Phnom Penh.”

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Cambodia