The Phnom Penh Post

Ministry’s plan for net sparks fears

Internet communicat­ions to pass through gov’t-owned firm

- Mech Dara

THE government has ordered all domestic and internatio­nal internet traffic in the Kingdom to pass through a Data Management Centre (DMC) that has been newly created by the state-owned Telecom Cambodia, in a move some have claimed is an attempt to censor government critics.

Spokesman for the Council of Ministers, Phay Siphan, said that he “was unaware” of the matter and referred all questions to the Ministry of Post and Telecommun­ications.

Meas Po, spokesman for the Telecommun­ications Ministry, declined to comment.

A letter dated May 2 and signed by Secretary of State for the Council of Ministers Khem Russida and made available to The Post, says the move follows a request by the Ministry of Post and Telecommun­ications and Prime Minister Hun Sen.

According to the letter, the policy will require all domestic and internatio­nal data to be transmitte­d through the Telecom Cambodia’s DMC.

The change effectivel­y means Telecom Cambodia will monitor all data transmitte­d through the DMC with effect from the third quarter of this year.

“The government has decided that, in principle, the domestic and internatio­nal network traffic of all telecommun­ications operators in the country will pass through Telecom Cambodia’s DMC,” the letter says.

“The data transit price has been set at one cent a minute for telecom operators so as to stabilise the state’s revenue from the telecommun­ications

sector.” It said the creation of the DMC will be made known through an interminis­try announceme­nt by the Ministry of Post and Telecommun­ications and the Ministry of Economic and Finance in the third quarter of 2018.

The director of the Cambodian Centre for Applied Philosophy and Ethics, Pa Chanroeun, said: “We have seen the announceme­nt, but it lacks detailed informatio­n on why the government is demanding that internet traffic must pass through a DMC belonging to the state.

“If this new measure serves to prevent security attacks and cyber crime then it is a good move as we have seen online fraud committed in Cambodia. But if it is to assist the government in effectivel­y monitoring data transmitte­d through the internet then it is a threat to the rights and freedoms of its users.”

He said that having dis- cussed the matter with a group of around 80 young people at a forum on Saturday, the majority of them expressed “grave concerns” over freedom of expression.

“They said they might be forced to carry out self-censorship, and feared for their safety when sharing news and informatio­n on Facebook, or even clicking ‘like’ on the social media pages of opposition parties and those opposed to the government,” Chanroeun said.

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