The Phnom Penh Post

Kheng: Stop discrimina­ting

Local officials urged to work with everyone regardless of politics, religion

- Mech Dara

MINISTER of Interior Sar Kheng on Wednesday instructed police officials and local authoritie­s to serve the people without considerin­g political affiliatio­ns or religion.

In the handover ceremony of 1,646 motorbikes to police stations nationwide, Kheng told police officials that they must serve the people regardless of political leanings or religion, and that they need to resolve people’s problems regardless of which party they belong to.

“Police officials have an obligation to help all people, not only one group, and to protect them without discrimina­tion. Commune councils and chiefs who receive the people’s mandate have an obligation to help the community to ensure the security and developmen­t of their communitie­s and liveli- hoods,” he said.

Kheng said if local leaders do not have good vision and resort to political, racial or religious discrimina­tion, it would lead to divisions within their communitie­s.

He said village leaders, in particular, must bring harmony to their village, lest frag- mentation and division take root.

“People can join a political party. It is their business and we must respect their rights and decisions. It is their business to join a party … We should not think that this

person is with this party and that person is with that party … Thinking like that violates the law. So please, do not d i s c r i minat e,” Kheng said.

Neutral and Impartial Committee for Free and Fair Elections executive director Sam Kuntheamy said in Cambodia, issuing such instructio­ns won’t eliminate discrimina­tion or labelling at the local level.

“Racial and political discrimina­tion has been happening in Cambodia for a long time, despite government leaders addressing it.

“We can see that the Ministry of Interior has issued such instructio­ns many times, but it keeps happening in the village and by commune chiefs and commune councils. They discrimina­te on the basis of political leanings,” he said.

People with political persuasion­s that are different from village and commune officials, he said, found it difficult to receive public services at the commune hall.

However, he agreed that if they can end the practice of discrimina­tion, communitie­s can better develop and grow.

A former lawmaker with the court-dissolved Cambodia National Rescue Party, Cheam Channy, said: “The instructio­n is the right thing and I support his speech, but officials at the local level continue to discrimina­te.”

 ?? SRENG MENG SRUN ?? Minister of Interior Sar Kheng.
SRENG MENG SRUN Minister of Interior Sar Kheng.

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