The Phnom Penh Post

PM: Law likely next week

World in need of another 6M nurses

- Niem Chheng

PRIME Minister Hun Sen said the draft law aiming to place the Kingdom in a state of emergency amid the Covid-19 pandemic is likely to be approved after the Khmer New Year, though he said there is a slim chance of enforcemen­t given the current situation.

Speaking during a press conference at the Peace Palace in Phnom Penh on Tuesday, he said the bill has to be passed by the two legislativ­e bodies and reviewed by the Constituti­onal Council before being promulgate­d by the King.

The draft law is being reviewed by the National Assembly’s (NA) two specialise­d commission­s, which will send it back to the NA’s Standing Committee before putting it up for deliberati­on and approval during its plenary session.

Hun Sen said the NA will hold its plenary session on Friday. After passing the bill, the NA will send it to the Senate for deliberati­on. The prime minister said it may take the latter a week to approve the draft law – or longer if the Senate delays its session during the Khmer New Year next week.

Once approved, the bill will be sent to the Constituti­onal Council for review.

“Now [Tuesday] it’s April 7, Friday is April 10, when [the draft law] is approved by the National Assembly. April 13-16 is Khmer New Year. So, I predict the bill will become law after the New Year,” he said.

However, Hun Sen stressed that the likelihood of enforcing it is only 0.1 per cent as he was over 99 per cent sure that the Kingdom can contain the Covid-19 pandemic.

The Ministry of Health on Tuesday confirmed one more infection, bringing the total reported in the Kingdom to 115. Of the number, 58 have been discharged from hospital.

The latest case was found in a 27-year-old Vietnamese

AS COVID-19 captures global headlines, the World Health Organisati­on (WHO) warned on Tuesday that the world needs nearly six million nurses.

The UN’s health agency along with partners Nursing Now and the Internatio­nal Council of Nurses (ICN) underscore­d in a report the crucial role played by nurses, who make up more than half of all health workers worldwide.

“Nurses are the backbone of any health system,” WHO chief Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesu­s said in a statement.

“Today, many nurses find themselves on the frontline in the battle against Covid-19,” he noted, adding that it was vital they “get the support they need to keep the world healthy”.

The report said that there are just under 28 million nurses on the planet. In the five years leading up to 2018, the number grew by 4.7 million.

“But this still leaves a global shortfall of 5.9 million,” the WHO said, pointing out that the greatest gaps were in poorer countries in Africa, southeast Asia, the Middle East and parts of South America.

The report urged countries to identify gaps in their nursing workforce and invest in nursing education, jobs and leadership.

ICN chief executive Howard Catton told a virtual briefing that infection rates, medication errors and mortality rates “are all higher where there are too few nurses”.

In fighting the pandemic, Mary Watkins, who co-chaired the report for Nursing Now, called for urgent investment in virus tests for healthcare workers.

“We have a very high proportion of healthcare workers not going to work because they’re afraid that they’ve been infected and that they can’t prove that they have not got the infection – or that they’ve had it, and they’re over it,” she said.

woman who left Svay Rieng province’s Bavet town on March 2. She returned to Cambodia on March 10.

“Cambodia is not in an emergency situation, but we need to have this law in hand,” Hun Sen said, adding that he would not wish to use it as it would undermine civil rights and economic growth.

The law also has many side ef fects, he said wit hout elaboratin­g.

“When the situation gets out of control, we will need to enforce it. No questions asked. If, for instance, the government bans mass gatherings because it could transmit the disease and you don’t comply, then we will have to enforce it,” he said.

The draft law was approved by the Council of Ministers’ Standing Committee last Tuesday. Consisting of five chapters and 11 articles, it stipulates a maximum 10year imprisonme­nt for anyone caught breaking it.

The bill sets out formalitie­s, procedures and terms for a declaratio­n of a state of emergency if the country runs into danger. It aims to maintain national security and public order, lives and public health, properties and the environmen­t.

The draft law has drawn some criticism among civil society organisati­ons.

On Monday, four NGOs – Civicus, Forum-Asia, Frontline Defenders and Civil Rights Defenders – said they were concerned about the bill’s “draconian provisions”. They claimed it would provide unfettered power to the executive, thereby underminin­g fundamenta­l freedoms with no defined endpoint.

“The government must immediatel­y revise the draft law to bring it in line with internatio­nal human rights laws and standards.

“If not, these emergency powers will be used as yet another weapon in Cambodia’s legal arsenal to quash dissent, stifle critics and silence human rights defenders,” the NGOs said.

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