The Phnom Penh Post

US and Cambodia talk cybersecur­ity ongoing assistance

- Khorn Savi

US AMBASSADOR Patrick Murphy met with Minister of Interior Sar Kheng on Wednesday to discuss bilateral collaborat­ion including on issues of civil society organisati­ons and democracy in Cambodia.

But cybercrime seemed to be the prevailing topic at the meeting.

Murphy posted on Twitter: “Productive meeting with DPM Sar Kheng on U.S.-#Cambodia law enforcemen­t cooperatio­n & over $11M in U.S. aid for efforts to fight #COVID19KH.

“The meeting discussed the importance of a v ibrant civ il societ y and t he need for a ll voices to contribute in a democracy.”

The interior ministry’s Facebook page posted that at the meeting Sar Kheng expressed hope that relations between the two countries, especially during Murphy’s tenure, will continue to grow even further.

Sar Kheng told Murphy at the meeting that Cambodia is speeding up its draft laws concerning counter-proliferat­ion financing and anti-money laundering. The two laws are vital for Cambodia, according to Sar Kheng’s Facebook page.

He said Murphy expressed interest in the draft laws on cybercrime and emphasised that the US wants to send more experts to Cambodia to help draft the law.

US Embassy spokeswoma­n Emily Zeeberg told The Post on Wednesday that cybercrime is a growing threat globa lly and the US government regularly engages with government­s on cybersecur­it y issues.

She said an expert from the US Department of Justice (DoJ) participat­ed in a workshop with ministry officials in January to discuss Cambodia’s draft cybercrime law.

The DoJ official, she said, shared feedback as well as best practices to help ensure that the law protects online freedoms and local innovation, which will make Cambodia’s digital economy attractive to investors.

“The US Embassy has offered to facilitate future engagement with leading US technology companies to help the government understand how such firms can contribute to Cambodia’s cybersecur­ity efforts as well as inform authoritie­s on how such laws impact US investment decisions,” she said.

The Ministry of Interior’s Anti-Cybercrime Department director Chea Pov said the draft law is coming along smoothly despite the Covid19 outbreak. It is about 70 per cent finished and due to be completed this year.

He said the US has always helped Cambodia in drafting the law. And what Murphy mentioned at the meeting is that the US wanted to send experts from its major technology companies to help draft it.

“They have helped us since a long time ago and they just want to add experts. In the past, they helped us with terminolog­y and they explained the definition­s so we can take Khmer words to match it,” he said.

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