The Borneo Post

Cambodia orders US NGO to close, expels foreign staff

-

PHNOM PENH: Cambodia yesterday closed a prominent American NGO and ordered its foreign staff to leave the country, the latest salvo by Prime Minister Hun Sen against perceived critics before a general election next year.

The order comes a day after the strongman premier threatened the Cambodia Daily, one of the country’s few remaining critical newspapers, with closure over an alleged unpaid tax bill of US$ 6.3 million, calling them ‘thieves’.

In a statement yesterday the Ministry of Foreign Affairs said foreign employees of the National Democratic Institute ( NDI) have seven days to leave after the group allegedly failed to formally register or pay correct taxes.

“Authoritie­s are geared up to take the same measures against any foreign associatio­n or nongovernm­ent organisati­on that fails to abide” by Cambodia’s laws, the statement added.

In recent weeks a string of foreign- funded organisati­ons including the NDI have been named in Cambodia’s progovernm­ent press or by officials as facing tax or regulatory probes.

Analysts say the cascade of legal cases is straight from the political playbook of Hun Sen, who has cornered opponents throughout his three- decade rule, in the runup to elections.

Cambodians are due to go to the polls in just under a year, in a poll many expect to be a close-run affair. Apart from the Cambodia Daily, which is owned by an American, the US-funded Radio Free Asia and Voice of America have also been legally targeted. All have denied wrongdoing and said they are being selected for their independen­t reporting.

In a statement the Overseas Press Club of Cambodia said the Cambodia Daily ‘has a history of running stories that have angered the government, leading many to believe the tax department is being used to target critics’ before the poll.

The NDI, which says it works to strengthen democratic institutio­ns worldwide, has been operating in Cambodia since 1992.

In recent weeks, progovernm­ent media have accused the organisati­on of helping Cambodia’s opposition party to try to topple the government.

The NDI, chaired by former US Secretary of State Madeleine Albright, did not immediatel­y respond to requests for comment.

But they have previously declared themselves as ‘strictly non-partisan’, adding they also trained many members of Hun Sen’s ruling party.

To supporters Hun Sen, one of the world’s longest serving leaders, has brought growth and stability to an impoverish­ed country ravaged by decades of war.

But critics say corruption, inequality and rights abuses have also flourished.

In recent years, he has grown closer to China while criticisin­g the US, one of Cambodia’s largest donors.

In 2015, the government passed a broadly-worded law regulating NGOs. Critics warned the legislatio­n would make it much easier to shutter organisati­ons deemed critical of the government.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia