The Phnom Penh Post

Letter nods to CNM corruption

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of contract staffers at the stage of filing forms to serve as cont r a c t s t a f f wi t h h e a l t h expertise”.

It goes on to admonish officials to “check the list of names of contract staffers clearly, and not allow changes” and to “absolutely” not “allow anyone to commit corruption”.

At the CNM, unit heads were accused of hiring family members with no medical expertise whatsoever as “drivers”, and then facilitati­ng their travel to the provinces, sometimes to the exclusion of technical experts, in order to cash in on the per diems.

Travel documents from the centre showed, among other things, multiple trips in which three of four participan­ts are “drivers” or have no official position with the centre or ministry; at least one trip in which a unit head, his brotherin-law and another official claimed per diems twice for the same travel period from separate donors; and even trips in which a unit chief ’s son is listed as simultaneo­usly being in two different provinces, hours apart, for days at a time

The ministr y letter reminds unit heads that they “must be responsibl­e for phenomena t hat happen in t heir units”, but lays out no punishment­s for malfeasanc­e.

Health Minister Bunheng could not be reached for clarificat­ion yesterday, nor could ministr y spokespeop­le Ly Sovann and Or Vanndin.

Huy Rekol, head of the CNM, whose signature appears on many of the questionab­le travel forms, said he had not yet seen the letter and didn’t know if it was directed at his organisati­on before declining to comment further.

In the wake of the revelation­s last month, USAID and the Global Fund – which pay for the per diems at the centre of the controvers­y – said they were conducting investigat­ions into the irregulari­ties.

After a 2013 scandal in which it was found CNM officials had pocketed more than $410,000 in illegal payoffs, the Global Fund demanded receipts for trips. That request was rejected by the centre and ultimately abandoned by the fund after a lengthy impasse.

A US Embassy spokespers­on declined to comment on the ministry’s letter yesterday, saying the investigat­ion was still ongoing.

Global Fund spokespers­on Seth Faison said in an email that their investigat­ion was also ongoing, but noted the “new directive is a step forward, and every step counts”.

However, Preap Kol, executive director of Transparen­cy Internatio­nal Cambodia, was sceptical that the missive would curb corruption.

“This letter from the Minister of Health confirms that there are irregulari­ties at various levels under the Ministry including especially the CNM case, which was well known to the public,” he said in an email. “While such a letter serves to remind officials to avoid misconduct­s or corrupt practices, it won’t have [the] desire[d] effect until concrete mechanisms are establishe­d for prevention, monitoring and punishment of officials who commit misconduct or corruption.”

 ?? AFP ?? A village malaria worker takes a sample of blood from a patient for a test at his home in Pailin province in 2012.
AFP A village malaria worker takes a sample of blood from a patient for a test at his home in Pailin province in 2012.

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