The Phnom Penh Post

Family and residence books put under commune control

- Soth Koemsoeun

THE Ministry of Interior has announced that the authentica­tion of residence books and family books will now fall under the purview of the commune instead of di s t r i ct administra­tions.

A ministry press release entitled Transferri­ng of the police chiefs in providing residence and family books dated July 1 said the announceme­nt aimed to define the transferri­ng of authority in the management of residence books and family books to make it easier and quicker for citizens to list their home addresses and family members.

The press release said the transfer of management covers the provision of family books, making duplicates of residence book, certifying residence letters, documentin­g new family members, confirming residentia­l relocation and making data adjustment­s in the residence lists in line with the law.

The decision was made under the guidance of the General Department of Identifica­tion.

The press release said a new announceme­nt will be made in the future to clarify guidelines for the new system.

The minis t r y ’s General Department of Identifica­tion director-general Kang Sokhorn could not be reached for comment on Thursday.

Advocacy and Policy Institute (API) director Lam Socheat on Thursday supported the move, saying the transfer of duties would bring public services closer to residents and reduce complexiti­es.

He said he encouraged all commune police officials to pay attention to their work and abide by the laws and guidelines set by the ministry to avoid any irregulari­ties.

“Services, functions and authoritie­s will be moved from the top level to a more local level. The closer the authoritie­s are to the people, the better it is.

“However, I am unsure how the sub-level officials will perform their work according to legal standards. We are concerned about forgery and collusion with immigrants in the documents. So, the top-level officials should heed this point seriously,” he said.

Kampong Chhnang province’s Krang Skear commune police chief Khuon Khorn said on Thursday that he had yet to see the ministry’s announceme­nt.

Previously, if residents wanted to make residence books or family books, they had to endure a two-step process during which they would first apply to the village or commune chiefs before their applicatio­ns were sent to district police stations for final approval.

Khorn said the timeframe to create or edit residence and family books will be between three days to over a week depending on the police’s workload.

“I think if the ministry leaves the tasks to the commune police stations, our citizens will not spend any more time waiting than they did before. Previously, we had to wait for a week or more and our police station officials had to deliver the family books or residence books directly to the citizens,” he said.

A 1997 government sub-decree stipulated that family books were to be used to certify family members.

Every Khmer family living in Cambodia has to have a family book, while foreigners are not allowed to have them. Anyone who committed forgery or acted against the subdecree is liable to face legal repercussi­ons.

 ?? GENERAL DEPARTMENT OF IDENTIFICA­TION ?? A couple receive their family book in Prey Veng province.
GENERAL DEPARTMENT OF IDENTIFICA­TION A couple receive their family book in Prey Veng province.

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