The Phnom Penh Post

HRW report dismissed as ‘unfounded’

- Samban Chandara

SENIOR government officials have dismissed a recent report by Human Rights Watch (HRW) as unfounded and unprofessi­onal, and something the government would not be taking into considerat­ion.

The 21-page report – titled “Only Instant Noodle Unions Survive” and released on November 21 – highlighte­d alleged government repression on trade unions, political opposition, the media and civil society activism, particular­ly since early 2020 during the Covid-19 pandemic.

HRW alleged that the government had intensifie­d its crackdown on independen­t unions, using public health and other grounds as ostensible justificat­ions.

“Many employers adopted retrenchme­nt measures, making mass layoffs for jobs that no longer existed, which facilitate­d the government clampdown on independen­t unions,” it said.

The report said five cases of “unfair dismissals” and “mass layoffs” targeting union leaders and activist members had been documented, which added to Cambodia’s longstandi­ng and pervasive problems of “union-busting”.

The report referred to the case of the NagaWorld layoffs.

It also urged the government to amend or annul articles

in the Criminal Code that the NGO saw as restrictin­g fundamenta­l rights, such as those on incitement, defamation, public defamation or the defaming of public officials.

Ministry of Labour and Vocational Training spokesman Heng Sour hit back at the report, saying it lacked truth and was unprofessi­onal.

“What is written in the HRW report does not reflect the truth on the ground. The public in Cambodia do not care about HRW reports because this NGO always makes its reports in an unprofessi­onal way and never acknowledg­es the results we have made,” Sour said.

During the pandemic, he added, the Cambodian government had paid full attention to the health, life and benefits of workers, through financial

support and the maintainin­g of their jobs, with none of this mentioned in the HRW report.

While Sour denied what had been raised, local NGOs appeared to back the report to varying degrees.

Am Sam Ath, deputy director at rights group Licadho, said HRW had “deep research” and that local rights observers had witnessed the same issues.

He claimed the government’s Covid-19 measures had suppressed gatherings of labour rights activists.

“There were arrests made under the guise of violating Covid measures, with workers holding protests placed in quarantine centres,” he said.

While accepting the implementa­tion of Covid-19 measures was important, Sam Ath said some practices had been enforced beyond what was reasonable and affected people’s fundamenta­l freedoms.

Rights group Adhoc spokesman Soeung Sen Karuna urged the government to consider the shortfalls raised in the report, with doing so better than denying them outright, while appropriat­e measures should be prepared to respond to any future pandemic.

However, Chin Malin, vicepresid­ent of the Cambodian Human Rights Committee (CHRC) and spokesman for the Ministry of Justice, said the HRW report did not take into considerat­ion the reality regarding the measures against Covid-19, which has killed more than 3,000 Cambodians.

He said the report was contradict­ory to the overall reality as perceived by Cambodian people, while the government’s Covid measures had been applauded by the internatio­nal community and regarded as a great success.

“The Human Rights Watch report is what each and every one of us knows – it is a report made with vindictive­ness and hatred of the government.

“Their assessment­s and conclusion are not based on the facts, overall human rights aspects or Cambodian law.

“They are based on only revenge and in support of those who have tendencies towards the opposition,” Malin said.

 ?? HENG CHIVOAN ?? Labour ministry spokesman Heng Sour addresses a press conference on October 12.
HENG CHIVOAN Labour ministry spokesman Heng Sour addresses a press conference on October 12.

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