South China Morning Post

Cambodian officials hit with sanctions for graft at base linked to China

- Robert Delaney robert.delaney@scmp.com Additional reporting by Catherine Wong

The United States government has sanctioned Cambodian officials for alleged corruption at the Southeast Asian nation’s largest naval base, where the demolition of structures funded by Washington has drawn criticism from American officials concerned about China’s access to the facility.

Chau Phirun, director general of the defence ministry’s material and technical services department, “conspired to profit from activities regarding the constructi­on and updating of Ream Naval Base facilities”, the US Treasury Department said.

Chau Phirun, Royal Cambodian Navy Commander Tea Vinh and other government officials “likely conspired to inflate the cost of facilities at [the base] and personally benefit from the proceeds”, it added.

The new sanctions, which will bar the two and immediate family members from entering the US, are authorised by a clause in the US government’s appropriat­ions law that targets officials of foreign government­s who “have been involved, directly or indirectly, in significan­t corruption, including corruption related to the extraction of natural resources, or a gross violation of human rights”.

The US Treasury Department will freeze any assets held by the two officials and their immediate family members under the authority of the Global Magnitsky Human Rights Accountabi­lity Act, which has been invoked against Chinese government officials and groups accused of human rights abuses in Xinjiang.

The move escalates a point of friction between the US and

Cambodia that has come into sharper focus. US deputy secretary of state Wendy Sherman raised “serious concerns” during a trip to the country in June about a Chinese military presence and constructi­on of facilities at the Ream base, according to the department.

Defence Minister Tea Banh said China was helping to build infrastruc­ture with “no strings attached”. A week later, a US defence attaché was refused full access during a visit to the base, further rankling Washington.

US concerns over the Ream base rose again last month after Washington think tank the Centre for Strategic and Internatio­nal Studies released satellite images showing what it said were new structures, including three new buildings and a road.

The report by the think tank’s Asia Maritime Transparen­cy Initiative also said other areas at the base had been cleared, potentiall­y for more constructi­on. It said the purpose of the constructi­on was unclear and there were “concerns that the new facilities are being built to facilitate a Chinese military presence in Cambodia”.

Foreign Ministry spokesman Wang Wenbin said China was against unilateral sanctions on Cambodian officials. “China has long opposed the US imposing unilateral sanctions and operating long-arm jurisdicti­on, and opposes the US grossly interferin­g in the internal affairs of other nations,” Wang yesterday said.

“As traditiona­l friendly neighbours, China and Cambodia cooperate in various areas.

“Equal and mutually beneficial cooperatio­n between China and Cambodia does not allow interferen­ce by foreign forces.”

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