Editorial by Khmer Circle: 
Most of the reliable records suggest that the Cambodian regime is the first and worst human rights violator. The EU not only have its core principles governing the EBA to defend as conditions for granting trade privileges to a special group of countries with Cambodia's development profile but also presently is being forced to 'blacklist' Cambodia among countries posing a threat to the EU financial system due to the Cambodian regime's alleged sponsorship of money laundering on a massive scale. 
Cambodia - on statistics - is among the fastest developer in Asean. One just wonders how much of the country's growth statistics is inflated by illegal money laundering and any other criminal activities while Cambodia remains the hub of both domestic and international criminal networks?
The major concern that many observers have with the current regime is that given its conformity to an old Communist totalitarian administrative structure; a system that puts the ruling party's wishes and interests above all else, never mind the fundamental needs and rights of the vast majority of Cambodians - not only in these trying times - what impact, if any, will a given governmental financial 'relief scheme' have upon those currently in economic hardship whom the scheme is meant - or more accurately - purports to reach out to? Bearing in mind that the same administrative model had served to pit Cambodians against one another in the seventies and to disenfranchise large segments of the population according to the central leadership's definition of party allegiance and other social-biological characteristics, the answer to the question should be safely in the negative.     
What we have witnessed and learned is that authoritarian regimes thrive upon the backs of their poor and dispossessed populations who serve these regimes as effective human-shields. While such impoverished populations are kept in desperate need of economic development and improvement, their un-elected regimes demand international aid or trade privileges of some sort of the world community and yet, while these same populations demand their basic human rights and entitlements they would be violently and brutally suppressed!
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While Cambodia struggles to cope with Covid-19, EU policies are hurting the very people whose 'rights' it wants to protect
By SIM VIREAK
JULY 3, 2020
AT

A Cambodian garment worker in front of a factory in Phnom Penh. Western policies have hit the country's garment industry hard. Photo: AFP / Tang Chhin Sothy
To Cambodia as well as the rest of the world, the Covid-19 pandemic has presented the worst form of challenges to fundamental human rights, ranging from the right to life to decent jobs, education, food and shelter. The loss of direct income due to the disruption of global production and supply chains has already forced 400 garment, footwear and travel-goods factories in Cambodia to suspend their operations, leaving more than 150,000 workers jobless.
Amid these challenges, Cambodia recently launched a large-scale cash transfer program for poor and vulnerable households to sustain the livelihoods of those hit hard by the Covid-19 crisis. The government is expected to spend US$25 million monthly, benefiting 560,000 households or 2.3 million Cambodian people.
Some critics say this social-security scheme is “too little” as it will not do much to help people cover their expenses, noting that residents of Phnom Penh need at least $300 a month to meet their needs while those in rural areas require at least $190.
Cambodia has received both punishment and assistance in this difficult time.
While Cambodia is trying to cope with the pandemic, the Swedish government decided to phase out development cooperation with the Cambodian government to refocus its support only on human=rights and democracy aspects.
Last year, then-European Trade Commissioner Cecilia Malmström, a Swedish national, launched a procedure to suspend Cambodia’s trade preference under the framework Everything But Arms (EBA), which would hit hard the multibillion-dollar garment industry in Cambodia. Ironically, it was she who also came all the way to Vietnam, a communist state, to sign the EU-Vietnam Free Trade Agreement in June of the same year.
In a contrasting position, the Swedish retailer Hennes & Mauritz (H&M) has pledged to continue placing orders to improve the garment industry’s situation. The differing approaches by Sweden’s government and its private sector represent different voices in a democratic country.
However, it is still difficult to understand when one hand is trying to help yet another is doing otherwise.
For example, while the European Union is mobilizing about $504 million to support Cambodia’s fight against the pandemic and mitigate its socio-economic impact, at the same time, it is about to eliminate trade preferences, which may cut off billions of dollars of direct incomes to a few million Cambodian garment workers and their dependents.
This is not to underestimate the EU’s development assistance, which has contributed significantly to Cambodia. But the lingering question would fall under the debate on “trade-not-aid.”
For Cambodia, trade represents direct income to its people. The more diversified the trade, the wider the demographic scope whereby the income can reach the people directly. For Cambodia, trade offers a stronger chance of economic independence and self-reliance. Cambodia’s weak point still lies on its small market power and production capacity as compared with its two larger neighbors, Thailand and Vietnam.
As far as aid is concerned, even if China and Japan are Cambodia’s largest donors, Cambodia’s exports to these two countries have remained small compared with those toward the US and the EU. For instance, Cambodia exported only $1.3 billion worth of goods to China in 2018, and $1.7 billion to Japan in 2019, as compared with $3.8 billion to the US in 2018 and $6 billion to the EU that year.
Cambodia is now trying to negotiate free-trade agreements with China and SouthKorea, while an FTA with Japan seems still to be far away. Some countries provide Cambodia a lot of trade preferences but only on items that it has no capacity to produce. Non-tariff measures have also been used to mitigate Cambodia’s ability to export, even though on the surface, it seems like those countries have provided many concessions.
In this debate, a piece written by the late secretary general of the United Nations, Kofi Annan, back in 1999 remains relevant even today.
“They are right to be concerned about jobs, about human rights, about child labor, about the environment, about the commercialization of scientific and medical research.… It seldom makes sense to use trade restrictions to tackle problems whose origins lie, not in trade, but in other areas of policy. By aggravating poverty and obstructing development, such restrictions often make the problems they are trying to solve even worse.…
“So it is hardly surprising if developing countries are suspicious of those who claim to be helping them by introducing new conditions or restrictions on trade. They have been told time and again that free trade is good for them, that they must open up their economies. And they have done so, often at great cost.”
At a time when the country is still climbing the development ladder, “trade-not-aid” should be the next feature of discourse between Cambodia and its foreign partners if they are truly supportive of Cambodia’s stronger self-reliance and sustainable development.
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Sim Vireak is a career diplomat currently working as an adviser to the Cambodian Ministry of Foreign Affairs and International Cooperation, where he covers various portfolios related to multilateral cooperation. For academic purposes, he also supports the Asian Vision Institute as its strategic adviser. More by Sim Vireak
1 comment:
One thing we know about this Covid-19 is the ......Rich get richer and the Poor get poorer! Corporations rule this world and Covid-19 is the vehicle they use to control world's economy. This was all planned ahead of time and implemented in the name of virus crisis to scared the world into submission of the will of the few who rule this world with absolute Power. And one of them is Prince Charles. The scale of Justice was never to be balanced but to enslaved us all. If you still believe masks saves LIES you are being enslaved by Big Corporations who are making more money in this time of crisis. Bill Gates and Doc, Faccui stands to rake in Billions of dollars with their solution via vaccines for Covid-19.
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