Saturday, 11 January 2020

Cambodia still most corrupt country in Southeast Asia, says Transparency International


Khmer Circle


Phay Siphan must be the only creature/person alive or half dead on this planet earth who fails to see rampant corruption in the Kingdom of Wonder. In fact, his very own official existence itself within this CPP regime is the most telling sign and confirmation of corruption. No democratic, transparent and responsible governing administration would ever allow the likes of him near it!


^^^


While some government ministries have made progress in the fight against corruption, Cambodia continues to languish in the lower reaches of Transparency International’s 2016 Corruption Perceptions Index


EUAN BLACK
JANUARY 26, 2017
Globe

Cambodia's National Assembly
Cambodia's National Assembly
general view shows the National Assembly building in Phnom Penh, Cambodia, 30 October 2015. Photo: EPA/MAK REMISSA


”How do they know? How do they find out about corruption? How do they rank it? Because corruption is very secret, it happens in the dark side – no one knows [about] it.”

Phay Siphan



Cambodia has been ranked 156th out of 176 countries in Transparency International’s 2016 Corruption Perceptions Index, earning it the title of the most corrupt country in Southeast Asia and the third most corrupt country in the wider Asia-Pacific region.

The index, which focuses solely on corruption within the public sector, is based upon the perception of experts, scoring countries on a scale of  zero (very corrupt) to 100 (very clean). Denmark topped the rankings with a score of 90; Cambodia’s score of 21 was unchanged from last year.

While acknowledging that concrete improvements had been made by some ministries, Preap Kol, executive director of Transparency International Cambodia (TIC), highlighted the judiciary and natural resource management as the two major problem areas.

“We are still seeing gaps and shortcomings in the management of public expenditure and natural resources,” he said at a press conference held at Phnom Penh’s Raffles Le Royal Hotel yesterday morning, before adding that “corruption in the judiciary is the key issue that needs to be addressed”.


Kol’s criticism of the judiciary follows similar comments made by Om Yentieng, chairman of the government’s Anti-Corruption Unit, last Thursday at the inauguration for the new president of the Bar Association of the Kingdom of Cambodia. Yentieng used the chicken-and-egg analogy to describe the vicious cycle of corruption within the judiciary, with judges accusing lawyers of forcing them to take bribes and lawyers accusing judges of demanding them.

During the conference, Pech Pisey, TIC’s senior director of programmes, was quick to emphasise the index’s credibility.

“We did not just talk to men on the street,” he said. “We studied in detail each institution to make sure that [their] data is usable and that [the] institutions are specialised, highly reputable, independent from political interference and use scientific methodology.”

But Council of Ministers spokesman Phay Siphan questioned Transparency International’s ability to compile such a report due to the secret nature of corruption.

“The index is biased and based on double standards – I don’t believe it,” he told Southeast Asia Globe. ”How do they know? How do they find out about corruption? How do they rank it? Because corruption is very secret, it happens in the dark side – no one knows [about] it.”

2 comments:

Anonymous said...

Talking about the corruption and Transparency’ International where is Preab Kol these days? . I hope he is in the nick of wood working hard to show to the world how bad the corruption in Cambodia is.

Anonymous said...

Preap Kol said everyone is corrupt. In America when they got corrupted it involved billions, and billions, more than all wealth of Cambodia combined.

In Cambodia, the people are so poor, they will get corrupted easily to survive. That I don't mind. I just hate the big guys who had so much already and they got corrupted to get more.