The International Labor Organization estimated this month that corruption drains off about 10% of the country’s GDP, or $1.7 billion a year, and Cambodia ranked a lowly 160 of 177 countries in Transparency International’s 2013 rankings of corruption perceptions.
Justice delayed
Cambodia’s corruption is so pervasive, even slam-dunk cases get buried
When the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria unveiled a detailed 88-page report
in November exposing how Cambodian government
officials solicited nearly half a million dollars in bribes, a spokesman
for the ruling Cambodian People’s Party vowed that justice would be
served.
“It is very essential to do an investigation and send the case to court,” Cheam Yeap told the Cambodia Daily.
“It doesn’t matter whether or not the alleged corrupt officials remain
in position or resign…. They must face prosecution for committing
corruption.” [blah, blah, blah, blah...]
“We
recognize this case, but we don’t have enough evidence for the
accusations,” Om Yentieng, head of the government’s anti-corruption
unit, told reporters this week, according once again to the Cambodia Daily.
“Our reputation will be damaged and the Global Fund’s too. … the
government would also be criticized, then how could the people trust the
government anymore?”
The
Global Fund, set up with the help of donors like Bill Gates, accused
three top Cambodian health officials of taking $410,000 in bribes from two anti-malarial mosquito-net manufacturers, Switzerland’s Vestergaard Frandsen and Sumitomo Chemical Singapore.
Covering
up $410,000 in bribes may barely register on the outrage scale,
especially as Cambodia’s longtime strongman prime minister, Hun Sen, is facing a genocide complaint filed with the International Criminal Court this week. But it’s emblematic of what ails the Cambodian economy.
The International Labor Organization estimated this month that corruption drains off about 10% of the country’s GDP,
or $1.7 billion a year, and Cambodia ranked a lowly 160 of 177
countries in Transparency International’s 2013 rankings of corruption
perceptions.
The
country’s economy has expanded at a rapid pace in recent years,
attracting manufacturing businesses that have fled higher labor costs in
countries like China. But critics fear that pulling Cambodians out of
poverty will be difficult while corruption remains so widespread.
“Business people, both local and foreign, have identified corruption,
particularly within the judiciary, as the single greatest deterrent to
investment in Cambodia,” the US state department concluded last year.
The
Global Fund, which has spent $331 million in Cambodia over the last
decade, declined to comment on the anti-corruption unit’s decision. “We
are working with Cambodia’s government to get repayment on funds
identified as misused,” a spokesman told Quartz. “While we do not
currently plan to cut or reduce funding to Cambodia because of that
process, we may need to make adjustments as we evaluate future grants.”
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