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| FILE - A person uses a smartphone to look at the Facebook page of Cambodia's Prime Minister Hun Sen during breakfast at a restaurant in central Phnom Penh, Cambodia, Oct. 7, 2015. |
US to Train Cambodian Government on Combating Cybercrime
VOA | 29 June 2016
PHNOM PENH—
The United States has invited senior Cambodian officials to learn about cybercrime from U.S. experts.
Numerous countries and nongovernmental organizations have expressed
concern in recent years over the drafting of a Cambodian cybercrime law,
which critics say could be used to restrict freedom of expression and
stifle political dissent as Cambodians increasingly turn to social media
websites such as Facebook to share their political opinions.
Kan Channmeta, a secretary of state at the Ministry of Posts and
Telecommunications, said he estimates about 7 million Cambodians —
almost half the population — now regularly use the internet.
U.S. Ambassador William Heidt said in early June that the United
States wanted to work with the Cambodian government to ensure Cambodians
have freedom of expression online.
"Cybercrime is a real problem in the United States and Cambodia as
well, so we are working with Cambodia," Heidt said when proposing the
training. He said they would bring officials to the U.S. "to see how our
cyberlaw works; how the United States enforces and prosecutes
cybercrime."
FILE
- University students from the Royal University of Phnom Penh check the
Internet in a coffee shop along the city's Russian Federation
Boulevard, June 13, 2014.
"We'll make sure that your internet remains a place for free expression as well," he said at the time.
Win over young voters
Phay Siphan, spokesman for the Council of Ministers, said that while
the government welcomed the training, not everything that applied in the
U.S. would work in Cambodia.
"I am interested in U.S. standards regarding their culture of
strengthening their national security and the knowledge of their
nation," Siphan said, adding that U.S. cybercrime laws will be used as
reference points for Cambodia.
"We take [the law] as a reference since, though we are not there yet,
we are prepared for the coming years when our economy is booming, and
standards of living are better and the law is respected," he said. "So
we want to collect elements to put into drafting of the cybercrime law."
Siphan suggested government officials in Phnom Penh may encounter
barriers to implementing anti-cybercrime measures, citing the dispute
between the FBI and Apple, which centers around the extent to which
courts can compel technology manufacturers to unlock encrypted
cellphones.
Ability to tackle cybercrime
General Khieu Sopheak, spokesman for the Interior Ministry, said the
level of knowledge among Cambodian authorities on how to tackle
cybercrime remains low.
"Technology advances very quickly, and some countries will not catch
up with the developed countries," Sopheak said. "The knowledge [on
cybercrime] is sometimes beyond our capacity. As you may know, we are
not a country that produces computers or programmers.
"Most of the programs [we use] are from [the U.S.], so I am very
happy that our experts could absorb more advanced technology in
developed countries, particularly the U.S.," he said.
Sopheak also said the government is perturbed by Khmer-Americans who
use Facebook as a platform to hurl insults at Hun Sen and other
government leaders.
"I want them to stop, and if such cases happen, I would like the U.S.
officials to cooperate, at least to let them know that although they
are American, they have to respect Cambodian traditions," he said.


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