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| Deputy Prime Minister Sar Kheng (centre left) presents the incoming Stung Treng governor, Mom Saroeun, with an official stamp late last year during a handover ceremony. Photo supplied |
The CPP loyalist’s guide to success
Phnom Penh Post | 7 October 2016
Seang Kosal was “sleeping” on
the job, Interior Minister Sar Kheng thundered in April last year after a crime
wave involving robberies, stabbings and shootings swept through Sihanoukville.
A little over nine months after
his appointment as police chief of the coastal province, Kosal was ousted, “transferred to the ministry”, and
appointed as deputy director of the tourism police department.
His fate is far from unique.
Government insiders and
observers alike say that the Cambodian People’s Party, which built and
maintains an iron grip on the state apparatus, has its own system for dealing
with mistakes, be they real, perceived or political.
Public officials are rarely
formally disciplined or fired, sometimes despite serious allegations of
misconduct, incompetence or corruption [not unlike the UN and other big bureacrazies!].
Those who displease their
superiors publicly, or who fall out of favour privately, instead find themselves
transferred to bureaucratic backwaters where, out of the limelight, they stay
loyal and wait for redemption.
“The party always allows people
to make mistakes, but the leadership, they take the opportunity to see how you
respond,” said one long-time observer.
“They move you to an inactive post, and you learn how to watch and
wait . . . as long as you don’t go to another
party, go out and talk badly, or take revenge, you can be sure that at the
right time, with the right envelopes to the right people, you will come back.”
Efforts by the Post to track down Kosal in
recent weeks and establish the responsibilities of his new job, or whether he
still held the job, proved difficult. His boss, head of the tourism police Som
Siyan, said the former police chief was still employed as a deputy and
“responsible for several provinces”.
Reached by phone yesterday,
Kosal, however, said he was “retired” and hung up.
Kicking the wind,
reading the newspaper
Two expressions are used to
describe an official on the outs, a Ministry of Defence official recently told
the Post. A person
relegated to the blacklist is said to be “kicking the wind”, or “kicking the
air” – both which mean unemployed – or he is said to be “reading the
newspaper”.
“Working at the ministry [for
them] is just like going to read the newspaper,” the source, who requested
anonymity, explained. “You go to work but don’t do any work.”
Ministries have long been
haunted by “ghost workers” – bureaucrats on the books but not at their desks.
Within his department, the source estimated that just 20 percent of employees
could be considered “active workers”.
He said that to rise in the
Ministry of Defence, loyalty to the commander must be absolute. Visible shows
of support and, in particular, raising funds for the boss to contribute to the
party are the best way to secure a promotion.
Those who don’t show loyalty or
who upset their superior are “blacklisted” – excluded from tasks and unable to
rise.
Professional stagnation is not
necessarily a bad thing, though, and can be particularly suitable for those
with businesses or jobs on the side, he saidBut for those who have a genuine
desire to work honestly, any spirit of public service is quickly crushed.
“There are only two options: be
loyal to your commander and be promoted, or don’t and get frustrated,” he said.
“A person who is hardworking and honest, the system changes them.”
Behind closed doors, said a
consultant who works with the government and who has extensive knowledge of the
party, three factors regulate an official’s conduct: their ability to do their
job, contributions to the party and the influence of their patron. The latter
he called “the most important”.
“You might not contribute a lot
to the party, but you really make your boss rich,” the consultant said. “When
you put these together, you can see why some incompetent people keep their jobs
and others are kicked out easily.”
A Justice Ministry official told the Post simply being suspected of making a mistake – perhaps of supporting the opposition party – might see you ostracised, though not necessarily transferred.
“Sometimes they transfer you
from one position to another, but sometimes he or she will be isolated from
their area of responsibility,” said the anonymous official.
“They will be pushed out, and
someone will replace them. They still have the position, but someone else does
it for them. And then eventually he’s outside. It’s sort of like mental
torture.”
The system
Sebastian Strangio, author of Hun Sen’s Cambodia, says
exiling officials to “patronage Siberia” is a way for the CPP to balance its
obligations as a state and its stability as a party. It provides “effective
discipline” but keeps officials “in the fold”, leaving the underlying patronage
system intact.
“The entire party-state
apparatus is made up of a complex mesh of personal dependencies, which gives
Cambodian politics something of the quality of a game of Snakes and Ladders,”
Strangio said.
“People can rise on a whim and
fall on a suspicion. How far an individual falls is of course dependent on an
ever-shifting equation of power among and between the top brass. No individual
is ever entirely safe.”
Such was the lesson learned by
Ty Sokhun when he was ousted as Forestry Administration director-general in
2010 amid criticism from Hun Sen for failing to stop illegal logging.
“Consider this a life lesson to
try to work harder,” the premier at the time told the official, who has since
been promoted to a secretary of state and yesterday hung up on a reporter.
Unsurprisingly, no mention was
made of the 2007 Global Witness report that implicated the FA and
members of Hun Sen’s family in a timber smuggling racket and accused Sokhun and
then-minister for Agriculture Chan Sarun of selling more than 500 jobs within
the body.
Sokhun’s fall, recalled veteran
Cambodia-based environmental activist Marcus Hardtke, also bore a striking
resemblance to Sarun’s own ousting from chief of the FA more than decade
before, after which he climbed back up to become minister.
“Nothing really changes,” said
Hardtke, calling it a “game of rise and fall”.
Enduring trend
In recent months, several
officials have found themselves publicly chided and quietly transferred.
Briefly imprisoned by
authorities in South Korea on allegations of sexual assault in May, Kry Seang
Long, the former director of the Education Ministry’s vocational orientation
department, serves as one example.
Bailed out by the Foreign Ministry
in May, Seang Long drew public condemnation from his superiors in Phnom Penh –
but only after his alleged unwanted advances against a translator in Seoul
came to light on the sidelines of an education conference weeks later.
Yet he remains on the public
payroll as “administration official”, said Education Ministry spokesman Ros
Salin, who called the move the “highest punishment” that could be delivered by
a disciplinary council unless there was a court verdict delivered.
Then there is the case of Long
Rokha, transferred in September from his post as head of
immigration at Ratanakkiri’s O’Yadav border checkpoint to the legislation
bureau in Phnom Penh amid accusations of illegal mining links.
Or the scolding and suspension
of former Kam Rieng district police chief Phan Vannara, who in January was shunted to a new role at the provincial headquarters when,
amid a countrywide crime spike, it emerged that he was out of town during a
fatal home invasion.
And although not everyone keeps
an official job, titles can sometimes suffice. When long-time sub-national
official Kol Sam Ol was replaced in December last year as governor of Stung Treng
province by Mom Saroeun, he was made a government adviser.
At the replacement ceremony,
Sar Kheng was franker than those beneath him – who cited the civil service
retirement age of 60 (Sam Ol was 58) – and reportedly criticised the province’s
lack of action in combating cross-border smuggling.
When contacted recently, Stung
Treng provincial spokesman Men Seng denied his old boss had fallen out of
favour; in fact, he says, it was quite the opposite.
“It’s a promotion,” Seng said,
although he concedes that Sam Ol, who has proved unreachable, now has “no
relation with the ministry”.
An old system, a new age
Though long effective at
controlling the public service, as the elections approach, the CPP faces a
growing challenge in dealing with the tension between state performance and
party loyalty, said Caroline Hughes, a professor at the University of Bradford
in the UK.
Hughes, a Cambodia expert, said
the growing demand for better and more complex public services, and the rise of
youth within the government, mean, more and more, the most effective official
might not be the most loyal.
For a party that can only
understand loyalty in terms of personal connections, rather than adherence to a
set of legal principles, this poses a significant problem.
“If you start to fire people
who have been loyal, then the system will absolutely collapse. You get a real
problem when the unquestioning loyalty and the effective performance
increasingly diverge,” Hughes said.
However, Youk Bunna, a
secretary of state at the Ministry of Civil Service tasked reforming the
sector, disputed this, and argues that merit – not loyalty – is the most
valuable currency within the public sector. Positions, he said, do not belong
to bureaucrats, who are entitled only to their professional grades and the
accompanying salary rates.
Bunna said it was up to the
government “to decide to move [civil servants] from one position to another
based on merit or the need of public service”.
He said instances in which
officials are switched to a less active position are simply a reflection of
their abilities.
“It’s based on your capacity,”
he said. “If the minister or the prime minister assess that you don’t have the
qualifications for that position, you can be transferred to a less responsible
position.”
Bunna said ongoing reforms aim
to define more clearly the nominating processes, job criteria and
responsibilities for each position.
This, he said, will help to
avoid “loopholes” that could lead to “the perception” that political motives
are a determinative factor when it comes to appointments, promotions and
transfers.
One state, one party,
one man
For all the reforms aimed at
increasing transparency within the public sector, it’s clear that one man’s
word is final when it comes to government decisions, including the fate of its
thousands of staff.
“I am very happy and thankful
that Samdech [Hun Sen] forgave me,” senior Interior Ministry Lieutenant-General
Mam Srim Vanna told reporters after being fired and then rehired by the premier in July after
his berating of a traffic policeman for daring to issue him a ticket went viral
on social media.
Seeking to portray himself as
responsive to citizens concerns, Hun Sen has embraced Facebook with gusto. The
platform has given him a window through which to broadcast snap decisions and
sweeping policy changes.
But it’s also given people an
opportunity to peer back and see the abrupt and personalised style in which he
presides over the political system.
One such display took place
last month, when the premier called ABC Radio and removed Phnom Penh’s health chief, Sok Sokun, after city
health authorities seized an unlicensed ambulance belonging to the station, a
decision the premier disagreed with.
Moved to a new role in the Health Ministry, Sokun made it
clear he was simply doing his job – but noted that in the civil service, that’s
not all that matters.
“We need to respect the top
leader when he assigns us or promotes us to fulfil [a different role],” he said
at the time.

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