[Background / related]
![]() |
| How Vietnam "foil plots" (democratic elections) to keep its CPP puppet in power in its destruction of Cambodia |
...
Ministry: Budget Critics Don’t Value ‘Flesh and Blood’ Sacrifices
Cambodia Daily | 29 November 2016
Critics of increased peacetime defense spending don’t value the
sacrifices of soldiers and personnel, whose salaries and other costs
make up three-quarters of the Defense Ministry’s budget, the Finance
Ministry said in a statement.
Criticizing an increasing budget for
defense and security means “looking down on and giving no value to
those who dare to sacrifice fresh flesh and blood for the nation and
bring peace to the nation and people,” the ministry said in a post on
its Facebook page.
Opposition party lawmakers criticized next year’s national budget before its passage last week for providing big peacetime bumps to state security that could have been directed at social welfare programs.
“Generally
in the world, many countries, including high-powered countries, do not
publish their… spending for their defense and security sectors because
this information is related to a country’s security,” the ministry’s
statement said on Friday.
Nonetheless, the ministry said it had decided to publish data on spending for the ministries of defense, interior and justice.
Next
year’s combined budget of $850 million for the three ministries is
equal to 3.87 percent of Cambodia’s GDP, up from 2.92 percent in 2013,
the statement said. The Defense Ministry, at 2.09 percent of GDP, was
the largest of the three. Employee spending accounted for nearly 78
percent of the combined budget, it said.
Spending has increased by about 27 percent to account for a pay hike for all civil servants, which will boost salaries to $250 a month by 2018, the ministry said.
Chhum
Socheat, a spokesman for the Defense Ministry, said on Monday that the
pay hike would bump soldiers’ minimum salaries an extra $100 monthly.
“The government needs to raise their salaries…even though they do not complain at all about their standard of living,” he said.
The country could not neglect personnel training during peacetime, Mr. Socheat said.
“When
the nation faces war, we use soldiers, but when the nation stays in
peace, we need to strengthen our forces like providing them with more
training to be ready for a sudden event,” he said.
Opposition
lawmaker Son Chhay said on Monday that the ministry’s rebuttal was
unwarranted, given the CNRP first proposed government pay raises in the
2013 national elections. But the soldiers were not the main recipients
of the money, he claimed.
“What exactly is the number of
employees? And how do they pay them?” he asked. “Nearly half of the
employees are just a name—not a person. We believe that there are a lot
of ghost soldiers around.”
Ou Virak, director of the Future Forum
public policy think tank, said he was more concerned about “the lack of
deep reform within the military,” which had been involved in land grabs,
illegal logging and human rights abuses.
The military’s main problem, Mr. Virak said on Monday, was a “lack of independence and partiality.”
“The spending is justifiable, but the lack of real reform in the military is not,” he added.

No comments:
Post a Comment