OGP workshop agenda in Cambodia

credit photo: CCC-Cambodia

OGP

After Malaysia, it was the turn of Cambodia to host the OGP Workshop in Asia Pacific countries. Taken place in Sunway Hotel, Phnom Penh, the OGP Workshop in Cambodia is not only attended by the CSOs from Indonesia, Philippine, and Cambodia, but also attended by the representative of CSOs from Vietnam coordinated by Toward Transparency Vietnam. Representatives of the government of Cambodia also attended the workshop such as the members of the parliament, Mr. Undersecretary of State and Deputy Head of the National Committee for Sub-National Democratic Development Secretariat (NCDDS) Ngan Chamroeun, the Head of Anti-Corruption Unit of Cambodia Dr. Om Yentieng, representatives from the Ministry of Education, Youth and Sport and the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and International. In addition to that, Mr. Undersecretary - CIO of the Philippine Department of Budget and Management Richard Bon Moya as the representative of the government of Philippine and Karina Kusumawardani the Associate Director of UKP4 as the representative of Indonesian government was also present along with the representative of the donors like Mr. Alexander Irwan from Ford Foundation, Ms. Haidy Ear-Dupuy from Asia Development Bank (ADB) and others from GIZ, Oxfam, and USAID.

Since Cambodia is still in the reforming process, its CSOs find it necessary to organize this workshop - just like what they have expressed in the OGP Asia Pacific Regional Conference in Bali, last Mei 2014. The purposes of this workshop as Mr. Soeung Saroeun the Executive Director of CCC said are to disseminate OGP’s values, mechanisms, goals and communities to the governments and CSO communities and to share the advantages of joining OGP.

In this two-day-workshop, besides sharing the advantages of joining OGP, the representative of both Indonesian and Philippine government represented by Ms. Karina Kusumawardani and Mr. Bon Moya also shared their experience in developing partnership with civil society.

Speaking of the criteria of OGP, Cambodia still needs seven more points to become eligible. Discussions during the workshop showed that more points could be obtained from the field of Access to Information and Asset Disclosures. Currently, Cambodia already has an existing Anti-Corruption law that has an article on non-public Assets Disclosures for senior public officials and it is expected that the parliament would amend the law and change the article to make it into a public assets disclosure by 2016. For Access to Information (ATI), currently Cambodia has 3 different policy framework proposals and the government has invited 3 CSOs, all of which are part of a bigger civil society coalition of Access to Information with 30 CSO Members, to participate in the drafting of an ATI bill. It is projected that by 2017 Cambodia, under the leadership of the Ministry of Interior, would have an ATI law, and the country would be the third country in Southeast Asia that has an ATI law after Indonesia and Thailand.

Though Cambodia has made a progress in the field of Access to Information and Assets Disclosure, they are still struggling in the field of Fiscal Transparency and the progress might be slow. However, there are youth groups that are eager in pushing demands for budget transparency.

To know more about the OGP Workshop Agenda in Cambodia, click the link below.

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