2001 Country Reports on
Human Rights Practices
Released by the Bureau of
Democracy, Human Rights, and Labor
U.S. Department of State
March 4, 2002
CAMBODIA
Cambodia is a
constitutional monarchy. Political stability, achieved through the coalition
government formed following the 1998 national elections, continued through
year's end. Hun Sen of the Cambodian People's Party (CPP) is Prime Minister,
Prince Norodom Ranariddh of the National United Front for a Neutral, Peaceful,
Cooperative, and Independent Cambodia (FUNCINPEC) is President of the National
Assembly, and Chea Sim of the CPP is President of the Senate. King Norodom
Sihanouk remains the constitutional monarch and Head of State. Most power lies
within the executive branch and, although its influence continues to grow
within the coalition structure, the National Assembly does not provide a
significant check to executive power. The Khmer Rouge no longer is a political
or military threat. The judiciary is not independent; it frequently is subject
to legislative and executive influence, and suffers from corruption.
The National Police, an
agency of the Ministry of Interior, have primary responsibility for internal
security, but the Royal Cambodian Armed Forces (RCAF), including the military
police, also have domestic security responsibilities. Security forces are
nominally under the control of civilian authorities, but in practice answer to
persons within the CPP. The responsiveness of local police and military
commanders to civilian authorities varies by location. Members of the security
forces committed numerous documented human rights abuses.
Cambodia is a poor
country. It has a market economy in which approximately 80 percent of the
population of 12.1 million engage in subsistence farming, with rice as the
principal crop. Economic deprivation and poor health characterize life for most
citizens. Annual per capita gross domestic product is $257. Average life
expectancy is approximately 50 years. Foreign aid is an important component of
national income. The economy grew at an estimated rate of 4.0 percent during
the year. The country has a thriving garment export industry, but has
difficulty in attracting foreign investment and mobilizing domestic savings to
support economic development.
The Government generally
respected the human rights of its citizens in a few areas; however, its record
was poor in many other areas, and serious problems remained. The military
forces and police were responsible for both political and nonpolitical
killings, and the Government rarely prosecuted anyone in such cases. There were
other apparently politically motivated killings by nonsecurity force persons as
well. The Government arrested suspects in some of these cases and convicted
suspects in two such cases. Police acquiesced in or failed to stop lethal
violence by citizens against criminal suspects; the Government rarely
investigated such killings, and impunity remained a problem. There were
credible reports that members of the security forces tortured, beat, and
otherwise abused persons in custody, often to extract confessions. Prison
conditions remained harsh, and the Government continued to use arbitrary arrest
and prolonged pretrial detention. Impunity for many who commit human rights
abuses remained a serious problem. With some exceptions, national and local
government officials lacked the political will and financial resources to act
effectively against members of the security forces suspected of responsibility
for human rights abuses. Democratic institutions, especially the judiciary,
remained weak. The judiciary is subject to influence and interference by the
executive branch and is marred by inefficiency and corruption. Politically
related crimes rarely were prosecuted. Citizens often appear without defense
counsel and thereby effectively are denied the right to a fair trial. The
Supreme Council of Magistracy disciplined 26 judges and prosecutors for
misconduct during the year but did not impose harsh penalties. Land disputes
remained frequent, and the Government and courts did not consistently resolve
them in a just manner. A new land law went into effect in July. The Government
largely controlled and influenced the content of the electronic broadcast
media, especially television. The authorities on occasion attempted to
interfere with freedom of assembly. Election related violence and intimidation
occurred less frequently than in previous national elections, and the
Government took action against some perpetrators, but not consistently.
Societal discrimination against women remained a problem. Domestic violence
against women and abuse of children were common. Discrimination against persons
with disabilities was a problem. The ethnic Vietnamese minority continued to
face widespread discrimination. Unlike in previous years, the political
opposition did not exploit actively anti-Vietnamese sentiment. The number of
trade unions grew, and they became more active than in previous years. The
Government continued to express support for freedom of association but did not
enforce freedom of association and other provisions of the Labor Law
effectively. Antiunion activity continued. Child labor continued to be a
problem in the informal sector of the economy, including in the commercial sex
industry, where forced labor was also a serious problem. Domestic and
cross-border trafficking in women and children, including for the purpose of
prostitution, was a serious problem. Mob violence, although none was ethnically
directed, resulted in some vigilante-style killings. Landmines killed 163
persons and injured 634.
In July a law entered into
force establishing a special tribunal to bring Khmer Rouge leaders to justice
for genocide and war crimes committed from 1975 through 1979. The Government is
seeking assistance and cooperation from the United Nations and will need
financial assistance from foreign donors to make the tribunal operational.
RESPECT FOR HUMAN RIGHTS
Section 1 Respect for the
Integrity of the Person, Including Freedom From:
a. Arbitrary or Unlawful
Deprivation of Life
Allegations of politically
motivated killings increased during the year as preparations for February 2002
commune-level elections began. The U.N. High Commissioner for Human Rights
(UNHCHR) reported that during the year 12 political activists, including
candidates, were killed under circumstances that were suspect. Human rights
monitoring organizations agreed that at least five of these killings were
politically motivated. All of the victims were members of the FUNCINPEC party
or the opposition Sam Rainsy Party (SRP). The Government arrested suspects in
several such cases, and convicted the accused in two cases. However, UNHCHR
reported that there were serious shortcomings in the police investigations and
in the subsequent judicial process, including a reluctance to probe possible
political motives. In some cases, the authorities failed to execute summonses
or search warrants against suspects believed to be protected by the military.
Government officials also declared the crimes not to be politically motivated
before investigations were complete, and actively propagated rumors that the
killers believed the victims were sorcerers, even in cases where there was no
evidence of such a motive. The investigation of some cases proceeded very
slowly, and, in one case, the authorities did not question a village chief who
had advance knowledge of plans to kill the victim but failed to report or act
to prevent it. In October a provincial court convicted the confessed killer and
an accomplice in the June murder of SRP activist Uch Horn, sentencing them to
15 and 14 years in prison respectively. In March a Kampot provincial court
sentenced a former CPP commune chief to 17 years in prison for the June 2000
murders of a FUNCINPEC activist and his wife. The judges did not comment on
whether the killings were politically motivated.
There were numerous
allegations of beatings of prisoners in police custody, including one case in
Prey Veng province in July in which police beat a prisoner to death. A domestic
nongovernmental organization (NGO) reported that between January and October 15
prisoners died of disease while in custody (see Section 1.c.).
Police and military forces
continued to acquiesce in or fail to prevent mob violence against suspected
criminals, which resulted in dozens of killings, although the number of such
killings was lower than in previous years. In April a mob overpowered police
and beat two alleged robbers in police custody to death. The Government never
has prosecuted anyone for participation in such cases of mob violence, but a
provincial court in Svay Rieng did begin an investigation into one such mob
killing that occurred in 1999.
According to the Cambodian
Red Cross, 163 persons were killed and 634 injured by landmines deployed by the
Khmer Rouge or various government forces during previous conflicts. The number
of such casualties was slightly higher than in 2000, but substantially lower
than in previous years.
The Government has not
arrested or prosecuted anyone in connection with the killing of three persons
by soldiers in Kratie province in May 2000. Human rights organizations continue
to investigate these killings, as well as the alleged disappearance of 32 other
persons in connection with the same event. Of the 32, 9 eventually were
confirmed to be alive, and the Government maintains that no one is missing.
The Government has not
prosecuted most of those responsible for the numerous political or
extrajudicial killings committed during the term of the previous government
(from 1993 to 1998) and reported by UNHCHR in 1997 and 1998. Former Khmer Rouge
officials Ta Mok and Kiang Kek Iev ("Duch"), accused of mass killings
and other crimes, remained in jail. Government efforts continued to bring these
and other senior Khmer Rouge officials to justice for their alleged crimes
committed from 1975 through 1979, and included the entry into force of a law
establishing a special tribunal to bring Khmer Rouge leaders to justice (see
Section 1.e.). The Government is seeking assistance and cooperation from the
U.N. and will need financial assistance from foreign donors to make the
tribunal operational.
The Supreme Court is
considering an appeal filed by former Khmer Rouge commander Nuon Paet of an
October 2000 Appeals Court decision upholding his 1999 conviction for his role
in a 1994 train ambush that resulted in the deaths of 3 foreigners and at least
13 citizens. Nuon Paet remained in custody serving a life sentence. In May
prosecutors sent forward an appeal by the families of the foreign victims of
the July 2000 acquittal of Chhouk Rin, another former Khmer Rouge commander
allegedly involved in the ambush. In June the RCAF discharged Sam Bith, a third
former Khmer Rouge commander implicated in the ambush, and dismissed him from
his position as advisor to the Co-Minister of Defense. Sam Bith had not been
arrested by year's end.
In June a municipal court
convicted 30 persons, including 2 in absentia, and acquitted 2 others on
charges of terrorism or conspiracy and membership in an armed group for their
roles in the November 2000 attack in Phnom Penh by the foreign-headquartered
Cambodian Freedom Fighters (CFF) organization in which 8 persons were killed
and 14 others injured (see Section 1.e.). In November the municipal court
convicted another 26 persons and acquitted 2 others in connection with the
incident. Human rights groups and other observers criticized the Government and
courts for the way they conducted their investigation and trials (see Section
1.d.). Some of those convicted have appealed.
b. Disappearance
There were no confirmed
reports of politically motivated disappearances, but local NGO's investigated
cases in several provinces in which individuals allegedly disappeared after detention
by police. One such person was located by a local NGO in his home village. The
UNHCHR and a local NGO also continued investigating the disappearance in 2000
of five persons from various parts of Kratie province following detention by
security officials (these disappearances are unrelated to the 23 persons who
allegedly disappeared there in May 2000 (see Section 1.a.)). By year's end, all
five remained missing, and government and NGO efforts to establish their
whereabouts continued.
c. Torture and Other
Cruel, Inhuman, or Degrading Treatment or Punishment
The Constitution prohibits
torture and physical abuse of prisoners; however, torture, beatings, and other
forms of physical mistreatment of persons held in police or military custody
continued to be a serious problem throughout the country. There were credible
reports that military and police officials used physical and psychological
torture and severely beat criminal detainees, particularly during
interrogation. The problem was compounded by a climate of impunity, whereby
police and security force perpetrators of torture and abuse frequently were
protected from prosecution or disciplinary action by local government
authorities, despite some central government efforts to curtail or eliminate
violations of prisoners' rights and to address problems of accountability.
During the year, the
Ministry of Interior was slow to investigate allegations by the UNHCHR of
torture and severe abuse of individuals in detention in various parts of the
country, including one case in July in Prey Veng province when police beat a
prisoner to death. However, provincial prosecutors filed preliminary charges
against prison officials in Kampong Cham province for alleged mistreatment of
prisoners following an escape attempt in 1999.
Dozens of detainees in
several provinces reported regular beatings in police custody. One domestic
human rights NGO investigated 21 cases of torture involving 27 victims during
the year. There were few reports of torture or physical abuse of prisoners who
have been convicted and are serving their sentences. The Ministry of Interior's
Prisons Department is responsible for both detainees and prisoners.
There were credible
reports that local authorities harassed members of the FUNCINPEC party and the SRP.
Such harassment allegedly included death threats, threats of loss of
citizenship documents, and the withholding of routine services (see Section
3.).
Prison conditions remained
harsh, and government efforts to improve prison conditions and implement new
regulations were hampered by lack of funds and weak enforcement. Human rights
organizations cited a number of serious problems, including overcrowding,
health problems, food and water shortages, malnutrition, and poor security. One
domestic NGO reported that 50 prisoners died of disease while in custody during
the year. In most prisons, there is no separation of adult prisoners and
minors, or of persons convicted of serious crimes and persons detained for
minor offenses, and there is inadequate separation of male and female
prisoners. Use of shackles and the practice of holding prisoners in small, dark
cells continued in some prisons after escape attempts. Government ration
allowances for purchasing prisoners' food remained inadequate, exacerbating malnutrition.
Regulations permit families to provide prisoners with food and other
necessities, and prisoners depend on such outside assistance; however, families
often must bribe prison officials in order to be allowed to provide it.
The Government continued to
allow international and domestic human rights groups to visit prisons and
prisoners and to provide human rights training to prison guards. However, NGO's
reported that on occasion cooperation from local authorities was limited (see
Section 4). During the year, the Ministry of Interior began requiring lawyers,
human rights monitors, and other visitors to obtain letters of permission from
the Ministry prior to visiting prisoners. The Ministry has withheld such
permission in some cases, particularly for individuals in detention in
connection with the crackdown on the CFF (see Section 1.d.). Human rights
groups and lawyers also noted that the Government in midyear began to deny them
permission to meet prisoners in private, thus inhibiting the ability of lawyers
to defend clients and of human rights groups to monitor prison conditions (see
Section 4).
d. Arbitrary Arrest,
Detention, or Exile
The Constitution prohibits
arbitrary arrest and detention; however, the Government continued to arrest and
detain citizens arbitrarily. A penal code drafted by the U.N. Transitional
Authority for Cambodia (UNTAC) in 1992 remains in effect, as does the 1993
Criminal Procedure Law. The Criminal Procedure Law provides adequate protection
for criminal suspects; however, in practice the Government sometimes ignored
these provisions. One NGO recorded 28 complaints of unlawful detention and
arrest by police, military, or local government authorities between March and
August. The Government initiated a crackdown on the CFF in September during the
course of which it arrested over 70 suspects, including dozens without arrest
warrants, and detained and subsequently released dozens more. The Government
held some suspects incommunicado and denied them access to lawyers for a period
of time.
Although lengthy detention
without charge is illegal, suspects often were held by authorities for long
periods before being charged or brought to trial or released. In August an NGO
provided the Ministry of Justice with information about 120 persons in
prolonged detention throughout the country. According to the UNHCHR, such
prolonged detention largely was a result of a growing prison population and the
limited capacity of the court system. Accused persons legally are entitled to a
lawyer; however, in practice they often have limited access to legal
representation. Prisoners routinely are held for several days before gaining
access to a lawyer or family members, although the legal limit is 48 hours.
Although there is a bail system, many prisoners, particularly those without
legal representation, often have no opportunity to seek release on bail.
The Constitution prohibits
forced exile, and in practice the Government does not use it. No persons were
known to be in self-imposed exile during the year.
e. Denial of Fair Public
Trial
The Constitution provides
for an independent judiciary; however, the Government does not respect this
provision in practice. The courts were subject to influence and interference by
the executive, and there is widespread corruption among judges, virtually none
of whom received a living wage.
A serious lack of
resources and poor training contributed to corruption and inefficiency in the
judicial branch, and in practice the Government does not ensure due process.
For example, judges often have no legal training and often lack copies of the
laws upon which they are expected to rule. As a result of these weaknesses,
citizens often effectively were denied a fair trial in jurisdictions without
regular access to defense lawyers or international judicial assistance
programs. The Judicial Reform Council established in 2000 has made no
significant progress in fulfilling its mandate to develop and implement
judicial reform measures. During the year, the Supreme Council of the
Magistracy disciplined 26 judges and prosecutors for misconduct, but none was
removed from his position. The harshest penalties meted out were the transfers
of eight judges. In June the Supreme Council of the Magistracy nominated to the
Appeals Court a former court president and a former prosecutor who had been
suspended from their positions and investigated for accepting bribes in 1999.
No information about the investigation was released.
Human rights groups
continued to report that the Government demonstrates its control of the courts
by ordering the rearrest of suspects released by the courts. In September the
Prime Minister ordered the rearrest of an acquitted suspected rapist, on the
ground that his release was irregular. Legal observers charge that the Supreme
Council of the Magistracy is subject to political influence, and does not
protect effectively the independence of the judiciary.
The courts and police
often pressure crime victims to accept small cash settlements from the accused
instead of seeking prosecution. When a case was tried, a judge sometimes
determined the verdict before the case was heard, often on the basis of a bribe
paid by the accuser or the defendant. Sworn, written statements from witnesses
and the accused usually were the extent of evidence presented in trials.
Statements by the accused sometimes were coerced through beatings or threats
from investigation officials, and illiterate defendants often were not informed
of the content of written confessions that they were forced to sign (see
Section 1.c.). In cases involving military personnel, military officers often
exerted pressure on judges to have the defendant released without trial.
Court delays or corrupt
practices often allowed those accused of crimes to escape prosecution, leading
to impunity for some government officials or members of their families who
commit crimes.
The courts prosecuted some
members of the security forces for human rights abuses, but impunity for those
who commit human rights abuses remained a problem. With some exceptions,
national and local government officials continued to lack the political will
and financial resources to act effectively against military or security
officials suspected of human rights abuses.
The court system consists
of lower courts, an appeals court, and a Supreme Court. The Constitution also
mandates a Constitutional Council, which is empowered to review the
constitutionality of laws, and a Supreme Council of the Magistracy, which
appoints, oversees, and disciplines judges. The composition of both of these
bodies is viewed widely as biased toward the CPP. There is a separate military
court system.
Trials are public.
Defendants have the right to be present and to consult with an attorney, to
confront and question witnesses against them, and to present witnesses and
evidence on their own behalf. However, trials typically are perfunctory, and
extensive cross examination usually does not take place. In 1998 the
introduction of newly trained lawyers, many of whom received supplemental
training by NGO's, resulted in significant improvements for those defendants
provided with counsel, including a reduced pretrial detention period and
improved access to bail; however, there remained a critical shortage of trained
lawyers in most parts of the country--especially outside Phnom Penh. Persons
without the means to secure defense counsel often effectively are denied the
right to a fair trial.
Defendants are entitled by
law to the presumption of innocence and the right of appeal. However, because
of pervasive corruption, defendants often are expected to bribe the judge for a
favorable verdict, thereby effectively eliminating the presumption of
innocence. Citizens' rights to appeal sometimes are limited by the lack of
transportation and other logistical difficulties in transferring prisoners from
provincial prisons to the appeals court in Phnom Penh. Many appeals thus are
heard in the absence of the defendant. Lawyers also noted that in midyear, the
authorities began to deny them the right to meet prisoners in private (see
Section 1.c.), in violation of the law.
In June human rights
groups criticized the convictions of 30 alleged members of the CFF in June, and
26 in November (see Section 1.a.). Although some of the defendants freely
admitted involvement in an armed attempt to overthrow the Government, observers
raised valid criticisms about the lack of thorough investigation or meaningful
cross examination, and the judge's broad use of discretion in accepting or
rejecting evidence. A number of the defendants were arrested without warrants
and were held longer than the 6-month maximum period of detention permitted by
the law.
There was ongoing
cooperation among the Government, foreign government donors, and NGO's to
improve the legal system.
The military court system
suffers from deficiencies similar to those of the civilian court system.
Moreover the legal distinction between the military and civil courts often was
ignored in practice; several civilian persons arrested for crimes that appear
to have no connection with military offenses have been detained for trial by
the military court.
In July a law entered into
force establishing a special tribunal to bring Khmer Rouge leaders to justice
for genocide and war crimes committed from 1975 through 1979. The Government is
seeking assistance and cooperation from the U.N., and financial contributions
from foreign donors, to make the tribunal operational.
There were no reports of
political prisoners.
f. Arbitrary Interference
with Privacy, Family, Home, or Correspondence
The Constitution provides
for the privacy of residences and correspondence and prohibits illegal
searches; however, the police routinely conducted searches and seizures without
warrants. There were no reports that the Government monitored private
electronic communications.
Citizens were free to live
where they wished; however, there were continued frequent reports of land
disputes between residents, local authorities, businesspersons, and military
officials. Since the forced collectivization during Khmer Rouge rule and the
return of thousands of refugees, land ownership often is unclear, and most
landowners lack adequate formal documentation of ownership. Following the end
of the Khmer Rouge insurgency, a rush to gain possession of lands near
potentially lucrative cross-border trade routes has exacerbated the ownership
problem. Several provinces have created land dispute settlement committees;
representatives of local NGO's and of the military forces frequently attended
committee meetings. Members of the committees often had apparent conflicts of
interest, and observers criticized dispute resolution as inconsistent and not
transparent.
One domestic NGO
investigated 140 land disputes involving Government officials during the year.
In one such case in March, a judge in Ratanakiri province ruled against a group
of ethnic hill tribe villagers in a land dispute, even though they presented
evidence that they had been cheated, because the defendant, an RCAF general,
held a title issued by the proper local authorities. The plaintiffs have
appealed the case.
In July the National
Assembly passed a new land law, clarifying ownership and recognizing for the
first time various forms of communal property arrangements, including for
indigenous minorities. The Government was in the process of preparing
implementing regulations for the new law, and working to improve the land
titling system.
Section 2. Respect for
Civil Liberties, Including:
a. Freedom of Speech and
Press
The Constitution provides
for freedom of expression, press, and publication, and the Government generally
respects these rights in practice; however, there continued to be some
problems. The Constitution implicitly limits free speech by requiring that
speech not adversely affect public security. The Constitution also declares
that the King is "inviolable." The Press Law provides journalists
with a number of rights, including a prohibition on prepublication censorship and
protection from imprisonment for expressing opinions. However, the Press Law
also includes a vaguely worded prohibition on publishing articles that affect
national security and political stability. There were no reports that print
journalists practiced self-censorship. There were a large number of news items
critical of the Government, which included frequent highly personal criticism
of the Prime Minister, the President of the National Assembly, and other senior
officials.
In November 2000, the
Ministry of Information approved a regulation that specified professional
requirements for new newspaper and magazine publishers, and introduced a
mandatory licensing system requiring that newspapers renew their licenses
annually and that magazines renew their licenses every 2 years. Some
journalists' organizations viewed the draft regulation as an attempt to
increase Government control over the media. The Ministry was engaged in
consultations with these organizations, and had not implemented the regulation
by year's end.
Although limited in
circulation, newspapers were a primary source of news and expression of
political opinion. All major political parties have reasonable and regular
access to the print media. In general newspapers were aligned politically. The
law permits newspapers to receive financial support from political parties and
some newspapers do, including from FUNCINPEC and from the SRP. There were
approximately 16 Khmer-language newspapers published regularly, which was
roughly the same number as in 2000. Of these, 11 were considered to be
progovernment, 4 were considered to support the opposition Sam Rainsy Party
(SRP), 1 was considered to support the FUNCINPEC Party, and 1 was considered to
be antimonarchy. In addition there was one French-language daily, one
English-language daily, and two other English newspapers published regularly.
Many of the Khmer-language newspapers frequently published articles translated
from the English-language newspapers.
Although the two largest
circulation newspapers are considered progovernment, most newspapers criticize
the Government frequently, and Prime Minister Hun Sen and National Assembly
President Prince Norodom Ranariddh frequently came under strong attack by opposition
newspapers. During the year, there were no clear instances of government
intimidation or retribution against newspapers for reporting critical of the
Government. The director and editor-in-chief of a weekly newspaper were held
from April until August on charges of theft and extortion after allegedly
asking the owner of a private company for $500 (specifically in U.S. currency)
in exchange for not running a negative story. They were released when the
investigating judge dropped the case due to lack of evidence. The newspaper has
resumed publication. Domestic journalists' organizations did not challenge the
detentions, but appealed to the Government to ensure freedom of the press.
In September the Minister
of Foreign Affairs and International Cooperation won a defamation suit against
three journalists from an English-language newspaper for an article containing
an attributed quote suggesting that during the 1975-1979 Khmer Rouge regime he
played a role in sending prisoners to be interrogated and executed from the
prison and reeducation camp where he was the head inmate. The court proceedings
were marred by irregularities. The judge did not consider relevant evidence
offered by the defendants, and collected evidence of her own in violation of
her mandate. The judged denied the defendants' request to be tried under the
1995 Press Law rather than the 1991 transitional UNTAC code, but then ordered
them to pay damages to the Foreign Minister and the state under both laws.
In August a municipal
judge filed a libel case against an opposition-affiliated newspaper for
publishing an article alleging that the judge accepted kickbacks in a property
dispute case.
The Government, the
military forces, and political parties continued to dominate the broadcast
media and to influence their content. According to a report by the UNHCHR, the
procedures for licensing and allocation of radio and television frequencies to
the media were not impartial. The opposition party in past years was unable to
obtain a broadcast license and during the year briefly broadcast radio
programming from a site in a neighboring country, but suspended broadcasts for
technical reasons. Broadcast journalists reportedly practice self-censorship to
enhance prospects for keeping their broadcast license.
There are six television
stations, all controlled or strongly influenced by the Government. Government
control severely limits the content of television broadcasting. At the
initiative of the National Assembly president the Ministry of Information's television
station broadcasts live telecasts of National Assembly sessions. Election
observers and political parties running against the CPP in local elections
complained that they were not given equal access to the media.
National radio and
television stations regularly broadcast some human rights, social action,
public health, and civil society programming produced by domestic NGO's.
Internet service, which is
available widely in the larger towns, is unregulated.
In August the Government
issued an order banning the sale of and threatening to confiscate a book
published by the SRP. A Government spokesman described it as "promoting
instability" but never specified what law the publication violated. The
Government never implemented its confiscation threat. The SRP removed the book
from circulation and filed a lawsuit against the Government, which was not
settled as of year's end.
Academic freedom is
respected.
b. Freedom of Peaceful
Assembly and Association
The Constitution provides
for freedom of peaceful assembly, but the Government does not fully respect
this right in practice. During the year, numerous groups assembled peacefully,
including workers and teachers protesting working conditions or wages,
political opposition activists supporting various causes, students protesting
border encroachments and the visit of Chinese leaders to the country, and
various groups protesting land seizures. On occasion, counterdemonstrations by
other citizens who supported the Government disrupted the protests, which sometimes
resulted in clashes that caused minor injuries to some participants. On one
occasion in June and on two occasions in September, police intervened in
allegedly violent labor actions (see Section 6.a.). In the course of the June
intervention, police detained five labor leaders for alleged involvement in
violence. The five subsequently were released.
The Government requires a
permit be obtained in advance of a march or demonstration. The Government often
did not issue a requested permit or took no action on a permit application;
however, these actions had no practical effect because demonstrations proceeded
anyway.
In June the Government
forbade a private conference on border issues planned by a student group in
conjunction with an organization of expatriate Cambodians at a Phnom Penh
hotel. The Government never explained the legal basis for its action, but
conference organizers canceled the event after the hotel refused to allow the
conference on its premises. Throughout the year, there were complaints from
various organizations that local authorities demanded that they apply for
permission to hold meetings and other events, despite the fact that there is no
legal basis for such requirements.
The Constitution provides
for freedom of association, and the Government generally respected this right
in practice. However, the Government does not enforce effectively the freedom
of association provisions of the Labor Law (see Section 6.a.). In October, the
Government adopted a standard Memorandum of Understanding for NGO's, which
eliminated provisions from an earlier draft NGO law that the NGO community
opposed.
The Government does not
coerce or forbid membership in political organizations. Political parties
normally are able to conduct their activities freely and without government
interference. However, there were several documented cases of harassment of
FUNCINPEC and SRP activists and candidates in connection with preparations for
the scheduled commune-level elections (see Section 3).
Membership in the Khmer
Rouge, which previously conducted an armed insurgency against the Government,
is illegal, as is membership in an armed group.
c. Freedom of Religion
The Constitution provides
for freedom of religion, and the Government generally respects this right in
practice. The Constitution also prohibits discrimination based on religion, and
minority religions experience little or no official discrimination. Buddhism is
the state religion and over 95 percent of the population is Buddhist. Most of
the remainder is made up of ethnic Cham Muslims, who are well integrated into
society.
The law requires all
religious groups, including Buddhists, to submit applications to the Ministry
of Cults and Religious Affairs in order to construct places of worship and to
conduct religious activities. Religious groups have not encountered significant
difficulties in obtaining approvals for construction of places of worship, but
some Muslim and Christian groups reported delays by some local officials in
acknowledging that official permission has been granted to conduct religious
meetings in homes. Such religious meetings take place unimpeded despite delay
or inaction at the local level, and no significant constraints on religious
assembly have been reported. In October the Ministry of Cults and Religions
issued a circular on "maintaining order in the Islamic religion in the
Kingdom of Cambodia," which would have imposed new restrictions on
mosques, including requiring Ministry approval for certain normal activities,
particularly those that involved contact with Muslim foreigners. The Prime
Minister canceled the circular 3 days later, describing it as contrary to
government policy on freedom of religion.
d. Freedom of Movement
Within the Country, Foreign Travel, Emigration, and Repatriation
The Constitution and law
provide for these rights and the Government generally respects them in
practice. The Government does not restrict domestic or international travel,
although the presence of land mines (see Section 1.a.) and bandits makes travel
in some areas of the country dangerous.
There were no reports of
persecution or discrimination against refugees who returned from abroad. The
U.N. High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) program assisting in the
resettlement of refugees who returned from Thailand formally terminated on
December 31. There was no new resettlement of internally displaced persons
during the year. Internally displaced persons who resettled in previous years
were able to return to their original places of origin, except where land mines
were a problem.
The law provides for the
granting of asylum and/or refugee status in accordance with the 1951 U.N.
Convention Relating to the Status of Refugees and its 1967 Protocol. The
Government allows noncitizens to apply to the UNHCR for refugee status. The
Government provides first asylum. In March the Government began to facilitate
access for Montagnard asylum-seekers from Vietnam to the UNHCR, helped the
UNHCR establish temporary refuge locations in two provinces, and cooperated
with UNHCR and a foreign government in resettling 38 refugees in the foreign
country. The number of residents at the UNHCR's two temporary sites increased
gradually during the year, and was 957 individuals at year's end. The
Government engaged in a tripartite dialog with UNHCR and the Government of
Vietnam to resolve the Montagnard refugee problem. However, between March and
the end of the year, there were reports that local authorities repatriated as
many as 256 possible asylum-seekers against their will, in violation of
standing policy to allow them access to UNHCR. This included one group of up to
167 persons deported from Mondolkiri province on December 27. None of these
local officials have been punished for their actions. In August the Government
also deported to Vietnam a group of up to 43 asylum-seekers who had been
processed and denied refugee status by the UNHCR.
Section 3 Respect for
Political Rights: The Right of Citizens to Change Their Government
The Constitution provides
citizens with the right to change their government peacefully. The 1998
electoral campaign and its aftermath were marred by protests, voter
intimidation, and partisan violence, some of it government directed. Despite
such incidents, the formation of the new Government appeared to reflect the
will of the electorate. Most international and observer groups certified the
election as acceptable. The coalition Government formed in late 1998 between
the CPP and FUNCINPEC, the two parties that won the largest number of votes and
National Assembly seats in the 1998 election, renewed political stability. The
coalition agreement provided for roughly equal power sharing between the
parties, with Hun Sen of the CPP as Prime Minister and Prince Norodom Ranariddh
of FUNCINPEC as President of the National Assembly. However, in practice the
CPP is the dominant partner. The coalition agreement also provided for the
creation of a Senate, which was formed in March 1999 with Chea Sim of the CPP
as President. The Senate's function is to review and provide advice on the laws
passed by the National Assembly; the National Assembly retains final authority
over whether to modify legislation based on the Senate's recommendations. In
practice the Senate's role largely is perfunctory, while the National Assembly
is a more credible forum for national debate.
Although growing in
influence, the legislature remained weak in comparison with the executive
branch. The coalition Government appointed the 24 provincial and municipal
governors and their deputies, who are divided between the CPP and FUNCINPEC
parties, as well as district officials. Commune-level officials are appointed
by the Ministry of Interior, and many have been in power since 1979. All
commune-level officials are members of the CPP. In March a Commune Election Law
and a Commune Administration Law went into effect, and the Prime Minister
scheduled elections for February 2002. These are to be the first local
elections ever held in the country, and will replace appointed commune chiefs,
some of whom have been in office for over 20 years, with elected councils.
Suffrage is universal and voluntary for all citizens over the age of 18. Most
citizens participated in national elections in 1993 and 1998, and over 83
percent of eligible voters registered to vote in local elections scheduled for
February 2002. More than one candidate was registered in 1,608 of the country's
1,621 communes.
There have been some
problems of intimidation and violence in the campaign for the commune
elections; however, by year's end they had been less than in the national
elections in 1993 or 1998. A total of 12 FUNCINPEC and SRP activists and
candidates were killed under suspicious circumstances, including 5 killings
that human rights monitoring organizations agreed were politically motivated
(see Section 1.a.). The authorities arrested suspects in several of these
cases, and convicted suspects in two other cases. The UNHCHR uncovered no
evidence of a centrally organized campaign of violence or intimidation; most
cases appeared to be the work of local officials. However, UNHCHR also reported
that police investigations of such incidents and subsequent judicial processes
showed serious shortcomings. There also were widespread reports of various
forms of intimidation such as vandalism, oath taking, collection of voter
registration cards by local authorities, and death threats. The National
Election Committee did not carry out effectively its legal mandate to
investigate such election violations and punish the perpetrators. These are the
first elections the country has organized without substantial foreign
assistance, and election preparations also were marked by poor dissemination of
information and other logistical and administrative problems. Some political
parties and election observers claim that the authorities did not do enough to
ensure that all voters who wished to vote could register.
Traditional cultural
practices inhibit the role of women in government, and the percentage of women
in government and politics does not correspond to their percentage of the
population. However, women took an active part in the 1998 national election
and have registered for the 2002 elections at roughly the same rate as men.
There are 10 women among the 122 members of the National Assembly, 8 women
among the 61 members of the Senate, and 2 female ministers and 3 female state
secretaries in the Cabinet.
There are several members
of ethnic and religious minorities in the Cabinet and the National Assembly
(see Section 5); however, the percentage of minorities, particularly ethnic
Vietnamese, in government and politics is somewhat smaller than their
percentage of the population.
Section 4 Governmental
Attitude Regarding International and Nongovernmental Investigation of Alleged
Violations of Human Rights
The large domestic and
international human rights community remained active and engaged in diverse
activities. The UNHCHR and numerous other human rights organizations conducted
monitoring activities and human rights training for provincial officials,
military officers, villagers, the legal community, and other groups. These
organizations operated relatively freely throughout the country, investigating
and publicizing their findings on human rights cases. There are approximately
40 NGO's involved in human rights activities, although only a small portion of
them actively were involved in organizing training programs or investigating
abuses. The Government generally cooperated with human rights workers in
performing their investigations; however, during the year there were several
reports of poor cooperation or intimidation by local authorities throughout the
country.
In September 1999, the
Government and the UNHCHR agreed to an extension until March 2002 of the
UNHCHR's activities in the country, but a formal memorandum of understanding
had not been signed by year's end. The UNHCHR maintains a head office in Phnom
Penh and has eight provincial offices. The U.N. Special Representative for
Human Rights visited the country three times during the year, and met with
government representatives at all levels, as well as with representatives of
political parties and NGO's.
Human rights groups and
lawyers noted that in midyear the Government began to deny them the right to
meet with prisoners in private, which inhibited lawyers in defending their
clients and human rights groups in monitoring prison conditions (see Section
1.c.).
The Cambodian Human Rights
Committee, which the Government established in 1998, largely was inactive
throughout the year, and its activities were not credible.
Section 5 Discrimination
Based on Race, Sex, Religion, Disability, Language, or Social Status
The Constitution prohibits
discrimination based on race, sex, color, language, religious beliefs, or
political views. Although the Government does not engage in discrimination
systematically, it sometimes failed to protect these rights in practice.
Women
Domestic and international
NGO's report that violence against women, including domestic violence and rape,
was common. Although comprehensive statistics are not available, one local NGO
reported 423 cases of domestic violence during the year. A local human rights
monitoring organization reported 141 cases of rape. Authorities normally
declined to become involved in domestic disputes, and the victims frequently
were reluctant to issue formal complaints.
The law prohibits rape and
assault. Spousal rape and domestic abuse are not recognized as separate crimes.
A case of spousal rape could be prosecuted as "causing injury" or
"indecent assault," but women's groups report that such charges were
rare.
Prostitution is prohibited
constitutionally; however, there is no specific legislation against it, and
prostitution and trafficking in women were serious problems (see Sections 6.c.
and 6.f.). Although the Government devoted greater attention to the problem of
trafficking during the year and initiated several prosecutions, it has not
enforced effectively a 1996 law against the exploitation and sale of human
beings. Despite sporadic crackdowns on brothel operators in Phnom Penh,
prostitution continued to flourish. A survey by a local human rights NGO found
that 40 percent of women and girls who work as prostitutes do so voluntarily,
while 60 percent have been forced to work as prostitutes or have been deceived
into prostitution. The NGO also estimated that there are up to 55,000 sex
workers in the country. Sex tourism was a problem.
The Labor Law has
provisions against sexual harassment in the workplace, and the International
Labor Organization (ILO) reports that in the industrial sector it was rare. It
was not known to be a problem in other sectors of the economy.
The Constitution contains
explicit language providing for equal rights for women, equal pay for equal
work, and equal status in marriage. In practice women have equal property
rights with men, have the same status in bringing divorce proceedings, and have
equal access to education and some jobs. However, cultural traditions continued
to limit the ability of women to reach senior positions in business and other
areas.
According to NGO reports,
women make up 52 percent of the population, 60 percent of agricultural workers,
85 percent of the business work force, 70 percent of the industrial work force,
and 60 percent of all service sector workers. Women often are concentrated in
low-paying jobs in these sectors and largely are excluded from management
positions. There are a large number of women's NGO's that provide training for
poor women and widows and address social problems such as spousal abuse,
prostitution, and trafficking. A media center produces and broadcasts
programming on women's issues. NGO's provide shelters for women in crisis.
Children
The Constitution provides
for children's rights, and ensuring the welfare of children is a specific goal
of the Government. The Government relies on international aid to fund most
social welfare programs targeted at children, resulting in only modest funds
for problems that affect children.
Children are affected
adversely by an inadequate education system. Education is free but not
compulsory through grade nine; many children leave school to help their
families in subsistence agriculture, begin school at a late age, or do not
attend school at all. Despite an extensive government school construction
program, schools are overcrowded and lack sufficient equipment. Less than 5
percent of primary school teachers have completed high school, and teachers'
salaries were not adequate to support a decent standard of living, leading to
demands for unofficial payments directly from parents, which the poorest
families cannot afford. The Government does not deny girls equal access to
education; however, in practice families with limited resources often give
priority to educating boys. In many areas, schools are remote, and
transportation is a major problem. This particularly affects girls because of
fears for their safety in traveling between their homes and schools.
Children frequently suffer
from malnutrition and the inadequacy of the health care system. Infant
mortality was reported most recently at 95 per thousand, and 12.5 percent of
children do not live to the age of 5 years. Child mortality from preventable
diseases is high.
Child abuse was believed
to be common, although there were no statistics available. Poverty and domestic
violence often drive children to live on the streets; domestic NGO's estimate
there are more than 10,000 street children in Phnom Penh alone, who are easy
targets for sexual abuse and exploitation. Although sexual intercourse with a
minor person under the age of 15 is illegal, child prostitution and trafficking
in children were common (see Sections 6.c. and 6.f.). In July 1999, the
Government adopted a 5-year plan against child sexual exploitation that
emphasized prevention through information and protection through law
enforcement. To combat sex tourism, during the year the Government prosecuted
at least six cases in which foreigners were charged with pornography violations
or pedophilia.
The illegal purchase and
sale of infants and children for adoption is a serious problem. There were
several documented cases in which individuals or organizations purchased
infants or children from their natural parents, created fraudulent paper trails
to document the children as orphans, and then earned substantial profits from
fees or donations from unwitting adoptive families, including foreign families.
Some of these children may end up being exploited. In some of these cases, the
perpetrators encouraged women to give up their children under false pretenses,
for example, by promising to care for the children temporarily but then
refusing to return them. During the year, police arrested at least seven individuals
in two separate cases involving orphans for adoption. The accused were charged
under the Trafficking Law (see Section 6.f.).
Child labor is a problem
in the informal sector of the economy (see Section 6.d.).
Persons with Disabilities
The Government does not
require that buildings or government services be accessible to persons with
disabilities. According to the Government, approximately 1 in 250 citizens is
missing at least one limb. This statistic reflects the continuing effects of
landmine detonations. Programs administered by various NGO's have brought about
substantial improvements in the treatment and rehabilitation of persons who
have lost limbs. However, persons who have lost limbs face considerable
societal discrimination, particularly in obtaining skilled employment.
National/Racial/Ethnic
Minorities
Citizens of Chinese and
Vietnamese ethnicity constitute the largest ethnic minorities. Ethnic Chinese
citizens are well accepted in society. However, animosity toward ethnic
Vietnamese who are seen as a threat to the nation and culture continues. The
rights of minorities under the 1996 nationality law are not explicit;
constitutional protections are extended only to "Khmer people," that
is, Cambodians. Unlike in previous years, the political opposition did not
exploit actively anti-Vietnamese sentiment. Student groups continued to make
strong anti-Vietnamese statements during the year; they complained of political
control, border encroachments, and other problems for which they held ethnic Vietnamese
persons within the country at least partially responsible. In several parts of
the country, some political parties also unsuccessfully challenged the voter
registration rights of ethnic Vietnamese who were citizens.
In March the courts
convicted six ethnic Vietnamese fisherman (three in absentia) for their role in
the 2000 killing of three government fisheries officials in Kandal province.
Ethnic bias did not appear to be a factor in the crime or the verdict.
Also in March, a
provincial judge ruled against ethnic hill tribe villagers in a land dispute.
Ethnic bias did not appear to be a factor in the judgment, but political
influence was seen as important in this affair (see Section 1.f.).
Section 6 Worker Rights
a. The Right of
Association
The Labor Law provides
workers with the right to form professional organizations of their own choosing
without prior authorization, and all workers are free to join the trade union
of their choice; however, the Government's enforcement of these rights was inconsistent.
Membership in trade unions or employee associations is not compulsory, and
workers are free to withdraw from such organizations; however, the Ministry of
Social Affairs, Labor, Vocational Training and Youth Rehabilitation (MOSALVY)
has accepted the charter of at least one union that requires workers to obtain
permission before they may withdraw. The Labor Law does not apply to civil
servants, including teachers, judges, and military personnel, or to household
servants. Personnel in the air and maritime transportation industries are not
subject fully to the law, but are free to form unions.
Most workers are
subsistence rice farmers. Only a small fraction (estimated at less than 1
percent) of the labor force is unionized, and the trade union movement, still
in its infancy, is very weak. Unions are concentrated in the garment and
footwear industries, where approximately 25 to 30 percent of the 150,000 to
170,000 workers were union members. Although there was an expanding service
sector, most urban workers were engaged in small-scale commerce, self-employed
skilled labor, or unskilled day labor. The Labor Law requires unions and
employer organizations to file a charter and list of officers with the MOLSAVY.
The MOSALVY registered 245 factory unions and 9 national labor federations
since the Labor Law went into effect, including 108 unions and 4 federations
during the year. Labor unions continued to expand outside the garment sector as
well, and in July the Ministry of Interior recognized the country's first
public-sector union, the Cambodia Independent Teachers Association, which
registered as an "association." Regulations issued in 2000 to
simplify union registration procedures were effective. Unlike in previous
years, there were no complaints that the Government failed to register unions
or labor federations, although some unions and federations complained of
unnecessary delays and costs. Although all unions collect dues from members,
none has been able to operate without outside sources of support. None of the
unions has the capacity to negotiate with management as equals.
One labor federation
maintains an affiliation with the opposition Sam Rainsy Party. Three other
registered labor federations have historical ties to the Government or
CPP-affiliated individuals within the Government. Two major labor federations
and several unaffiliated factory unions are independent. There was credible
evidence of employer involvement in some labor unions, in violation of the
Labor Law.
The Government's
enforcement of provisions that protect the right of association was poor. The
Government's enforcement efforts were hampered by a lack of political will and
by confused financial and political relationships with employers and union
leaders. The Government also suffers from a lack of resources, including
trained, experienced labor inspectors, in part because it does not pay staff
adequate salaries. In addition unions suffer from a lack of resources,
training, and experience. There were credible complaints about antiunion
harassment by employers, including the dismissal of union leaders, in more than
20 garment factories and other enterprises during the year. In a case beginning
in 2000, a factory continued to defy a MOSALVY order to reinstate dismissed
union leaders. The Government has never prosecuted or punished an employer for
antiunion activity. The MOSALVY often finds in favor of employees, but rarely
uses its legal authority to penalize employers who defy its orders. The MOSALVY
often advises employees in such situations to sue in court, which labor unions
claim is unnecessary, costly, and ineffective. On several occasions, dismissed
union leaders accepted cash settlements after unsuccessfully appealing to the
Government to enforce labor law provisions requiring their reinstatement.
In 1999 the Government
signed a textile agreement with a foreign country, which linked garment market
access to compliance with internationally recognized core labor standards. In
January the ILO began a program to monitor working conditions in the garment
industry. However, senior officials, including the Deputy Prime Minister and
the Minister of Commerce, made public statements throughout the year dismissing
the labor movement as being made up of political agitators intent on sabotaging
the economy.
The Labor Law provides for
the right to strike and protects strikers from reprisal. There were 97 strikes
during the year, the vast majority of which took place without the 7-day prior
notice required by law. The Government allowed all strikes and demonstrations,
including some in which demonstrators caused property damage. In June the
authorities arrested several union members for alleged involvement in violent
labor demonstrations at a garment factory, and fined them and released them several
days later (see Section 2.b.). However, in general police intervention was
minimal and restrained, even in cases in which striking workers caused property
damage. In spite of the provisions in the law protecting strikers from
reprisals, there were credible reports of workers being dismissed on spurious
grounds after organizing or participating in strikes. In some cases, strikers
have been pressured by employers to accept compensation and leave their
employment.
Unions may affiliate
freely, but the law does not address explicitly their right to affiliate
internationally.
b. The Right to Organize
and Bargain Collectively
The Labor Law provides for
the right to organize and bargain collectively; however, the Government's
enforcement of these rights was inconsistent. Wages are set by market forces,
except in the case of civil servants, for whom wages are set by the Government.
Since passage of the Labor
Law in 1997, there has been confusion over the overlapping roles of labor
unions and elected shop stewards. The Labor Law provides unions the right to
negotiate with management over wages and working conditions and allows unions
to nominate candidates for shop steward positions. However, the Law provides
shop stewards the right to represent the union to the company management and to
sign collective bargaining agreements. Legal ambiguities also exist in the
process by which unions nominate shop stewards. In practice most factories
elected shop stewards before a union was present in the enterprise; thus, many unions
had no legally enforceable right to negotiate with management in situations in
which there were nonunion shop stewards. In addition the law specifically
protects elected shop stewards from dismissal without permission from the
MOSALVY, but grants no such protection to elected union leaders. In November
2000, MOSALVY issued a regulation that gave trade unions roles comparable to
those of shop stewards and extended protection from dismissal to certain union
officers within an enterprise. However, these protections for union leaders did
not prove effective (see Section 6.a.).
Very little collective
bargaining takes place. There are only two collective bargaining agreements
registered with the Government, and these do not meet international standards.
In addition to difficulties in defining the bargaining unit, collective
bargaining is inhibited by the weak capacity and inexperience of unions. In
November the Government issued a regulation establishing procedures to allow
unions to demonstrate that they represent workers for purposes of collective
bargaining. The new regulation also establishes requirements for employers and
unions regarding collective bargaining and provides union leaders with
additional protection from dismissal.
There are no export processing
zones.
c. Prohibition of Forced
or Compulsory Labor
The Labor Law prohibits
forced or compulsory labor, including forced labor by children; however, the
Government does not enforce its provisions adequately. Involuntary overtime
remained widespread. Workers faced fines, dismissal, or loss of premium pay if
they refused to work overtime.
Trafficking in women and
children for the purpose of prostitution was a serious problem (see Sections 5
and 6.f.). There have been reports of children who were kidnaped and forced to
work in the illegal sex trade (see Sections 6.d. and 6.f.). Officials of the
Government took action to rescue underage or trafficked women from
prostitution, but do not do so consistently (see section 6.f.). There also were
reports of isolated cases of forced labor by domestic servants.
One study estimates that
there are 88,000 bonded Cambodian workers in Thailand at any given time (see
Section 6.f.).
The Law on the Suppression
of Kidnaping, Trafficking and Exploitation of Humans (The Trafficking Law)
establishes a jail sentence of 15 to 20 years for any person convicted of
trafficking in persons under the age of 15 (see Section 6.f.).
d. Status of Child Labor
Practices and Minimum Age for Employment
The Labor Law establishes
15 years as the minimum age for employment, and 18 as the minimum age for
hazardous work. The law permits children between 12 and 15 to engage in
"light work" that is not hazardous to their health and that does not
affect school attendance. A tripartite Labor Advisory Committee is responsible
for defining what constitutes work that is hazardous to the health, safety, and
morality of adolescents, as well as consulting with the MOSALVY to determine
which types of employment and working conditions constitute "light
work." MOSALVY has identified six industries as priorities for
clarification of what constitutes hazardous work and light work, but has not
yet placed the subject on the agenda of the Labor Advisory Committee.
Children under the age of
15 account for more than half the population. Approximately 16.5 percent of
children between the ages of 5 and 17 work. More than half of these are over
the age of 14, and 89 percent are engaged in small-scale agriculture. Only 4
percent of working children are engaged in larger scale enterprises, including
brick factories and rubber plantations.
Child labor was not
prevalent in the garment industry, although there was at least one instance of
a young worker misrepresenting her age to gain employment in a garment factory.
Lack of credible civil documents made it difficult to guard against this
practice. Most garment factories have policies that set the age of employment
above the legal minimum of 15 years. The most serious child labor problems were
in the informal sector.
The MOSALVY is hampered by
inadequate resources, staff, and training. Law enforcement agencies have
authority to combat child prostitution, but do not do so in a sustained,
consistent manner. Some observers note that existing regulations do not address
the problem of child labor in the informal sector adequately. With assistance
from the ILO, MOSALVY established a child labor unit to investigate and combat
child labor. In 1997 the Government, in conjunction with the ILO and NGO's,
also approved a national action plan on child labor. The Government has not
ratified ILO Convention 182 on the elimination of the worst forms of child
labor, and has not established a definition for worst forms of child labor.
The Government prohibits forced
or bonded child labor. However forced child labor, including by trafficked
children (see Section 6.f.), is a serious problem in the commercial sex
industry. In 1999 the ILO's International Program for the Elimination of Child
Labor (IPEC) reported that more than 15 percent of prostitutes were between 9
and 15 years of age (see Section 6.f.).
e. Acceptable Conditions
of Work
The Labor Law requires the
MOSALVY to establish minimum wages based on recommendations from the Labor
Advisory Committee. By law the minimum wage can vary regionally. In July 2000,
the Labor Advisory Committee approved a minimum wage denominated in U.S.
currency of $45 per month, but this covered only the garment and footwear
industries. Most garment and footwear factories respected the minimum wage.
There was no minimum wage for any other industry.
According to a survey
taken during the year by a local economics research center, garment workers,
who were paid in U.S. currency, earned an average of $61 per month, factoring
in overtime. However, prevailing monthly wages in the garment sector and many
other professions were insufficient to provide a worker and family with a
decent standard of living. Civil service salaries also were insufficient to
provide a decent standard of living, requiring government officials to secure
outside sources of income.
The Labor Law provides for
a standard legal workweek of 48 hours, not to exceed 8 hours per day. The law
stipulates time-and-one-half for overtime and double time if overtime occurs at
night, on Sunday, or on a holiday. The Government does not enforce these
standards effectively. Despite reminders from the Government concerning hours
of work, workers in many garment factories complained that overtime is
excessive or involuntary, or that they are required to work 7 days per week.
Some factories do not pay the legally mandated premiums for overtime and night
or holiday work properly. Another common complaint is that management violates
the law by paying the overtime rate only for the salary component of workers'
pay, leaving piece rates unchanged regardless of the number of hours worked.
Outside the garment industry, regulations on working hours rarely are enforced.
The Labor Law states that
the workplace should have health and safety standards adequate to ensure
workers' well being. The Government enforces existing standards inconsistently,
in part because it lacks trained staff and equipment. Work-related injury and
health problems were common. Most large garment factories producing for markets
in developed countries meet relatively high health and safety standards as
conditions of their contracts with buyers. Working conditions in most
small-scale factories and cottage industries are poor and often do not meet
international standards. The Government has issued several instructions on
workplace standards, and more detailed regulations await approval by the Labor
Advisory Committee before they may be promulgated. Penalties are specified in
the Labor Law, but there are no specific provisions to protect workers who
complain about unsafe or unhealthy conditions. Workers who remove themselves
from unsafe working conditions risk loss of employment.
f. Trafficking in Persons
The law prohibits
trafficking in persons; however, trafficking was a serious problem. Enforcement
of the Trafficking Law also was a problem. The country was a source,
destination, and transit country for trafficking in persons.
The majority of
trafficking takes place within the country, providing both adults and children
for exploitation in the country's sex industry. The sex industry is estimated
to employ from 80,000 to 100,000 sex workers, a sizable proportion of whom are
victims of trafficking. The International Organization for Migration estimates
that at least 3,000 women and girls from southern Vietnam were trafficked to
the country to work as prostitutes, with more than 15 percent being younger
than 15 years of age. The ILO's IPEC Program reported in 1999 that more than 15
percent of female prostitutes in the country were from 9 to 15 years of age,
and that 78 percent of these girls were Vietnamese; the remainder were
Cambodians. Women have been trafficked from European countries such as Moldova
and Romania, as well, for purposes of prostitution. A UNICEF study reported
that one-third of the country's prostitutes were under age 18. Some Vietnamese
women and girls are trafficked through the country for exploitation in the
commercial sex trade in other Asian countries. One study estimated that 88,000 Cambodians
work in Thailand as bonded laborers at any given time; many are exploited in
the sex industry or, particularly among young boys, are employed as beggars.
One NGO estimated that 30,000 women and girls were trafficked to neighboring
countries, especially Thailand. Women and children, especially those in rural
areas, are the most likely to become victims of trafficking.
Surveys conducted by
domestic NGO's in 1995 indicated that from 40 to 50 percent of young women who
were trafficked were victimized by a relative or friend of the family, and were
offered money or promises of a better life. Poverty and ignorance in villages
was a major factor in contributing to the trafficking problem. Young children,
the majority of them girls, often are "pledged" as collateral for
loans by desperately poor parents to brokers or middlemen; the child then is
held responsible for repaying the loan and accumulated interest. In other
cases, parents are tricked into believing the child will be given legitimate
work in the city. There is also a problem with the illegal purchase and sale of
infants and children. Sometimes this is for purpose of adoption, including by
foreign couples, but some of these children may end up abused and exploited
(see Section 5).
Given the lucrative nature
of human trafficking and the widespread nature of the problem in the country,
it is believed that organized crime groups, employment agencies, and marriage
brokers all have some degree of involvement. In one area on the Thai border, a
recent report estimated that as many as 100 traffickers were carrying out
operations.
In December the Government
began a general crackdown on prostitution, which has made prostitutes even more
vulnerable to intimidation, violence, theft, rape, and disease.
Corruption is endemic in
the country, and it is believed widely that law enforcement and other
government officials receive bribes that facilitate the sex trade and human
trafficking. There were allegations that high-ranking law enforcement and
government officials are involved actively in some forms of trafficking in
persons.
The Trafficking Law
establishes a jail sentence of 15 to 20 years for any person convicted of
trafficking in persons under the age of 15; however, the Government does not
enforce the law effectively due in part to budget limitations and a lack of
implementing regulations.
Although prosecutions of
traffickers increased, and the Government devoted greater attention to
trafficking during the year, enforcement of antitrafficking laws and prosecution
of perpetrators was inconsistent. The Government conducted several raids
throughout the year, rescuing numerous commercial sex workers, including
underage workers, and providing them with protection while working with NGO's
to either reunite the victims with their families or place them in a shelter
operated by an NGO or other private charity. The Government arrested several
brothel owners; some were convicted, while others were released without
charges. The Ministry of Interior's antitrafficking unit reports that it
investigated 116 cases between January and July, arrested 112 criminals, and
obtained 85 convictions. The unit conducted at least two raids against
trafficking rings with overseas connections; in June police arrested six
Vietnamese nationals in connection with trafficking commercial sex workers to
Malaysia, and in October police arrested two Chinese and one Vietnamese
national allegedly involved in trafficking Vietnamese nationals to serve as
prostitutes in Macau. Working with the International Organization for
Migration, the Government rescued 73 Cambodian forced laborers on Thai fishing
vessels who were arrested by the Indonesian navy in July.
The Government has several
programs underway in conjunction with the International Organization for
Migration to combat trafficking, including one program to provide training and
capacity building for Government officials with antitrafficking
responsibilities. In September the Ministry of Women's and Veterans' Affairs
launched a public education campaign against trafficking, focusing on border
provinces.
In July 1999, the
Government adopted a 5-year plan against child sexual exploitation that
emphasized prevention through information and protection through law
enforcement. There were no new developments in the implementation of this plan
by year's end.
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