×

Our award-winning reporting has moved

Context provides news and analysis on three of the world’s most critical issues:

climate change, the impact of technology on society, and inclusive economies.

Cambodia's new China-style internet gateway decried as repression tool

by Reuters
Thursday, 18 February 2021 09:40 GMT

FILE PHOTO: A person uses a smartphone to look at the Facebook page of Cambodia's Prime Minister Hun Sen, during breakfast at a restaurant in central Phnom Penh, Cambodia October 7, 2015. REUTERS/Samrang Pring/File Photo

Image Caption and Rights Information

The virtual gateway will allow officials to monitor and control all online traffic

PHNOM PENH, Feb 18 (Reuters) - Human rights groups decried Cambodia's establishment this week of a China-style internet gateway that would allow all online traffic to be controlled and monitored, saying it would be a new tool for longtime leader Hun Sen to repress any opposition

"Prime Minister Hun Sen struck a dangerous blow against internet freedom and e-commerce in Cambodia by expanding the government's control over the country's internet," Phil Robertson, deputy Asia director at Human Rights Watch, said on Thursday.

"Cambodia's National Internet Gateway is the missing tool in the government's toolbox for online repression," he said in a statement.

An 11-page decree announced on Wednesday requires internet service providers to reroute their services through a National Internet Gateway within the next 12 months, before February 2022.

The gateway is similar to that of China, an important economic ally for Cambodia, which has seen its ties with the United States and European Union deteriorate recently.

It requires service providers to make users complete online forms with their correct identities and says failure to connect networks to the gateway would result in operating licenses being suspended and bank accounts frozen.

Government spokesman Phay Siphan on Wednesday said the decree was necessary because there was no order to the internet in Cambodia, adding it was less intrusive than regulations in the United States and Britain.

The new gateway comes as Hun Sen's government faces international criticism over a crackdown that has decimated civil society and the political opposition, resulting in a power monopoly for his party, and criminal charges and jail terms for many of its rivals.

Emerlynne Gil, Amnesty International's deputy regional director for research, called the new gateway "a disaster for human rights".

"In the context of an escalating crackdown on human rights defenders, mass trials of opposition supporters, and rising numbers of prisons of conscience - this development is especially alarming," Gil added.

(Reporting by Prak Chan Thul. Writing by Kay Johnson)

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

Themes
-->