Khouth Sophak Chakrya
Wednesday, 25 April 2012
Phnom Penh Post
Interior Minister Sar Kheng and Telecommunications Minister So Khun had
issued an inter-ministerial directive that requires telecom service
providers to turn over the identity information of their subscribers and
users to the Interior Ministry in a bid to aid crime-fighting, Interior
Ministry officials said yesterday.
Chhay Sinareth, head of the security department at the ministry,
announced the directive, which has equivalent force in law to a prakas,
at a national police commission meet.
“The police have made
victorious crackdowns in over 2,850 cases of kidnapping and
life-threatening crimes in 2011 by using evidence from
telecommunications systems including mobile phones and the internet,” he
said.
“The number of crimes was remarkably reduced under the
good collaboration between the expert ministries and mobile networks and
internet companies in searching for, and timely crackdowns on, the
criminals.”
The directive, signed on March 28, requires all
telecoms operators, as well as points of sale and distribution, to
register their business and for the proprietors of internet cafes and
public phones to instal security cameras to film customers’ use of
telecommunications equipment. It also requires all identity information
gathered by telecoms service providers to be handed over to the Ministry
of Interior.
Currently, the law requires a mobile phone
subscriber to produce a valid identity card before connecting to a
telecoms service provider. Service providers are obliged to retain this
identity information.
“The directive demands telecom operators,
selling and distribution branches to identify and copy user identity
cards to avoid forgery that causes social insecurity,” Chhay Sinarith
said, adding operators and sales and distribution points would be fined
if they did not comply.
“With my ongoing experience and research
in Cambodia, the criminals always use telecommunication services
including mobile phone and internet as a means to commit terrorism,
cross-border crimes, robbery, kidnapping, murdering, human and drug
trafficking, economic-related crime, installation crime and
telecommunication business in spreading pornography and other sexual
harassment,” he said.
Chhay Sinarith said Cambodia’s eight mobile
phone companies and 27 internet companies had a registered total of 1.6
million users.
But according to data collected from operators
and points of sale and distribution for telecoms services, there were
more than 16 million SIM cards in circulation, he said, adding that this
meant users were buying multiple cards for personal use.
San
Mao, a 28-year-old from Svay Rieng province, said mobile phone company
promotions meant SIM cards sold for between 1,000 riels and US$1 but
came with up to $6 credit.
“I always buy two or three SIM cards
[Metfone] per month to contact my family and friends because it is
cheaper than public mobile services and when it runs out of money, I
just take it out and put a new one in,” he said, adding that he was
never asked for identification because he was such a regular customer.
Chhay
Sinarith said there would be an official dissemination of the directive
on Koh Pich on Friday for telecom operators and their distribution and
sales outlets to attend.
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