A watchdog organization says the Ministry of Economy and Finance's tax collectors are bilking the country out of at least a million dollars a year by overcharging for annual vehicle stickers.
Chun Sakada, VOA Khmer
Phnom Penh Wednesday, 01 December 2010 
“Next year, we want to see those guilty of corruption sentenced to prison.”
Thirty tax officials will face the loss of their jobs, after an investigation by the new Anti-Corruption Unit.
Om Yentieng, a senior government  advisor and head of the ACU, told reporters Wednesday the 30 agents  from the Ministry of Finance’s taxation unit had overcharged vehicle  owners as much as $1.20 per annual registration tag.
The ACU was acting on complaints  filed by an NGO on behalf of more than 200 citizens who said they were  routinely overcharged for vehicle registration.
The complaints were the first  real test of the ACU, which was formed as part of a recently passed  anti-corruption law. Some 2,700 people from 14 provinces contributed  corruption complaints earlier this year.
“I will send all the evidence  concerning the 30 agents to the Ministry of Economy and Finance and its  general department of taxation tomorrow morning to make administrative  punishments,” Om Yentieng said. “I believe that anyone who has made a  serious mistake will be sacked from his or her job.”
Other administrative punishments can include the loss of promotion or suspension.
The ACU has compiled a 14-page  brief, provided to reporters, that identifies the alleged corrupt  agents, provides photo IDS and lists the sites were they allegedly  bilked motorists of their money.
According to the brief, vehicle  owners were overcharged for annual registration on “pretexts,” such as  the cost of forms themselves, of filling out the forms or even for the  purchase of drinking water.
San Chey, a project coordinator  for the Affiliated Network for Social Accountability in East Asia and  the Pacific, which gathered the complaints, said administrative  punishment was acceptable for now.
“Next year, we want to see those  guilty of corruption sentenced to prison,” he said. “But for this year,  administrative punishment is an acceptable act for civil society.”
Om John, deputy chief of the Ministry of Finance’s tax department, said agents would not escape punishment.
 






 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
0 comments:
Post a Comment