The government declined to provide the names of telecommunications companies that have not made required contributions to state-managed funds on Monday, appearing to go back on an earlier promise to publicise those names.
The deadline for telecom companies to pay about 3 percent of their annual revenue to the Ministry of Posts and Telecommunications (MPT) was April 30, pushed back from an original deadline of March 1.
The ministry published a notice and bought an advertisement in The Phnom Penh Post to announce the new deadline in early April and promised to “publicly announce” the names and ownership of any companies that failed to meet the obligations “without exception”.
Contacted yesterday, all three officials who were listed on the announcement as coordinators of the interministerial task force in charge of that enforcement declined to provide the names or details of which companies had failed to make payments.
“I have no idea to comment at all, they just only put my number in the announcement,” said Sat Monyvibol, one of the listed contacts. “It is a job for higher duties.”
Oum Kakada, another contact listed on the announcement, said “I have no duty to provide information to media, I am only the coordinator.”
Nom Sinith, the third contact, said he was in Singapore and was unable to speak to a reporter.
The government pushed back the original deadline of March 1 after the ministry collected just $4.2 million of the total of over $17 million that was owed under regulations that came into effect as part of the 2016Telecommunications Law.
The majority of those payments – $3.5 million – came from a single company, Smart, the firm told The Post at the time.