Anti-Corruption Group Accuses Officials of Marriage Graft
Chun Sakada, VOA Khmer 
Phnom Penh Thursday, 09 December 2010 
“If I did not pay, I had no right to marry,” he said. “So I had to pay.”
A  watchdog group that took tax collectors to task for overcharging on  vehicle registration has now set its sights on marriage certification.
Administrators across the  country charge as much as $20 for documents required for marriage, which  should officially only cost less than $0.30, San Chey, a project  coordinator for the Affiliated Network for Social Accountability in East  Asia and the Pacific, said Thursday.
Earlier this year, the  Affiliated Network brought complaints against Finance Ministry tax  collectors, leading to a recommendation by the newly formed  Anti-Corruption Unit that offenders be demoted and administratively  punished.
Speaking at a Phnom Penh  gathering to mark International Anti-Corruption Day, San Chey said  commune officials were overcharging people in direct contravention to a  government subdecree on marriage.
In Cambodia, a person needs a  letter to prove he or she is not already married and a letter stating  they are permitted to marry. Once married, they receive a certificate.  Officials are overcharging for the whole process, San Chey said.
“The people must pay between $10  and $20 to commune officials for marriage certification, while the  official price is up to 1,200 riel for the marriage paperwork process,”  San Chey said.
Chhoeun Chem, a resident of  Phnom Penh's Meanchey district, Stung Meanchey commune, said he was  charged $20 for the process just last month.
“If I did not pay, I had no right to marry,” he said. “So I had to pay.”
However, Kim Khem Mony, the  Stung Meanchey official in charge of marriage certification, said his  staff has never overcharged for the process.
“We charge only 1,200 riel, as  stated in the subdecree,” he said. “But people always pay $20 to a  broker or middleman to help them with their marriage licenses.”
San Chey advised people to get  receipts from the authorities when they are fined or pay for public  services. Public officials should not hesitate in providing one, he  said.
“This can push for more  transparency for income management and can reduce people's illegal  payments to prevent a big part of corruption,” he said.






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