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.
Please click here to read more...
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.
Please click here to read more...
No comments:
Post a Comment