The Convention on the Elimination of Discrimination against Women (“CEDAW”) is the most detailed international treaty on women’s human rights and is often described as the international bill of rights for women. The Committee on the Elimination of Discrimination against Women (“the Committee”) is a body of 23 independent experts on women’s rights that monitors implementation of CEDAW by countries who have ratified the treaty. The Royal Government of Cambodia ratified CEDAW in 1992 and in 2010 ratified the Option Protocol to CEDAW.
State Parties, including Cambodia, are required to submit reports to the Committee every 4 years on how the country is implementing the rights under the CEDAW. Cambodia has several obligations under CEDAW, including adopting appropriate legislation to prohibit discrimination against women, ensuring effective protection of women from discrimination, ensuring equality in the public and private sectors, and abolishing existing laws, regulations, or customs which discriminate against women. The Committee last reviewed Cambodia in November 2019 and should review Cambodia again in 2023.
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Date
03-Feb-2021 Source
Khmer TimesUS, Cambodia to beef up human trafficking fight
United States law enforcement and Cambodian police further strengthened their mutual commitment to combatting human trafficking at a meeting between the two sides on Monday.
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Date
02-Feb-2021 Source
PPPKingdom seeks recognition for anti-human trafficking efforts
The Cambodian government has sent a letter to the UN Network on Migration (Network) through the International Organisation for Migration (IOM) Cambodia requesting recognition for Cambodia as a Champion Country for eliminating or reducing impacts on m
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Date
12-Oct-2020 Source
PPPCouncil of Ministers approves draft laws
The Council of Ministers will send four draft laws to the National Assembly for approval after recently approving a draft of the 2019-2023 National Action Plan for Prevention of Violence Against Women and a draft of a three-year rolling Public Invest
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Date
31-Aug-2020 Source
PPPJustice ministry clears 63% of legal case backlog
The Ministry of Justice said it had cleared 63 per cent of legal case backlog at all of the Kingdom’s courts and expected to complete the mission by year’s end. Ministry spokesman Chin Malin told The Post on Sunday that in less than four months si
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