LIBRARY

Microfinance institutions (MFIs) & debt

Statement | Strong Common Ground and Commitment to Further Steps in NCP Dialogue Relating to Microfinance Loans in Cambodia

19 March 2024audio available

On 13-15 March 2024, representatives of social impact investor Oikocredit, Ecumenical Development Cooperative Society U.A. and of three human rights NGOs, Cambodian League for the Promotion and Defense of Human Rights (LICADHO), Equitable Cambodia and FIAN Germany, came together for a dialogue. This was part of the process related to the submission made by the three NGOs to the Dutch OECD National Contact Point for Responsible Business Conduct concerning the alleged negative impacts of some microfinance loans on Cambodian borrowers.

During the dialogue, there was strong common ground between the parties in their commitment to improve the livelihoods of Cambodian borrowers. There was also a joint recognition of the urgent issues in the Cambodian microfinance sector and the need to take action to address them. The parties have identified and committed to concrete next steps towards a positive outcome of the dialogue.

The Dutch NCP has commended both parties on their good faith engagement in the ongoing NCP process.

Statement | NGOs’ Complaint against Oikocredit Moves Forward with the Dutch National Contact Point for the OECD Guidelines

18 September 2023audio available

The Netherlands’ National Contact Point for Responsible Business Conduct (Dutch NCP) has accepted and will proceed with a complaint alleging that Oikocredit, a global social investor based in the Netherlands, has contributed to severe adverse human rights impacts in Cambodia’s microfinance sector.

The complaint followed extensive public evidence of widespread and systematic human rights abuses in Cambodia’s microfinance sector, including reports of violations associated with the microloan providers that receive direct funding from Oikocredit. The complaint alleges that Oikocredit was aware of reports of predatory lending, coercive collection practices, and related serious harms in Cambodia’s microfinance sector since at least 2017 yet continued and even increased its investments through 2022.

Video | Complaint Mechanism for Affected MFI Borrowers

30 August 2023audio available

Today, LICADHO is introducing a mechanism for all Cambodians who wish to file a complaint about aggressive and predatory MFIs/banks.

Complaints can be made on behalf of anyone who has experienced harms and abuses in the microfinance sector. Such abuses might include coerced land sales, child labour, unwanted migration, hunger, threats and intimidation, and other harms.

Report | Debt Threats: A Quantitative Study of Microloan Borrowers in Cambodia

29 August 2023audio available

Equitable Cambodia (EC) and the Cambodian League for the Promotion and Defense of Human Rights (LICADHO) today are releasing Debt Threats: A quantitative study of microloan borrowers in Cambodia’s Kampong Speu province. The report features findings from a survey of 717 households.

The research shows that widespread over-indebtedness has led to significant numbers of serious human rights abuses – including hunger, child labour, and coerced land sales – across Kampong Speu province. Borrowers are making unacceptable sacrifices to repay loans that are overwhelmingly collateralised with land titles, and that often far exceed borrowers’ incomes and ability to repay.

Flash Info | Investigation of IFC Investments in MFIs to Move Forward

2 August 2023audio available

The Compliance Advisor Ombudsman (CAO) of the International Finance Corporation (IFC) will carry out a compliance investigation of six microfinance lenders in Cambodia and four intermediaries over harms caused by over-indebtedness and predatory lending.

The CAO’s investigation was initially announced on 13 June 2023, but was delayed after IFC management requested the IFC Board to review the CAO’s decision. This was the first ever request of its kind, made using a 2021 amendment to the CAO policy that allows for such reviews under narrow, technical grounds only. The IFC later withdrew its request on the last day of the review period without explanation. The CAO noted a policy requiring “any request” to be published, but also said a decision on whether to publish this withdrawn request is “pending.”

The CAO’s Compliance Appraisal Report determined that an investigation was warranted. In this report, the CAO stated it had found preliminary indications of harm and that the IFC may not have complied with its own policies. The report noted that those harms are plausibly linked to IFC’s potential non-compliance.

Flash Info | IFC Board Grants Itself Extra Time to Review Independent Accountability Mechanism’s Decision to Investigate

18 July 2023audio available

The Board of Directors of the International Finance Corporation (IFC) has granted itself additional time to review a decision by its independent accountability mechanism to open an investigation into IFC microfinance investments in Cambodia. The Board has until 28 July 2023 to uphold or overturn the decision to investigate.

The IFC is a member of the World Bank Group, and it has made significant investments in Cambodia’s microfinance industry. Following a complaint, the independent accountability mechanism of the IFC – the Compliance Advisor Ombudsman (CAO) – completed, among other steps, a seven-month-long review and on 13 June 2023 “concluded that an investigation is merited". On 29 June, IFC management requested that the Board review the CAO’s decision, by activating a never-before-used 2021 amendment to the CAO Policy.

Twenty-four stakeholders, including LICADHO, wrote a joint letter to the Board on 12 July 2023 outlining concerns about IFC management’s request for Board review. The letter reminds the Board that CAO Policy limits their review to narrow technical criteria, and that the Board is explicitly prohibited from making a judgement on the merits of the complaint.

Statement | IFC Board to Review CAO’s Decision to Investigate Cambodian MFI Complaint

3 July 2023audio available

The ombudsman of the International Finance Corporation (IFC) has determined that a compliance investigation is warranted in response to a complaint that IFC’s investments in six microfinance institutions in Cambodia, as well as four funds and investors, contributed to harms suffered by Cambodian borrowers. However, in an unprecedented move, IFC management has requested that the IFC Board review the ombudsman’s decision – which could delay or end the compliance investigation process.

The Board has 10 working days to review the request. It may either allow the compliance investigation to move forward, reverse the CAO’s decision, or give itself additional time to review the request.

“An investigation is a crucial step toward justice and remediation for Cambodian borrowers who continue to suffer due to predatory lending,” said Naly Pilorge, outreach director of LICADHO. “The IFC management’s request for board review, after the CAO decided an investigation is merited, is a shameful ploy to avoid scrutiny. The IFC needs to prove that it is committed to accountability through the CAO and stop trying to corrupt an independent process.”

Statement | Human Rights NGOs File Complaint against Oikocredit over Cambodian MFI Investments

12 December 2022audio available

Three NGOs today filed a complaint to the Dutch government’s National Contact Point for Responsible Business Conduct accusing Oikocredit, a global social investor based in the Netherlands, of failing to conduct proper due diligence on its investments in Cambodia’s microfinance sector since at least 2017, despite evidence of harms directly linked to those investments.

Oikocredit has made large and increasing investments in Cambodian microfinance institutions (MFIs) from 2017 through 2022, at a time when overwhelming evidence of widespread over-indebtedness and negative social impacts was being produced by local NGOs, journalists, international NGOS and even Oikocredit itself. Despite this evidence, Oikocredit increased its investments in Cambodian MFIs, rising from 50 million Euros in 2017 to more than 67 million Euros as of September 2022 – making Cambodia the country with the second-largest exposure in Oikocredit’s portfolio.

Statement | AIIB Loans to Cambodian Microlenders Risk Worsening a Human Rights Crisis

17 November 2022audio available

We, the undersigned civil society organisations in Southeast Asia and Europe, decry the Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank’s (AIIB) approval of US$175 million in financing to Cambodian microfinance institutions, despite years of widespread public reporting on human rights violations in the sector.

AIIB, a multilateral investment bank with 105 members including Germany which holds significant shares, chose to begin financing two Cambodian microlenders the same month that the IFC’s Compliance Advisor Ombudsman accepted a complaint alleging that the IFC’s investments in those same microlenders and others are linked to predatory lending and abusive collection practices.

Statement | IFC Watchdog Moves to Compliance Stage of Cambodian Microloan Complaint

15 November 2022audio available

A complaint against six microfinance institutions and banks in Cambodia that are funded by the International Finance Corporation (IFC) will move into the Compliance stage, an important step toward a much-needed investigation into years of abuses and violations of IFC performance standards by microloan providers in Cambodia.

The Compliance Advisor Ombudsman (CAO) of the IFC has announced that the complaint, filed in February this year by LICADHO and Equitable Cambodia (EC) on behalf of affected Cambodian borrowers, will move to Compliance following the decision of some complainants, and after other complainants and financial institutions did not reach a mutual agreement to enter into dispute resolution.

Statement | German Government-Funded Study Confirms Grave Problems in Cambodia’s Microfinance Sector

14 September 2022audio available

A study commissioned by the Federal Ministry for Economic Cooperation and Development (BMZ) provides further evidence of widespread over-indebtedness in Cambodia, resulting in an “alarmingly high” and “unacceptable” number of distressed land sales. The study’s findings indicate that more than 167,000 Cambodian households have had to sell land to repay loans over the past five years. FIAN as well as Cambodian NGOs LICADHO and Equitable Cambodia call on the German government and other donors of the microfinance sector to fulfil their responsibilities and take immediate and concrete action to address this untenable situation.

Statement | IFC Watchdog Accepts Complaint over Microfinance Abuses in Cambodia

3 May 2022audio available

The Compliance Advisor Ombudsman of the International Finance Corporation (IFC) has accepted and will move ahead with its review of a complaint alleging human rights violations and violations of IFC performance standards committed by six microfinance institutions and banks that offer microloans in Cambodia.

The complaint was filed on behalf of affected borrowers by Equitable Cambodia (EC) and the Cambodian League for the Promotion and Defense of Human Rights (LICADHO). It details how the IFC failed in its obligation to conduct due diligence and supervise projects to ensure compliance with performance standards. As a result, grave harms resulted from IFC loans and investments in six microfinance institutions (MFIs) and microloan-providing banks in Cambodia – ACLEDA, Hattha Bank, Sathapana, Amret, LOLC, and Prasac – who together hold about 75% of the country’s microloans.

Video | Cambodian Land Communities Speaking Out for the Right to Relief

28 June 2021audio available

A video featuring the voices and experiences of community members who face over-indebtedness due to microfinance and microloan debt. Difficulties include coerced land sales, child labour, migration, hunger, and other human rights violations. These borrowers have the right to relief.

Report | Right to Relief: Indebted Land Communities in Cambodia Speak Out

28 June 2021audio available

Right to Relief is a call for immediate action to be taken by microloan providers - both microfinance institutions (MFIs) and banks - as well as their international investors, including state development banks from Europe and the United States, to investigate the scope of human rights abuses and provide relief to borrowers who have suffered from predatory lending and collection practices. The research spans eight provinces in Cambodia, with each community profile featuring information about the community’s formation in response to a land conflict, and the threat to land tenure security and other human rights now posed by over-indebtedness.

A website features highlights from the 14 community profiles, while a PDF of the report contains more complete profiles and additional information about the project.

Article | Right to Relief: Indebted Land Communities in Cambodia Speak Out

28 June 2021audio available

Right to Relief is a call for immediate action to be taken by microloan providers - both microfinance institutions (MFIs) and banks - as well as their international investors, including state development banks from Europe and the United States, to investigate the scope of human rights abuses and provide relief to borrowers who have suffered from predatory lending and collection practices. The research spans eight provinces in Cambodia, with each community profile featuring information about the community’s formation in response to a land conflict, and the threat to land tenure security and other human rights now posed by over-indebtedness.

A website features highlights from the 14 community profiles, while a PDF of the report contains more complete profiles and additional information about the project.

Video | Understanding the Rights of Borrowers

9 April 2021audio available

Understanding your rights as a borrower is important. Watch this video to learn about some of the negative consequences and unethical practices in Cambodia's microfinance and microloan sector.

Statement | Suspend Loan Repayments, Interest Accrual to Help Cambodian Borrowers

6 April 2021

We, the undersigned groups, are calling on the government to direct all microfinance institutions (MFIs) and banks in the country to suspend all loan repayments and interest accrual for at least three months in order to give borrowers the opportunity to stay home and stay safe during the current COVID-19 outbreak without needing to fear losing their land or homes if they cannot repay their debt.

Statement | Joint Response to Open Letter on Microfinance Reports

16 July 2020audio available

We read your open letter addressed to our four civil society groups and published on the CMA Facebook page on the night of July 15th.

We respectfully decline your request to change any of the three reports regarding human rights abuses in Cambodia’s microfinance and microloan sector. The information and individual stories in these reports remains accurate. We will continue to protect the privacy of people who have chosen to share their stories with us on condition of anonymity. We encourage you, and all interested parties, to read the reports in full to better understand their purpose, methodology, and findings.

Briefing | Worked to Debt: Over-Indebtedness in Cambodia's Garment Sector

30 June 2020audio available

Tens of thousands of garment workers in Cambodia will struggle to repay microfinance debts during work stoppages and factory suspensions caused by COVID-19, creating a mounting human rights crisis as they struggle to feed their families and hold onto their land under immense pressure from microfinance institutions (MFIs). Without immediate debt relief, many of these workers will resort to selling their land or their homes, eating less food or taking out even more loans to repay their debts.

In Worked to Debt, a joint briefing paper between the Cambodian Alliance of Trade Unions (CATU), the Center for Alliance of Labor and Human Rights (CENTRAL) and the Cambodian League for the Promotion and Defense of Human Rights (LICADHO), researchers surveyed more than 150 workers – most of them women – from three factories in Phnom Penh and Kampong Chhnang to investigate how workers were coping with their debts as hundreds of factories suspended operations as a result of the global pandemic.

Article | Six Youth Group Members Arrested and Monks Threatened During Peaceful MFI Protest

10 May 2020audio available

Six members of Cambodian youth group Khmer Thavrak including human rights activist Hun Vannak were arrested in Battambang last night while returning from a peaceful protest calling on banks and microfinance institutions (MFIs) to suspend loan repayments amid the economic crisis caused by the global COVID-19 pandemic. Five monks who joined the protest were also threatened with expulsion from their pagodas unless they thumb-printed an agreement pledging to stop their activism on behalf of Cambodian borrowers.

Next Page >>

Filter

Type






Topic


















Year