CROSS-STANDARD public interest · Wireless / IoT device
China-to-Cambodia Wireless / IoT Device Compliance Gap Matrix (MPTC / TCDB)
AI-compiled from official public sources — cross-checked by multiple AI models, not human-verified. Informational only; see disclaimer. Public-interest, source-linked comparison of common China Wi-Fi, Bluetooth, cellular, LoRa, and IoT device documentation against Cambodia TCDB (Telecommunication and Digital Business Regulator) mandatory type approval under the authority of MPTC (Ministry of Post and Telecommunications), Cambodia TCDB EMC conformity requirements, electrical safety requirements (230 V / 50 Hz; IEC 62368-1 basis), in-country authorised importer obligations, Khmer-language labelling preferences, and Cambodia cybersecurity regulatory developments.
GAP MATRIX
Compliance Gap Matrix
| Compliance item | Common China baseline | Cambodia (MPTC / TCDB) | Gap / action | Source + verification date |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cybersecurity — Cambodia Cybercrime Law Development; TCDB and Ministry of Interior Digital Security Framework (Emerging) | China has a comprehensive cybersecurity regulatory framework for network-connected products, including the Cybersecurity Law of the People's Republic of China (2017), the Data Security Law (2021), the Personal Information Protection Law (PIPL, 2021), and the Regulations on the Security Management of Internet of Things (IoT) published by MIIT. Chinese-market IoT devices may also be subject to MIIT network access license (NAL) requirements that include security testing. GB/T 22239 (Baseline Requirements for Cybersecurity Classified Protection) and related national standards form the cybersecurity baseline for network-connected products in China. China's cybersecurity framework applies to devices sold or operated in China; it is not recognised in Cambodia and does not substitute for any emerging Cambodian cybersecurity requirements.Cybersecurity Law of the People's Republic of China (2017) Data Security Law of the People's Republic of China (2021) Personal Information Protection Law of the People's Republic of China (PIPL, 2021) MIIT Regulations on the Security Management of Internet of Things (IoT, China) GB/T 22239 — Baseline Requirements for Cybersecurity Classified Protection (SAC, China) |
Cambodia's cybersecurity regulatory framework for wireless and IoT devices is still developing as of 2026-06-17. The primary regulatory bodies with cybersecurity mandates are TCDB (under MPTC) for telecommunications network and device security, and the Ministry of Interior (including the National Police Cybercrime Department) for enforcement of cybercrime-related provisions. A dedicated Cybercrime Law has been under development; Cambodia enacted a Law on Telecommunications and various sub-decrees related to digital economy governance, but a comprehensive product-level IoT cybersecurity standard equivalent to the EU Cyber Resilience Act or UK PSTI is not yet in force. Cambodia's National Bank (NBC) has driven digital payment security standards (QR code payment systems are widely adopted under the BAKONG platform); payment-capable devices may be subject to NBC payment security requirements. TCDB may impose network security conditions as part of type approval for devices connecting to Cambodian telecommunications networks. Manufacturers should monitor Cambodia cybersecurity regulatory developments, as the government has signalled intent to strengthen digital security laws in line with ASEAN Digital Masterplan 2025 commitments. No mandatory IoT product cybersecurity baseline standard equivalent to ETSI EN 303 645 or equivalent is currently required by TCDB as of 2026-06-17.Cambodia Law on Telecommunications (Sub-Decree No. 50 and related instruments) — TCDB network and device security provisions Cambodia Ministry of Interior — Cybercrime enforcement; Cybercrime Law under development ASEAN Digital Masterplan 2025 — cybersecurity cooperation commitments (Cambodia is a signatory) National Bank of Cambodia (NBC) — digital payment security standards (BAKONG QR payment platform); applicable to payment-capable devices TCDB type approval — may include network security conditions for devices connecting to Cambodian telecom networks |
Cambodia's product-level IoT cybersecurity requirements are still developing and no mandatory baseline standard equivalent to ETSI EN 303 645 or the EU Cyber Resilience Act is in force as of 2026-06-17. Chinese cybersecurity certifications and documentation (based on China's Cybersecurity Law, MIIT-NAL security provisions, or GB/T 22239) are not recognised in Cambodia and do not satisfy any current or emerging Cambodian cybersecurity requirements. Manufacturers exporting wireless and IoT devices from China to Cambodia should: (1) monitor TCDB and Ministry of Interior cybersecurity regulatory developments; (2) ensure devices do not contain vulnerabilities that could breach Cambodia's Law on Telecommunications network security provisions; (3) verify whether TCDB type approval for specific device categories includes security testing conditions; and (4) for payment-capable devices, comply with National Bank of Cambodia (NBC) digital payment security standards applicable to the BAKONG ecosystem.[INFORMATIONAL] Cambodia does not yet have a mandatory product-level IoT cybersecurity baseline standard (equivalent to ETSI EN 303 645) as of 2026-06-17. Chinese cybersecurity certifications are not recognised in Cambodia. TCDB may impose network security conditions as part of type approval; manufacturers should verify this for their specific device category. Payment-capable devices must comply with National Bank of Cambodia (NBC) digital payment security standards. Manufacturers should monitor Cambodia cybersecurity regulatory developments closely, as the framework is actively evolving under ASEAN Digital Masterplan 2025 commitments. | Ministry of Post and Telecommunications (MPTC), Cambodia; Telecommunication and Digital Business Regulator (TCDB), Cambodia; National Bank of Cambodia (NBC) for payment security standards2026-06-17 · reference |
| Electrical Safety — 230 V / 50 Hz Mains Supply; IEC 62368-1 Basis; Plug Type A / C / G | China's mains supply is 220 V / 50 Hz with Type A and Type I plug sockets predominant. Electrical safety for IT and multimedia equipment in China is governed by GB 4943.1 (aligned with IEC 62368-1 / IEC 60950-1) under the CCC (China Compulsory Certification) scheme administered by CNCA. CCC electrical safety certification for the Chinese domestic market is not recognised in Cambodia and does not substitute for Cambodian electrical safety requirements. The voltage difference (220 V China vs 230 V Cambodia) is within the IEC tolerance range for equipment rated 220-240 V / 50 Hz, but this must be confirmed per the specific device's power supply rating.GB 4943.1 — Information technology equipment: Safety (SAC/CNCA, aligned with IEC 62368-1 / IEC 60950-1) CCC (China Compulsory Certification) — electrical safety for IT equipment (CNCA) China mains supply: 220 V / 50 Hz; plug types A and I |
Cambodia's mains supply is 230 V / 50 Hz. Plug types in use include Type A (US-style flat two-pin), Type C (European two-pin round), and Type G (UK three-pin rectangular), reflecting Cambodia's mixed electrical infrastructure legacy. Wireless and IoT devices with mains power supply or battery charger must be designed and tested for 230 V / 50 Hz operation and must comply with applicable electrical safety standards. Cambodia references IEC 62368-1 (Audio/video, information and communication technology equipment — Safety requirements) as the applicable electrical safety standard basis for multimedia and IT equipment; IEC 60950-1 (predecessor) may also be referenced during transition. Electrical safety compliance documentation should be supported by test reports from IECEE CB Scheme accredited laboratories or other internationally recognised laboratories. Manufacturers must ensure power supply units and chargers in the product are rated for 230 V / 50 Hz and are compatible with the range of plug types used in Cambodia. Compliance with electrical safety requirements is verified as part of the TCDB type approval process and, for applicable product categories, may involve Cambodia's Ministry of Industry, Science, Technology and Innovation (MISTI) or other relevant authorities for product safety oversight.IEC 62368-1 — Audio/video, information and communication technology equipment: Safety requirements (referenced by Cambodia as basis for multimedia and IT equipment electrical safety) IEC 60950-1 — Information technology equipment: Safety (predecessor; may be referenced during transition period) Cambodia mains supply standard: 230 V / 50 Hz Plug types in use: Type A, Type C, Type G (mixed infrastructure) TCDB type approval process — includes electrical safety compliance verification Ministry of Industry, Science, Technology and Innovation (MISTI), Cambodia — product safety oversight for applicable categories |
CCC electrical safety certification (GB 4943.1) is not recognised in Cambodia and does not satisfy Cambodian electrical safety requirements for TCDB type approval. Separate electrical safety testing to IEC 62368-1 (or applicable standard referenced by TCDB) is required for the Cambodia market. Manufacturers must verify that power supply units and chargers are rated for 230 V / 50 Hz (not 220 V only). The mixed plug type environment (A/C/G) means that devices sold in Cambodia should either include multi-type adapters or clearly specify compatible plug types. IECEE CB Scheme test reports may be accepted by TCDB to reduce redundant testing — verify acceptance with TCDB. Note: Chinese products rated for 220-240 V / 50 Hz are typically compatible with Cambodia's 230 V supply, but compliance documentation must specifically reference 230 V / 50 Hz Cambodia supply conditions.[INFORMATIONAL] Electrical safety compliance to IEC 62368-1 (or applicable TCDB-referenced standard) is required for mains-powered or battery-charging wireless and IoT devices entering Cambodia. Chinese CCC (GB 4943.1) certification is not recognised. Devices must be rated for 230 V / 50 Hz; power supply compatibility with Cambodia's mixed plug environment (Type A/C/G) must be confirmed. IECEE CB Scheme reports may reduce redundant testing — verify with TCDB. Separate electrical safety testing and documentation for the Cambodia market is required. | Ministry of Post and Telecommunications (MPTC), Cambodia; Telecommunication and Digital Business Regulator (TCDB), Cambodia; IEC (for IEC 62368-1 standard reference)2026-06-17 · reference |
| EMC / RF Interference | China requires SRRC radio type approval and CCC certification (which incorporates EMC testing per GB 9254 / GB/T 17626 series) for radio and telecom terminal equipment.SRRC Radio Type Approval (Ministry of Industry and Information Technology) CCC (China Compulsory Certification) — EMC GB 9254 GB/T 17626 series |
Cambodia has no standalone EMC regulation; radio/telecom equipment must pass MPTC type approval which includes EMC parameters within the technical file review. CAMCONTROL may inspect imported goods for compliance with general product quality requirements at the border.MPTC Prakas on Type Approval of Radio and Telecom Terminal Equipment CAMCONTROL General Import Inspection Procedures Sub-Decree No. 209 ANK/BK on Product Quality (2015) |
SRRC and CCC EMC certificates are NOT recognised by MPTC or CAMCONTROL. A fresh technical file with test reports must be prepared for MPTC type approval. Chinese-standard EMC test reports may be used as supporting evidence but will not substitute for MPTC submission.[INFORMATIONAL] EMC compliance for Cambodia is assessed within the MPTC type approval process; there is no separate EMC certificate. Chinese SRRC/CCC test data may support but cannot replace the MPTC filing. Verify current MPTC technical requirements before submission. | Ministry of Post and Telecommunications of Cambodia (MPTC)2026-06-17 · reference |
| CAMCONTROL Border Inspection | China conducts customs and CIQ (China Inspection and Quarantine) checks at border; CCC certification is the primary documentary requirement for covered product categories.CCC (China Compulsory Certification) China Customs Law CIQ inspection requirements |
CAMCONTROL (Ministry of Commerce) may conduct physical quality and conformity inspection of imported electronics at the port of entry. Importers should hold documentation demonstrating product safety and conformity (e.g. MPTC type approval certificate, test reports). Risk-based inspection; not every shipment is checked.Sub-Decree No. 209 ANK/BK on Product Quality (2015) CAMCONTROL import inspection procedures Law on Consumer Protection (2019) |
CAMCONTROL operates independently from MPTC. Holding an MPTC type approval certificate significantly reduces CAMCONTROL inspection risk, but does not eliminate it. Chinese CCC documentation does not satisfy CAMCONTROL requirements; local importer must present valid Cambodian compliance documents.[INFORMATIONAL] Ensure the local Cambodian importer/agent holds the MPTC type approval certificate and can present it to CAMCONTROL at the border. Chinese CCC documents alone are insufficient. Verify current CAMCONTROL product categories subject to mandatory inspection before shipment. | CAMCONTROL — Ministry of Commerce of Cambodia2026-06-17 · reference |
| EMC Emissions — TCDB Technical Requirements / CISPR 32 Basis (Multimedia and Wireless Equipment) | China addresses EMC emissions for IT and multimedia equipment primarily through GB 9254 (aligned with CISPR 22/32) and GB 17625 (aligned with IEC 61000-3 for harmonics and flicker). Products within CCC scope must be certified before sale in China; others may use self-declaration against applicable GB/T standards. Chinese GB 9254 / CCC EMC emissions documentation is not directly recognised in Cambodia and does not satisfy TCDB type approval EMC requirements.GB 9254 — Information technology equipment: Radio disturbance characteristics (SAC/MIIT, aligned with CISPR 22/32) GB 17625.1 — Limits for harmonic current emissions (SAC, aligned with IEC 61000-3-2) |
Cambodia's TCDB (Telecommunication and Digital Business Regulator) applies technical requirements for electromagnetic compatibility (EMC) emissions as part of the type approval process for wireless and telecom terminal equipment. Cambodia references international and ASEAN-harmonised standards — including CISPR 32 (Electromagnetic compatibility of multimedia equipment — Emission requirements) as a basis for emissions limits applicable to Wi-Fi, Bluetooth, cellular, LoRa, and IoT devices. Manufacturers seeking TCDB type approval must demonstrate EMC emissions compliance through test reports from accredited laboratories. Cambodia's EMC framework is still developing; applicants should verify the current applicable emissions standard and test report requirements directly with TCDB before testing. GDCE (General Department of Customs and Excise) customs clearance for importing devices may also require evidence of TCDB compliance.TCDB (Telecommunication and Digital Business Regulator, Cambodia) — type approval technical requirements for EMC emissions CISPR 32 — Electromagnetic compatibility of multimedia equipment: Emission requirements (referenced by Cambodia for international alignment) ASEAN harmonised technical requirements for telecommunications and radio equipment (ASEAN framework) |
Chinese GB 9254 / CCC EMC emissions documentation is not directly accepted in Cambodia as satisfying TCDB type approval EMC requirements. Although both GB 9254 and CISPR 32 derive from the same CISPR lineage, separate EMC compliance testing meeting TCDB requirements is needed for the Cambodia market. Manufacturers should verify with TCDB the current applicable emissions standard and whether test reports from ILAC-MRA accredited laboratories are accepted. Cambodia's EMC regulatory framework is still maturing; early engagement with TCDB or a local regulatory consultant is recommended.[INFORMATIONAL] EMC emissions compliance (referencing CISPR 32 or equivalent) is required as part of TCDB type approval for wireless and multimedia devices in Cambodia. Chinese GB 9254 / CCC EMC documentation is not a direct substitute. Separate EMC testing meeting TCDB requirements is needed. Verify current applicable emissions standards and accepted laboratory accreditation with TCDB before testing, as Cambodia's EMC regulatory framework is still developing. | Ministry of Post and Telecommunications (MPTC), Cambodia; Telecommunication and Digital Business Regulator (TCDB), Cambodia2026-06-17 · reference |
| EMC Immunity — TCDB Technical Requirements / IEC 61000-4 Series Basis | China addresses EMC immunity for IT and multimedia equipment through GB/T 17618 (aligned with CISPR 24) and related GB/T standards in the IEC 61000-4 series. CCC certification includes immunity testing for in-scope products. Chinese GB/T 17618 immunity documentation is not directly recognised in Cambodia and does not satisfy TCDB type approval EMC immunity requirements.GB/T 17618 — Information technology equipment: Immunity characteristics (SAC, aligned with CISPR 24) GB/T 17626 series — Electromagnetic compatibility testing and measurement techniques (aligned with IEC 61000-4) |
EMC immunity requirements for wireless and telecom terminal equipment in Cambodia are applied by TCDB as part of the type approval process. Cambodia references internationally recognised immunity standards aligned with CISPR 35 and the IEC 61000-4 series for multimedia and telecommunications equipment. Wireless and IoT devices intended for residential or commercial environments in Cambodia must demonstrate immunity to relevant electromagnetic disturbances in accordance with applicable technical requirements referenced by TCDB. Because Cambodia's regulatory framework is still developing, applicants should verify the current immunity standard requirements and accepted test report formats directly with TCDB or through a locally registered regulatory consultant before commissioning immunity testing.TCDB (Telecommunication and Digital Business Regulator, Cambodia) — type approval technical requirements for EMC immunity CISPR 35 — Electromagnetic compatibility of multimedia equipment: Immunity requirements (referenced for Cambodia alignment) IEC 61000-4 series — Electromagnetic compatibility testing and measurement techniques (referenced by Cambodia) |
Chinese GB/T 17618 / CCC immunity documentation is not accepted as satisfying TCDB Cambodia EMC immunity requirements. Although both systems derive from IEC/CISPR standards, Cambodia market compliance requires separate immunity testing meeting TCDB technical requirements. The specific immunity standard applicable to a given device category should be verified with TCDB before testing. Manufacturers should not assume CISPR 24-based Chinese test reports satisfy CISPR 35-based Cambodian requirements. Cambodia's EMC regulatory framework is still maturing and requirements may evolve.[INFORMATIONAL] EMC immunity requirements (referencing CISPR 35 and IEC 61000-4 series) apply to wireless and multimedia devices as part of TCDB type approval in Cambodia. Chinese GB/T 17618 / CCC immunity documentation does not substitute. Separate immunity testing meeting TCDB requirements is needed for the Cambodia market. Verify current applicable immunity standards and accepted laboratory accreditation with TCDB before testing, as Cambodia's framework is still developing. | Ministry of Post and Telecommunications (MPTC), Cambodia; Telecommunication and Digital Business Regulator (TCDB), Cambodia2026-06-17 · reference |
| Local Authorised Importer / Agent, Khmer-Language Labelling, and GDCE Customs Clearance | China does not require a dedicated 'local importer' for domestic market devices in the same sense; however, MIIT NAL and CCC processes require a China-registered applicant entity. Chinese product labels must be in simplified Chinese (Mandarin) and comply with GB labelling standards. There is no Khmer-language labelling requirement for the Chinese domestic market. China and Cambodia are both ASEAN-China FTA parties and Belt and Road partners; however, Chinese domestic approval processes (SRRC/MIIT-NAL/CCC) do not carry over to Cambodia regulatory requirements.MIIT Network Access License (NAL) — applicant must be a China-registered entity CCC application entity requirements (CNCA, China) Chinese labelling law — simplified Chinese mandatory for domestic market (GB 7718 for food; general product labelling under applicable GB standards) ASEAN-China Free Trade Agreement (ACFTA) — China is a party; tariff and trade provisions apply |
A locally registered Cambodian company or individual acting as an authorised importer or agent is required for TCDB type approval applications and for customs clearance of imported wireless and telecom terminal equipment in Cambodia. The authorised importer must be registered with the relevant Cambodian authorities and is the responsible entity for TCDB certification, product labelling compliance, and post-market obligations in Cambodia. Product labelling in Khmer (the Cambodian official language) is strongly preferred for consumer products sold in Cambodia; Khmer-language labelling is increasingly expected as Cambodia's consumer protection regulations develop. Labels should include: product name and model, manufacturer name and country of origin, TCDB type approval certificate number (once granted), rated voltage and frequency (230 V / 50 Hz), authorised importer name and contact in Cambodia, and applicable safety symbols. Khmer text must be accurate and verified by a qualified Khmer translator familiar with technical and regulatory terminology; machine-translated Khmer without expert review is not acceptable for regulatory or commercial use. Import clearance is handled by the General Department of Customs and Excise (GDCE — អគ្គនាយកដ្ឋាន税税税 / នាយកដ្ឋានគយ និងរដ្ឋាករ) under the Ministry of Economy and Finance. Applicable HS codes must be declared correctly for customs classification. Cambodia's direct import trade with China has expanded significantly under Belt and Road and ASEAN-China FTA frameworks, but TCDB and customs compliance obligations are independent of these trade agreements.TCDB type approval application requirements — locally registered Cambodian importer / representative obligation (Cambodia) Cambodia Law on Consumer Protection — product labelling requirements; Khmer as official language General Department of Customs and Excise (GDCE), Ministry of Economy and Finance, Cambodia — import customs clearance and HS code declaration ASEAN-China Free Trade Agreement (ACFTA) — tariff preferences applicable but does not substitute for TCDB or labelling compliance Cambodia Law on Commercial Enterprises — registration requirements for importers and commercial agents in Cambodia |
A locally registered Cambodian company or individual must act as authorised importer and TCDB type approval holder — a China-only entity cannot directly hold TCDB approval or act as customs importer of record in Cambodia. Khmer-language product labelling is strongly preferred and increasingly required for consumer devices in Cambodia; Chinese-only or English-only labels may not satisfy Cambodia labelling obligations as regulations develop. Khmer translation must be verified by a qualified translator familiar with Cambodian technical and regulatory language — machine translation is not acceptable. The Belt and Road and ASEAN-China FTA trade relationship facilitates import logistics and tariff reduction but does not substitute for TCDB type approval, Khmer labelling, or GDCE customs compliance. Correct HS code declaration is required for GDCE customs clearance.[INFORMATIONAL] A locally registered Cambodian company or individual must act as authorised importer and TCDB type approval holder. Khmer-language product labelling is strongly preferred and increasingly required for consumer wireless devices in Cambodia; Chinese-only or English-only labels may not comply as regulations develop. Khmer translation must be verified by a qualified translator. A Chinese-only entity cannot hold TCDB approval or act as GDCE customs importer of record. The Belt and Road and ASEAN-China FTA relationship facilitates trade logistics but does not substitute for TCDB or customs compliance. | General Department of Customs and Excise (GDCE), Ministry of Economy and Finance, Cambodia; Ministry of Post and Telecommunications (MPTC) / TCDB, Cambodia2026-06-17 · reference |
| TCDB Type Approval — Radio / Telecom Terminal Equipment (Mandatory, under MPTC authority) | China requires SRRC (State Radio Regulation of China, under MIIT) radio type approval for all radio transmitters sold in China, along with a MIIT network access license (NAL) for telecom terminal equipment with network access functions. CCC (China Compulsory Certification) may also apply to certain RF equipment categories. Approval codes must appear on product labels per MIIT/SRRC regulations. Neither SRRC approval, CCC, nor MIIT-NAL are recognised by TCDB Cambodia; all are domestic Chinese requirements with no mutual recognition with Cambodia as of 2026-06-17.Radio Regulations of the People's Republic of China (SRRC / MIIT) Telecommunications Regulations of the People's Republic of China (MIIT — NAL) CCC (China Compulsory Certification) — for RF equipment categories in scope (CNCA) |
All wireless and radio communication devices — including Wi-Fi, Bluetooth, cellular, LoRa, and IoT products with RF capability — must obtain a TCDB (Telecommunication and Digital Business Regulator) type approval certificate before import or sale in Cambodia. TCDB operates under the authority of MPTC (Ministry of Post and Telecommunications — ក្រសួងប្រៃសណីយ៍ និងទូរគមនាគមន៍) and is responsible for regulation, frequency management, and type approval of all radio and telecom terminal equipment in Cambodia. A TCDB conformity label or approval marking must be affixed to the product or its packaging. Cambodia's frequency allocations include ASEAN-harmonised 2.4 GHz and 5 GHz Wi-Fi bands regulated by TCDB. CE marking, FCC certification, and SRRC approval from China are not recognised by TCDB and do not substitute for Cambodia type approval. An in-country authorised importer or local representative registered in Cambodia is required to file and maintain TCDB type approval. Cambodia has been expanding direct import of Chinese electronics under Belt and Road connectivity frameworks, but TCDB type approval obligations remain independent of trade corridor agreements.MPTC (Ministry of Post and Telecommunications, Cambodia) — telecommunications regulatory authority TCDB (Telecommunication and Digital Business Regulator, Cambodia) — type approval and frequency management regulations TCDB type approval procedures for radio and telecom terminal equipment (Cambodia) ASEAN harmonised frequency bands for 2.4 GHz and 5 GHz Wi-Fi (ASEAN framework, enforced by TCDB) |
SRRC radio type approval, MIIT network access license (NAL), and CCC are domestic Chinese requirements and are not recognised by Cambodia's TCDB. A separate TCDB type approval must be obtained for the Cambodia market before import or sale. A TCDB conformity label must be affixed to the product or packaging. CE and FCC approvals are also not recognised by TCDB. A locally registered Cambodian importer or agent must be appointed to file the TCDB application. Common gap: Chinese-market products carry only SRRC/MIIT/CCC marks; all TCDB certification and labelling must be completed separately before entry into the Cambodia market.[INFORMATIONAL] TCDB type approval is mandatory for all wireless and RF-capable devices before import or sale in Cambodia. Chinese SRRC, CCC, and MIIT-NAL approvals are not recognised by TCDB. A separate TCDB type approval application must be filed through a locally registered Cambodian importer or agent. A TCDB conformity label must appear on the product or packaging. CE and FCC certifications provide no exemption from TCDB requirements. | Ministry of Post and Telecommunications (MPTC), Cambodia; Telecommunication and Digital Business Regulator (TCDB), Cambodia2026-06-17 · reference |
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SOURCES
Official-source register.
- Ministry of Post and Telecommunications (MPTC), Cambodia; Telecommunication and Digital Business Regulator (TCDB), Cambodia; National Bank of Cambodia (NBC) for payment security standards · accessed 2026-06-17 · reference · used in 1 rows
- Ministry of Post and Telecommunications (MPTC), Cambodia; Telecommunication and Digital Business Regulator (TCDB), Cambodia; IEC (for IEC 62368-1 standard reference) · accessed 2026-06-17 · reference · used in 1 rows
- Ministry of Post and Telecommunications of Cambodia (MPTC) · accessed 2026-06-17 · reference · used in 1 rows
- CAMCONTROL — Ministry of Commerce of Cambodia · accessed 2026-06-17 · reference · used in 1 rows
- Ministry of Post and Telecommunications (MPTC), Cambodia; Telecommunication and Digital Business Regulator (TCDB), Cambodia · accessed 2026-06-17 · reference · used in 3 rows
- General Department of Customs and Excise (GDCE), Ministry of Economy and Finance, Cambodia; Ministry of Post and Telecommunications (MPTC) / TCDB, Cambodia · accessed 2026-06-17 · reference · used in 1 rows