

BY CAT BARTON AND CHEANG SOKHA
Phnom Penh Post, Issue 17 / 03, February 8 - 21, 2008
No sooner had the battalions of Western press corps emblazoned long-lost Rochom P’nhieng onto the world’s consciousness, than they forgot her.
The days after a naked, emaciated P’nhieng wandered back into civilization on January 13 last year, having apparently spent 18 years living in the jungle, saw a blitzkrieg of foreign reporters and film crews descend on her village. Health professionals from across the world were quick to pontificate on how best to help Cambodia’s own “feral child.”
But a year on and the dusty village of Phsom in Ratanakkiri’s remote O’Yadao district is quiet. P’nhieng has now spent a year living with the family that claimed her as their long-lost daughter – although no DNA tests have been conducted – and has been forgotten by the media and health care professionals who so eagerly offered their services when she first emerged from the jungle.
“Since she came back no one has paid any attention to her,” said her father, Sal Lou.
“No government or hospital officials have come to see how she is doing.”
One person who has been paying attention to P’nhieng is Hector Rifa, a professor of behavioral research methods who works with the Spanish NGO Psychologists without Borders (PSFA). For ethical reasons, Rifa declined to discuss the details of P’nhieng’s case.
But according to her family, P’nhieng is doing well, all things considered. When she emerged from the jungle last year she was naked, malnourished and mute. Socialization has been slow but steady, Sal said.
“She can wear clothes now and she doesn’t try to take them off,” he said. “She eats a lot of rice, she has a big plate of it with her meals, but still she doesn’t speak.”
In the first few months after she returned, P’nhieng would take off the clothes her family gave her and try and leave the house. She escaped successfully once, but wandered back into the village several days later.
Now, she is content to stay at the house and has settled back into family life. P’nhieng eats her meals with her family – she has learned to use cutlery, her father said – and then goes out to the garden.
“She sits in her spot under the cashew tree,” said Sal. “She sits on her own – laughing, waving, humming or singing bits of tune.”
P’nhieng may not be able to speak but she is no longer entirely silent. Her parents say she sometimes keeps them awake at night singing or laughing to herself.
P’nhieng was lost aged nine when herding cows near the edge of the jungle in 1989. Her father was in Mondulkiri when she vanished. After two or three days, the family gave up hope of her returning.
“She was very young and we really didn’t believe that she would have survived until she came back last year,” he said. “Normally, after a few days of disappearing in the jungle they die.”
On February 14, 2008, P’nhieng is in the family garden, wearing a blue sarong and an orange pajama top. Her hair has been bluntly cut into a ragged bob. She sits on the ground between a barbwire fence and a set of wooden shelves.
She is aware of those around her – she responds with seeming pleasure when her mother brings her a small bunch of bananas and her eyes follow new arrivals with focused intensity – but her continued silence is worrying her family.
“I still believe the jungle spirits are inside her and they harm her and stop her from speaking out,” said Sal.
He is trying to raise money to cover the cost of taking his daughter to a spirit healer in Mondulkiri province who could help exorcise the jungle spirits from his daughter. The trip will cost upwards of $1000, he estimates.
Rifa declined to comment on reasons why P'nhieng remains mute a year after her return from the jungle. Like many professional psychologists, Rifa dislikes the careless use of psychological labels or people “playing psychologist,” both of which, he said, can “destroy the life of anybody.”
He cautioned the Post against contributing to “the general audience think[ing] that anybody can make psychological diagnosis by themselves,” and forcefully discouraged working on the blind assumption that P’nhieng was suffering from mental health problems.
When asked about P’nhieng’s progress, he said that “we have to work always thinking that everything is possible.”
After a year of proper food, P’nhieng has gained a noticeable amount of weight and is, according to the director of the O’Yadao operational district, Tak Bunthak, in good physical health.
“She has no physical health problems as she came in for a check up at the health center and she was fine,” he told the Post in Banlung on February 15. “We gave her some vitamins but I don’t think her current problems relate to malnutrition.”
Bunthak said that, in his opinion, if P’nhieng had faced severe malnutrition over the whole 18 years she was gone, “she would not have grown up properly or been able to stand, but when my staff inspected her they said she was fine. She is normal physically but I believe she has some mental health problems.”
But determining whether P’nhieng has mental health problems is nearly impossible in O’Yadao district because the health centers there have “no capacity” to diagnose or deal with mental health problems, Bunthak said. In Ratanakkiri province there is only one doctor and one nurse – both of whom received three months of training in Phnom Penh on “psychological issues” – to deal with the population’s mental health problems.
“We lack the buildings, the staff, the medicine,” Bunthak said. “We suspect some of the cases we see at the hospital are people suffering from moderate mental health problems, they could be treated with medicine and a little care but we can’t help them as we have no capacity here, and their relatives don’t know how to care for them either.”
The director of Banlung provincial hospital, Hing Pan Sokunthea, agreed that a lack of capacity prevented the province providing adequate levels of mental health care.
Although there is no way of knowing exactly what happened to P’nhieng during the 18 years she spent away from her family nor whether she is currently afflicted with mental health problems, her case does draw attention to the lack of mental health care capacity in Cambodia’s provinces, particularly remote regions such as O’Yadao, about three hours’ drive from Banlung.
“Mental health is not a priority in developing countries,” said Rifa, the psychologist.
“There are many provinces in Cambodia that are not attended. The government of Cambodia, through the National Mental Health Program, is making a big and successful effort but not in the province of Ratanakkiri,” he said.
PSFA, in cooperation with the Spanish Agency of Cooperation for Development, is starting a new project titled the Promotion of the Psycho-social Wellbeing Among the Indigenous Women of Cambodia, starting in Ratanakkiri province.
“We expect a better situation [in terms of mental health care] in the very near future, working side by side with the Ministry of Health,” Rifa said.
In the meantime, the burden of care for P’nhieng has fallen upon her family. They are spending more on food and have lost one income as Sal, her father, no longer goes out to work so he can stay home and watch his daughter.
“I have to look after her as a bodyguard looks after a high ranking official. I follow her all the time and I am very worried that if I leave her she will wander off on her own and not return like before,” he said.
“Even though we are now in difficulties because of looking after her I cannot throw her away – she is my daughter. She got lost when she was nine and she lived in the jungle for 18 years in great difficulty. Now I have to look after her.”
The days after a naked, emaciated P’nhieng wandered back into civilization on January 13 last year, having apparently spent 18 years living in the jungle, saw a blitzkrieg of foreign reporters and film crews descend on her village. Health professionals from across the world were quick to pontificate on how best to help Cambodia’s own “feral child.”
But a year on and the dusty village of Phsom in Ratanakkiri’s remote O’Yadao district is quiet. P’nhieng has now spent a year living with the family that claimed her as their long-lost daughter – although no DNA tests have been conducted – and has been forgotten by the media and health care professionals who so eagerly offered their services when she first emerged from the jungle.
“Since she came back no one has paid any attention to her,” said her father, Sal Lou.
“No government or hospital officials have come to see how she is doing.”
One person who has been paying attention to P’nhieng is Hector Rifa, a professor of behavioral research methods who works with the Spanish NGO Psychologists without Borders (PSFA). For ethical reasons, Rifa declined to discuss the details of P’nhieng’s case.
But according to her family, P’nhieng is doing well, all things considered. When she emerged from the jungle last year she was naked, malnourished and mute. Socialization has been slow but steady, Sal said.
“She can wear clothes now and she doesn’t try to take them off,” he said. “She eats a lot of rice, she has a big plate of it with her meals, but still she doesn’t speak.”
In the first few months after she returned, P’nhieng would take off the clothes her family gave her and try and leave the house. She escaped successfully once, but wandered back into the village several days later.
Now, she is content to stay at the house and has settled back into family life. P’nhieng eats her meals with her family – she has learned to use cutlery, her father said – and then goes out to the garden.
“She sits in her spot under the cashew tree,” said Sal. “She sits on her own – laughing, waving, humming or singing bits of tune.”
P’nhieng may not be able to speak but she is no longer entirely silent. Her parents say she sometimes keeps them awake at night singing or laughing to herself.
P’nhieng was lost aged nine when herding cows near the edge of the jungle in 1989. Her father was in Mondulkiri when she vanished. After two or three days, the family gave up hope of her returning.
“She was very young and we really didn’t believe that she would have survived until she came back last year,” he said. “Normally, after a few days of disappearing in the jungle they die.”
On February 14, 2008, P’nhieng is in the family garden, wearing a blue sarong and an orange pajama top. Her hair has been bluntly cut into a ragged bob. She sits on the ground between a barbwire fence and a set of wooden shelves.
She is aware of those around her – she responds with seeming pleasure when her mother brings her a small bunch of bananas and her eyes follow new arrivals with focused intensity – but her continued silence is worrying her family.
“I still believe the jungle spirits are inside her and they harm her and stop her from speaking out,” said Sal.
He is trying to raise money to cover the cost of taking his daughter to a spirit healer in Mondulkiri province who could help exorcise the jungle spirits from his daughter. The trip will cost upwards of $1000, he estimates.
Rifa declined to comment on reasons why P'nhieng remains mute a year after her return from the jungle. Like many professional psychologists, Rifa dislikes the careless use of psychological labels or people “playing psychologist,” both of which, he said, can “destroy the life of anybody.”
He cautioned the Post against contributing to “the general audience think[ing] that anybody can make psychological diagnosis by themselves,” and forcefully discouraged working on the blind assumption that P’nhieng was suffering from mental health problems.
When asked about P’nhieng’s progress, he said that “we have to work always thinking that everything is possible.”
After a year of proper food, P’nhieng has gained a noticeable amount of weight and is, according to the director of the O’Yadao operational district, Tak Bunthak, in good physical health.
“She has no physical health problems as she came in for a check up at the health center and she was fine,” he told the Post in Banlung on February 15. “We gave her some vitamins but I don’t think her current problems relate to malnutrition.”
Bunthak said that, in his opinion, if P’nhieng had faced severe malnutrition over the whole 18 years she was gone, “she would not have grown up properly or been able to stand, but when my staff inspected her they said she was fine. She is normal physically but I believe she has some mental health problems.”
But determining whether P’nhieng has mental health problems is nearly impossible in O’Yadao district because the health centers there have “no capacity” to diagnose or deal with mental health problems, Bunthak said. In Ratanakkiri province there is only one doctor and one nurse – both of whom received three months of training in Phnom Penh on “psychological issues” – to deal with the population’s mental health problems.
“We lack the buildings, the staff, the medicine,” Bunthak said. “We suspect some of the cases we see at the hospital are people suffering from moderate mental health problems, they could be treated with medicine and a little care but we can’t help them as we have no capacity here, and their relatives don’t know how to care for them either.”
The director of Banlung provincial hospital, Hing Pan Sokunthea, agreed that a lack of capacity prevented the province providing adequate levels of mental health care.
Although there is no way of knowing exactly what happened to P’nhieng during the 18 years she spent away from her family nor whether she is currently afflicted with mental health problems, her case does draw attention to the lack of mental health care capacity in Cambodia’s provinces, particularly remote regions such as O’Yadao, about three hours’ drive from Banlung.
“Mental health is not a priority in developing countries,” said Rifa, the psychologist.
“There are many provinces in Cambodia that are not attended. The government of Cambodia, through the National Mental Health Program, is making a big and successful effort but not in the province of Ratanakkiri,” he said.
PSFA, in cooperation with the Spanish Agency of Cooperation for Development, is starting a new project titled the Promotion of the Psycho-social Wellbeing Among the Indigenous Women of Cambodia, starting in Ratanakkiri province.
“We expect a better situation [in terms of mental health care] in the very near future, working side by side with the Ministry of Health,” Rifa said.
In the meantime, the burden of care for P’nhieng has fallen upon her family. They are spending more on food and have lost one income as Sal, her father, no longer goes out to work so he can stay home and watch his daughter.
“I have to look after her as a bodyguard looks after a high ranking official. I follow her all the time and I am very worried that if I leave her she will wander off on her own and not return like before,” he said.
“Even though we are now in difficulties because of looking after her I cannot throw her away – she is my daughter. She got lost when she was nine and she lived in the jungle for 18 years in great difficulty. Now I have to look after her.”
19 comments:
I can understand why this jungle girl chose to live in the jungle! And you know when I really think about it and sometime it is better to live in the jungle than to live under AH HUN SEN Vietcong slave dictator government!
THE SAME THING WHY THOSE SLAVES ELECTED TO SLAVES IN THE U.S.; THEREFORE, ALL OF YOU NO DIFFERENCE THAN THIS GIRL. IN ESSENCE, YOU'RE SLAVES!
To 6:20PM
What? This is a jungle girl not a slave! You are off the hook!
If you're a human, you have to be a slave for somebody; therefore, in this poor girl case, is her family and their ignorance.
No you man need to work for somebody but need not to be slave fool! Stand for your right and dignity!
Only PHD from Hanoi Vietname thing stupid like you 12:33AM!
12:22AM, are you Hun Sen's son?
Don't be stupid like your father boy!
Oh. I mean 12:33Am Hun Sen 's boy!
has slaved mentality too!
Oh. I mean 12:33Am Hun Sen 's boy!
has slaved mentality too!
Hun Manat has BS from West Point and PhD from Uk -- not from Hanoi.
Again, once you became a slave, you'll always be a slave.
Oh! Cambodia already has someone in control, and it does not need slaves like you people to take care her.
Just in case you need a place to visit in Cambodia, we have reserved a place for slaves, that is, where water buffalos live.
To 3:19AM
Uh? PhD in what area of study? Since he got his so called PhD and what was his contribution to the world or Cambodia?
AH HUN MANAT can't use his BS or his PhD to threaten Cambodian population any longer because there are some fools out there with their so called PhD but still can't do the fucken job!
I must say that I do admire Mr. Bill Gate the chairman of Microsoft even though he didn't earn his PhD in school and he was able to earn billion and billion and was able to contribute many positive things through his charity throughout the world far more than any PhD of his generation!
The question is can AH HUN MANAT do the fucken job or not! It is time for AH HUN MANAT to show Cambodian population of his great ideas for a better future of Cambodia if he wants to gain respect from Cambodian population! So far this guy pretend to sit quietly in some important meeting encourage by his father to look all pretty like a woman! If AH HUN MANAT dare to enter politic and all eyes are on him and he will be put under a giant microscope and let hope his father AH HUN SEN the dictator can protect him!
If Manat elected to be in the political arena, you and the rest of your slaves cannot do anything to stop or prevent him from attain his goal.
To 5:33AM
Cambodian people have been waiting for long time for AH HUN MANAT to come out of the nutshell to prove what he made of!
For AH HUN MANAT to get where he is right now and he had benefited so much from the blood and sweat of Cambodian people under his father corruption and for him never have to think about working for the rest of his life but to focus on getting good oversea education under democratic system and I will be a amaze if AH HUN MANAT can't get his so called PhD!
By the way even the fucken position he got right now was given to him by his corrupted father!
I will be the first person to welcome AH HUN SEN MANAT to politic and I can assure him and he won't be treated as pretty woman when the time comes! Ahahhahh
This so called “jungle girl” is a hoax. I think her family created this hoax out of desperation for survival. The so called “Jungle girl” was probably tied up by her family so they could hide her from the neighbors’ eyes. You can see the marks on her risks, they are tie marks. How could a borderline mentally disturb girl survives for 18 years alone? Does Cambodia have such mass jungle where a girl can just wander naked for 18 years with out encountering a living soul? Landmines, booby-trap, or poachers? I sympathize the family living in poverty, but I believe this is a hoax.
I love it when I see these Western slaves with full of repugance and pugnacity because they are angry with the situation in which they unable to control.
Manat will certainly be something that all of your slaves cannot even imagine, but to get envy over the situation in which you cannot control.
Corrupted father = Corrupted Son
Come on out pretty boy and now it is time for you to enter a man world and don’t forget to bring your PhD with you too!
US slaves is far better than Viet slaves.
Sound like Hun Manat comes to KI comment.
6:20PM, you are very lucky that GERMAN could not have found your family. But, one of those day, US will get you in Cambodia.
Jungle girl led a way to Hun Monat,and Hun, you watch out!boy, CPP will not crown you!!!like your father....
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