Friday, May 07, 2010

Concern Grows Over Women’s Health, Equality

A Cambodian woman kisses her baby while walking through the slum village in Phnom Penh.(Photo: AP)

Chun Sakada, VOA Khmer

Phnom Penh Thursday, 06 May 2010

"Cambodian women still face problems of domestic violence, rape and trafficking."
Lawmakers and health officials from the UN are meeting Friday over the country’s progress on maternal mortality and gender equality, as concern grows that Cambodia is failing to meet its development goals and is in some cases losing ground.

“The maternal mortality rate is still at a high level, and it hasn’t fallen like the Cambodian government wants,” Ping Chutema, director of the Reproductive Health Association of Cambodia, told VOA Khmer on Thursday. “It is a very serious problem.”

Cambodia has so-called millennium development goals, which include lowering the rates of mothers who die in childbirth and improving gender equality, among others.

But Ping Chutema said for maternal mortality, the country is going in the wrong direction.

“In 2000, 437 women died in childbirth among 100,000; 472 died in 2005,” she said. “Our maternal mortality is still high, and our gender equality and empowerment of women is not yet equal. We have not reached the millennium development goals.”

Cambodian women still face problems of domestic violence, rape and trafficking, said Say Saravathany, director of the Cambodian Women’s Crisis Center, which took in more than 1,400 women in 2009.

“It affects a woman’s health in both body and feeling,” she said. “The majority of women suffer from domestic violence. They have no energy or heart to join in social development, and they are not brave enough to become leaders.”

And while the government does have an official policy to promote the rights and health of women, “it has not worked to implement it,” Ros Sopheap, director of Gender and Development for Cambodia, said. “Women have the right to participate in decision-making at sub-national and national levels, but there is not gender equity.”

“If we compare gender equality and empowerment of women over the past 10 years, now there are steps forward,” she said. “But a step forward is still not reaching the level of equality.”

Mu Sochua, a lawmaker for the opposition Sam Rainsy Party and former minister of women’s affairs, said there is time to reach the development goals, but the government needs to boost the national budget and prioritize education and health.

“Women’s decision-making in the community, or at sub-national and national levels is still very limited,” she said. “The millennium development goals remain far from the wishes of our Cambodians.”

Cheam Yiep, a lawmaker for the ruling Cambodian People’s Party, said Friday’s discussions will provide various theories and ideas on how the government can fulfill its development goals.

6 comments:

Anonymous said...

cambodia women need to fight for their rights.

Anonymous said...

Cambodia will get stronger when women are strong

Anonymous said...

Pretty and cute baby. Mom loves her child, but our leaders do not care about people's lives. They forgot that they came from the scum. Now they're in power; they help to hurt Khmer people more and more everyday.

Oh! poor baby, I felt pain for you because I have children as small as him. Every time I see children suffer; it makes me angry to the stupid leaders in CPP. When do they wake up and retire?

Anonymous said...

Real love!

Anonymous said...

I love the way sh does to her baby, I can imagine that when i was baby, my mom did the same hers.

I pray for all mom on mother Day the success in life, good health and peaceful in mind.

Cassie said...

Cambodia is getting stronger each and every day, and it's just right that they are fighting about the rights of women's health..