Thursday, July 07, 2011

Govt centre under fire

Children at the gate of the Prey Speu social affairs centre earlier this week in Phnom Penh's Dangkor district. (Photo by: Heng Chivoan)

Thursday, 07 July 2011
James O'Toole and Vong Sokheng
“We were only at the centre for one day, but we found out that it is not a good place to live”
VORN Kandop, 43, was arrested on Monday while begging in the capital’s O’Russei market. Along with his wife and five-year-old son, he was taken one day later to the Prey Speu social affairs centre.

Most detainees are held at the notorious Dangkor district facility for at least three months. Vorn Kandop and his family were able to leave the centre yesterday with the help of local rights groups, and afterwards, he recognised their good fortune.

We were told that we would be beaten if we tried to escape from the centre, and we saw people being beaten,” he said.

Until yesterday, Vorn Kandop’s son was just one of roughly 20 children housed at Prey Speu, a government-run facility established in 2003 that has come under renewed criticism following a report from the United Nations committee on child rights made public last week. That report calls for the release of all children in the Kingdom being held in “arbitrary detention”, yet activists fear that the entrenched patterns of abuse at Prey Speu show no sign of fading any time soon.


“For almost a decade, the government has ‘swept’ the streets and held homeless people, street kids, drug users, sex workers and the mentally ill against their will in Prey Speu. They are held without charge or trial, and subject to physical and sexual abuse,” Joe Amon, director of the health and human rights division at Human Rights Watch, said in an email.

“Without judicial oversight, without accountability, with absolute impunity, it is almost certain that people will continue to be abused and even tortured at Prey Speu.”

The centre, run by the municipal social affairs office, is a walled compound that sits amid rice fields a few hundred metres off a road on the outskirts of Phnom Penh. It is nominally voluntary, and government officials say it provides valuable services for beggars and other vulnerable Cambodians.

“Those beggars choose to live in the centre freely,” said Sorn Sophal, director of the municipal department of social affairs. “There is no harassment of those beggars and their children, and we have an informal school for the children."

A number of people at the centre are indeed there voluntarily, taking advantage of the free food and vocational training on offer. Roughly 75 are now being held involuntarily, however, according to local rights group Licadho, and scratch marks can be seen on the walls of the dormitory where some detainees are counting down their days in confinement.

Standing outside the Prey Speu gates earlier this week, a 13-year-old girl from the facility said she and her father had come there voluntarily about a year ago. She said she appreciated the food and schooling available, but acknowledged witnessing violence at the hands of staff on a regular basis.

“People are beaten with sticks when they try to escape,” she said. “It happens often – once a week or once every few days.”

Between 2006 and 2008, allegations of grave abuses surfaced at Prey Speu, including “torture, rape, beatings, reported incidences of suicide, and even reported killings committed by social affairs guards against detainees”, according to the UN Committee Against Torture. More recently, a 2010 report from Human Rights Watch carried accounts of vicious beatings and gang rapes performed by Prey Speu staff.

Rather than providing services, Licadho director Naly Pilorge said Prey Speu and other social affairs centres throughout the Kingdom exist to round up individuals considered “undesirables”: drug users, sex workers, beggars and street children who live alongside one another at the facility. Pilorge noted that reports of abuse have declined in recent years, but that the conditions leading to such abuses “haven’t changed much”.

“Individuals linked to credible allegations of beatings and rape are still among the staff employed at the centre, while Prey Speu continues to unlawfully detain some of Cambodia's most vulnerable people, including children,” she said.

UNICEF spokesman Marc Vergara said Prey Speu “is not equipped to accommodate children”, and that UNICEF “has advocated for the release of children in the centre and has offered to support the government with a plan for their reintegration”. While the organisation is not directly funding Prey Speu, Vergara said UNICEF does provide support to the Social Affairs Ministry “to strengthen standards and systems in child protection”.

Pilorge called on donors to apply further pressure on the issue, saying the closure of Prey Speu and similar centres “should be made conditional to aid given to the Ministry of Social Affairs”.

For Vorn Kandop's and other families, this would be a welcome reform.

“We were only at the centre for one day, but we found out that it is not a good place to live,” he said.

8 comments:

Anonymous said...

To All Khmer and Khmer yuon,

Ah Kvak Hun Sen just shut down INTERNET in Cambodia.

Email and other are jamming and chaos in Cambodia now.

Ah Kvak Mad Dog maybe shut the door and hit the dog??

Anonymous said...

If we let the people did what they wanted, our country Cambodia will be one day destroy by anarchist. These people sound to us are alway live their life and did not care of the situation.
Will the opposition able to resolve all these problems.
Am sure the opposition will have a lot of headache with these people and will handle the problem same as the CPP, when they have the power in Cambodia.
It is about rebuilding of the democracy in our country. All of us have to take part, support and respect the law of the country.

Anonymous said...

ប្រសើរជាងអាបក្សប្រឆាំងនៅស្រុកខ្មែរធ្វើអ្នកនយោ
បាយចង់អស់មួយជីវិតទៅហើយមិនឈ្នះគណបក្ស
ប្រជាជនទាល់តែសោះ។គិតទៅគ្មានបក្សប្រឆាំងណា
មួយនៅក្នុងពិភពលោកភ្លើហើយល្ងង់ដួចជាបក្សប្រឆាំងនៅស្រុកខ្មែរទាល់តែសោះ។យកអ្នកដែលខ្លួនបាន
ធ្វើឲ្យជ្រួលច្របល់មកដាក់នៅមុខទំព័រវិបសៃហើយសរសើរពួកគេថាជាអ្នកក្លាហានទៅវិញតាមពិតបើពួកនេះបានធ្វើធំវិញអ្នកក្លាហានទាំងនេះមិនអាច
មានមតិយោបល់អ្វីទាំងអស់។

Anonymous said...

1:03 AM

How the hell do you, Vietcong, know that the opposition is the same as the CPP in running the country?
They never have a chance to lead the country because there are too many Vietcong or people with Vietcong like minded as you in Cambodia.
But one thing is 100% sure; they will not be slaves to the Viet as the CPP currently are. They will work for Cambodia but not Vietnam.

Anonymous said...

11:03am-
this problem is decrease once the social injustice is decrease. I believe this idea is matched with that of the SRP.
increase in social justice means increase in education, jobs, decent living, morality and so on.
but today Cambodia is run by mafia type of government.
Mr. Rainsy and others has nothing against Hun Sen personally, but the system that is run by Hun Sen and his boss, the Viet. If Hun Sen dies and the system is still the same we are still have new person to challenge for the sake of Khmer people like you who support your enemy without consciousness.

Anonymous said...

1:03 AM!
1- LOOKS LIKE YOU ADMIT THE HUN SEN
ADMINISTRATION IS A COMPLETE FAILURE. IN THAT CASE WHAT HUN SEN SUPPOSE TO DO? CLING ON TO POWER AT ANY COSTS? OR BETTER TRY SOME NEW FACES EVEN FROM YOUR OWN PARTY?
2- AS FAR AS DEMOCRACY IS CONCERNED
YOU BETTER SHUT UP BECAUSE ANY MONKEY KNOWS WHAT THAT IS IN SOCIALIST OR COMMUNIST COUNTRY. TRY
SOMETHING BETTER.
SI ENG KRUY!

Anonymous said...

There is no place to hide.Don't try
to hide,Hun Sen.you are a crooked
man and dictator prime minister in
Cambodia.
Hun Sen is the group of dictators
and five communist countries:
China,North Korea,Vietnam,Lao,and
Cuba.Cambodia is a fake neutral
kingdom,the true color is a
communist dictator and Vietnam
slave.
Dictator countries like Cambodia:
Syria,North Korea,China,Sudan,
Burma,Libya,uzbekistan,Turmenistan,Zimbabwé,Iran,Egypt,Tunisia,Yemen,
and some few others countries.

Anonymous said...

Stupid Khmer, just can't do any thing good for their own people.

When foreign donors give money to the government to pass on to the poor, they pocket it instead.

The poor will benefit if the country is under Thai or Viet control, the sooner, the better.




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