Showing posts with label Children abuse. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Children abuse. Show all posts

Tuesday, February 02, 2010

Cambodian detention centres 'torturing kids'

Authorities are accused of taking children off the streets and delivering them to detention centres. (AFP : Rob Elliott)

Tuesday, February 02, 2010
By Conor Duffy in Bangkok for PM
ABC News (Australia)



New York-based Human Rights Watch (HRW) has released a scathing report accusing Cambodian authorities of locking up and torturing thousands of people a year in drug detention centres.

The human rights group says many of the detainees are children and that they suffer abuses such as rape and electric shocks.

HRW has also accused UNICEF of involvement in one of the detention centres, saying one of the organisation's vehicles has been used to transport children to the drug treatment centre.

HRW says there are 11 drug detention centres scattered across Cambodia and that more than 2,000 people are detained inside each year.

The organisation has been trying to peer inside the jail cells for more than a year and has now released a detailed report.

NRW New York-based director Joe Amon says the group has spoken with more than 50 recently released detainees who suffered violence he describes as sadistic.

"We found a pretty uniform set of abuses being reported across all of the centres where we talked to people," he said.

"People reported being beaten, being whipped with electrical cables. There were reports of being raped or witnessing other rapes and also the use of electric shock."

Mr Amon says many of those imprisoned are children and that the centres breach Cambodian and international law.

"There were two different ways in which people ended up in the centres. One was through street sweeps, where the police would detain people and bring them to the centres and drop them off," he said.

"In those cases there was no formal charge, there was no lawyer, there was no judge, there was no process for appeal.

"And the second main way was through family members who would pay the police to arrest their loved ones, their children or spouses or brothers."

UNICEF implicated

UNICEF has been working closely with the Cambodian government at one of the detention centres.

A Cambodian newspaper has published a photograph which it says shows a UNICEF van being used to transport illegally detained children to a detention centre.

Mr Amon has called on UNICEF to denounce the centres.

"The van very clearly says 'provided with the support of UNICEF and the European Union' and there was another picture also which wasn't published, but which I saw that said 'in support of child friendly justice'," he said.

"The idea that these centres are child friendly justice is really outrageous. These centres are abusive and they're torturing kids."

A European Union spokesman said he was concerned at any use of EU assets in illegal activities and has called for an immediate investigation.

Richard Bridle, the UNICEF representative in Cambodia, says his organisation has put questions to the Cambodian Social Justice Ministry over the use of the van.

"We are also concerned if a vehicle was provided partly with UNICEF funding," he said.

"The main source of funding actually came from the European Union delegation here, so the vehicle doesn't belong to us, it belongs to the government; we're looking into the terms in which it was transferred."

However Mr Bridle has resisted the calls from HRW to close the prisons down because he says it would lead to children being locked up in adult prisons.

"What would worry me about shutting down this centre is that then the only alternative that's left is closed detention and we have seen period round-ups by the police of street children," he said.

Mr Bridle told ABC Radio's PM that he would not be surprised if abuses were occurring in the drug detention centres, but that HRW's call to close the centres down immediately is simplistic.

"I understand where Human Rights Watch is coming from. I understand it is an advocacy organisation and that from our point of view it tends to see things in black and white," he said.

"We have much more difficult calls to make here with regards to the best interest of all children who come into conflict with the law."

Similar drug detention centres exist in many other Asian countries and it may be an argument that plays out across the region.

Sunday, July 29, 2007

If only we could see her face

In an ideal world, there would be no child prostitution and we wouldn't need to blur this girl's face. But the reality is...

July 29, 2007
The Electric New Paper (Singapore)

WHEN her father died, teenager Kong Bopha (not her real name), left her village in Cambodia for Phnom Penh, where a neighbour promised her work in a restaurant.

With a job, she could help support her mother, three sisters and brother.

The dream was short-lived.

After she arrived at the capital, the neighbour sold her to a brothel where she was beaten and forced to have sex with men every day.

Several times, the brothel owner had a doctor stitch up her vagina to fool clients into thinking she was a virgin, to get a higher price for her.

In Manila, pretty 13-year-old Jaydee (not her real name) took a job at a bar near the House of Representatives in Quezon City.

One evening, she noticed a government official eyeing her.

The next day, her 14th birthday, she was given what she thought was medicine. She passed out and when she woke up she was naked and lying in a strange bed.

Next to her was the official's son. It was his birthday too, and Jaydee and her virginity were his birthday present.

Jaydee was then forced to work as a drug courier and only escaped some weeks later. Now in a girls' shelter, she is too frightened to go to the police. 'I do not believe there is justice,' she said.

In recent years, the child sex industry has expanded across Asia, reported the Reader's Digest in its August edition.

A 2006 report by the US-based Asia Foundation estimates that almost 20,000 children are sexually exploited in Cambodia.

The Philippines National Plan of Action estimates that there are between 60,000 and 75,000 children involved in the sex trade in the country.

Non-governmental organisations have put the number closer to 100,000.

In India, where daughters are often seen as a liability by their families, the US State Department estimates that up to 500,000 children under age 16 are exploited in the sex trade.

'ALMOST A MILLION'

'There is a press-down-pop-up phenomenon: Even when the sexual exploitation is tackled effectively in one country, it may emerge insidiously in another country,' Prof Vitit Muntarbhorn of Bangkok's Chulalongkorn University, a longtime United Nations human rights special rapporteur, told the Reader's Digest.

Because sex with children is illegal and clandestine, no one knows for sure how many are involved. However, the magazine estimates that close to a million children are involved in the sex trade across Asia.

Three developments have led to this situation:
  • Greater demand for child sex from Asian men. Some Asian men want sex with children, especially with virgins, because they believe that it will bring them good health, long life and good luck, and protect them from HIV/AIDS.
  • Indifference among lawmakers and enforcers. In most Asian countries, sex with a child under 16 years is a crime. So is employing anyone under 18 in the sex trade. Yet prosecution hasn't seemed to reduce the problem.
  • Widespread corruption. Criminals responsible for the traffic in Asian children routinely buy off police officers, judges and lawmakers.
There are some success stories though.

Kong Bopha spent a year on the streets of Phnom Penh. In March 1999, aged 17, she was arrested by police, who handed her over to social workers. She was angry and dejected and was suffering from typhoid and colitis.

After four years of counselling, she found a job in a garment factory. And five years after her nightmare began, she married a young man from her home village.

Her happy ending has not lessened her anger.

She said: 'People like that brothel owner must be punished so that other girls will not have to go through what I did.'

Friday, July 27, 2007

Undercover in SE Asia's brothels

Many trafficked children have horrific stories to tell

Friday, 27 July 2007
BBC News

Reporter Thembi Mutch spent seven weeks in Thailand and Cambodia, finding out what life is like for children trafficked into the region's thriving sex industry.

I arrived in Thailand on Friday morning, and by the evening my researcher and I were already scouring the bars of Bangkok, attempting to work out our game plan.

We were in the region to find children who had been trafficked into sex work - those who are hidden away, often by armed pimps and traffickers in suburban bars and houses.

Prostitution is illegal in Thailand, although women and men are allowed to do bar work over the age of 18.

But in both Thailand and Cambodia, sex work is so lucrative for everyone involved that it is more blatant than almost anywhere else in the world.

It is not just tolerated, but unofficially, according to many non-governmental organisations (NGOs), it is actively encouraged by both the police and the government.

Posing as tourists

A recent memorandum of understanding between the countries in the Mekong region - including Thailand and Cambodia - has done much to stem child prostitution.

So too has more 10 years of aid work and advocacy by NGOs such as Save the Children and World Vision.

But despite this, resorts like the Thai beach town of Pattaya seem to be more like industrialised brothels than functioning towns.

The sex industry has also expanded to Cambodia, with many children employed as domestic workers, bricklayers, in fish processing plants, while at the same time dipping in and out of the best paid option, sex work.

Most of these children are not there voluntarily - they are trafficked.

Trafficking is helped along by the economic boom in South East Asia. The frantic rate of construction springing up in the region has brought more staff with a desire for young sex workers.

It is not an easy task to pose as "interested tourists" in these areas. We hung out on the streets at night, and got information of where children were working from local sex workers.

We recorded in blacked-out vehicles, changed hotels regularly, and I could never let the recording equipment be seen, or check my recordings, until I was safely inside the hotel.

Once, in Cambodia, we recorded traffickers making deals of children over coffee in a cafe in broad daylight.

The atmosphere was hostile, and the men were clearly on hard drugs, and drinking.

"Who are these people," I muttered to Ang, the ex-prostitute who was my fixer.

"They're Vietnamese and Cambodian government officials," she replied, and my heart sank.

We left immediately, aware that it costs $50 (£25) to hire a hit man in Cambodia.

We were followed almost continuously that day, and also on several others. Men on mopeds and motorbikes would pull up beside us as we raced through the capital Phnom Penh - me clutching Ang's waist, sitting pillion on her moped.

They would take a good, thorough look at my face, and then fall back behind us.

Tales of trafficking

As for the trafficked children, their stories defy words.

A 15-year-old girl in Cambodia said her parents had sold her to a man for her virginity. The man had drugged and raped her whilst she was unconscious.

After a week in the hotel room with this man, she was sold onto a brothel. There, she was gang-raped by 10 men posing as clients.

She escaped, by hiding in a rubbish bin, but was then tricked into prostitution again, staying for three years. Eventually she escaped, and knocked on the door of some strangers, who cared for her.

She then made a two-day bus journey to Phnom Penh, where she arrived three months ago.

I also met a chatty, bright and wide-eyed nine-year-old, who, under a mango tree in the countryside, described how she had been kidnapped from the streets of the capital, locked in a house for a month, and made to watch pornography and drink water with human faeces in it.

The traffickers know what they are doing. She and the other girls were beaten regularly and never allowed out - all part of a systematic campaign to break down the children so they were too confused to do anything about it.

These children did not even know what sex or trafficking is, and whether they will ever "recover" from their ordeal is an ongoing debate.