Working ‘mother’ kept child chained
A day after Prime Minister Hun Sen pointed out the need for
more effective child protection in Cambodia, police in Koh Kong arrested
and released a woman who admitted to chaining her 4-year-old “adopted
daughter” inside their house eight hours a day for the past two years.
Authorities and rights workers placed the girl in a Ministry of
Social Affairs-approved shelter on Friday evening, after following up on
a complaint lodged by a fellow resident of the house in Kemarak Pumin
town’s Smach Meanchey commune, which shelters as many as 60 farmers.
Police and rights group Adhoc found the small girl sitting on the
floor with a chain padlocked around her ankle, securing her to a
building post. She told police that once, desperately thirsty, she drank
her own urine.
“We think that the mother is so poor that she did not have any way of
looking after the girl,” said Srey Touch, head of the Koh Kong police’s
human rights and juvenile protection unit. “The [adoptive] mother said
the girl used to get in rainwater and get messy; she feared her daughter
may leave the house and drown or get lost.”
The girl moved in with the suspect as collateral for a loan the
girl’s biological mother borrowed from the woman about two years ago,
she told police.
The suspect, who worked as a farmer at a plantation a kilometre or so
from the house, chained the toddler each workday from 7am to 11am and
then from 1pm to 5pm, she told police.
Child abuse is common among Cambodia’s poor, and typically goes
unreported, said Chhan Sokunthea, head of the women and children’s
rights section at Adhoc.
Adults caring for children are typically unaware of laws protecting
their wards, as are neighbours and family members who witness the abuse,
Sokunthea said. As a result, children of poor parents are more often
the subject of beatings and other abuse, and there can be even fewer
repercussions for abusive adults compared with their middle- or
upper-class counterparts.
“I myself think it’s unfair, because in Cambodia 75 to 80 per cent
are uneducated and they don’t know how to care for their kids,”
Sokunthea said. “Rarely is there a case where the neighbour or relative
make a complaint.”
The case comes after multiple high-profile instances of child abuse to which police have recently responded.
A Phnom Penh municipal investigating judge last week accused a
Meanchey district couple of human trafficking and intentional violence
for allegedly severely beating two sisters – ages 7 and 14 – who were
living and working in the couple’s home as maids. Their father worked
for the family’s construction company.
When Hun Sen called for greater juvenile protection efforts on
Thursday, he referenced the case of a 9-year-old pagoda boy allegedly
brutalised for months by a monk in the capital.
“Children have special rights,” Sokunthea said. “It’s not fair for
parents or a step-parent or relatives to be violent with them.”
Police removed the 4-year-old from the house on Friday and questioned
the suspect at the provincial police station. They let the woman go
after she signed a contract promising not to repeat her crime, Touch of
the Koh Kong police said.
Bon Pel, a deputy in Koh Kong’s Social Affairs department, said the
suspect showed no signs of mental illness, and said she loved the girl
but had no one to look after her when she went to work.
When informed of the woman’s arrest, her years of chaining the girl
to a post and the 4-year-old’s move to a children’s shelter, the girl’s
biological mother, who lives in Preah Vihear province, said she could
not take back and care for her daughter, Pel said. But the girl will not
be sent back to live with the suspect, he added.
“I told the adoptive mother that it is illegal to chain a child up
alone in a house. She could have brought the daughter with her to work
at the plantation or sent her to a neighbour’s to look after her for a
while, but [chaining the girl inside the house] is damaging to
children’s mental health,” Pel said.
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