Police Raid Vietnamese Coffee Shop, Arrest Sex Workers
Cambodia Daily | 26 October 2016 | អាន ជាភាសា ខ្មែរ
A monthlong investigation into a small Vietnamese coffee shop in
Phnom Penh led to the arrest of four alleged sex workers, a chef and two
managers—all Vietnamese nationals—over suspicions the shop was being run as a
brothel, an official said on Tuesday.
Tipped
off by an NGO, bureau officials began looking into Mohasambath, a small shop on
Preah Sisowath Quay in Daun Penh district’s Srah Chak commune, he said.
At about 9 p.m. on Monday,
police officers stormed the premises and arrested Dam Dang Ting, 52, and Vien
Dang Vong, 37—both relatives of the establishment’s owner—another man and four
women with documents purportedly showing them to be between the ages of 20 and
31, Mr. Vuth said.
“They just opened a coffee shop
to hide from the police’s eyes, but they were running a brothel,” he said.
“Upstairs, there were bedrooms for having sex.”
He declined to name the NGO
that had informed police of the alleged brothel or to detail investigation
procedures.
Upon raiding the establishment
and questioning the four alleged sex workers, however, Mr. Vuth said anti-human
trafficking police had determined that two of the women were underage.
“Our investigation found that
there were girls who were minors because they look so small. But in their
passports, it says they are 20 already,” he said, adding that he remained
confident in his officers’ assessment.
Additionally, he said, police
had found sufficient evidence in the establishment to accuse the group of
illegal drug use.
“We found some condoms and smoking
equipment in the upstairs room,” he said, adding that two of the four women
arrested admitted to working as prostitutes and using drugs under police
questioning. He said no drugs were found at the scene.
While a three-year-old
regulation prohibits officials from using condoms as evidence of commercial
sex—in an attempt to promote safe sexual practices and fight HIV and
AIDS—anti-human trafficking police have admitted to continuing the practice in
the absence of an effective alternative.
Mr. Vuth said officials were
still working on identifying and locating the owner. The seven arrested
suspects remained at the department’s headquarters as officials prepared a
report to submit to the Phnom Penh Municipal Court.
According to commune chief
Chhay Thearith, the coffee shop had been a convincing cover for a brothel.
“If I had known this coffee
shop had a brothel parlor inside, I would have reported it to higher level
officials to crack down on it,” he said.
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