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With
Braves Faces
Abused Children in Cambodia Await
Tougher Laws, Enforcement
By Molly Ball
The Cambodia Daily
Last month, Mao Savoeun decided she had to
punish her 13-year-old daughter for going to a forbidden party. So the
35-year-old mother nailed the girl's foot to the floor with a 5-cm-long
nail.
Local police in Kompong Thom province didn't arrest Mao Savoeun; they
"educated" her about child abuse and released her when she promised not
to abuse her daughter again, Stung Sen District Police Chief Srey Puthy
said at the time.Human rights groups immediately decried the lack of
punishment. The Licadho NGO appealed to the provincial court to file
charges, as it often does when its investigators find serious cases of
abuse.
On Nov 28, the court complied. Now Mao Savoeun is behind bars as the
court investigates her case.
Most people don't think of child abuse such as this as domestic
violence-a term that is associated almost exclusively with wife-beating,
abuse experts say. |

The image of a drunken father beating his child was
created and used in child discussion groups by the Christian charity
Tearfund. Most people believe abuse is necessary to discipline their
children, children's advocates say. A second illustration shows a
parent forcing her child to beg.
This photo was an Illustration from
the Child Welfare Group |
The National Assembly this session has tentatively agreed to debate a draft
domestic violence law, which also covers child abuse in the family and could
have a dramatic effect on efforts to protect children. Yet this aspect of
the law has been little examined.
Child advocates say child abuse is widespread but little
acknowledged in Cambodia. If the draft law passes, the problem could receive
much-needed attention as police are forced to intervene in serious abuse
cases.
By the same token, the law will create many more dilemmas like that of Mao
Savoeun and her children-dilemmas many doubt Cambodian authorities are
equipped to solve.
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The image of a drunken father beating his child was
created and used in child discussion groups by the Christian charity
Tearfund. Most people believe abuse is necessary to discipline their
children, children's advocates say. A second illustration shows a parent
forcing her child to beg.
This photo was an Illustration from
the Child Welfare Group |
By law, Mao Savoeun may be in jail for up
to six months before her case goes to trial. In the meantime, her
impoverished family-four young daughters and their fisherman
father-cannot support themselves, police claim. Mao Savoeun was
responsible for selling her husband's catch.
Are Mao Savoeun's daughters better off without their mother? It's
impossible to know. "Of course taking the mother away is not the ideal
solution," said Glenn Miles, who is doing research on child abuse in
Cambodia for the Christian charity Tearfund.
"In every situation around the world, authorities, usually social
workers, have to make these decisions, and they always come out as the
baddies," Miles said. "They have to make a decision based on the best
interests of the child." |
Faced with the difficult choice of leaving
a child in an abusive situation or driving the child and her family deeper
into poverty, this is the question those trying to protect children wrestle
with daily.
"If the child could receive reasonably good care with a relative-which is
preferable to an orphanage-and the mother could be worked with in prison,
that would be ideal. But there are so many ifs and buts," Miles said.
The district police who handled Mao Savoeun's case were at a loss for what
do to, Srey Puthy said at the time. "We couldn't arrest Mao Savoeun or
punish her because her four daughters need to be fed. This family lives day
by day. It is very hard to judge," he said.
"It is Cambodian custom that parents have
the right to beat their children," said Kek Galabru, president of Licadho.
"When we try to educate them, they don't understand. They say, 'They don't
listen to us. If we don't beat them they don't respect us,' and so on."
Child abuse in the home is one of those issues that is rarely studied
directly, but rather, is on the periphery of several other issues, such as
domestic violence and child sexual exploitation.
Statistics are spotty. A 1999 Royal University of Phnom Penh survey of
schoolchildren aged 10 to 12 found that 58 percent said they had been beaten
by their parents. In a 2001 survey by the UN Children's Fund of children
aged 9 to 17, 44 percent said they had been beaten by their parents.
A household survey done for the Ministry of Women's Affairs in 1994 found
that 67.5 percent of parents thought they should hit their children to
discipline them. The same survey found that both victims and perpetrators of
spousal abuse were more likely to beat their children.
And with authorities unlikely to intervene in domestic situations, abuse
drives children to the streets: In a 1995 World Vision survey of street
children, 34 percent said they were on the street because of abuse.
Perhaps most disturbing, girls-often very young girls-are frequently subject
to sexual abuse within the home or extended family. Of 198 cases of child
abuse investigated by Licadho in the first 10 months of 2002, 133-or
two-thirds-were cases of rape or indecent assault.
Licadho does not keep figures on how many of these cases occurred within the
home or family. Sou Sophornnara, information manager for Save the Children
Norway, said "Most of the cases [of child abuse] we see are rape, usually
within the extended family."
The effects of child sexual abuse go far beyond the violence of the act.
"Young girls are in a particularly tricky situation" when they are subject
to sexual abuse, said David Harding of the street children NGO Mith Samlanh/Friends.
"They're abused twice because of the shame." They are also less likely than
boys to run away from abusive situations because it is culturally unseemly
as well as dangerous for them to be on their own, he said.
For all abused children-beaten, neglected or molested-and for children who
witness spousal abuse, the trauma lingers for the rest of their lives,
Harding, a psychologist, said. "Internationally, 25 [percent] to 35 percent
of abused children will abuse when they become adults," he said. Most have
lifelong emotional problems and many turn to crime, Sou Sophornnara said.
And yet for child abuse, as with spousal abuse, authorities rarely
intervene, considering domestic violence a private "family matter," experts
say. Some police even fear being beaten themselves and stand in the doorway,
explaining coolly that they cannot enter without a court warrant.
The draft domestic violence law, which the Ministry of Women's Affairs has
been pushing for more than a year, would force police to do something. Under
the proposed law, authorities who witness violence occurring, anticipate
that violence is about to happen or receive a complaint from a victim must
take immediate action to protect the victim.
Under the draft law, complaints can be filed on behalf of abuse victims by,
for example, NGOs or relatives, and authorities then have the duty to
protect victims.
The draft law allows courts to issue "protection orders," similar to
restraining orders in developed countries, to keep victims safe while cases
are investigated; authorities can remove victims from abusive homes.
The provisions apply equally to women and children. Other provisions are
specifically for children, including Cambodia's first statutory rape
provision, which prohibits sex with minors (people under 18.) Married
couples are exempt.
The proposed law also criminalizes neglect. Parents or guardians who do not
properly care for their children can be sentenced to up to one year in
prison and fined up to 2 million riel (about $500). If neglect leads to a
child's death, the maximum sentence increases to three years in prison and 5
million riel (about $1,250).
Women's advocates have decried the provision of the law that allows
authorities to relocate victims or perpetrators of abuse.
They say police could take women away from their children and property only
to allow violent husbands to abuse both in the mother's absence.
But the provision is necessary, said Dr Dagmar Oberlies, a legal adviser on
women's issues with the German technical cooperation agency. "The only way
to protect children is to intervene when you see something happening," she
said.
Minister of Women's Affairs Mu Sochua added: "We are also hoping for
behavior change in society. Children are not generally considered to have
rights. Many parents see [violence] as the only way to care for their
child-until a law comes along and says, 'No.'"
The law has been through the Council of Ministers and the National Assembly
Commission on Health, Social and Women's Affairs, but was left off the
Assembly's agenda.
Even as the draft law may be nearing its final hearing, child advocates have
little idea of its implications, and discussion of the legislation has
centered exclusively on women's rights.
The Project Against Domestic Violence "has never dealt with the effect of
the law on children," says Hor Phally, director of the PADV, one of the main
consultants on the legislation. "We only deal with women victims of domestic
violence. The law also should protect children, but the reason for the law
is husbands beating their wife."
For women's advocates, the issue may be an uncomfortable one. Women almost
always are the victims of spousal abuse-but when it comes to child abuse
they are often the perpetrators.
Children's advocates have not yet had a say in the draft law. "We haven't
got a copy yet," Save the Children Norway's Sou Sophornnara said. In
drafting and promoting the legislation, the Ministry of Women's Affairs
never consulted children's groups, he said.
Tearfund's Miles said, "We really want to [be involved with the law], I just
haven't got round to looking at it yet. The law needs to be very carefully
reviewed by people involved with child rights, especially in terms of the
way in which children could be removed from their homes and on what
grounds."
Attempts to protect children in developed countries have been problematic
for similar reasons. Prosecuting parents can take away children's financial
support; taking children from their homes leads to ugly scenes of families
broken up. Parents even say children threaten to accuse them of abuse if the
children don't get their way.
In Cambodia, where many children work on farms, beg or otherwise bring in
family income, separating families without impoverishing them becomes even
harder. When children are taken away, there is often no shelter or other
place they can go to. There is also no official licensing process to ensure
that children aren't dumped in orphanages that advocates say are actually
fronts for prostitution or baby-selling.
As mandated by the UN Convention on the Rights of the Child, to which
Cambodia is a signatory, the only consideration must be the child's own best
interest, Sou Sophannara said.
The Ministry of Women's Affairs has already started planning how it will
implement the domestic violence law when and if it passes; the plans include
training for security forces. The ministry will also work with NGOs to
improve the network of non-governmental services such as shelters that the
authorities will have to rely on.
"It's a delicate balance," Galabru said. No matter how difficult it will be
to tackle the problem of child abuse, she said, something must be done. "A
little spanking of a child is not domestic violence. Even I give a little
spanking to my daughter. But when you see so many scars on a poor little
body, that is not acceptable."
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