Juliana Ruhfus
Posted: 06/21/2012
Juliana Ruhfus investigated the growth of the global commercial
volunteering industry and found volunteers' hopes exploited and
Cambodian children needlessly placed in orphanages.
Susan Rosas is a young American social worker based in Cambodia. When
I met her at the Harvard University Global Mental Health Program last
year she told me about a surprising phenomenon: in spite of the fact
that Cambodia had managed to overcome decades of conflict, famine and an
AIDS epidemic, the number of orphanages around the country had doubled
over the past decade. This, she said, was not based on the needs of the
children but the growth of the global volunteering industry, which was
hungry for placements.
Over 70% of the Cambodian "orphans" have at least one living parent,
Susan said, but families were lured into giving up their children by the
promise of Western education.
I started to research. "Voluntourism" has been described as the
fastest growing sector of one of the fastest growing industries in the
world. According to David Clemmons, founder of www.voluntourism.org, an
estimated 11 million people traveled to volunteer in 2011 alone,
proving that voluntourism has become a "multi-billion dollar expression
of travelers' desires to find meaning and to make the world a better
place."
Five months later I met Susan again. I had come to Cambodia with a
colleague to investigate a darker side of voluntourism for Al Jazeera's
People & Power current affairs programme. One of the first people we
met was an Australian called Demi Giakoumis who has volunteered in
Cambodian orphanages with three of the largest global commercial
volunteering companies and grown increasingly disillusioned with the
experience. From her we heard that commercial organizations, such as the
UK based Projects Abroad, were charging volunteers up to $3,000.00
dollars a month whilst her orphanage director told her he only received
$9.00 per volunteer, per week. Demi also claimed that orphanages were
keeping children in deliberate poverty to attract more donations.
At Lighthouse Orphanage, on the outskirts of Phnom Penh, we first
encountered 'orphanage tourism' in action. We met a group of young
Canadian high school students who had spent a week in the orphanage
painting beds and digging up the vegetable garden until they got
sunstroke. On their last day we witnessed how busy Cambodian orphans can
get entertaining foreign visitors: after a traditional dance
performance for the Canadians, lunch was scheduled with a group from
South Korea and a group from Hong Kong was rotated through later in the
day.
Whilst specialized voluntourism operators based outside Cambodia may
make large profits through arranging visits, it soon became clear that
there is plenty of money for the local orphanages, too. One of the
Canadian teachers told us that thousands of dollars had been sent to the
orphanage prior to the students' arrival to buy building material and
other goods. The students told us they had raised yet more money through
bake-sales and fund-raisers. Frequently volunteers become so attached
to the children that they continue to send money long after they have
departed.
Unsurprisingly, accountability of Cambodian orphanages is a thorny
issue. No qualifications are needed to set up care homes for children
and during our stay we met orphanage directors who had been a bodyguard,
an actress and a business woman. Worse still, out of an estimated 500
orphanages in Cambodia, only half are registered with the government.
It was when we met the investigative NGO SISHA that things began to
look much more serious. SISHA had been contacted by volunteers who were
concerned about the way the Children's Umbrella Centre Organization
(CUCO) was run. The volunteers complained about the living and sleeping
facilities for the children, including an open sewer right in the centre
of the compound, the director's constant request for inflated donations
and worst of all -- his offer to give up children for adoption.
(Adoption is illegal in Cambodia). After sending in their own
undercover investigator, SISHA alerted the Ministry of Social Affairs,
Veterans and Youth Rehabilitation, which carried out two inspections and
found that on both occasions the orphanage was failing to comply with their minimum standards.
So my colleague and I decided to go undercover. Equipped with hidden
cameras we went to CUCO hoping that things had changed -- but found the
conditions the same. On our arrival director Sineth Sok explained CUCO's
financial difficulties and asked for a donation so we bought some food
for the children. Without ever asking for any identification he put us
in front of a class of children to teach. At times we were completely
abandoned with more than twenty children and nobody to translate. We --
and the children -- were left to our own devices.
When we returned to follow up on the most serious allegation -- that
some children had gone missing -- we found a new volunteer, a young
Dutchman, at CUCO. To our surprise he told us he had been sent by
Projects Abroad, the organization whose volunteers had first raised
alarm bells about what was going on at the orphanage and whose
complaints had triggered SISHA's and the government's inspections. Yet
Projects Abroad was still sending people on placements at CUCO.
To test how serious the director Sineth was about looking after his
children we asked him if we could take some of them out of the
orphanage. We had brought a Cambodian social worker with us, but told
Sineth she was a friend and interpreter. He lined the children up
against a wall for us to pick our favorites -- and a few minutes later
we were allowed to drive off with four of them. Never once had we been
asked for identification, never once had our credentials been checked.
It was deeply shocking, not least because Cambodia is one of the world's
sex offender's hotspots and children are especially at risk.
Back in the UK we checked the most recent Projects Abroad company
accounts and found them to have an annual turnover of $24 million for
2010 with $3 million profits. When we contacted them they pointed out
that CUCO receives $50 per volunteer per month and that they believe it
is better to have volunteers in orphanages than leaving them
unmonitored. They also explained to us that the Dutch volunteer (who was
in his twenties) had not been asked for a background check because this
was only required for volunteers over thirty, whereas young volunteers
could bring school or other references instead.
David Clemmons predicts that as voluntourism matures as an industry
it will receive greater scrutiny. The hope is that as a result
commercial volunteering companies will become more rigorous in
implementing some basic standards such as conducting criminal background
checks and sending young volunteers into orphanages where they are
supervised by qualified staff.
But for many that is not enough. They question the very idea of
traveling volunteers working with vulnerable children -- after all -- it
is something few of us would accept in our own countries ...
"Cambodia's Orphan Business" was produced by Matt Haan and reported by Juliana Ruhfus for Al Jazeera English.
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