Thu, 9 July 2015 ppp
Sen David and Alice Cuddy
People sit on the steps of a building at Prey Speu Social Affairs Centre on Tuesday afternoon, on the outskirts of Phnom Penh, after they were rounded up by authorities during recent weeks. Pha Lina |
After
opening its gates on Tuesday afternoon for a visit by the opposition
Cambodia National Rescue Party, the capital’s notorious Prey Speu
detention centre yesterday freed a number of children, while others
remained incarcerated despite relatives’ pleas for their release.
Eighty-nine
people, including a number of young children, were imprisoned at Prey
Speu – or Por Sen Chey Vocational Training Centre as it is now
officially known – this week, having been rounded up from the city’s
streets.
Officials claimed that “90 per cent” of them were “mentally ill”, while others had no home or family.
Mith
Samlanh, one of two local NGO’s partnered with the “street sweeps”,
yesterday took in five families from the centre, including seven young
children between 1 and 3 years old.
On
Tuesday night, the Municipal Social Affairs Department “called quite
late and asked if we could take them in”, said James Sutherland, a
communications coordinator at Friends International, which works with
Mith Samlanh.
“Mith Samlanh now have them in their transitional home so we can assess the situation,” he added.
Sutherland said the length of stay for the families will “depend entirely on their individual circumstances”.
Despite
the continued use of Prey Speu as a dumping ground for those rounded
up, Sutherland said the NGO was “dedicated to trying to make it [the
partnership with City Hall] work”.
“We’ve
signed an MoU [memorandum of understanding], and we’re very much
dedicated to getting that working . . . and finding long-term
solutions”.
The other NGO involved, Pour un Sourire d’Enfant, said it had not been asked to take in anyone from Prey Speu.
While
some inmates were released from the centre yesterday, others remained
incarcerated despite calls from their relatives to let them go.
Forty-three-year-old Ly Srey Noch said her sister, Ly Srey Pich, 30, was still detained at Prey Speu yesterday afternoon.
“She
doesn’t have a mental illness, she is just homeless,” she said, adding
that Srey Pich had been held at the facility for a few weeks already.
“The centre promised to free her when I met with Ke Sovannaroth [a CNRP lawmaker], but she is still there now,” she said.
A 46-year-old man who gave his name only as Van said his brother was also still detained at the centre.
Son
Sophal, director of the Social Affairs Department, said he doubted some
of the claims that people were related to the detainees, and was
keeping them imprisoned for their own protection.
“We are afraid of them taking those detainees to do something bad,” he said.
Sovannaroth said she expected everyone in Prey Speu to be released when alternative care was arranged.
“They promised us they will free them,” she said.
1 comment:
Begin of Drgunzet's comment.
CNRP is useless and greedy. Just look at the CNRP and their body guards, all well fed. CNRP could have help these poor folks in Prey Speu. But no.
CNRP only makes noise to cause trouble and serve themselves.
So, I will tell CNRP one more time, stop driving those expense cars (some were costing more than 40,000 US dollars). Just driving some cars worth no more than a few thousands US dollars then use the money to help the poors.
Will you do that?
Eat less and save food for the poor. You need to be on a diet.
-Drgunzet-
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