Police raided the unlicensed orphanage and rescued 21 children. The orphanage, called Love in Action, is suspected of beating its children and carrying out human trafficking.
PHNOM PENH, Cambodia (AP) — Cambodian authorities said Monday they
had shut a foreign-run orphanage that is suspected of beating its
children and carrying out human trafficking.
Officials and a
rights group said police in the capital, Phnom Penh, on Friday raided
the unlicensed orphanage, called Love in Action, and rescued 21
children.
Gratianne Quade, a spokeswoman for SISHA, an
anti-trafficking organization in Cambodia, said an Australian woman who
ran the orphanage was not arrested in the Friday raid and her current
whereabouts were not known.
Poverty compels many parents in
Cambodia to send their children to orphanages. SISHA estimates that 70
percent of Cambodia's 100,000 orphans actually have at least one parent.
Um
Sophanara, an official at the Social Affairs Ministry, which oversees
orphanages, confirmed the closure but declined to give details. A SISHA
statement said the raid came after several groups of children had fled
the orphanage recently and reported a variety of neglect and abuse
problems to authorities.
"The shutdown is a massive step forward,
demonstrating the Cambodian government's increased capacity to deal with
abusive orphanages," SISHA said, adding that its Australian owner was
under investigation for human trafficking, child abuse, neglect and
running an unregistered orphanage.
An investigation found "the
food standards were subpar, some children were visibly ill and not taken
to a doctor, the facility was dirty, sewage was blocked, and the living
quarters were overcrowded," the SISHA statement said, adding that
interviews with children revealed "many instances of physical abuse from
the staff."
Love in Action's website describes it as a Christian-run facility that receives funding from church groups in Australia.
Separately,
the 36-year-old director of an orphanage in northwestern Siem Reap
province was arrested Friday for repeatedly sexually abusing two girls,
11 and 12, over a four-month period, police said.
The suspect, Mon
Savuth, was detained for the alleged abuse at the Angkor Orphanage
& Education Organization, but the center — which cares for 36
children — remains open, said Duong Thavery, the head of the
anti-trafficking police unit in Siem Reap.
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