A
woman who ‘borrowed’ a young girl as ‘collateral’ for a loan she had
given to another villager kept the child chained to a post for eight
hours a day over two years.
The shocking case of child abuse
resulted in police taking the four-year-old girl’s ‘carer’ into custody
– but have now decided not to charge her out of pity for her own
poverty-stricken circumstances.
Police and child
protection workers who went to a village hut near the Cambodian town of
Kemarak Pumin found the girl sitting on the floor of the community
building with a chain padlocked around her ankle, securing her to a
post.
The Phnom Penh Post reported today that the girl had told police that on one occasion she was so thirsty that she had to drink her own urine.
Police said the ‘adoptive mother’, who had
loaned money to the child’s biological mother – had taken the
four-year-old as collateral against a loan, but found it impossible to
care for the girl during the day because she had to go to work.
‘The adoptive mother said the girl used to
get in rainwater and get messy and she feared she might leave the house
and drown or get lost,’ said Srey Touch, head of the local police human rights and juvenile protection unit.
Police were alerted to the girl’s plight by Keo Chhon, a 60-year-old village resident who told the Post: ‘I felt so much pity for her. It is so bad.
‘I think all
children have the right to be cared for, not chained up like a dog. I
wonder why the other workers didn’t report it, but for me, I had to
report it.’
Despite the
treatment the girl had suffered, her biological mother said she could
still not take her back because of her poverty. ‘I love her but I have
no-one to look after her when I go to work,’ she said, repeating what
the adoptive mother had told police.
Child abuse is common among poverty-stricken village families in Cambodia, particularly as adults are unaware of laws that protect youngsters.
Chhan Sokunthea, head of the women and children’s
rights section of the child protection group Adhoc, said that
youngsters are more often the subject of beatings and other abuse,
‘In Cambodia, 75
to 80 per cent are uneducated and they don’t know how to care for their
kids,’ she said. ‘Rarely is there a case where the nighbour or relative
makes a complaint.
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