The entrance gate to Orkas Knhom facility on the outskirts of Cambodia’s capital Phnom Penh this year. PHOTO SUPPLIED |
Cambodia's long-pilloried drug detention centres
continue to be hotbeds of violence, sexual abuse and forced labour, and
serve more as a place to keep “undesirables” out of sight than as
centres of rehabilitation, according to a report by Human Rights Watch
released yesterday.
The report, titled They Treat Us Like Animals,
details a litany of abuses undergone by those who are locked up in the
centres without due process and, at times, without even being drug addicts.
One
detainee, identified in the report as Smonh, said that he had been
clean for years prior to being summarily detained in Phnom Penh’s Orkas
Knhom (“My Chance”) centre, where he was beaten for no apparent reason.
After an escape attempt, things only became worse.
“They beat me
like they were whipping a horse. A single whip takes off your skin. A
guard said, ‘I’m whipping you so you’ll learn the rules of the center!’”
Smonh was quoted as saying. “I just pleaded with them to stop beating
me. I felt I wasn’t human any more.”
Even though he had kicked his
meth habit four years before his detention, Smonh said, he returned to
drugs immediately upon his release.
“I feel crazy because of the
beatings I received inside the center,” he said. “Now I sniff a can of
glue a day and, if I can afford it, I smoke yama [a type of
methamphetamine],” he was quoted as saying.
The centres are also
routinely used to house beggars, the homeless, sex workers and other
“undesirables”, who are often rounded up ahead of visits by foreign
dignitaries, as was the case before last year’s ASEAN summit, the report
maintains.
“People are often released profoundly traumatised by
the abuse they suffer; there’s nothing in the centres that is even
remotely therapeutic,” said Joseph Amon, HRW’s director of health and human rights, in an email yesterday.
“So
this system isn’t about treatment, it’s about having a convenient
dumping ground for people considered too ‘undesirable’ to be left in
liberty,” he added.
The government has closed three of its
centres since HRW’s 2010 report, but the number of people detained
remains unchanged, Amon said. However, 12 UN agencies and the health organisation Global Fund have since taken stances against the centres, he added.
Robert Ali, the chair of the Asia-Pacific Drugs and Development Issues
Committee, said he was aware of poorly run centres in China and
Vietnam, and that “there’s nothing I’ve seen about the centres in
Cambodia to lead me to believe that they would be any different”.
“The
assessment of the centres has found relapse rates of between 85 and 95
per cent, and we have found that the centres are essentially doing
nothing,” he said. “All they’re doing is delaying drug use … because
they aren’t providing effective treatment. They’re just holding people
against their will.”
Kao Khon Dara, deputy chairman of the National Authority for Combating Drugs, declined to comment.
Source: phnompenhpost
0 comments:
Post a Comment