Leigh
Ramsay
322
Wecker Road
Carindale
QLD
4152
6th
Feb 2013
Dear Leigh
I have arrived in Phnom Penh
to find Chanti sick and in need of hospitalization. As you know, Chanti is 8 months pregnant. Her
white blood cells are, I discovered in my first 24 hours in Phnom Penh,
dangerously low as a result of a respiratory infection. The precise nature of
the infection will not be known until a second round of blood tests have been
done. What we do know at present is that there is a build up of fluid in her
body that, if it is not dealt with, could place Chanti’s baby's life at risk.
The cost of the hospital will be $45 a day – a cost that I will, yet again,
quite happily meet.
The prime issue here is not
so much that Citipointe is mean-spirited in offering no help at all to any
other members of Chanti’s family (though this is the case) but that it never
occurs to you or your staff to even make enquiries as to the health of Chanti’s
family. It would have been blindingly obvious to the Citipopinte staff who
visited Chanti’s home just a few days ago that she had a fever, was not well
and needed to see a doctor she could ill afford. Did they pas this information on to you? A
couple of years ago it was a tumour on Chanti’s wrist that was large enough
that your staff could not have failed to notice it. It cost only $60 to have
the tumour removed – a cost that Citipointe would not meet. I did. Have your
staff been instructed NOT to make enquiries about the health of Chanti and her
family? Are there any circumstances under which your church might reach out and
help Chyanti and her family? The potential death of her unborn child, for
instance! What sort of a Christian are you, Leigh?
Your total disregard for the
well-being of Chanti herself, and for the rest of her family, no longer
astounds me. What does astound me is that your fellow Christian NGOs, under the
umbrella of Chab Dai, turn a blind eye to your exploitation of the girls in
your care – in contravention of both Cambodian and Australian law and the basic
precepts of Christianity. It astounds me also that the government of Cambodia
allows an NGO such as Citipointe to operate in this country – an NGO that
engages in (at least) two varieties of human rights abuse – of the children
themselves and of their parents.
Poverty tourism, also known as
orphan-tourism is the latest in a long line of human rights abuses visited upon
the poor Cambodian people. This involves subjecting young girls like Rosa and
Chita to the gaze (and camera lenses) of ‘well-meaning’ tourists who believe they can
demonstrate to others and themselves what ‘good’ and ‘caring’ people they are
visiting an orphanage, working in the kitchen and otherwise hanging out with
the children of poor parents. The bulk of these children are not orphans at all,
of course. They have families. Poor
families. This is a scam and should end – both in the case of genuine orphans
and those who, like Rosa and Chita, have effectively been ‘stolen’ from their
poor parents.
In the case of Citipointe there
is another level to this ‘poverty-tourism’ scam – namely presenting girls like
Rosa and Chita as having been rescued from the sex trade. This is a bald-faced
lie. Do you ever tell your Citipointe ‘poverty tourists’ that Rosa and Srey Mal
have a mother and a father, a grandmother, siblings, a home and a dad who earns
enough money at a tuk tuk driver to support the whole family? Do you tell your
‘poverty-tourists’ that you have refused
Chanti’s repeated requersts to have her daughters returned to her care? Do you tell your ‘poverty tourists’ of the
enormous distress it causes Chanti being able to see her daughters for only a
few hours each month? Do you tell your ‘poverty tourists’ that the ‘She’ refuge
is much less concerned with the welfare of the families the church claims to be
reintegrating the children in its care back into than in exploiting girls like
Rosa and Chita to raise money for the church?
Turning children into tourist
attractions would not be tolerated in Australia, as you know. Nor would the
stealing of the daughters of poor parents by tricking them into signing
worthless contracts that they could not read and did not understand. In
Australia you would be up on charges of kidnapping for what you have done –
holding Rosa and Chita for 15 months against the express wishes of their mother
and father.
There is another new development
in this ongoing saga but I will leave off telling you of it until Chanti has
been returned to health – with no thanks at all to yourself or Citipointe
church. You are the kind of Christian, Leigh, that gives Christianity a bad
name.
best wishes
James Ricketson
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