It is clear from their lack of
response to my two ‘open letters’ (26th August and 4th
Sept.) that neither the Cambodia Daily nor the Phnom Penh Post will investigate
the removal of two girls from their materially poor family over five years ago.
Neither newspaper has accepted my
offer to provide them with a colour photocopy of the ‘contract’ signed by the
mother with her thumb print. This ‘contract’ formed the supposed legal basis
for the removal of the parents’ daughters in mid 2008 – until the fraudulent
nature of the ‘contract’ was revealed and Citipointe decided that these two
girls (aged 5 and 6 at the time of their removal) were not victims of poverty
but ‘victims of human trafficking.’
The newspapers’ refusal to view
and have legally evaluated this key piece of evidence is an abrogation of one
of the fundamental duties of a journalist – to look, with a dispassionate eye,
at the facts. To quote Dietrich
Bonhoeffer:
"Silence in the
face of evil is itself evil.”
I do not think it is too much of a stretch of the word’s meaning
to describe the illegal removal of two daughters from their materially poor
family by wealthy Christians as ‘evil’. Edmund Burke’s admonition is also
relevant here:
“All that is needed for the forces of evil to succeed is for
enough men to do nothing.”
‘To do nothing’, to remain silenct, is the position the Cambodia
Daily and the Phnom Penh Post have adopted.
Why this is so, why neither newspaper
is interested in demonstrable fact, in evidence (the 31st July 2008
‘contract’ qualifies as both) I can only conjecture. Is it because they fear
being sued by Citipointe church for asking questions? Or is it that they do not
want, for reasons of self-preservation, to publish articles critical of NGOs
that make up a significant part of their readership? When did either newspaper
conduct any significant investigation into the modus operandi of any NGO in
Cambodia? Or the appropriateness of having so many NGOs in Cambodia who, whilst
providing a wonderful lifestyle for individual NGOs, do little or nothing to improve
the lot of the poor Cambodians they are supposedly here to help? (In 18 years
of visiting Cambodia the malnourishment level sits at 40% and tens of thousands of Cambodians have had
their land and homes stolen from them despite the mountains of reports written
by NGOs!)
As far as Citipointe being
litigious, indeed the church is. Twice it has threatened to sue me. It has not
done so as this would necessitate producing, in a court of law, evidence that
the church’s removal of the girls from their family was lawful and that my
suggesting that it was unlawful was defamatory. Citipointe does not want a
spotlight of this kind to be shone on its activities in Cambodia. Journalists
in Australia would start to ask questions of the kind I have been asking for
five years and which both the Cambodia Daily and Phnom Penh Post refuse to ask.
Or, if the questions have been asked by either newspaper, refuse to report on
Citipointe’s refusal to answer them.
In the event that either
newspaper had decided to ask a few questions, both would have been remiss to presume
that all or any of what I have written in my blogs is true. Indeed, a competent
journalist should not take my word for anything at all. S/he should just deal
with the facts (incontrovertible facts) which, in brief, are these:
(1) An NGO removed two girls from
their family in mid 2008.
(2) After the removal the NGO got
the mother of the two girls to place her thumb print, on 31st July
2008, on a document that she could not read.
(3) The NGO then told the mother
(and myself, in writing) that in accordance with the ‘contract’ the church intended
to keep the girls (aged 5 and 6 at the time) until they are 18 and that her
visitation rights were limited to 24 hours per year.
These are facts. They are not
opinions. They are demonstrably true. Citipointe would not argue with them.
Indeed, the church could not argue with them as the facts are all well
documented in email exchanges and recorded conversations.
Only one question would have been
needed to be asked to kick off an investigation by either newspaper:
“Is this 31st July
2008 ‘contract’ legally binding under Cambodian law?”
A lawyer from either newspaper could
have looked at the ‘contract’ and provided a legal opinion as to its validity
in accordance with Cambodian law. If the lawyer had said, “This is not a contract that
gives the NGO the right to hold the two girls contrary to the express wishes of
the parents,” the next question for an investigative journalist would
have been a no-brainer:
“What legal authority did
Citipointe have, in mid-2008, to remove the two girls from their family and
retain custody of them despite repeated requests from their parents that they
be returned to their family?”
Nothing in what I have suggested
here would have required that either newspaper believed anything that I have
written about this matter on two blogs. All that was required was the asking of
a few questions, the writing of a few emails and on obtaining a legal opinion
in relation to the July 31st 2008 ‘contract’. Standard operating
procedure for any journalist and tasks that would not have taken more than a
few hours to perform.
The Cambodia Daily and Phnom Penh
Post have shown no interest in (a) viewing the ‘contract’, (b) in asking their
newspaper’s lawyer to read and assess it (it is less than one page long!) and
(c) asking Citipointe what legal authority the church had to remove the girls
in mid 2008 and hold them contrary to the express wishes of their parents.
If Citipointe had not able to or
refused to provide evidence for the legality of its actions in removing Rosa
and Chita in mid-2008, (not an unreasonable newspaper request) the next port of
call for a journalist would have been the Ministry of Social Affairs. MOSAVY
played no role at all in the removal of Rosa and Chita in mid 2008 but a
competent journalist should not and would not have taken my word for it. S/he
would have asked the Ministry when and why it became involved and how and why
two girls whose family sought short term assistance as a result of their
poverty (this is clear in the 31/7/08 ‘contract’) came to be re-defined as
‘victims of human trafficking’?
If a Cambodia Daily or Phnom Penh
Post journalist had received any response at all from the Ministry, s/he would
have learned that it was fully 15 months (and multiple requests from Chanti and
Chhork that their daughters be returned, all well documented) before MOSAVY
gave Citipointe retrospective permission to remove the girls – in late 2009.
The next question for a Cambodia
Daily or Phnom Penh Post journalist could then have been:
“What legal authority did
Citipointe have, between July 2008 and Nov 2009 to hold the girls contrary to
the parents’ oft expressed wishes that they be returned?”
This is where, my own experience
tells me, the trail being pursued by a competent journalist would have gone
dead. Both Citipointe and MOSAVY, if they deigned to answer questions at all, would
have told the journalist that when Citipointe registered with the Ministry of
Foreign Affairs the church had the right to remove the girls, any girls, from
their families without providing a reason or evidence that such removal was in
the best interests of the children themselves.
In accordance with this logic,
any NGO registered with the Ministry of Foreign Affairs is free remove the
children of poor parents from their families without being answerable or
accountable MOSAVY, to Chab Dai (of which Citipointe is a member) or to anyone
else – including, to date, LICADHO. Is this not a story worthy of at least a
few phone calls and emails? In the case of the Cambodia Daily and the Phnom
Penh Post it seems not!
NGOs must and should be held
accountable for their actions and activities in Cambodia. This requires both
transparency and an adherence to the precepts of accountability by NGOs. It
also requires that the media, in this instance the English language press, ask
questions and not allow itself to be intimidated into silence either by the
fear of being sued or because criticism of NGOs might damage newspaper
circulation or advertising revenue. (If there is a third possible reason for
inaction I would love to know what it is.)
The NGO community should, I
believe, welcome the expose of sham, incompetent NGOs that abrogate the rights
(both legal and human) of the Cambodian people. These NGOs should not be
welcome as part of the NGO community.
The media could play a very
important role in exposing fraudulent NGOs. Both the Cambodia Daily and the
Phnom Penh Post are failing to hold NGOs accountable or to demand transparency
from them. And so it is, in the absence
of any form of media oversight, that Citipointe church can continue to hold
Chanti and Chhork’s daughters without either parent knowing why the girls were
removed in the first place or what they must do to have them returned to their
care.
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