The Phnom Penh Post

Ministry questions brick factory report

- Niem Chheng BuiltonS lavery: DebtBondag­eandChildL­abour inCambodia’sBrickFact­ories,

THE Labour Ministry on Friday sidesteppe­d evidence uncovered by rights group Licadho suggesting the use of debt bondage is rife in Cambodian brick factories, instead choosing to question the group’s methods.

The statement, released in response to the group’s December 2 report failed to acknowledg­e researcher­s’ central claim: that many factory owners used indentured workers as a way of trapping families in poverty and servitude despite the practice being illegal under Cambodian law.

Instead, the ministry questioned why Licadho had not reported to officials alleged cases of child labour at the factories it visited. “The ministry regrets that Licadho officials failed to file a complaint to relevant authoritie­s or the ministry to take children out of child labour, if they really saw such instances during their investigat­ion,” the statement reads.

Labour Ministry spokesman Heng Sour attacked the group on Facebook, claiming its investigat­ors lacked “profession­alism and sympathy”. Sour was unreachabl­e, but an official at the ministry’s child protection department, who would only give his name as Sopheak, claimed the ministry had eliminated child labour at brick factories. Sopheak called debt bondage, a practice which Adhoc said draws the children of indebted workers into the industry, a “private matter”.

Licadho’s Am Sam Ath yesterday said the group would happily cooperate with authoritie­s to improve conditions.

 ?? PHA LINA ?? Workers move bricks through a factory in Kandal’s Muk Kampoul district late last month.
PHA LINA Workers move bricks through a factory in Kandal’s Muk Kampoul district late last month.

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