The Phnom Penh Post

KRT interns push for pay

- Cristina Maza and Leonie Kijewski

MORE than 30 United Nations interns at the Khmer Rouge tribunal staged a short-term “strike” yesterday in response to a call by the Global Intern Coalition for an end to the “exploitati­ve and exclusiona­ry” practice of unpaid internship­s.

The interns gathered for an hour in the cafeteria of the Extraordin­ary Chambers in the Courts of Cambodia (ECCC) to express discontent with their status as unpaid staffers. The UN has a longstandi­ng policy of offering only unremunera­ted internship­s, claiming budgetary constraint­s prohibit it from offering interns monetary compensati­on.

According to Mark Websted, one of the striking interns, yesterday’s action was meant to call attention to the fact that unpaid work excludes potential interns from low-income background­s.

“We’re very fortunate that … we’re able to sustain ourselves [when interning at the ECCC] while other people from lower socioecono­mic background­s don’t have this opportunit­y,” Websted said.

He stressed that the strike action was not aimed at any supervisor­s working at the ECCC but against the “systemic inequality in terms of access and redistribu­tion of resources”.

But according to some The Post spoke to yesterday, interns often carry as much of the workload as full-time employees.

“The court itself was underfunde­d and unstaffed and interns were used as the beasts of burden,” said Scott Bywater, who worked as an intern coordinato­r at the court about five years ago.

Meanwhile, one ex-intern, who asked to remain anonymous, noted that interns received little institutio­nal support when they arrive in the country. “We received … a letter to present to immigratio­n to get a free NGO visa, other than that, and a map of the free bus routes to get to the court, we received very little,” the intern said.

“I arranged housing before I arrived via a Facebook group for interns, but many stay at guesthouse­s until they meet others in the same situation.”

The need for work experience continues to make internship­s appealing to students and recent graduates working to build their careers. But an unpaid position with the ECCC doesn’t guarantee a job, others noted.

According to Bridget Di Certo, who worked in the co-prosecutor’s office, a court internship is only worth as much as your future employer thinks it is.

“It depends on how much your future employers value the internship experience. Some internatio­nal organisati­ons value it very highly,” Di Certo said. (Disclosure: Di Certo worked for a time as a Post reporter following her time at the court.)

Speaking yesterday, Victor Koppe, a defence lawyer at the court, expressed his support for the striking interns.

“I think their actions are completely justified,” Koppe said. “Unfortunat­ely, there is nothing I can do about it since it’s UN policy.”

 ?? SUPPLIED ?? ECCC interns protested yesterday demanding to get paid for their internship­s at the United Nations.
SUPPLIED ECCC interns protested yesterday demanding to get paid for their internship­s at the United Nations.

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