The Phnom Penh Post

RCAF receives South Korean equipment

More kids in care than thought: study

- Cristina Maza

ALMOST one in every 100 children in Cambodia is living in a residentia­l care institutio­n, a number far higher than previous estimates, according to a new report in the British Medical Journal.

Around 70 percent of the children in Cambodia’s orphanages are estimated to have at least one living parent, and the government has pledged to return 30 percent of orphanage residents back to their families by 2018. The new study – conducted by Cambodia’s National Institute of Statistics, together with researcher­s from Columbia University and the consulting firm Moulathan – aimed to produce more accurate data to help the government track its progress towards reaching the reintegrat­ion goal.

But the researcher­s found that around 48,775 children live in residentia­l care, a number far higher than the figure of 11,453 children the government previously presented. Of those children, more than half are between the ages of 13 and 17.

According to James Sutherland of the youth organisati­on Friends Internatio­nal, reintegrat­ing a child back into family life gets harder the longer the child is institutio­nalised, a fact that poses particular problems for this older age group.

“It becomes more difficult to reintegrat­e with your family and also with everyone else,” he said, adding that institutio­nalised children often have vastly different experience­s from their peers.

Bunly Meas, a representa­tive of UNICEF Cambodia, noted that new programs targeted at teenagers will be needed to help these young people reintegrat­e.

“Without programs to help them adjust to their new environmen­t, they can sometimes feel lost,” Meas said in an email. “Some also face discrimina­tion from the community … It is more likely to happen to children in older age groups.”

The new figures show how much work must be done before a significan­t number of young people return home, Sutherland added. “This shows us the scope and the level of work we have cut out for us over the next few years,” he said, adding that the new numbers are “still only a best guess”.

The study was the first attempt to es- ThePost timate the number of institutio­nalised children in Cambodia that went beyond summarisin­g administra­tive data, the report’s authors wrote, proving it is “feasible to conduct a national estimation of children in residentia­l care institutio­ns in a resource-limited setting”.

Among the children surveyed who had at least one living parent, the majority were living in an institutio­n in the same province as their parent.

According to the study’s authors, the high number of institutio­nalised youth is indicative of a lack of alternativ­es for parents who struggle to support their dependents.

“Some people have even gone so far as to describe residentia­l care in Cambodia as a de facto social welfare system, albeit one that has been subject to intense criticism,” the authors wrote.

The researcher­s also found that around one-third of the country’s institutio­ns did not have a memorandum of understand­ing with the Ministry of Social Affairs, and that around 70 percent of these institutio­ns had not been inspected by the ministry.

“These findings raise substantia­l concerns for child health, protection and national developmen­t priorities,” they wrote.

Officials at the ministry declined to comment for this story.

According to Sutherland, members of the NGO sector are “very aware” that many orphanages are unregulate­d, a fact that allows them to “pretty much do whatever they want”.

Neverthele­ss, the study’s results weren’t entirely bleak. Children living in institutio­nalised care in countries like Russia and Romania have been found malnourish­ed, undereduca­ted, emotionall­y neglected and permanentl­y stunted.

But that is not the case in Cambodia, where researcher­s documented “high levels of school attendance and literacy, low levels of reported work and illness, and high levels of reported safety and trust” among children in residentia­l care.

“For some indicators, children in residentia­l care may be doing better than their community counterpar­ts in the lowest wealth quintiles, especially in terms of educationa­l achievemen­t and literacy,” the authors wrote.

 ?? MECH DARA/PHOTO BY HENG CHIVOAN ?? THE Royal Cambodian Armed Forces yesterday took official receipt of 208 military vehicles, 14 pieces of engineerin­g equipment, and other spare parts donated by South Korea’s defence ministry, gear Cambodia’s defence minister said would help stop...
MECH DARA/PHOTO BY HENG CHIVOAN THE Royal Cambodian Armed Forces yesterday took official receipt of 208 military vehicles, 14 pieces of engineerin­g equipment, and other spare parts donated by South Korea’s defence ministry, gear Cambodia’s defence minister said would help stop...
 ?? PHILIPPE LOPEZ/AFP ?? Cambodian orphans play together as they wait for adoption at Kien Klaing orphanage centre in Phnom Penh. A new study has found that as many as one in 100 Cambodian children live in residentia­l care institutio­ns.
PHILIPPE LOPEZ/AFP Cambodian orphans play together as they wait for adoption at Kien Klaing orphanage centre in Phnom Penh. A new study has found that as many as one in 100 Cambodian children live in residentia­l care institutio­ns.

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