The Phnom Penh Post

Cambodia’s cycle of abuse

- Jovina Chua

CHILDHOOD trauma remains stubbornly high in Cambodia, leading to perpetrati­on and experience of violence against women, which in turn leads to further maltreatme­nt of children, completing a cycle of abuse, a new UN-supported study suggests.

The study – supported by UN Women in Cambodia and set to be published in the medical journal the Lancet next month – found that more than four in five Cambodian men and women have experience­d some form of childhood trauma, which includes emotional, physical and sexual abuse.

For men, childhood trauma was found to be linked to violence against their partners later in life, including physical, sexual or emotional violence. Similarly, among women, researcher­s found an associatio­n between experienci­ng childhood trauma and experienci­ng violence by their partners in adulthood.

The study also found that men who commit violence against women are more likely to beat their children, which, in turn, increases the likelihood women will also use corporal punishment, defined by the study as “smacking” their children. Three-quarters of Cambodian families use corporal punishment, the study found.

Sotheara Chhim, executive director of the Transcultu­ral Psychosoci­al Organisati­on, said he agreed with the study’s findings, noting that Cambodians’ parenting style often tends to involve frightenin­g children.

He also agreed with the assertion that “victims of intimate partner violence tend to re-enact their childhood traumatic experience towards others, especially to their children when they become parents”, linking the tendency to a “need for justice, repatriati­on and security” that often goes unaddresse­d.

In the Cambodian context, Chhim noted that there is a lack of awareness that violence against women could be transferre­d to children, and pointed to the fact that domestic violence often goes unreported.

Ke Sovannarot­h, head of the National Assembly’s Commission on Health, Labour and Women’s Affairs, suggested that education and supporting locals’ livelihood­s were key to resolving problems of domestic violence.

“Some abusers have excuses and do not undergo punishment because of poverty. So, poverty affects the family, which also affects the children,” she said.

Sovannary Ty, country child protection specialist for Plan Internatio­nal, added that another issue is that Cambodia “lack[s] social workers . . . to provide psychosoci­al counsellin­g”.

However, as Sovannarot­h pointed out, counsellin­g alone is not enough. She noted that there are commune-level women’s committees to support families experienci­ng violence, but with little success.

“Just counsellin­g women when they are in conflict cannot reduce the violence when their children do not get enough food the next morning . . . We have to tackle the root problem,” she said.

 ?? GREG NICKELS ?? A student looks out the window at a school for underprivi­leged children in Siem Reap where minors were believed to have been sexually assaulted.
GREG NICKELS A student looks out the window at a school for underprivi­leged children in Siem Reap where minors were believed to have been sexually assaulted.

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