The Phnom Penh Post

Surrogate mothers face charges for traffickin­g

- Mech Dara

THE Phnom Penh Municipal Police are to send 15 people to court for their alleged involvemen­t in a surrogacy case, said its anti-human traffickin­g and juvenile protection bureau deputy chief Touch Sarein.

He said the 13 women and two men will be taken to court on Monday, following their arrest in the capital’s Sen Sok district on November 8.

“We [will] send them as soon as we finish preparing the documentat­ion,” he said on Monday, adding that 11 of the detainees were pregnant women.

Sarein said his team needed time to carry out the interrogat­ion process and couldn’t finish earlier due to the number of detainees. “We asked the court for a postponeme­nt in order to launch a thorough investigat­ion,” he said.

No further details are available while the experts “determine the appropriat­e legal action”, he said.

Ministr y of Interior secretary of state Chou Bun Eng said officials are still figuring out the mastermind in the case and that similar cases have happened before.

“[The perpetrato­rs] will be charged according to the Law on Suppressio­n of Hu- man Traffickin­g and Sexual Exploitati­on.”

Bun Eng said that civil society organisati­ons regard the pregnant women as “victims”. But she argued that the latter might be in collusion with the perpetrato­rs.

“[Those women] have the intention to exchange their babies for money. If we ask any one of them, they are aware of it,” she said.

In June, the authoritie­s detained several people in an alleged surrogacy ring, among whom were the mastermind and her accomplice­s, as well as 32 women who were offered a certain amount of money to have children for Chinese clients.

Those “surrogate mothers”, who were initially regarded as victims, were eventually charged with “The Act of Selling, Buying or Exchanging a Person for Cross-border Transfer” according to Article 16 of the human traffickin­g law.

The article stipulates that the act is punishable by imprisonme­nt of up to 20 years.

In late October, Bun Eng said the lawyer for the 32 women filed an appeal in court for their temporary release.

She added that the women wished to care for their newborns, and to prevent the babies from being handed to the clients.

Anti-human traffickin­g prosecutor­s claimed that the mothers were offered up to $10,000, paid in instalment­s – $500 every month during pregnancy and $300 each month postdelive­ry until they receive the entire agreed amount.

 ?? SUPPLIED ?? Police arrest 15 people alleged to be involved in a surrogacy case on Thursday in Phnom Penh’s Sen Sok district.
SUPPLIED Police arrest 15 people alleged to be involved in a surrogacy case on Thursday in Phnom Penh’s Sen Sok district.

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