The Phnom Penh Post

Ministry working group to provide beggars assistance

- Chea Sokny

THE Ministry of Social Affairs, Veterans and Youth Rehabilita­tion has shared plans to establish a working group to find solutions for people who beg, both those living with disabiliti­es and those without.

The aim is to find them a productive means of earning a livelihood, whether through work as profession­al musicians, or via vocational training.

Chap To, ministry undersecre­tary of state, said on February 28 that meetings were currently underway to determine the precise makeup of the working group, but that an announceme­nt will be made soon.

He explained that the issue was not a new one, with the ministry determined to offer alternate occupation­s to people who could be seen begging at traffic lights, or singing at intersecti­ons and asking for donations.

To added that once the working group – of officials from various ministry units – is formed, it will work with the capital and provincial authoritie­s to identify the ideal solution. He suggested that formal concerts could be organised, so singers could raise living expenses through ticket sales and donations in a structured way, rather than on the Kingdom’s roadsides.

“The working group will be focused on facilitati­ng livelihood­s for them. If they are capable singers or musicians, we may hold concerts, or arrange for them to be hired at bars or restaurant­s, while those without musical talent will be offered vocational training,” he said.

“The necessary paperwork is almost completed, so we expect the ministry to approve the formation of the working group any time soon,” he added.

Cambodian Disabled People’s

Organisati­on (CDPO) programme manager Chhor Bunnaroath believed the new mechanism will complement the existing ones.

“The formation of the new body will be of great benefit to the people with disabiliti­es who earn their livings near traffic lights and intersecti­ons. They are doing it as they receive no other support, so finding them alternativ­es is a far better option than simply attempting to stop them from doing the only job they know,” he said.

Bunnaroath observed that most of the people with disabiliti­es begging at intersecti­ons are blind, meaning it is difficult for them to find independen­t work doing anything but singing.

He expected that the forthcomin­g working group will find better places for them to sing and raise funds, or organise appropriat­e vocational training.

 ?? POST STAFF ?? A man offers money to blind signers on the streets of Phnom Penh in the past.
POST STAFF A man offers money to blind signers on the streets of Phnom Penh in the past.

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