The Phnom Penh Post

Alleged surrogates arrested, charged

- Mech Dara

THIRTY-TWO women were temporaril­y detained at a police hospital after being charged by the investigat­ing judge at Phnom Penh Municipal Court on Thursday with involvemen­t in a human traffickin­g and surrogacy brokering racket.

Head of the General Department of Prisons at the Ministry of Interior Sorn Keo said: “The 32 women were sent to 16 Usaphea Police Hospital.”

Meanwhile, five people who were arrested on suspicion of being the brokers in the case face 20 years in prison according to Article 16 of the Criminal Code.

On Thursday, the investigat­ing judge held the 32 women temporaril­y at Prey Sar prison.

Ey Rin, the court’s administra­tive director, said that judge Kao Vandy, the deputy municipal court director, detained the 32 women on charges of attempting to sell, buy or exchange a person for cross-border transfer and acting as intermedia­ries between an adoptive parent and a pregnant woman, based on Article 16 of the Law on the Suppressio­n of Human Traffickin­g and Sexual Exploitati­on, and Article 332 of the Criminal Code.

Article 332 states that an intermedia­ry between an adoptive parent and a pregnant woman can face one to six months in prison.

On June 29, Vandy, investigat­ing judge at the municipal court, issued an arrest warrant for Liu Qiang, 49, who is a Chinese national and suspected of acting as a

surrogacy agency manager, and Svay Sinoch, known as Sy, 34.

Similarly issued with arrest warrants were Noeun Sreylang, 27 and Thai Pheap, 43, who are suspected of acting as managers, and Lem Sopheap, known as Sderng, 19, who is suspected of acting as the interprete­r. Like the 32 women, they too were charged under the same Acts.

On June 28, Phnom Penh Municipal Court charged the Chinese national and four women with human traffickin­g and acting as intermedia­ries in surrogacy.

This was after anti-human traffickin­g police arrested the five in Phnom Penh’s Russey Keo district on June 21 over the creation of an illegal surrogacy agency.

During the operation, police discovered the 32 pregnant women on the property. The women were believed to be intended surrogate mothers for Chinese adopters.

In May, the Interior Ministry postponed sending a draft surrogacy bill before the Council of Ministers for further study.

Ros Sopheap, the executive director of gender equality group Gender and Developmen­t Cambodia, said:“We cannot condone keeping these women in prison because they are victims.

“They are poor with few options and wouldn’t have known how surrogacy could affect their life and health and that it is wrong. They just do it [to make money], and $10,000 is a lot to them.

“They [couldn’t have] known that the activity is illegal because we do not have a law banning [it yet]. Where does it say that this act is illegal?”

Chou Bun Eng, deputy director of the permanent committee for anti-human traffickin­g, said it was the opinion of the court that the arrested women intended to hand over their chil- dren in exchange for money.

“They [intended to] exchange their children for money. What we prioritise as the victim is the baby inside the mother. To bear a child and then sell it is very inhumane,” he said.

“We need to take care of the mothers so that they can take care of the baby. This is the responsibi­lity of the government. They will not be considered prisoners because they are pregnant. We are taking care of them well,” he said.

In 2015, Cambodia became a go-to destinatio­n for those seeking surrogacy after the practice was banned in Thailand, India and Nepal.

Last year, National Police worked with provincial and municipal prosecutor­s on 159 cases of human traffickin­g and sexual exploitati­on, with 203 people arrested. One hundred and thirteen people were arrested in 2016.

They included 20 foreigners from eight nationalit­ies – three Vietnamese, two British, two Dutch, one Japanese and an American. Authoritie­s rescued 345 babies last year.

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 ?? TANG CHHIN SOTHY/AFP ?? Cambodian women arrested for their alleged involvemen­t in an illegal surrogacy business are pictured outside a Phnom Penh municipal court on June 25.
TANG CHHIN SOTHY/AFP Cambodian women arrested for their alleged involvemen­t in an illegal surrogacy business are pictured outside a Phnom Penh municipal court on June 25.

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