The Phnom Penh Post

Smith: Overhaul the Prey Speu centre or shut it down

- Niem Chheng

RHONA Smith, the Special Rapporteur on the situation of human rights in Cambodia, has recommende­d that the Phnom Penh Municipal Social Affairs Centre, better known as Prey Speu, be overhauled or shut down.

Smith made the recommenda­tion in her annual report submitted at the 42nd Session of the UN Human Rights Council (UNHRC), which is being held from Monday until September 27.

She said she visited the facility, also known as the Por Sen Chey Vocation Training Centre, in May and noted that the number of people staying there had decreased significan­tly.

“[People] were held in the centre against their will and/or on the basis of their disability, raising serious concerns about arbitrary detention, lack of adequate care and violations of the rights of persons with disabiliti­es,” Smith wrote in her report.

There were even reports of someone dying in the centre, she claimed, with the case not being fully investigat­ed.

She recommende­d an independen­t investigat­ion and an in-depth review of the centre be carried out, including on whether it “should continue to exist at all”.

If Prey Speu was to be a place of support for people with disabiliti­es, she said, it was essential that Cambodia complied with the Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabiliti­es.

A disability should in no case justify the deprivatio­n of liberty, and persons with disabiliti­es should be supported to live within communitie­s rather than be segregated, she said.

Smith said such a facility should be closer to the centre of Phnom Penh,

and those who were placed there should be able to freely access and leave it of their own accord.

“As currently set up, the centre continues to operate as a place of arbitrary detention and should be closed,” Smith insisted.

However, Ministry of Social Affairs, Veterans and Youth Rehabilita­tion spokespers­on Touch Channy on Wednesday denied Prey Speu was a “detention centre”.

He said those placed there were beggars, the homeless, the mentally ill, the elderly and the destitute.

“If we don’t [put them there], what can they do for themselves? Some of them were just wandering around with nowhere to go and no one to take care of them.

“When we bring them there, at least we have someone to care for them and give them at least three meals a day,” Channy said.

People could get life-skills training at

the centre and could leave when they were ready, he said.

Channy said the centre’s population was irregular because local authoritie­s brought between two and 30 people there every day, with some also leaving.

Those placed there could leave when the centre found their family or knew that they had somewhere to go, or when their identity had been ascertaine­d by their local authoritie­s, he said.

However, he said some refused to leave the centre as they did not have anywhere else to go.

“Prey Speu is not a detention centre. It is just a temporary centre for them. We did not arrest them – it was the local authoritie­s that collected them while on patrol to ensure public order. We just receive and put them in a controlled facility,” Channy said.

Smith’s Situation of Human Rights in Cambodia report covered a wide range of issues – from the Kingdom’s current political and human rights situation to the UN’s 2030 Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Goals (SDGs).

It also mentioned the release of Kem Sokha, the president of the Supreme Courtdisso­lved Cambodia National Rescue Party (CNRP), as the first of 22 recommenda­tions in her annual report.

Smith appeared pleased with some areas of the SDGs – part of the government’s Rectangula­r Strategy Phase IV. Among them were initiative­s to improve transparen­cy and efficiency in public institutio­ns.

She also acknowledg­ed improvemen­ts in the 20-page report, which a government official described as “balanced”.

 ?? HONG MENEA ?? People use the communal area of the Phnom Penh Municipal Social Affairs Centre, better known as Prey Speu, in 2015.
HONG MENEA People use the communal area of the Phnom Penh Municipal Social Affairs Centre, better known as Prey Speu, in 2015.
 ?? HONG MENEA ?? The Phnom Penh Municipal Social Affairs Centre pictured in 2015.
HONG MENEA The Phnom Penh Municipal Social Affairs Centre pictured in 2015.

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