The Phnom Penh Post

Anti-traffickin­g drive goes on

- Chea Sokny

ARECENT meeting between social affairs minister Vong Soth and Kamei Haruko, chief representa­tive of the Japan Internatio­nal Cooperatio­n Agency (JICA) in Cambodia, resulted in renewed commitment­s to redouble efforts to end human traffickin­g activity in the Kingdom.

The outgoing JICA representa­tive said she was happy that she was here for the 70th anniversar­y of diplomatic ties between Japan and Cambodia, and that she sees it as a great way to cap off her mission here.

Kamei requested at the March 27 meeting that the ministry continue to strengthen cooperatio­n with JICA experts on human traffickin­g so that all of their efforts and work would have a positive impact.

Soth said human traffickin­g is a complex issue that requires the participat­ion of all stakeholde­rs as it is systematic and often linked from one country to another and run by organised crime or mafia groups that are transnatio­nal in operations.

Soth thanked Kamei for her role in furthering Cambodia’s developmen­t and her work representi­ng JICA. He said the Cambodian people will always be grateful for the help that Japan provided in the past few decades, a time when it was

urgently needed and few other nations were eager to step in at the level of investment that Japan could and did.

In this regards, Chou Bun Eng, Ministry of Interior secretary of state and permanent vice-chair of the National Committee for Counter Traffickin­g (NCCT), said on March 28 that the continued strengthen­ing of cooperatio­n between the social affairs ministry and JICA was highly commended.

She noted that Cambodia needs the participat­ion and cooperatio­n of other countries to be able to do this work, and that recently cases of human

traffickin­g in Cambodia have decreased remarkably due to the efforts of stakeholde­rs and their commitment to anti-human traffickin­g.

“Despite the decline of cases in the country, what is happening again is called ‘influencer traffickin­g’ and it begins by recruiting people from abroad. So, it is something that we have to cooperate on and remain vigilant about, so we want to have even more cooperatio­n,” she said.

Soeng Sen Karuna, spokesman for local rights group ADHOC, said cooperatio­n to prevent human traffickin­g can reduce the

cases drasticall­y if law enforcemen­t is willing to punish those who are responsibl­e for it.

“In Cambodia, there are two problems. First, Khmer people themselves are being trafficked as well as foreigners, and second, there are also many cases of people being cheated or exploited through all kinds of online games and gambling and other fraudulent schemes that take advantage of the lack of tech and digital sophistica­tion among some of the Kingdom’s rural residents, especially compared to city-dwellers here and in other countries,” he said.

 ?? SOCIAL AFFAIRS MINISTRY ?? Social affairs minister Vong Soth meets with Kamei Haruko, chief Representa­tive of the Japan Internatio­nal Coopertati­on Agency (JICA) on March 27.
SOCIAL AFFAIRS MINISTRY Social affairs minister Vong Soth meets with Kamei Haruko, chief Representa­tive of the Japan Internatio­nal Coopertati­on Agency (JICA) on March 27.

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