Dear
Heather Graham
The
banner headline reads:
'The girls are known as my
Cambodian daughters':
Australia's richest person Gina Rinehart
reveals she has NINE adopted children
Gina Rinehart has been supporting nine
orphaned girls from Cambodia
The 61-year-old said she
sent them to prestigious Asian universities
The nine girls are often
treated to overseas trips and black tie events
The article written by Sally Lee for Australia’s Daily Mail, was
published on 25th April 2015
Lucie Morris Marr wrote a similar article 5 days
later, 30th April, for the Herald Sun with the banner headline:
“Gina Rinehart opens up on
‘Cambodian daughters’ saved from life of extreme poverty.”
In it Morris Marr makes reference to the:
“special bond” she (Rinehart) shares with nine
Cambodian “daughters”, all orphans she rescued in 2007 from the sordid
backstreets of Phnom Penh.”
There
is a problem with both articles. Gina Rinehart’s ‘Cambodian Daughters’ are not
orphans.
Is
this merely sensational tabloid journalism? Or have Gina Rinehart and Scott
Neeson deliberately mislead the journalists who wrote the stories?
How
did these clever but materially poor students come to be re-branded as :
“orhpans
rescued in 2007 from the sordid backstreets of Phnom Penh?”
It
is impossible to know the answer since the journalists, Neeson and Rinehart refuse
to comment.
In
the absence of clarification this ‘orphan story’ will become ‘the truth’. Future potential donors and sponsors to the
Cambodian Children’s Fund will be able, through Google search, to learn of
Neeson and Rinehart’s heroic rescue of these ‘orphan’ girls, just as they will
be able to find the following story about Scott Neeson’s “1500 orphaned and disadvantaged children.”
I
have written to you before, Heather, with information that would, I hoped, induce
you to ask a few questions of Scott Neeson before you lend your name any more
to his money raising activities.
Here
are two more questions to add to the list:
“Are any of Gina Rinehart’s 9
‘Cambodian Daughters’ orphans?”
and
“How many of the Cambodian
Children’s Fund “1500 orphaned and
disadvantaged children” are orphans? Five? Ten? Fifty?”
Given that Neeson is obliged, in accordance with
Cambodian law, to enter into contractual agreements with the parents of the
children in institutional care at CCF the answers to these questions should be
but a phone call away.
As
you know, Scott Neeson was a marketing person in Hollywood.
http://cambodia440.blogspot.com/2014/11/28-former-hollywood-mogul-finds.html
Scott
knows that rescuing orphans from the ‘sordid
back streets of Phnom Penh’ is a much more compelling story, and more
likely to assist in his money-raising activities, than is the story of CCF and
Gina Rinehart simply assisting clever students from materially poor families?
It
is not merely a lie to refer to these young women as orphans. To do so in a
country in which 75% of ‘orphans’ in ‘orphanages’ are not orphans feeds into
the myth, perpetrated by unscrupulous NGOs, that Cambodian families are
incapable of taking care of their own children.
The
truth is that tens of thousands of Cambodian families are so poor that it is
difficult (often impossible) to feed and educate their children. The answer is
not to remove the children from their homes and put them in institutions but to
help these materially poor families and their communities fed, clothe and
educate their own kids.
Regardless
of the obvious humanitarian reasons for not extracting children from their
families to become pawns in NGO money raising initiatives, it is not a cost
effective way of solving the problems associated with extreme poverty. It costs
between 5 and 9 times as much money to support a child in an institutional
setting as it does to assist that child in a family and community context.
Please
start asking questions, Heather, and take Scott Neeson’s public relations spin
with a grain of salt.
Neeson takes children from their parents. In most cases the parents cannot read and have little ability to understand what they are 'thumbprinting'. In some cases there are no contracts. The Cambodian government should get involved prosecute this guy so that he could see the joys of Cambodian prison life up close and personal.
ReplyDeleteIf your so convinced of this, why don't you prosecute him?
ReplyDeleteAS i mentioned, it is for the government. If it was as easy as taking him to court and gaining access to the 'contract', I'd be very happy to.
ReplyDeleteWht even happened to Kevin Tutt. Did he fall or was he pushed?
ReplyDelete[b]Civil society renews calls for input on NGO law[/b]
ReplyDeleteThe Phnom Penh Post, usually a loyal NGO defender just reported this:(after the link)
Here is something for the laughingstock. To most expats it's no secret that Cambodia is flooded with NGO of which many display their "Concern-NOT" with their 4x4 Vehicles that clog the streets of Phnom Penh. HM the Prime Minister is not as stupid as the intl. NGO community would like him to be. And of course there is the ever underground work of the US Embassy to achieve Regime Change.
So, 272 intl. NGO held a press conference to petition the Cambodian Government to have the pending NGO law get it their way. Perhaps they havn't seen the writing on the wall. The Government is coming to terms with it's foreign legion, be it Expats, Drug and Human Traffickers or Cambodia's persistent Pest the NGO.
I know that i speak for many Expats when i ask the Prime Minister to stay firm. This is Cambodia, the Country that you represent. Cambodia is not the US or Europe, Australia or the Antarcis. Tell them to go and fly a kite if they don't like it when the Government puts REGULATION on a sector that has been on a FREE RIDE eversince the Khmer Rouge left.
We Expats now have to register the same way we do at home. If we have a business we have to have a Working Permit and a Business License in order to contribute to the Tax Revenue of Cambodia. No Free Ride ! We, the Expats in Cambodia enjoy an unbelivable freedom of how to express ourself and in what we do. For that i thank Cambodia to let me stay here as a GUEST. As a Guest i am grateful and willing to contribute to Cambodia's future.
It's time the Cambodia NGO Forum and it's many members come to terms and choose a way to contribute in a way that is transparent and not only in their own selfish interest.
http://www.phnompenhpost.com/national/civil-society-renews-calls-input-ngo-law
What has this got to do with anything you fucking retard. Try and learn to speak English you fuckwit before throwing your stupid observtions at us
ReplyDeleteSorry, this should be here. Is that the POVERTY PIMP again?
DeleteWhose the fucktard 4.28. Learn to spell 'observations' before throwing stones in other peoples glass houses. I read the article. Makes sense to me. Why the fuck shouldnt NGOs register!
ReplyDeleteCivil society renews calls for input on NGO law
Tue, 5 May 2015
Taing Vida
Nearly 300 local and international NGOs yesterday held a press conference to petition the Cambodian government to suspend its adoption of a controversial draft law on NGOs that would curb organisations’ freedom of movement. They said the state should first consult with stakeholders to ensure the law’s effectiveness.
According to a statement by the 272 NGOs, the government initially cooperated with civil society actors on the fourth draft of the law, released in 2011. Since then, however, Prime Minister Hun Sen has delayed the law’s adoption, before announcing last month that it would be passed in early May without the help or feedback of NGOs.
Tek Vannara, the executive director of the NGO Forum on Cambodia, said the request by civil society groups was meant to promote cooperation.
“We request that the government commit to a culture of dialogue, the protection of human rights and democratic and economic development,” he said. However, government spokesman Phay Siphan yesterday accused NGOs of serving “foreign” interests, saying they had “no right to force the government to act as they please”.
Is that the POVERTY PIMP again?
ReplyDeleteSurely you can see the political reasons that make the government's NGO law controversial. If such a law was passed in another country, it would cause uproar. Such laws would not impact organisations like CCF - they enjoy a very close working relationship with the government at the highest levels, and do not receive funding from any foreign government. They are self-funded, largely a-political, and work with local government to strengthen their programs.
ReplyDeleteThis law is aimed at restricting the ability for human rights and advocacy groups to voice their concerns - that might mean local NGO's protesting at dubious election results, illegal land-clearing, or even issues related to judicial issues (say, the jailing of innocent citizens).
Most decent NGOs welcome an NGO law, as they have been registered for years, they pay tax, and they don't like the multitude of small, unregistered and unaccountable NGOs in the country impacting on their reputations. What we don't want to see is the government skimming money from direct aid (individual donations to education of health programs for example) or a situation where the government has the right to shut down any organisation they disagree with. This is about ensuring freedom of speech for Cambodians.
To say that the creation of such a law should be done without any consultation with civil society is extremely ignorant.
And 5:38, I think you mean "who's the fucktard", not "whose the fucktard".
@ Anonymous May 5, 2015 at 10:28 PM
Deleteyour assessment of the process of the controversial NGO law isn't quite up to date. Perhaps you should know that since 2011 there have been 3 major consultations by the government which invited the Civil Society (NGO) to forward their opinion. They did so and the draft law was consequently amended 3 times. This however is not enough for the NGO World which like to keep the current status quo equal minimal transparency.
The Scott Neeson NOT troll again showed that he is seriously scared to loose his source of income or to open up his books by panicking like he does here.
I find it funny when the only troll here complains about english comments that do not meet his standard but at the same time throws words like Fucktard or fucking retard around. I know that the english language has gone through major changes and now every 2. word you hear is FUCK. That's what i call progress ! But it's also clear that the troll needs quality counseling by a shrink !
this blog has gotten very far removed from the david fletcher case, Ricketson whats happening with the docs from the embassy?
ReplyDeleteYes, it does seem to go off on tangents, doesn't it? A bit like conversations in real life. 25% of the documents Fletcher asked for have been redacted - in the words, all the documents that would be of use to him in his case. The British Embassy in Cambodia has confirmed, however, that it will play no role at all in helping Mr Fletcher secure a fair trial and that no representative of the British Embassy will be in attendance at such a trial should one occur. The Foreign & Commonwealth Office has left Mr Fletcher under no illusions as to their position: It has washed its hands completely. I have written to Foreign Minister Phillip Hammond about this but have been too busy (and on the road) to post it. I will in the next 12 or so hours.
ReplyDelete