Dear Heather
It is more than two years since I first wrote to
you alerting you, as a member of the CCF board, to Scott Neeson’s removal of
children from their families. Here is a quote from that letter, the full text
of which can be found below:
“You have
jumped on the Scott Neeson Cambodian Children’s Fund bandwagon but I wonder,
Heather, if you have asked enough questions (some of them tough ones) in order
to find out what actually goes on at CCF? Of course, when you make a quick trip
to Cambodia, you will be shown what Scott wants you to see, you will hear what
Scott wants you to hear and you will be used (in a public relations sense) to
get Scott’s message out to the world. The message is, in brief: “There are so
many children in need, so many children without homes, so many children that
need and deserve a decent education that CCF needs all the money it can raise.”
Yes,
there are many children with these needs. These children for the most part,
have parents. They have mums and dad’s who love them; mums and dads who want to
best for their children; mums and dad’s who cannot afford to feed their sons
and daughters properly, to educate them; mums and dads who would welcome any
assistance provided to the entire family – assistance that would keep the
family together and not see their sons and daughters brought up by strangers in
an institution and presented to donors and sponsors, to all intents and
purposes, as ‘orphans’ rescued by the wonderful Scott Neeson who gave up his
highly successful Hollywood career etc.
During
your brief visits to Cambodia you will not meet or talk with the parents of
children who were removed from their families under false pretenses and not
returned when the parents asked Scott to return them. Yes, you will be taken to
visit some families who have been (are being) helped by CCF but what about all
the families still living in the most appalling of circumstances, working in
the dump, whilst one member of the family is living in an what amounts to a CCF
orphanage?”
I have written to you a few times since then. You
have not responded in any way. This is true for your fellow board members also
- Samuel Robinson, Bob Alexander and Bob Tufts. Questions from the media are
not welcomed by either Scott Neeson or the CCF board. In the case of difficult
questions from a media person such as myself, the answers to which would
implicate all of you in serious charity fraud, ham-fisted attempts are
made to shoot the messenger.
Whether you like it or not you are now complicit in
Scott Neeson and CCF charity fraud. There will be no consequences for CCF in
Cambodia for this fraud. As you know there is no rule of law in this country.
If you have money (and CCF has a lot of it) you can do pretty well whatever you
like and no-one, including the Cambodian media (both Khmer and English
language) and human rights organisations will say a word.
But you know all this or, if you do not, you have
kept your eyes blissfully closed in the times you have visited Cambodia.
Knowing full well in advance that you will not be
answering any questions (any more than your fellow board members will) I will,
nonetheless place a few more questions on record.
Let’s start with Charam, a poster boy for
CCF’s success at creating Cambodia’s future leaders. Charam has recently wowed
audiences in Australia with his charm and good looks and with the tearful way
in which he tells his life story. And he has done the same in New York.
Just 10 days ago CCF posted, on its Facebook page,
a photo of a very happy looking Charam “a truly remarkable young
man” in a helicopter. CCF Facebook tells followers that Charam:
“works in hospitality at a cultural centre in Phnom
Penh”
This reads well. It sounds impressive. However, to
say that Charam “works in hospitality at a cultural centre in Phnom
Penh” is more than a little disingenuous given that Charam
works as a barman in an upmarket Expat bar/restaurant in Phnom
Penh!
There is nothing wrong with working as a barman, of
course, but for an organization proclaiming to be training Cambodia’s future
leaders Charam’s story is far from being an example of success in this
department.
This is Scott the marketing man using slippery
words to manufacture an “extraordinary” story that will have sponsors and
donors reaching for their wallets.
Does it concern you at all, Heather, that
Charam is being exploited by CCF? That he is flown around the world (New York,
Sydney), dressed up in a Western suit, to tell a story that reduces audiences
to tears and has wealthy New Yorkers writing huge cheques? And what happens to
Charam when each of these world money-raising tours comes to an end?
You know the answer. Until very recently Charam
returned to Phnom Penh to sleep in a crowded CCF dormitory (4 bunks,
10 boys!), as he has done for the past 10 years - despite having a mother and a
father living elsewhere. (Charam is one of Scott's fake 'orphans'!)
Recently, as repayment to Charam for all the money
his good looks and charm have generated for CCF over the years, he and his
parents were allowed to live in one of the houses ‘gifted’ to poor families.
(Another of Scott’s slippery use of words to crate the impression that the
homes were given to poor families!)
During the time that Charam was sleeping in his
dormitory was CCF also helping out the rest of his family? Was there a good
reason why Charam had to be removed from the care of his mother and father and
taken into residential care? Have you ever seen a copy of the contract that
Charam’s mum and dad signed with CCF before he was taken into care? To the best
of your knowledge do Charam’s mum and dad have copies of this ‘contract’?
What impact do you think it has on the psyches of
young CCF men and women when they are flown around the world, dressed up, put
on display, asked to tell their stories to men and women in evening attire, at
gala celebrity-studded events in the Big Apple, and then returned to their
ordinary lives in CCF institutional care?
Do you and your fellow board members ever consider
the possibility that there is something wrong with this? That it may amount to
exploitation of children for financial gain?
I have a few more questions to add to those I have
asked Samuel Robinson, Bob Alexander and Bob Tufts this past few days:
(1) Did the CCF board approve, in 2011, loans
totalling $95,000 to 3 senior staff members - one of whom was the Country
Manager (Kram Sok Channoeurn) – seen here in the photo of you, Scott,
Charam and two CCF young women?
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(2) By the end of 2014 did the
board approve of CCF’s holding just under $5m in land and $3.5 million in
investments? Was the board aware of this at a time when Scott Neeson was claiming
that CCF owned no land; at a time when he owned land himself, contrary to
Cambodian law.
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(3) In the CCF returns for 2014 'Travel'
accounted for about $240k. This suggests an average spend of $20,000 each month
for an organisation with its major operational focus in one part of one city in
Cambodia. Did the board ever ask Scott Neeson to account for this $20,000
per month travel bill? (Does the board ever ask Scott Neeson to account for any
of his spending?)
(3) In CCF’s flagship location in central
Phnom Penh, CCF1, resident students, almost all of whom are over 18 years old
were, until very recently, sharing beds – 4 bunk beds between 10 students. Did
the board approve of this bunk-sharing arrangement?
(4) Is it a matter of concern to the board
that CCF residents have no dining room to eat in? That the room once used as a
dining room was taken over for administrative use, making it necessary for
residents to eat wherever they can find a space to sit.
(5) Do you believe it is necessary for
CCF residents to be monitored 24 hours a day by up to 8 internal CCTV cameras?
(6) Is it a matter of any concern that CCF is
dominated by the family of the Country Manager whose sisters, brother, father,
husband and brother-in-law have held or are holding key positions in the
organization; that these positions are very favorably remunerated.
(7) Why does CCF keep siblings from the
same family in different residential establishments? Do you approve of this
splitting up of siblings in this way?
To refresh your memory, my letter to you of June
2014
# 11 Some questions that Heather Graham should ask
Scott Neeson
http://cambodianchildrensfund.blogspot.com/2014/06/some-questions-that-heather-graham.html
Heather Graham
c/o PMK/HBH Public Relations
700 San Vincente Avenue
Suite G-910
West Hollywood, CA 90069
13th June 2014
Dear Heather
re Scott Neeson and the Cambodian Children’s Fund
I am writing this to you via your Public Relations
representative in Hollywood. You understand the importance of public relations
in representing yourself to the world in the way that is going to serve your
acting career best.
Non Government Organizations such as the Cambodian
Children’s Fund also employ Public Relations specialists to present themselves
to potential donors and sponsors in the light that is going to serve their
interests best – namely to raise as much money as possible. Celebrities such as
yourself can be very useful in achieving this goal. Celebrities can also become
pawns in a game the rules of which they do not know or understand if they are
kept in the dark and force fed a public relations myth such as the one
perpetrated this past 15 or so years by Somaly Mam.
The recent exposure of Somaly Mam as a liar reveals
that public relations can only do so much to protect charismatic frauds such as
Somaly Mam from public scrutiny. Eventually the truth emerges. I imagine
that there are rich, famous Hollywood stars and producers who, in June 2014,
wish they had asked more questions of Somaly before jumping on the Somaly Mam
Foundation bandwagon. If they had bothered to do so (or even do a little google
research) they would have discovered what the NGO community in Cambodia has
known for many years, namely that Somaly has always played fast and loose with
the truth in the belief that the good work she was doing justified her lies and
deceit – the end justifying the means.
Somaly is not alone in playing fast and loose with
the truth, in creating the past for herself that best services the Somaly Mam
myth; a myth that has shielded her for many years from criticism: “How could
you be critical of Somaly Mam?” this line of thinking goes. “How could you
question her integrity? She is doing such good work to help women who have been
trafficked.” The resultant lack of scrutiny, even from Pulitzer Prize winning
journalists such as Nicholas Kristoff, has enabled Somaly to exploit the very
women she was supposed to be helping in order to provide herself with a
fabulous red-carpet celebrity-filled jet-setters lifestyle.
You have jumped on the Scott Neeson Cambodian
Children’s Fund bandwagon but I wonder, Heather, if you have asked enough
questions (some of them tough ones) in order to find out what actually goes on
at CCF? Of course, when you make a quick trip to Cambodia, you will be shown
what Scott wants you to see, you will hear what Scott wants you to hear and you
will be used (in a public relations sense) to get Scott’s message out to the
world. The message is, in brief: “There are so many children in need, so many
children without homes, so many children that need and deserve a decent
education that CCF needs all the money it can raise.”
Yes, there are many children with these needs.
These children for the most part, have parents. They have mums and dad’s who
love them; mums and dads who want to best for their children; mums and dad’s
who cannot afford to feed their sons and daughters properly, to educate them;
mums and dads who would welcome any assistance provided to the entire family –
assistance that would keep the family together and not see their sons and
daughters brought up by strangers in an institution and presented to donors and
sponsors, to all intents and purposes, as ‘orphans’ rescued by the wonderful
Scott Neeson who gave up his highly successful Hollywood career etc.
During your brief visits to Cambodia you will not
meet or talk with the parents of children who were removed from their families
under false pretenses and not returned when the parents asked Scott to return
them. Yes, you will be taken to visit some families who have been (are being)
helped by CCF but what about all the families still living in the most
appalling of circumstances, working in the dump, whilst one member of the
family is living in an what amounts to a CCF orphanage?
I recently filmed with one such family – all
but one member of which works in the Phnom Penh dump. The combined family
income is between $10 and $20 a week. The one member of the family not working
in the dump is living in a CCF ‘orphanage’, eating three meals a day and
receiving an education their parents could not afford to provide them with.
Have you ever asked Scott how much it costs to keep one child in a CCF
dormitory? Have you ever asked him if this amount of money, if given directly
to the family, would not only enable the family to stay together but make it
unnecessary for the mother and father to work in the dump?
Scott will probably tell you that many of the kids
he ‘adopts’ come from abusive families. Do they? How many? And even if they do,
do you think that there might be some relationship between such abuse and the
extreme poverty experienced by the family? Removing children from families,
even when parents are abusive, alcoholic, drug addicted, should be the last
resort; not the first one.
Leaving aside the human rights abuses inherent in
breaking up families, do the sums add up? Are you aware that it costs around 5
times as much to keep a child in an institution as it does to support that
child within his or her family? If not, Heather, please do your homework before
next lending your name to the perpetuation of the Scott Neeson myth.
If you feel inclined to ask some questions,
Heather, you might also ask Scott how many kids sleep in CCF dormitories. Take
with a huge grain of salt what Scott tells you; what you read online. Remember,
there are PR specialists putting a lot of time and effort into perpetuating the
Scott Neeson mythology and presenting CCF as beyond criticism - an NGO so pure
that to even ask Scott questions would be insulting to a man who gave up his
successful Hollywood career to rescue….etc.
Have you ever asked Scott what has become of the
many ‘graduates’ of CCF? How many of them have benefited from being removed
from their families and institutionalized? How many have not? Without answers
to such questions it is impossible for you, or for anyone else, to know whether
CCF is doing more good than harm or the reverse.
I do not expect that you should blindly believe
anything I write here, Heather. I would suggest, however, that you ask as many
questions as you can of Scott and be satisfied with the answers before
continuing to act as a Hollywood spokesperson for Scott Neeson and CCF. Look
beyond the spin and be as cautious as you can be in accepting what Scott tells
you as Gospel truth; as cautious as you should be in accepting anything I write
her as Gospel.
If you have half an hour to spare you could read my
Cambodian Children’s Fund blog and find our for yourself just how Scott treated
one member of the media who began to ask questions that he did not want to
answer:
You will discover, if you read it, that Scott is a
liar. If he lies to me, can you be sure that he is not lying to you? If you ask
around a little you will discover that Scott does not like to talk with anyone
in the media who is going to ask him questions that he does not want to answer;
any journalist who might puncture the bubble of the Scot Neeson myth. This is
why he employs his brother to make hagiographic films about him and to conduct
‘interviews’ that are really just self-promotion on Scott’s part.
Do bear in mind, Heather, the ultimate fate of
Somaly Mam, publicly humiliated when the truth about her came out. And bear in
mind also the amount of egg on the faces of all those celebrities who bought
Somaly’s story hook, line and sinker.
best wishes
James Ricketson
So now you stoop to using the images of successful young Cambodians, kids who have pulled themselves up out of the muck and made good, to diminish their accomplishments and shame and exploit them like this, so you James Ricketson can indulge your personal vendetta against the Cambodian Children's Foundation and attack the NGO that helped them. You have no scruples James Ricketson. You are heartless and exploitative, and no friend to children, the vulnerable and down-trodden. You really are a vile thing Ricketson.
ReplyDeleteDear Anonymous 11.25
DeleteScott Neeson and CCF have been using images of Charam all around the world in order to raise money. Does your accusation of exploitation extend to CCF and Neeson also?
I have not in any way diminished the accomplishments of Charam. He has a job and seems to be getting on with his life. And now he has the opportunity to actually live with his mum and dad - an opportunity not available to him whilst living in a crowded dormitory at CCF.
Ido not have a personal vendetta against CCF. Chance rather than design made me aware that CCF practices serious fraud in order to solicit money from generous donors and sponsors. As a documentary filmmaker,as a sometime journalist, as a blogger and as someone who loves Cambodia and hates to see the poor and powerless exploited by the rich and powerful, I have no hesitation in exposing fraud when I come upon it.
Now that Charam is an adult he needs to make a decision as regards his own status as 'poster boy' for CCF. If he chooses to continue in this role, to place himself in the public eye in the way CCF places him, he has to accept that the media will take an interest in his story. If he chooses to distance himself from CCF and no longer play the 'poster boy' role the media will have no reason to take an interest in him. It is his choice.
Finally, I wish Charam and all the other young men and women emerging from CCF all the best for the future. this does not mean I must cease from being a critic of CCF.
So what? This is about what you have done here, not somebody else. How you James Ricketson are using these young peoples' images without their permission in order to diminish them and attack the Cambodian Children's Foundation. "But him too" to is not an excuse for unethical behavior. You did this here. You and you alone. And you should be ashamed of yourself.
ReplyDeleteDear Anonymous 11.54
DeleteTen or so days ago Charam appeared on a TV show in Australia. Given that he is an adult (21, I believe) one has to presume that he made this TV appearance of his own volition; that he was not coerced into doing it.
He then accepted the offer made to fly over Sydney in a helicopter, to have his photo taken and to have this photo published on CCF's Facebook page.
In short, Charam placed himself in the public domain. And he did so as an adult.
You may not be a Neeson Troll but I find it interesting that you should be getting so exercised about my use of photos in the public domain but express no concern at all about the implications inherent in members of the CCF board refusing to answer any questions from the media.
Dear Mr Ricketson
ReplyDeleteI sponsor some kids at CCF. They work full time for CCF as teachers but do not have access to the money they are told they are earning. It worries me that they are not learning any long term life skills. It worries me that CCF has no plan in place for transitioning these kids from CCF to the community. They are in their 20s and should be in the community now, working in jobs where they are paid. I do not want to stop sponsoring them but also do not want to kick up a fuss with CCF and get them into trouble for telling me that they are not happy. I think this is a common problem
I have heard numerous reports of CCF residents being forced to work for no wage. In once case that I know of well, the mother of a 14 year old girl removed her daughter from CCF residential care because she was being forced to provide free baby-sitting services for young children.
DeleteThe problem with CCF, the problem with all NGOs that remove children from there families is that there is no-one, no official body, that oversees the way in which the children are treated and, in all too many cases, exploited and abused.
MOSAVY admits that it does not have the staff or the resources to keep an eye on the activities of so many 'orphanages' and hence provide adequate protection for the children living in them or for the parents of these 'orphans' who, all too often, have no idea what, if any rights, they have. The 'orphanages' (and CCF is no exception) effectively take control of the children in their care and the parents have no rights to speak of.
And if the parents of children residing in an 'orphanage; have a complaint to make, where do they complain? To whom can they make a complaint?
Cambodia's human rights organisations are, by and large, disinterested in the plight of children that have been removed from their families.
At the very least, it seems to me, one of the human rights organisations should set up a register for all NGOs engaged in the removal of children from their families. Genuine orphanages, rescue centres and others involved in the caring for disadvantaged children would be quite happy, I suspect, to register. It is the disreputable NGOs with no commitment to transparency and accountability that would be very wary of registering - especially if one of the conditions of registering was that pro forma contracts entered into between the NGO and families would be made public.
Given that the government cannot or will not monitor the activities of NGOs taking care of kids I believe that the NGO community should take it upon itself to do so.
So where is the Cambodian press on the multitude of Neeson scams that Ricketson has exposed? IF Neeson pays his teachers $250/month (remember, they are part-time, as the vast majority of children go to government schools) and IF he pays them on a 12 month contract (highly unlikely), his 3 million in salaries would pay 1000 teachers!! Who is kidding who here and where is the donor money going?
ReplyDelete