AFESIP Cambodia 

Acting for Women in Distressing Situations 

Facebook Twetter Instagram Linkedin Tiktok
 

Cambodia has a turbulent and complicated history. From 1975 to 1979, Cambodia was controlled by the Communist Khmer Rouge regime where the educated and wealthy were targeted and all traditional forms of religion, commerce, education and healthcare came to a halt.  Cambodia was sealed off from the world while its cities were forcibly evacuated and their residents forced into slave labor. According to UN estimates, between 2-3 million Cambodians lost their lives.  In the following years, thousands of Cambodians spent years in refugee camps along the borders.

 

 

 

Cambodia is one of the least developed countries in the region due in part to its destabilizing past. Poverty, lack of education and employment opportunities have left many Cambodians, particularly women and children, in extremely vulnerable situations. These factors, compounded with the weakening of societal structures and traditions during the Khmer Rouge regime, have a significant impact on human trafficking and exploitation trends in the country.

 

Fast Facts

  • The population is 14.8 million[1]
  • 65% of Cambodians are under 25 years old,[2] 33% under the age of 15.[3]
  • 1/3 of Cambodians live below the national poverty line (2,473 riel or US$0.61).[4]
  • 85% of the population lives in rural areas[5]
  • 50% of young girls in rural Cambodia work rather than go to school.[6]
  • The labor force increases at 250,000 per year, compared with the current 350,000 jobs in the whole garment industry, by far the leading industry in Cambodia.[7]
  • Trafficking is defined as the act of recruiting, transporting, transferring, harboring or receiving a person through a use of force, coercion or other means, for the purpose of exploiting them.
  • Prevalence of trafficking in Cambodia is highly contested, with few available statistics for Cambodia.
  • Government estimates say there are over 34,000 commercial sex workers in Cambodia[8], and other sources say as many as one third are children[9].
  • Cambodia is a source, transit, and destination country for trafficking in persons:
    • within Cambodia, largely from rural to urban areas;
    • from Cambodia to Thailand, Malaysia and further afield including Taiwan, Korea, Somalia;
    • from Vietnam, China and Eastern Europe into Cambodia.[10]
  • The traffickers are organized crime syndicates but also parents, relatives, friends, intimate partners and neighbors.[11]  

 

This is our team.

 

AFESIP rescued girls from sex trafficking, rape and exploitation since 1996 by Somaly Mam,

herself a victim of trafficking, to combat human trafficking and sexual exploitation of children.

  

Vision

A world where children are safe from slavery.

 

objectives

Works to care for and secure the rights of young women and girls who are victims or at risk of being victims of slavery and to successfully recover, educate, train and reintegrate them into mainstream society through financial independence in a sustainable and innovative manner. We accomplish this by helping and teaching them how to achieve financial independence through sustainable careers. We then welcome them to become part of our survivor empowerment network.

 

Target group

The girls who are victims or at risk of being victims of sexual violence, trafficking, abuse or indentured slavery and or exploitation.

 

Official legal registration

Council of Ministers: No 454 dated 18 March 1997
Ministry of Interior: No 449 dated 17 June 1997
Ministry of Social Affairs, Veterans and Youth Rehabilitation: No 304 dated 28 February 1996
Ministry of Interior: No10952 on 8 Nov, 2019

  

Village 24, Prey Sar Commune, Dangkao District, Phnom Penh, Cambodia.  P.O.Box 2089.


e-mail: This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.  


Tel: +855 12 888 840

 

Google map


 

 

 

 

  We accept:
Copyright © 2005 - 2023 |  AFESIP CAMBODIA