Stung Meanchey Municipal Waste Dump is located in southern Phnom Penh, in a district of the city of the same name, Stung Meanchey. It is a part of the city with low-income neighborhoods and slums. The dump itself covers about 100 acres, or almost 6 hectares. It is flanked by private property on which rubbish pickers build makeshift huts and are charged extortionate rents by landowners. Roughly 2,000 people, about 600 of which are children, live and work there.
It is nicknamed “Smoky Mountain” because of the miasma of smoke that the dump constantly gives off. It is literally on fire; the waste creates methane as it rots and the methane burns. In monsoon season and throughout much of the rest of the year, the surrounding area is swamped and the children live and play in fetid water.
Most of the rubbish pickers at Steung Meanchey are either from Phnom Penh or came to Phnom Penh looking for work and ended up in the slums. Many of the approximately 600 children have parents or relatives who also work on the dump and look after them. Some of them go to school, but most do not - at least not on a regular basis -, and it is safe to say that virtually none of them ever completes a primary school education. The school fees are too high and their families need them to collect rubbish to contribute to the family income. Adults earn, on average, 4000 to 5000 riels (US$1.00 to $1.25) a day; children earn on average about half that amount. A whole family working together can actually earn more money than they could in the rural village from which they originally came. (source: The Centre for Children's Happiness )
Luckily, there are some organizations trying to help those people. One of the biggest and most effective ones is French Pour un Sourire d'Enfant organization, they are located around 1km away from the landfill. They organize schools for several thousands of children from the dump, vocational trainings for the older ones. Every morning in the school near the dump they provide complimentary breakfast to several hundred children. They also try to help families living and working at the dump. They want them send children to school, not to work in the landfill, but families need money, that children can earn forthem. So PSE provide rice to families, who promise to send children to school, not to work. Unfortunatelly, there are many cases when families take rice and still send children to work. They need money. Many children don't go to school at all. Those who go, often after school wear their boots, take their hook and sacks and go to the Smoky Mountain to earn some money, for the family or for themselves.
There also exist some orphanages taking care of orphans from the Stung Mean Chey dump. One of them is The Centre for Children to Happiness (CCH) established and managed by Mr Mech Sokha, who himself is an orphan, the sole survivor in his family of the Khmer Rouge genocide of 1975 to 1979. He started the orphanage in October 2002 with help of a Japanese woman, Ms.Osanai Mieko, a President of Japan Team of Young Human Power (JHP) organization. It provides a home and education to 30 children - 12 girls and 18 boys. The children are either orphans or belong to parents who cannot take care of them due to illness or disability. All of the children previously worked as garbage pickers at the Stoeng Meanchey landfill in Phnom Penh. Mr Mech Sokha has just opened a second orphanage, in a house belonging to his wife parents. He would like to rent a house adjoining the second orphanage to accomodate more children, but he needs more funds to do that... Although sponsorship of the children by private individuals and companies is increasing there is still a big need of sponsors. It costs the equivalent of £33 to support a child for a month at the Center for Children's Happiness. This includes food, clothing, housing, health costs, and costs associated with education such as school uniform, notebooks and textbooks as well as the education provided by the Center for Children's Happiness itself. Please contact Mr Mech Sokha if you can help. Every little help is needed. You can find some photos from that orphanage in my Cambodia 2005 - The Centre for Children's Happiness Orphanage gallery.
Another organization I know is The Cambodian Children's Fund, established in 2003 by Scott Neeson, then working as a film executive for a Hollywood studio. The CCF was founded to aid the most impoverished of Cambodia's children, and has grown since its inception to include over 120 students. The CCF provides a comprehensive educational program for all the children, focusing on Khmer reading and writing, computer studies and English language training. At night, the children are taught their local music, dance and drama. Vocational training is a key aspect of the children's educational experience; they are encouraged to identify their vocational aspiration, and training towards that goal is incorporated into their educational program. In addition, the CCF houses a medical center where children are provided with blood testing, medical treatment, dental services and an extensive vaccination program. The long-term goal of the CCF is to open two more facilities in Cambodia's most impoverished provinces, bringing schooling, medical care and vocational training to the nation's poorest communities.
Thank you for all the comments and votes, highly appreciated.
These pictures make me angry.
.
It is nicknamed “Smoky Mountain” because of the miasma of smoke that the dump constantly gives off. It is literally on fire; the waste creates methane as it rots and the methane burns. In monsoon season and throughout much of the rest of the year, the surrounding area is swamped and the children live and play in fetid water.
Most of the rubbish pickers at Steung Meanchey are either from Phnom Penh or came to Phnom Penh looking for work and ended up in the slums. Many of the approximately 600 children have parents or relatives who also work on the dump and look after them. Some of them go to school, but most do not - at least not on a regular basis -, and it is safe to say that virtually none of them ever completes a primary school education. The school fees are too high and their families need them to collect rubbish to contribute to the family income. Adults earn, on average, 4000 to 5000 riels (US$1.00 to $1.25) a day; children earn on average about half that amount. A whole family working together can actually earn more money than they could in the rural village from which they originally came. (source: The Centre for Children's Happiness )
Luckily, there are some organizations trying to help those people. One of the biggest and most effective ones is French Pour un Sourire d'Enfant organization, they are located around 1km away from the landfill. They organize schools for several thousands of children from the dump, vocational trainings for the older ones. Every morning in the school near the dump they provide complimentary breakfast to several hundred children. They also try to help families living and working at the dump. They want them send children to school, not to work in the landfill, but families need money, that children can earn forthem. So PSE provide rice to families, who promise to send children to school, not to work. Unfortunatelly, there are many cases when families take rice and still send children to work. They need money. Many children don't go to school at all. Those who go, often after school wear their boots, take their hook and sacks and go to the Smoky Mountain to earn some money, for the family or for themselves.
There also exist some orphanages taking care of orphans from the Stung Mean Chey dump. One of them is The Centre for Children to Happiness (CCH) established and managed by Mr Mech Sokha, who himself is an orphan, the sole survivor in his family of the Khmer Rouge genocide of 1975 to 1979. He started the orphanage in October 2002 with help of a Japanese woman, Ms.Osanai Mieko, a President of Japan Team of Young Human Power (JHP) organization. It provides a home and education to 30 children - 12 girls and 18 boys. The children are either orphans or belong to parents who cannot take care of them due to illness or disability. All of the children previously worked as garbage pickers at the Stoeng Meanchey landfill in Phnom Penh. Mr Mech Sokha has just opened a second orphanage, in a house belonging to his wife parents. He would like to rent a house adjoining the second orphanage to accomodate more children, but he needs more funds to do that... Although sponsorship of the children by private individuals and companies is increasing there is still a big need of sponsors. It costs the equivalent of £33 to support a child for a month at the Center for Children's Happiness. This includes food, clothing, housing, health costs, and costs associated with education such as school uniform, notebooks and textbooks as well as the education provided by the Center for Children's Happiness itself. Please contact Mr Mech Sokha if you can help. Every little help is needed. You can find some photos from that orphanage in my Cambodia 2005 - The Centre for Children's Happiness Orphanage gallery.
Another organization I know is The Cambodian Children's Fund, established in 2003 by Scott Neeson, then working as a film executive for a Hollywood studio. The CCF was founded to aid the most impoverished of Cambodia's children, and has grown since its inception to include over 120 students. The CCF provides a comprehensive educational program for all the children, focusing on Khmer reading and writing, computer studies and English language training. At night, the children are taught their local music, dance and drama. Vocational training is a key aspect of the children's educational experience; they are encouraged to identify their vocational aspiration, and training towards that goal is incorporated into their educational program. In addition, the CCF houses a medical center where children are provided with blood testing, medical treatment, dental services and an extensive vaccination program. The long-term goal of the CCF is to open two more facilities in Cambodia's most impoverished provinces, bringing schooling, medical care and vocational training to the nation's poorest communities.
Thank you for all the comments and votes, highly appreciated.
These pictures make me angry.
.
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