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Girls as young as 12 say they are working in garment factories in Kampong Speu, some with the knowledge of their employers and others with false identification documents issued by their local officials. Minors cannot work at night, from 10 p. Another girl in the province, aged 13, said she was currently working at a factory where around of the workers were underage. She had started at age 12, showing her real ID card to the employer, and sewed two labels onto 1, to 2, clothes a day working on her feet from 7 a.
The girl said that she had asked her family repeatedly to be allowed to go to work because she saw them struggle with debt, and her mother had finally agreed. They can do it, so I can also do it. At the factory, there are more than people about my age. A reporter who observed a cluster of factories in the area saw around workers commuting on Monday morning, and just over appeared to be under 18, and roughly 50 appeared to be under The names and identifying details of minors who spoke to VOD are being withheld due to their potential involvement in illegalities, as required by the Press Law.
He added that education and health were among the concerns for children entering the workforce at a young age. Better Factories Cambodia, an International Labor Organization project, noted in a report that many families face financial pressure to put their children to work. It adds that employers must keep a register of all minors who work for them, and the labor inspector must control this register. Kampong Speu provincial governor Vei Samnang denied that officials were taking money in exchange for falsifying documents, even if gift-giving was culturally common.
If you are Khmer, you understand, and usually the farmers always send coconuts and palms when visiting, or if they are in Phnom Penh, they send bread. No one takes money from anywhere. Samnang added that he was not aware of child labor in garment and footwear factories, and the government was opposed to it. Cambodian Confederation of Unions president Rong Chhun said he had no statistics on the number of cases, but believed it was common across the country. This article is produced with the financial support from Rosa-Luxemburg-Stiftung in Southeast Asia via its Hanoi office.