The Phnom Penh Post

Court hears appeal of China bride trafficker

- Kim Sarom

THE Supreme Court on Wednesday heard the appeal of a woman sentenced in Banteay Meanchey province in 2015 to 15 years imprisonme­nt for traffickin­g a Cambodian teenager to China for marriage.

The lawyer representi­ng the convicted woman said she merely offered informatio­n to the victims and did not help them to travel to China.

At t he courtroom on Wednesday, Chin Punleu, 33, a lso k nown as Norn, told the judge that she was caught up i n the case because her cousin ca lled her from China while a woman named San was v isiting her house.

Punleu claimed that San said to her t hat, since she had a relative in China, she would like to receive help in getting two women – who were daughters of another woman called Pheap – to work in China.

“I told San that no one was looking to hire people in China, but I said, ‘If you want to know for sure, I can give you my cousin’s phone number’,” Punleu said.

She said that after giving San her cousin’s phone number, the two started to communicat­e.

After t hat, the woman named Pheap, who is t he mother of the t wo girls aged 17 and 26, asked Punleu to take her daughters to Phnom Penh to apply for a passport, she said.

However, the immigratio­n officer refused their request because they already had passports, having previously worked in Malaysia.

Pheap then asked Punleu’s cousin to arrange for the two women to fly to China.

“Before deciding to travel, the victims had video chats with the men in China. I ask the court to free me because I have cancer of the neck and have four children to care for,” Punleu said.

She said after the younger sister had lived in China for 10 months, she returned to Cambodia in 2016.

Pheap, the women’s mother, did not have enough money to pick her up, Punleu said, so she asked an NGO to help and take her home. It was then that the NGO filed a lawsuit against Punleu.

Punleu said that San received $2,000, but she did not receive any money herself.

Punleu said on August 15, 2017, the provincial court sentenced her to 15 years in prison and ordered her to pay five million riel ($1,233) to the victim.

Punleu took her case to the Appeal Court but, on March 25 last year, the court upheld the previous sentence.

Prosecutor Chum Samban said that during police questionin­g, the victim said Punleu had received $2,300 from her cousin in China.

Samban said Punleu admitted at t he lower court’s hearing t hat she received t he money. “Therefore, I would like t he court to look at t heir answers and follow the law,” he said.

Defence lawyer Luy Sothy said that her client only offered informatio­n to the victim. “My client didn’t send the girl to anyone. And the daughters also told their mother that they had Chinese husbands.

“Why wouldn’t [the mother] have complained at the time? I would like the court to release my client,” she said.

Judge Kong Srim said the court would announce a verdict on June 5.

 ?? SUPPLIED ?? The appeal of a woman sentenced to 15 years imprisonme­nt for traffickin­g a teenager to China was heard on Wednesday.
SUPPLIED The appeal of a woman sentenced to 15 years imprisonme­nt for traffickin­g a teenager to China was heard on Wednesday.

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