Mentally Ill Man Kills Baby Cousin, Attacks Grandmother
Wednesday, November 13, 2013
By Sek Odom and Denise Hruby, The Cambodia Daily, November 12, 2013
Police in Banteay Meanchey have arrested a 29-year-old man who brutally
killed his 1-year-old cousin and seriously injured the baby’s
grandmother.
Soun Seng, who police said suffers from an undefined mental illness,
attacked 54-year-old Sreb San with a cleaver at around 6 p.m. on Sunday
in Preah Netr Preah district’s Chop Vary commune while she was holding
her 1-year-old grandson. Ms. San was the child’s guardian because his
parents are migrant workers in Thailand.
“The suspect climbed up the stairs into the house, chopped the
grandmother with his cleaver and then he grabbed the baby boy and
brought the cleaver down on his head once. Then he grabbed the baby by
both legs and smashed him against a pillar,” said deputy district police
chief Keo Bunyoeun.
Mr. Seng then turned back on the grandmother, beating her. The woman’s
screams went unheard by neighbors, who were out working in the rice
fields at the time of the attack, according to Mr. Bunyouen. The suspect
then fell into what police described as a catatonic state, allowing
the grandmother to escape and seek help.
Ms. San was taken to the hospital to be treated for head injuries and remains in stable condition.
“There was no dispute or reason for revenge with anybody in the family.
The only reason is that his mental illness was worsening,” Mr. Bunyoeun
said.
Mr. Seng was taken into custody but will be sent to the provincial
referral hospital, where his mental health will be assessed, Mr.
Bunyoeun said.
The suspect’s mother, 50-year-old Srep Ser, said that her son had
suffered from mental problems for more than nine years and was taking
medicine prescribed by the local health center.
However Chida Kim, a psychologist with the Transcultural Psychosocial
Organization, said there was a lack of adequate mental health care in
the provinces.
“[Small clinics and health centers] don’t know what the diseases are,
because they have no experience. They are not specialists and just give
any medicine,” Ms. Kim said.
Many people never receive treatment for mental health issues, and often
relatives of the mentally ill, or the police in criminal cases, can only
describe the person as “crazy,” she added.
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