Friday, 07 December 2012
Justine Drennan and Mom Kunthear
The Phnom Penh Post
Sudden
hardships such as job loss, crop failure, natural disasters or a family
member falling ill are key factors that push impoverished Cambodians
into the hands of labour brokers, making them highly vulnerable to human trafficking, a USAID-funded study has found.
Trafficking victims, more than other poor Cambodians, tend to be young
and lack education. But the likelihood that they experienced a string of
stressful events before going abroad sets them apart from their peers,
says a survey of nearly 1,000 Cambodians organised by NGO Winrock
International.
Trafficking survivors on average experienced more than three such
hardships in the year before they were trafficked, while poor Cambodians
who had not been trafficked experienced an average of two such events,
said Daniel Lindgren of development consulting group Rapid Asia, which
conducted the study and yesterday presented its findings.
“Suddenly someone goes from a vulnerable situation to a very critical situation,” Lindgren said.
Brokers are drawn to such desperation, added Lindgren, whose
organisation has conducted similar surveys in other countries. During
the 2004 tsunami, it took three weeks for aid to reach Indonesia’s
hard-hit Aceh region. Labour brokers appeared in a day.
In Cambodia, the study also found that the experience of being
trafficked – often into fishing, construction, domestic work and sex
work – did little to provide victims with the information necessary to
defend themselves. People who had been rescued from trafficking were no
more likely than others to say they would take precautions against
entering into the undefined but broker-dependent set-ups that the study
found was most associated with trafficking.
Impressing upon vulnerable populations the need to clarify the status of
broker agreements should therefore be a focus of anti-trafficking
efforts, Lindgren concluded.
Ten Borany, deputy director of the Anti-Human Trafficking and Juvenile
Protection Department at the Ministry of Interior, said yesterday that
“police officials are trying to do their best to spread information and
directly educate villagers at the commune, village and community level,
so that they understand what they need to know for their job before
leaving home to go overseas”.
Ya Navuth, executive director of anti-trafficking group CARAM Cambodia,
said that more than 400,000 Cambodians are working in Thailand, more
than 50,000 in Malaysia, more than 10,000 in Korea and more than 5,000
in other countries.
He stressed, however, that it was hard to estimate the number of victims of trafficking.
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