The Phnom Penh Post

Officials in Nepal are ‘traffickin­g women’

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Immigratio­n officials at Nepal’s internatio­nal airport are colluding with trafficker­s to illegally send Nepali women to the Gulf, where they are often exploited and abused, said a parliament­ary report released yesterday.

The parliament­ary committee tasked with internatio­nal relations and labour rights said the government had failed to protect Nepalis working overseas and turned a blind eye to allegation­s of traffickin­g.

More than 60 percent of Nepali domestic workers who end up illegally in the Gulf travelled through the main airport in the capital Kathmandu, the report said.

“[They] travel on tourist visas via Tribhuvan Internatio­nal Airport in direct collusion with immigratio­n officials, airline company staff, security officials and the trafficker­s. The rest travel via different cities in India, Sri Lanka, China and various African countries,” the report said.

The women are lured to Gulf countries on promises of well-paid jobs in department stores or hotels. Instead, they are sent to work in private homes where their passports are usually confiscate­d.

Rights activists in Nepal have long demanded the government do more to protect the 4 million Nepalis who work overseas – mostly in the Gulf and Malaysia. With remittance­s from migrant workers accounting for nearly a third of Nepal’s GDP according to government figures, activists suspect the authoritie­s are reluctant to put pressure on host nations.

“The government has been closing its eyes to the problem of human traffickin­g,” Mohna Ansari, spokeswoma­n for the Nepal’s Human Rights Commission, said.

Lawmakers on the parliament­ary committee met with women who had escaped from abusive homes in Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, Qatar and the United Arab Emirates. Many had suffered physical, mental and sexual violence, the report said.

“Some women who have escaped and reached an embassy office have made reports about the human trafficker­s, but Foreign Affairs Ministry has failed to request the Home Ministry to take action against the culprits,” it added.

The number of migrants leaving Nepal for work has surged in recent years with nearly half a million leaving in 2015, up from 200,000 in 2008, according to the latest available government figures.

Nepal has previously attempted to ban women from working as maids in private homes in the Gulf over claims they are often overworked for low wages and treated poorly, but enforcemen­t has been patchy.

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