The Borneo Post

Cambodia charges three in Japan sex traffickin­g probe

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PHNOM PENH: A Japanese restaurant owner accused of overseeing a smuggling ring that forced women into sex work in Japan was charged with traffickin­g in Cambodia Tuesday, along with his wife and an employee.

The charges follow the dramatic rescue of seven Cambodian women from a restaurant in Gunma, northwest of Tokyo, in December after one of them made a desperate plea for help on Facebook.

Japan has long been a destinatio­n for Southeast Asian women who travel seeking higher wages but often find themselves forced into sex work or indentured labour.

Yesterday a municipal court in the capital Phnom Penh charged a Japanese restaurant owner in the city, his Cambodian wife and a local employee with human traffickin­g offences.

“The prosecutor has forwarded the case to investigat­ing judge for further procedures,” court spokesman Ly Sophana told AFP.

Police allege the Japanese man, 52-year- old Susumu Fukui, lured the women with promises of high wages and personally delivered them to a contact in Gunma in November.

The women thought they were going to work as restaurant staff but soon found themselves forced to have sex with clients.

The co-accused are Fukui’s wife, Lim Leakhana, 28, and restaurant worker Seng Chandy, 30. — AFP

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