The Star Malaysia

Hidden and suffering in silence

Young Bangladesh­is are promised a college education and work opportunit­ies here, but end up caught in a constant cycle of exploitati­on.

- Stories by ELROI YEE and IAN YEE alltherage@thestar.com.my com.my/ trafficked.

PETALING JAYA: They are sold a dream – of a ticket to study and work in a foreign country, But after spending their family’s entire savings, they are caught in the harsh reality of being trafficked and trapped in a constant cycle of exploitati­on and extortion.

Thousands of young Bangladesh­is have been trafficked to Malaysia through obscure private colleges and their unscrupulo­us “agents”.

Some pay over RM20,000, equivalent to three years’ wages in Bangladesh, for the agents to secure student visas and admission into these bogus colleges.

But that’s just the beginning of the exploitati­on.

When they arrive in Malaysia, the victims realise the colleges don’t offer any real classes, they can’t work under student visas, and there are often additional “fees” to be paid.

Many have no choice but to work illegally under inhumane conditions, creating a cycle of exploitati­on where they have to earn enough to repay their debts and buy a ticket home, or pay the agents again to renew their student visas so they can work another year.

“I can’t go home, because my family spent all their money on the agent fees.

“Now I need to work here to pay for my father’s medicine,” said one victim, 24, whose father has suf fered two strokes.

The Star’s R.AGE team uncovered these traffickin­g rings through a series of undercover investigat­ions, all featured in its new video series, Student/Trafficked, which will be launched today.

The team met up with agents while posing as factory managers looking for cheap labour, infiltrate­d the colleges, and followed the trail all the way to Dhaka, Bangladesh.

One agent told our journalist he works for a “Datuk” who owns a college in Kuala Lumpur, and that he has trafficked over 8,000 Bangladesh­i students to Malaysia.

“Bangladesh­i students are easy and quick money,” said the agent, who is Nepali.

“Bring in 200 or 300 of them, then distribute them (among the colleges), then you’ll make your money.”

Many of these victims live and work not far from the glittering lights of the Klang Valley’s major towns, hidden and suffering.

“Our living conditions here are worse than the garbage dumps in the slums of Dhaka,” said one victim, now a constructi­on worker living in a makeshift ghetto in Cyberjaya.

His family had to take a loan to pay for his “studies” in Malaysia, for which they pay 21,000 taka (RM1,100) a month in instalment­s.

He now earns around RM1,500 a month.

“In my college, there were around 200250 Bangladesh­i students, but only 3035 have renewed their visas (to continue studying).

“Where the rest are, we don’t know,” he added.

During the course of its investigat­ion, R.AGE met over 30 student traffickin­g victims, and found almost 30 colleges that showed signs of having worked with student trafficker­s.

When a R.AGE journalist posing as a prospectiv­e student went to one of these colleges, an employee quietly warned him against signing up.

“If our own people (Malaysians) come, I’ll tell them not to study here,” she said.

“Look around, the whole place is empty! I wouldn’t want any Malaysian students stuck here.”

An earlier report by The Star revealed a large number of foreign students arriving through dubious colleges in 2013.

The Ministry of Higher Education revoked the internatio­nal student licence of four such institutio­ns in 2015.

Since then, a further 26 institutio­ns have had their licences revoked or not renewed.

Though many of these colleges can no longer enrol internatio­nal students, they continue to operate by channellin­g students to other affiliated colleges.

“We do have something like a collaborat­ion, a group of companies,” said the Nepali agent.

“We have a language centre and four colleges, all are like ‘jointventu­re’ companies.”

He also claimed that he enrolled 3,000 Bangladesh­i students at one of these colleges, but R.AGE found its campus to be nearly deserted.

“I came here to study. Only to study. But now, my dream is dashed,” said one victim.

The Student/Trafficked documentar­y series premieres today at rage.

I can’t go home, because my family spent all their money on the agent fees. Now I need to work here to pay for my father’s medicine. A victim

 ??  ?? Sad plight: Victims of the student traffickin­g trade have no choice but to work illegally, and often under inhumane conditions, to pay off their debts.
Sad plight: Victims of the student traffickin­g trade have no choice but to work illegally, and often under inhumane conditions, to pay off their debts.
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia