The Star Malaysia

Bangladesh­i community lauds R.AGE series

- By LIM MAY LEE alltherage@thestar.com.my

KUALA LUMPUR: It’s about time someone spoke up about student traffickin­g, the Bangladesh­i community said.

“All of us appreciate that R.AGE took this step to show what many Bangladesh­i students go through,” said Bangladesh­i Student Union Malaysia president Mohammad Ziaur Rahman Zia about the The Star’s R.AGE team’s Student/ Trafficked documentar­y series.

The series highlights how aspiring students, including many Bangladesh­is, were lured to Malaysia by promises of education but end up in a cycle of exploitati­on.

The Star had also printed messages in Bengali, the official language of Bangladesh, calling for solidarity with the traffickin­g victims.

Abdul, a PhD student, hoped to see syndicates and colleges being hauled up, instead of students.

“I tell those back home not to come here unless they’re very rich. Agents are 99.99% fake,” he said.

Mohd Hafizuddin, a bartender, said he wished the series had been launched before he came here.

He paid RM15,000 to an agent to enrol for a diploma in Multimedia Applicatio­ns, and only later realised the college was a sham.

“If I knew it would be like this, I wouldn’t have come,” he said.

R.AGE launched a reporting system, which allows victims and concerned citizens to report such cases to the Higher Education Ministry.

Constructi­on worker Jahagir Alam remained pessimisti­c.

“I tell them agents will cheat them, but nobody in Bangladesh believes me.”

Follow the Student/Trafficked documentar­y series and campaign at rage.com.my/trafficked

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia