The Star Malaysia

‘Sri Lankan women selling kidneys to repay loan sharks’

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COLOMBO: Sri Lankan war widows and women in former conflict zones are being forced to sell their kidneys to pay loan sharks, a United Nations expert said, urging government interventi­on.

Juan Pablo Bohoslavsk­y, the UN’s independen­t expert on effects of debt on human rights, said that debt collectors were also demanding sexual favours.

“Women are at times exposed to psychologi­cal and physical violence by these collectors,” he said after a visit on Tuesday.

“I have also learnt of cases of borrowers who have tried to sell their kidneys for money to repay loans.”

Sri Lanka is home to tens of thousands of war widows nine years after the 37-year civil conflict ended, many of them forced to use small “microfinan­ce” loans to survive.

Local media reports have said that dozens of indebted women in the battle-scarred north, which is also in the grip of drought, have committed suicide.

Bohoslavsk­y said that loan sharks are also demanding annual interest rates of up to 220%.

Recently, the government waived debts for 200,000 women who were unable to repay loans and capped lending rates at 30%.

But Bohoslavsk­y said that Colombo should go further and right off debts for men as well as women and impose tougher rules for lending. —

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