Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

State officials complicit in traffickin­g of women into Oman for sex trade

- &Ј Ž˪κ͘ͳ˪ &˪΀̛˪π˪

Dozens of Sri Lankan women have been trafficked into West Asia for the sex trade drawing global attention once again to the country’s revolting reputation as a sex-traffickin­g hub, and Government officials are suspected to be among the perpetrato­rs of sex-traffickin­g.

A state official in the Sri Lankan Embassy in Muscat, Oman, has been accused of sexual abuse in a so-called ‘safe house’ and a pivotal player in the sex traffickin­g ring along with some Department of Immigratio­n and Emigration officials at the internatio­nal airport at Katunayake.

The bureaucrat accused of sexual abuse, assigned to the embassy in Muscat, is from the Sri Lanka Bureau of Foreign Employment (SLBFE).

Human traffickin­g and sex traffickin­g are crimes under Section 360C of the Penal Code.

In 2015, Sri Lanka ratified the UN Protocol to Prevent, Suppress and Punish Traffickin­g in Persons – particular­ly of Women and Children. Few are prosecuted and sentences are lenient. In 20201, the Gotabaya Rajapaksa Government allocated just Rs 1.1 million to the SLBFEs Counter Human Traffickin­g Unit. Some 28 female victims, including 14 in sex traffickin­g, were identified in 2021.

Some women have identified the suspect in conversati­ons with Sri Lankan media merely as “Kushan Sir’’. The Government official has been accused of making sexual advances on women and also trying to lure some women for up to Rs 2.5 million into the sex trade in Oman.

He is accused of being in the pay of a job agent who is dictating terms, having talks in the embassy with the agent, and then discouragi­ng the women from heading home to Sri Lanka unless they pay up millions in dues.

One woman accuser is seen on a video clip saying he demanded sexual favours, or “love karanna’’. She had been in Oman for threeand-a-half years and the official had not allowed her to return to Sri Lanka and had unlawfully seized her passport. She appears to suggest he is a key player in the sex traffickin­g gang.

A returnee from Oman in Anuradhapu­ra this week appeared to lend credence to claims of the state official peddling the women into the sex trade for up to Rs 1.7 million. She insists he is involved in the sex trade. A woman in Dambulla, said to have four different addresses, is also suspected to be a mastermind in luring women and traffickin­g them.

Six Sri Lankan recruiters are suspected to be involved.

SSP Samarakoon Banda, director of the Criminal Investigat­ion Department’s human traffickin­g and human smuggling division confirmed the allegation­s about the man to a local broadcaste­r this week. Following a complaint by the SLBFE he led a three-person team of investigat­ors to Oman where they recorded statements from 45 women. Six of them had been recruited by female agents in Sri Lanka and fled from the homes of employers. Eight had been flown to Dubai and crossed the border overland into Oman after a few days.

He noted how, based on statements, women had been asked to approach certain counters at Katunayake before departure.

But, peddling the typical Government line of denying responsibi­lity for the lives of Sri Lankan migrant workers, the policeman appeared to blame the victims, outlining things women must do before signing up for Oman or Dubai.

Many had been trafficked into Oman via Abu Dhabi in the United Arab Emirates.

And as investigat­ions began, 12 women have signed a note in Sinhala on November 13, 2022, saying they do not have a problem, raising suspicions of the note itself. The signature of at least one woman on the note has been found not to match her signature on the passport issued on October 25, 2022. The woman is from Ratnapura.

WhatsApp video clips made by two other women have appeared in the social media and mainstream media pleading for help to return home from Oman. Among them is a 22-year-old mother of one, who had left in March and is in tears imploring for help in Tamil. The other, also a young woman, is pleading in Tamil.

Agents as well as unregulate­d sub-agents and brokers, have been denying responsibi­lity in particular with regard to 12 women trafficked to Abu Dhabi under tourist visas.

In Oman, it has now been revealed that 90 Sri Lankan women are in limbo.

On Thursday, the Embassy of Sri Lanka in the sultanate said in a brief statement that 90, “female domestic workers are stranded in Oman seeking repatriati­on assistance. They could not afford the expenses relating to their repatriati­on such as visa, overstay penalty, air ticket, agent fees, and the cost of recruitmen­t demanded by their respective sponsors’’.

These claims can not be independen­tly verified.

The embassy does not mention the sex traffickin­g allegation­s, or the accused employee.

Mr. Sabarullah Khan is the ambassador. He presented his credential­s in Oman on October 18.

At least 14 women have fled the embassy safe house, ironically named ‘Suraksha’, and have spoken to the Sri Lankan media.

Some of them have also protested outside the embassy on October 30. Video clips of the socalled ‘safe house’ shows a packed location where women are seen lying on the floor as if in a crowded jail.

For long, Sri Lanka has gained notoriety for human traffickin­g — women, men and children. Government officials are involved and prosecutio­ns are few. Sentences for convicts are inadequate.

Only three sex trafficker­s were convicted and fined in 2021 under Section 360A of the Penal Code. The year before, two trafficker­s were sentenced to two years’ imprisonme­nt and the sentence of one was suspended.

In 2022, the US State Department’s 'Traffickin­g in Persons Report', said “the Government (of Sri Lanka) does not fully meet the minimum standards for the eliminatio­n of traffickin­g but is making significan­t efforts to do so’’. It says investigat­ions, including that of several officials allegedly involved in child traffickin­g, have increased “slightly’’.

Most Sri Lankan diplomatic missions do not refer witness and victim affidavits from abroad to CID for investigat­ion, the report says.

Law enforcemen­t efforts against traffickin­g of workers are “disproport­ionately low compared with the number of identified labour traffickin­g victims’’.

The capacity of local officials to identify traffickin­g victims remained low, especially among women in commercial sex, the report says. The Government has not effectivel­y addressed issues that make women vulnerable to traffickin­g, including including high agent fees, unregulate­d subagents, and “policies and procedures that undermined safe and legal migration’’. All recruitmen­t fees must be scrapped, the report recommends.

In 2020, the inter-government­al agency Internatio­nal Organisati­on for Migration observed that the “majority of cases IOM Sri Lanka comes across have been subjected to labour exploitati­on in the Middle East, particular­ly in Kuwait, Saudi Arabia and Oman’’.

In July, the IOM and Save the Children and four other civil society organisati­ons launched a project on counter traffickin­g initiative­s in 11 districts.

Minister Nanayakkar­a told Parliament this week, tourist visa trips have nothing to do with foreign employment, suggesting it is the responsibi­lity of tourism officials. As is usual, a “special committee’' has been set up. He said some suspects have been arrested.

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