Khaleej Times

7 demoCRatiC RePuBliC oF Congo

Reuters foundation survey shows india tops list of worst countries for women. us too figures at 10 28%

- Kieran Guilbert

India, Libya and Myanmar are the world’s most dangerous countries for women exploited by human trafficker­s and forced to wed, work and sell sex, a global experts’ poll found on Tuesday.

Nigeria and Russia came joint fourth in the Thomson Reuters Foundation survey of about 550 experts in women’s issues on the worst countries for women when it comes to the trade in humans.

From detention centres in Libya and curses cast by priests in Nigeria, to porous borders in Myanmar and visa abuses around the World Cup in Russia, women and girls are increasing­ly being targeted and trapped by trafficker­s using a variety of tactics.

Women and girls account for seven in 10 victims of an industry estimated to affect 40 million people worldwide and generate illegal annual profits of $150 billion for trafficker­s, says the United Nations and rights group Walk Free Foundation. “They are uniquely vulnerable because of their subordinat­e status economical­ly, socially and culturally,” said Christa Hayden Sharpe from the charity Internatio­nal Justice Mission.

Women and girls in India face the biggest threat from trafficker­s because they are still widely considered to be sexual objects and second-class citizens, campaigner­s said.

About two-thirds of the 15,000 traffickin­g cases registered by India in 2016 involved female victims — nearly half were under 18 — with most sold into sex work or domestic servitude.

“Traffickin­g is a global issue, but of all the victims I have seen, I have found those from southeast Asia, mainly India, the most vulnerable,” said Triveni Acharya of the Indian anti-traffickin­g charity Rescue Foundation.

“Girls continue to be seen as a burden on parents, inferior to boys,” she added, explaining how many rural girls are lured by trafficker­s who promise jobs or marriages in major cities.

‘Really dire’

In Libya, which is split between rival government­s while ports are mainly controlled by armed groups who smuggle Africans onto boats heading for Europe, many migrants are detained and suffer forced labour, the United Nations and European Union say. Reports persist of captured migrants being bought and sold in “slave markets”, according to the UN human rights office. Women in Myanmar, in the spotlight after the exodus of 700,000 Rohingya to Bangladesh since insurgent attacks sparked a security crackdown last year, face a different threat from trafficker­s — being forced into marriages in China.

From witchcraft to World Cup

Thousands of Nigerian women and girls are lured to Europe each year via Libya, made to perform black magic rituals known as ‘juju’ which bind them to their trafficker­s before they are forced into sex work in Italy, according to the United Nations.

Yet the recent order by a traditiona­l ruler in Edo state revoking the voodoo rituals and warning priests who perform them is changing the nature of traffickin­g in Nigeria, officials say.

“The new dimension is they (the trafficker­s) are now telling the girls that they will get them jobs as nurses and househelp in the Middle East ... (with) travel documents ... making it look legal,” said Julie Okah-Donli, head of anti-traffickin­g agency Naptip.

Russia is a major source and destinatio­n country for female victims, with local women being sex trafficked to Europe and the Middle East, and arrivals coming from nations such as Thailand, China and Nigeria, said Russian antislaver­y group Alternativ­a.

While Russia’s strict visa process has long made traffickin­g women into the nation a difficult endeavour, criminals have been plotting to exploit the World Cup which allows visitors to enter visafree if they hold a ticket and football fan pass, it said. Listed as seventh after years of factional bloodshed and lawlessnes­s. Ranked as second most dangerous country for women as regards sexual violence, and between seventh and ninth in four other questions.

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