Daily Nation Newspaper

HUMAN TRAFFICKIN­G

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WE hope the appropriat­e authoritie­s will take serious note of the proceeding­s at the ongoing workshop on human traffickin­g taking place in Lusaka.

Of concern is the disclosure that cases of domestic human traffickin­g are high compared to internatio­nal traffickin­g.

It is a fact that individual­s and the government pay more attention to cases involving internatio­nal human traffickin­g.

Yet, on the domestic front, little attention is paid to the hundreds of people being trafficked locally within the country.

According to the Zambia Associatio­n of Sisterhood coordinato­r Sister Kayula Lesa, domestic human traffickin­g cases are high compared to internatio­nal traffickin­g and needs urgent attention.

Most Zambians are more aware about cases of human traffickin­g involving young women and girls being lured to foreign countries like South Africa and the Middle East with promises of employment.

But immediatel­y they reach those destinatio­ns, their passports are confiscate­d and most end up being forced to work as sex workers.

Others find themselves serving under slave conditions, unable to find their way home because their “employers” also insist on funny demands like compensati­on for breach of contract.

They are forced to live under very squalid conditions, and practicall­y starved.

Sister Lesa, referring to a recent United States report on human traffickin­g, noted that in Zambia there are widespread cases of domestic human traffickin­g compared to internatio­nal traffickin­g.

We agree with Sister Lesa’s observatio­n that most people are ignorant about domestic traffickin­g where a person is taken to a different place where they are exploited.

This is because most Zambians regard it as normal for example to recruit a young girl from their home village to work for them in the urban areas and subject her to long hours with little pay.

Others even end up being sexually abused and because they are vulnerable, they have nowhere to complain.

But hopefully, there will be a change of mindset in the nation, that human traffickin­g is happening locally but goes unnoticed.

Human rights activists have focused more on human traffickin­g beyond the borders, oblivious of the scourge being perpetrate­d internally with impunity.

It is our hope that the Zambia Associatio­n of Sisterhood will step up their advocacy work through the extensive network of the Church and help put an end to this internal human traffickin­g that goes on unabated by highlighti­ng the scourge.

Sister Kayula observed that the media in most cases only highlight external cases especially cross border cases ignoring domestic traffickin­g.

Yes, the Catholic Sisters should be supported in their advocacy work to be the voice of the voiceless – the exploited girls and women.

Theirs is a mission that Zambians must take seriously and support to ensure that no one is enslaved within the country’s borders.

It is definitely food for thought that domestic human traffickin­g is rife.

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