Kuwait Times

Trafficked on Myanmar passports, Indian maids struggle to return home

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AIZWAL: The 17-year-old recalls being excited as she took the car journey and bus ride from her home in northeast India and across the border into Myanmar. But a few weeks into her stay in Yangon, a phone call to her distraught mother suddenly made her fearful. “She told me I had illegally crossed into another country,” she said. “My family said I should come back and their tone made me very scared.” An agent - a man she had seen around her neighborho­od but “didn’t know too well” had housed her in a Yangon hostel, and had promised to get her a fake Myanmar passport and a well paid job, she told the Thomson Reuters Foundation.She and seven other girls from northeast Indian state of Manipur had crossed borders in June and were holed up in Yangon for three months, waiting to be moved on to jobs as housemaids in Singapore or Malaysia with their new travel documents. They were among hundreds who transit through Myanmar’s biggest city - an emerging hub for trafficker­s seeking to send Indian girls to Southeast Asia to become domestic workers, said Hasina Kharbhih of Impulse NGO Network, a charity that has helped repatriate many traffickin­g victims.

Travelling on illegal documents leaves the already vulnerable young women with little protection, she said. Since Myanmar’s democratic government took over in 2016, it has been easier to travel through the country and trafficker­s have stepped up activity, according to a recent report by the anti-traffickin­g unit in northeast Indian state of Mizoram.

“The Myanmar route to South East Asia is seeing increasing traffickin­g because for many miles on both sides of the border, the people are the same - speaking the same language, looking the same,” said Thianghlim­a Pachuau, head of the Mizoram police force. “We have had tragic cases in the region. In one instance the girl died in Singapore but could not be brought home (to India) since her documents indicated she was a Myanmar national. Her parents never got closure.”

Border routes

Years of ethnic violence and armed conflicts in northeast India have made it a traffickin­g hotspot, campaigner­s say. The region is a source, destinatio­n and transit point for girls being trafficked into brothels or domestic servitude. The underdevel­oped region is bordered by China, Nepal, Bangladesh, Myanmar and Bhutan. Many of these porous borders are crossed every day by thousands of people, who share similar ethnic, religious, linguistic and cultural characteri­stics, security officials say.

Traditiona­lly, trafficker­s have used Nepal as a transit point to send women to the Gulf countries. But traffickin­g through Myanmar is now on the rise, police say. Moreh, a thriving business hub on the India-Myanmar border, is the first stop for girls trafficked from the northeaste­rn states. “The border crossing is easy because agents have family and friends along border villages, who shelter the girls and get them across,” Pachuau said.

“Once they cross over, they are told not to reveal their Indian identities and then they are just lost.” Now back home, the 17-year-old high school dropout - who did not want to reveal her name - remembers praying three times a day in her Yangon room as she waited for the agent to get her a passport and ticket to fly to Singapore to work as a maid. “I thought I was escaping to a better place. I was wrong,” she said. —Reuters

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