The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Nepali traffickin­g survivor conquers Everest to warn others of slavery

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NEW DELHI: A Nepali woman who was trafficked, exploited and abused as a maid in Egypt has conquered Mount Everest in a bid to highlight the dangers of traffickin­g in her impoverish­ed Himalayan homeland where thousands are sold into slavery every year.

Kanchhi Maya Tamang, 28, is thought to be the first survivor of human traffickin­g to scale the world’s highest mountain.

UN Women in Nepal – which supported Tamang’s expedition – said in a statement on Monday that she reached Everest’s peak on Saturday.

“My mission has first and foremost been to stop forced migration of women and girls from my district, which is listed as the top district for traffickin­g of women and girls in Nepal,” Tamang radioed from Mount Everest Base camp, according to the statement.

“I want to foster initiative­s that create local employment opportunit­ies and empower women, both those facing forced migration and returnees like myself. We must empower girls – give them a rope, show them a rock, then ask them to climb it.”

Nepal’s National Human Rights Commission says up to 9,500 people were rescued from trafficker­s in 2014/15, a rise of almost 12 per cent from the previous year.

But activists say the figures are a gross underestim­ate of the problem, particular­ly after two massive quakes struck Nepal in 2015, leaving many people vulnerable to trafficker­s promising a better life overseas.

Criminal gangs in Nepal dupe impoverish­ed women and girls into working as slaves in urban homes in neighbouri­ng India, as well as countries in the Middle East, while others are sold into brothels. Men are trafficked to work as manual labourers.

Tamang, who is from a village in Nepal’s central district of Sindhupalc­howk, was trafficked to India and then onto Egypt, where she worked as a domestic help for six years.

She was denied her monthly salary and faced verbal and mental abuse from her employer before managing to escape and return to Nepal.

Since then she has worked to prevent women and girls in her district from suffering the same fate and has become a prominent voice in her community, promoting girl’s education and advocating for more opportunit­ies. — Reuters

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