The Borneo Post

New roads, old war fan sale of Southeast Asian brides in China

- By Rina Chandran

VIENTIANE: For some years now, a charity in Laos has been providing women at risk of being trafficked with a new tool to seek help: the Chinese social media app WeChat.

Village Focus Internatio­nal (VFI), which works with traffickin­g victims, began showing women how to use the app as neighbouri­ng China became the main destinatio­n for women forced into marriage.

China’s decades-long one-child policy has left the country with far fewer women of marriage age than men. This has caused a spike in women being trafficked over the border from Laos, Myanmar and Vietnam, researcher­s and rights groups say.

Women are usually approached in the village by brokers with promises of a job in the city, or they come to the city themselves, and are preyed on by trafficker­s.

“The women often do not know they are to be married to a Chinese man,” said Christina Cilento at VFI, which runs shelters for traffickin­g victims in the Laotian capital, Vientiane, and the southern city of Pakse.

“Once there, they don’t know the language and don’t know where to go for help, so we train girls at risk to post a message on WeChat or find the Laos embassy,” she said.

While globally, most human traffickin­g cases are for sexual exploitati­on and forced labour, Southeast Asian women are especially vulnerable to traffickin­g for forced marriage, according to the UN Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC).

China is driving much of that demand: there will be up to 40 million more Chinese men of marrying age - more than the population of Canada - compared to women by 2020, according to the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences.

Many of these men, particular­ly in rural areas, cannot afford to pay thousands of dollars in dowry for a local bride.

Instead, they turn to brokers who smuggle women and girls from Vietnam, Cambodia, Laos and Myanmar, paying 5,000 to 20,000 yuan (US$727 to US$2,985) per woman.

The risk of traffickin­g has risen as hundreds of thousands in Southeast Asia have been forced from their homes due to conflict, disasters and rapid industrial developmen­t, said Charlie Thame, a professor at Thammasat University in Bangkok.

“Conflict and developmen­tinduced displaceme­nt, and a lack of social protection­s, forces many to migrate,” he said.

“But the legal way to migrate is so restrictiv­e. Many of these people lack legal documentat­ion, and that makes them significan­tly more vulnerable to abuse and exploitati­on.” Trafficked thrice Around the world, some 15 million people were living in marriages into which they were forced, according to a report last year from the Internatio­nal Labour Organizati­on.

There are no official data for China, but it is by far the most common destinatio­n country for traffickin­g victims from Myanmar, accounting for two thirds of the 307 cases investigat­ed by the latter’s government in 2016.

Myanmar is among the world’s most dangerous countries for women exploited by trafficker­s and forced to wed, work and sell sex, according to a recent Thomson Reuters Foundation poll.

A decades-long armed conflict in Myanmar’s northern Kachin state has forced tens of thousands to flee from their homes to shelters and camps close to the China border.

Large infrastruc­ture projects such as mines, dams, and commercial plantation­s have forced others from their lands, and they have limited access to public services, according to the rights group Kachin Women’s Associatio­n Thailand (KWAT).

“There is a strong sense of duty for daughters to support their parents and siblings, which drives them to migrate for work, often without legal status, thereby becoming vulnerable to traffickin­g,” said Moon Nay Li, KWAT’s general secretary.

Of nearly 400 Myanmar women KWAT surveyed last year in Myanmar and China, along with a team from the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, about 40 per cent said they had experience­d forced marriage. One woman had been trafficked to China thrice.

The Chinese men’s “main goal is to have one child,” a 24-yearold Kachin woman in China said in the survey published Friday.

Most of the women “are not registered in the family, they have no identity cards and they are not Chinese citizens. So, it is like they are hired just for bearing children,” she said. Tied up For more than a decade, KWAT has documented hundreds of cases of traffickin­g for forced marriage and forced childbeari­ng in China. About a quarter are under 18 years.

Women have told KWAT they were shown to many men, sometimes tied up so they wouldn’t run away, or taken to a market to be chosen by prospectiv­e buyers.

The building of new roads and rail lines to China as part of the One Belt One Road programme increases their vulnerabil­ity, said Ann Parnitudom, a traffickin­g consultant at UNODC in Bangkok.

“Increased connectivi­ty brings risks and can exacerbate crime. Along with prostituti­on, human traffickin­g is often the first type of crime to benefit from such infrastruc­ture developmen­ts,” she said.

Myanmar passed a landmark Anti-Traffickin­g Law in 2005.

But while there are provisions to safeguard the rights of trafficked victims, these are not enforced, and there are few prosecutio­ns of trafficker­s, Moon Nay Li said.

Similarly, despite a 2016 anti-traffickin­g law, Laos investigat­es, prosecutes, convicts and sentences only “a modest number” of trafficker­s, the US State Department said this year in its annual Traffickin­g in Persons report.

The United States downgraded Myanmar and Laos to Tier 3, its lowest ranking, reserved for countries that are not making significan­t efforts to eliminate traffickin­g. Chinese police say they rescued “several thousand” women of foreign nationalit­y in anti-traffickin­g operations between 2009 and 2017. They also sentenced nearly 8,000 people for traffickin­g from 2012 to 2015, according to official data cited by UNODC.

China eased its one-child policy in 2016, and could soon end all restrictio­ns. But its impact on traffickin­g and forced marriage will not be immediate.

“The consequenc­es of the onechild policy are so huge, that it may take 25-30 years to normalise,” said Casey Branchini at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health.

“Without addressing pervasive poverty and the lack of education opportunit­ies, women in the region remain vulnerable.” — Thomson Reuters Foundation

 ??  ?? Women at shelter for victims of traffickin­g in Vientiane, Laos, Oct. 15. — Thomson Reuters Foundation/Rina Chandran
Women at shelter for victims of traffickin­g in Vientiane, Laos, Oct. 15. — Thomson Reuters Foundation/Rina Chandran

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