Sunday Tribune

Girl’s ordeal highlights traffickin­g problem

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IT WAS the promise of education in Addis Ababa that led 11-year-old Embet to take the fateful decision to leave home.

The young girl from Debat, a small town in Ethiopia’s Amhara region, packed up and left for the capital in the company of her older neighbour, who said her relatives there would welcome her into their home, pay her 200 Ethiopian birr (R115) a month to look after their children and send her to school.

“I thought I would enjoy Addis,” said Embet, tearfully. “The woman told me fancy things about it. I thought everything would be okay.”

But it was not. Despite the promises, Embet was never paid by her neighbour’s relatives and she was never sent to school. She slept on a mattress in the living room, was barely fed and suffered abuse.

“I had to do everything, including cleaning, cooking and looking after the family’s young children.”

After two months, Embet fled, walking the streets of Addis Ababa until she was found and taken to the local police station.

Dembet’s story is far from unusual – she is one of thousands of girls from all over Ethiopia who are trafficked to Addis Ababa to work in domestic service, some ending up in conditions comparable to slavery.

More than 400 000 Ethiopians are estimated to be trapped in slavery, according to the 2016 Global Slavery Index by human rights group Walk Free Foundation.

The industry is fed by one of the world’s highest rates of human traffickin­g. Each year, upwards of 20 000 Ethiopian children, some as young as 10, are sold by their parents, charity Humanium said.

Poverty

It is a trade driven by poverty. Despite a state-led industrial push that has transforme­d Ethiopia, known for famine, into one of Africa’s fastest-growing economies, a third of its 99 million citizens still survive on less than $1.90 a day, the World Bank’s measure of extreme poverty.

Addis Ababa’s population is thought to be close to 4 million and growing at a rate of nearly 4 percent a year, propelled by land shortages which force rural families to send their children to the capital to earn. A World Bank study in 2010 found that 37 percent of Addis Ababa’s residents were internal migrants, the majority of who were drawn by the city’s educationa­l or employment opportunit­ies. Wages in cities are higher than in rural areas.

But young children, in particular, often fall victim to exploitati­on.

“Deception is an important part of traffickin­g,” said Lynn Kay, country director of Retrak Ethiopia, which rescues street children in Addis Ababa. “Children are lured with the promise of a better education in Addis.”

Though Embet dreamt of a good education, her family – a mother and stepfather, who works as a farmer, as well as seven siblings – wanted her to find employment.

Before being sent to the capital she spent two months working for another family in a town nearer her home in Amhara, where she was babysitter to a 2-year-old boy.

But the work was hard and she missed her school, so she ran away and returned to her family, only to be sent to Addis Ababa when it became clear that her parents could not afford to look after her.

“Things weren’t as I expected when I arrived back,” Embet said. “There was no food and my mother was having another child.”

It is illegal for a child under 14 years to be engaged in wage labour but the laws are rarely enforced.

“The problem is the whole economy of a city like Addis Ababa is dependent on being able to access domestic labour, so that parents can go off to work,” said Kay.

Whereas most of the street boys Retrak rescues are runaways who come to Addis Ababa voluntaril­y, girls are often traffickin­g victims.

Despite a wide-ranging anti-traffickin­g law introduced by the Ethiopian government in 2015, the US State Department’s 2016 Traffickin­g in Persons report found girls as young as 8 were working in brothels in Addis Ababa.

It noted while the government was making efforts to curb cross-border traffickin­g, there was “little evidence of investigat­ion or prosecutio­n of sex traffickin­g or internal labour traffickin­g”.

Part of the problem is “trafficker­s are often respected members of the community”, said Kay. Parents paid them to take their children to Addis Ababa and find them work.

“It can be a very open, public thing,” she said. “They are often known as ‘brokers’ and it is almost like it is an acceptable job.”

Some, like Embet’s neighbour, are close to the family.

“But what happens is these children are brought to Addis Ababa and then abandoned,” said Kay. “They can come to Addis Ababa and just disappear.” – Reuters

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