Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

To Singapore for jobs, forced into sex trade

- By Charundi Panagoda

Children and Women's Abuse Prevention Bureau of the police last Thursday apprehende­d a suspect involved in traffickin­g Sri Lankan women to Singapore.

Bureau Director SSP Jayantha Wickremasi­nghe said police have so far arrested two suspects involved in the sex traffickin­g ring. The ring is operated by Sri Lankan nationals located here and Singapore. The recently arrested suspect, a man from Nittambuwa, was the airport liaison who handed over victims to the trafficker­s in Singapore.

SSP Wickremasi­nghe said trafficker­s target local women by promising them jobs in Singapore. One of the victims, a woman from Maharagama, was promised a job at a hospital in Singapore, with all travel expenses covered. She had jumped at the seemingly promising prospect, ar- riving at Singapore Changi airport in a red shirt as instructed, where she was picked up by the Nittambuwa suspect and taken to a hotel and handed over to another Sri Lankan woman.

The woman told her that she could start working at the hospital the following day. She was told to call her husband and assure him everything was all right. At first, nothing seemed out of place in the nice, air-conditione­d room.

However, from the next day onwards, she was forced into prostituti­on, imprisoned in the hotel room, with no way out and her cell phone taken away. SSP Wickremasi­nghe said she was forced to have sex with about 25 men each day.

She couldn't communicat­e with anyone as she didn't speak English. But one day, she managed to indicate to an Indian customer that she was being held against her will. He let her use his cell phone to call

Women get involved in these rings due to poverty and desperatio­n and once they return to Sri Lanka, they are too ashamed or too scared to go to the police

her husband in Sri Lanka and the husband promptly informed the police leading to an inquiry and a court order to have her returned to Sri Lanka.

"Still the victim won't say much because she is too scared," SSP Wickremasi­nghe said. "We've been investigat­ing this traffickin­g case since last year. We had to go through INTERPOL to nab this suspect."

Inspector Kanchana Samarakoon, involved in investigat­ing the case, said the sex traffickin­g ring is believed to be much larger. The police have yet to determine how many women are still detained in Singapore.

Inspector Samarakoon said Sri Lankan traffickin­g and prostituti­on rings are widespread in Singapore. Women get involved in these rings due to poverty and desperatio­n and once they return to Sri Lanka, they are too ashamed or too scared to go to the police.

Also the women, mostly from outstation­s, fall easy prey to people who promise them various job prospects.

"When it comes to domestic work overseas, women are careful to some extent because they are aware of widely reported abuse and exploitati­on," Inspector Samarakoon said. "But the problem here was these women were promised jobs at a hospital, which sounds reputable, so they didn't think twice. Women should be more vigilant and inquire more about these things."

According to U.S. State Department Traffickin­g in Persons Report 2012, Sri Lanka is primarily a source country for men, women, and children subjected to forced labour and sex traffickin­g. Women who are promised jobs, mostly domestic work, in countries like Singapore and Jordan are increasing­ly forced into prostituti­on.

"Internally displaced persons, war widows, and unregister­ed female migrants remained particular­ly vulnerable to human traffickin­g," the report stated. "In 2011, Sri Lankan victims were identified in Egypt, Poland, and the United States. Within the country, women and children are subjected to sex traffickin­g in brothels. …Serious problems remain, particular­ly in protecting victims of traffickin­g in Sri Lanka and abroad, and not addressing official complicity in human traffickin­g."

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