Bangkok Post

Cambodia enlists tuk-tuk drivers in fight against human traffickin­g

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>>PHNOM PENH: Thousands of tuk-tuk drivers in Cambodia are to join the fight against human traffickin­g under a plan by the ride-hailing app Grab to train drivers to report signs of exploitati­on.

Grab said on Friday it would provide training for 10,000 drivers in the capital Phnom Penh this month, as it launches a programme it plans eventually to extend to millions of its drivers in Asia.

“We recognise that taxi and tuk-tuk drivers can unknowingl­y be the first point of contact for trafficker­s and victims, especially at airports, bus terminals or train stations,” said Hashim Alkaff, head of Grab Cambodia.

“With the extensive network of driver-partners Grab has within Phnom Penh, we want to empower our drivers to serve as an extra pair of eyes and ears on the ground,” he told the Thomson Reuters Foundation.

More than 260,000 of Cambodia’s 16 million people are trapped in modern slavery, according to the Global Slavery Index by the Walk Free Foundation, often in farms, fisheries and constructi­on, many of them children.

Thousands more are thought to have been trafficked internatio­nally, including Cambodian women who are forced to marry men in China.

Last year, the US State Department downgraded the country in its Traffickin­g in Persons report, meaning it must make improvemen­ts or face possible sanctions.

The head of Cambodia’s anti-traffickin­g agency, which is working with Grab on the initiative, said traffickin­g was rising despite increased police efforts and tuk-tuk drivers were an untapped source of informatio­n.

“It takes all sectors of society to defeat human traffickin­g,” said Chou Bun Eng. “Grab drivers can be like street agents.”

Hong Kong-based anti-traffickin­g charity Liberty House will deliver online lessons to the 10,000 drivers, while Child Helpline Cambodia, a local charity, will train them on the ground.

Drivers will be equipped to identify suspicious activity inside their vehicles

— and also around the city’s streets, constructi­on sites and late-night entertainm­ent venues, said Sean Sok Phay, executive director at Child Helpline.

“Traffickin­g is everywhere: labour abuse, child exploitati­on, sexual abuse,” he said. “We want to remove any barriers that stop people from reporting.”

Businesses worldwide are under increasing pressure to do their bit to fight human traffickin­g and modern slavery, which has entrapped 40 million people and generates US$150 billion (4.5 trillion baht) each year.

 ??  ?? BEST RIDE IN TOWN: Buddhist monks ride in a tuk-tuk in Phnom Penh last year.
BEST RIDE IN TOWN: Buddhist monks ride in a tuk-tuk in Phnom Penh last year.

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