TODAY, no country is safe from human trafficking or being caught in its
tangled network. It is estimated that there are more than 20 million victims of
human trafficking, yet, no government anywhere is doing enough to eliminate it.
Human trafficking is defined as the sale or trade of human beings, and
it is considered to be a modern day form of slavery.
Malaysia
is widely regarded as a destination and transit country for women, men and
children trafficked for forced labour and commercial exploitation. Australia
has claimed that 60 per cent of trafficked foreigners there used Malaysia as a
transit point. Human trafficking in Malaysia is very serious but the level of
awareness is very low.
Trafficking
victims are exploited by coercion, force or fraud for forced labour, sexual
exploitation and contractual servitude.
Economic
growth and job opportunities in Malaysia are among the reasons victims are
attracted to this country. The high demand for people who can be used for cheap
labour, begging or commercial sexual exploitation is one of the biggest causes
of human trafficking today.
Human
trafficking is hugely profitable, especially where there is a market for cheap
labour. Crime syndicates are able to convince or deceive impoverished workers,
who are desperate for jobs, with the promise of a better life.
Malaysia’s
long borders at sea and land with Thailand, Indonesia and the Philippines make
the country geographically strategic for human trafficking. Lack of or failure
of enforcement strategy are among the factors that encourage human traffickers
to use this country.
Trafficking
victims come from a range of national, age, socioeconomic and education
backgrounds.
Most of
them are poor workers who migrate willingly to Malaysia from Indonesia, Nepal,
India, Thailand, China, the Philippines, Myanmar, Cambodia, Bangladesh, Pakistan
and Vietnam in search of better economic opportunities.
Sadly, a
significant number of young women, who are recruited for work in restaurants,
shops and hotels, are coerced into the commercial sex trade.
Studies
show that victims tend to come from politically unstable countries, where the
public sector is perceived to be highly corrupt, as measured by Transparency
International Corruption Perception Index.
The weak
institutions in these countries usually offer poor protection. The push
factors, such as police corruption, extortion, and cronyism, result in state
institutions turning a blind eye to trafficking syndicates, or even unlawfully
facilitating the trafficking.
A lack of
opportunity for economic growth in neighbouring countries encourages many individuals
to join criminal networks that traffic young women for sexual exploitation,
which is rampant in most urban areas and tourist destinations in Malaysia.
With the
influx of sex workers from neighbouring countries, prostitution in Malaysia has
become notorious as an “industry”, despite efforts to crack down on human
trafficking and sex tourism by the authorities.
According
to unofficial estimates, there are about 150,000 prostitutes in Malaysia, with
approximately 10,000 to 20,000 of them in the Klang Valley alone.
Worst of
all, the advent of modern technology has made the world’s oldest profession
available online, like many other vice activities, such as online gambling.
While
many of Malaysia’s trafficking offenders are influential business people, large
organised crime syndicates are also behind some of the trafficking in
foreigners in Malaysia. There are mounting allegations that recruitment
agencies in the country are engaging in fraud, with some involved in forced
labour and human trafficking.
To
prevent modern-day slavery, it is important to find the root cause of human
trafficking. It is a global crime that generates billions of dollars in profits
each year, and is a complex issue, fuelled by a lack of value for life,
poverty, growth in the global sex market, uneven development, corruption of
officials, cultural practices and the lack of political will to end it.
As we
have seen, victims are looking for a better life to escape poverty or
oppression in their countries, but some are tricked or fall into the hands of
human traffickers locally and overseas.
Research
shows that 46 per cent of trafficking victims know their recruiters. The
traffickers use influential villagers to identify families who are economically
vulnerable. Some parents or family members in poor countries sell young women
and children to traffickers. Traffickers also tend to promise well-paid work,
marriages to rich husbands or debt bondage, where they provide economic
incentives and financial loans to parents that bind their children into
sex-slavery or other exploitative forms of labour. Debt terms are often
ill-defined.
It is the
same situation in Malaysia, where some victims encounter forced labour or debt
bondage at the hands of their traffickers, employers, employment agents or
informal labour recruiters.
Young
women and children are the target group because of their marginalisation in
many societies and their limited economic resources. Other target groups
include people from impoverished and low-income families, ethnic minorities,
indigenous people, hill tribes, refugees, illegal migrants, people with low
levels of education and young girls running away from home.
Studies
show that corruption is present at every link in the trafficking chain,
beginning with a victim’s recruitment, transport, transfer and harbouring, to
their exploitation.
Corruption
is the grease that illicitly enables their movement within and across
countries, without detection or the need for paperwork. It is a constant
companion to human trafficking and the suffering that it brings.
Once
victims reach their destination and the exploitation begins, traffickers rely
on corruption to maintain the silence of victims and avoid arrest. They can
stay in our country as long as they like because there is lack of enforcement.
Several
law enforcement officials were charged in court with accepting bribes to allow
immigrants to enter Malaysia illegally. Though Malaysia has made some notable
steps towards protecting the victims of trafficking, these steps have not yet resulted
in tangible change. Experts agree that the government needs to implement more
stringent policies to make more lasting changes.
This
year, the United States has downgraded Malaysia, along with three other
countries — Thailand, Gambia and Venezuela, to Tier 3 in its annual Trafficking
of Persons (TIP) Report. Tier-3 countries do not fully comply with the minimum
standards and have not shown the US that they are making significant efforts to
do so.
Unfortunately,
despite its prevalence and the seriousness of the crime, trafficking is
currently not viewed as a priority by law enforcement agencies. To achieve
significant reduction in human trafficking, police, Immigration and other
investigative agencies have to be trained to manage their intelligence professionally,
and to prosecute and enhance penalties for individuals engaging in sex tourism
in order to reduce human trafficking in Malaysia.
Law
enforcement agencies have to eliminate the opportunities that allow individuals
to use Malaysia as an entry point for their criminal acts.
To give
real service to the nation, law enforcement agencies must acquire something
that cannot be bought or measured with money, and that is sincerity and
integrity. Strengthen integrity and prevent opportunities in the sectors
perceived to be at high risk to corruption. Therefore, integrity is
non-negotiable.
Surveys
have revealed that the level of corruption, or the tolerance of it by society,
has a direct correlation with the level of economic well-being of the nation.
Besides that, corruption compromises national integrity, destroys our nation,
affects future generations and adds to more serious social problems.
However,
bribery and corruption puts love for money above love for one’s country. No one
should betray his country by accepting bribes from human traffickers or illegal
immigrants.
According
to Karl Klaus, corruption is worse than prostitution. The latter might endanger
the morals of an individual, the former endangers the morals of the country. By
Datuk Akhbar Satar
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