http://www.thejakartaglobe.com/news/human-trafficking-in-southeast-asia-a-complex-issue/


Human Trafficking in Southeast Asia a Complex Issue 
Local authorities have a hard time protecting people who cross national borders 
seeking work

By IRIN on 10:30 am May 7, 2013.
Category Featured, News
Tags: Cambodia, child abuse, human trafficking, indonesia, Ministry of Foreign 
Affairs, sex industry, UN office on drugs and crime, United Nations 


In 2011, 16-year-old Evi, not her real name, left her remote village in 
Indonesia’s Banten province in the hope of making more money to help her family.



“My auntie introduced me to a broker who forged my travel documents so I could 
work,” she said. “The broker then took me to a recruitment agency in Jakarta. I 
just wanted to earn more money. I thought God would protect me.”

The agency arranged for Evi’s travel to Jordan and placement as a domestic 
worker in Amman, but she soon found she was being exploited by her employer.

“I was allowed to sleep for about two hours a day, sometimes less,” said Evi. 
“I had to take care of four children and clean the house. The mother and auntie 
of the children often beat me with sandals or punched me for no reason, and 
sometimes my nose bled.”

In 2012, having endured physical abuse for over a year, her employer began to 
withhold her pay, and Evi attempted suicide by drinking a glass of kerosene.
“My employer found me unconscious and allowed me to rest, but the next day, 
they made me work again,” she said.

Later, Evi ran away from her employer and roamed the streets of Amman looking 
for work until a local shopkeeper took her to a police station. Jordanian 
police then took her to the Indonesian Embassy, which arranged for her 
repatriation to a shelter for trafficked children in Jakarta, where she is 
recovering.

Experts and government officials say tens of thousands of people are vulnerable 
to being trafficked in Southeast Asia, with governments struggling to 
understand and respond collectively to the problem.

A 2012 UN Office on Drugs and Crime report on human trafficking recorded more 
than 10,000 cases of trafficking in persons in South Asia, East Asia and the 
Pacific between 2007 and 2010, but it is unclear what the situation is today.

“Nobody has been able to convincingly demonstrate the scale of the problem, let 
alone come up with clear ways of how to address it,” Sverre Molland, a lecturer 
at the Australian National University in Canberra who specializes in human 
trafficking, told IRIN.

“After all these years, we are still debating what trafficking actually is,” he 
said, noting efforts to combat it were suffering from donor fatigue because of 
a lack of tangible results.

The 2000 UN Protocol to Prevent, Suppress and Punish Trafficking in Persons 
defines human trafficking as “the recruitment, transportation, transfer, 
harboring or receipt of persons by means of coercion, abduction, fraud or 
deception for the purpose of exploitation.” Child trafficking is defined as the 
“recruitment, transportation, transfer, harboring or receipt of a child for the 
purpose of exploitation.”

Regional cooperation

Cooperation between the 10 member states of the Association of Southeast Asian 
Nations to tackle human trafficking has resulted in high-level initiatives and 
memorandums of understanding.

“The MOUs should facilitate the exchanging of information and evidence between 
governments,” said Sean Looney, the operations, monitoring and evaluation 
manager at SISHA, an anti-trafficking and exploitation NGO based in Phnom Penh, 
Cambodia.

“But in practice this does not happen at all. In a lot of human trafficking 
cases there’s no resolution because there’s no cooperation, despite the fact 
that agreements are in place.”

According to Looney, cooperation is also hindered by a lack of trust between 
Cambodia and Thailand, and Cambodia and Vietnam, due in part to past conflicts.

Martin Reeve, a UNODC regional adviser on trafficking in Bangkok, said law 
enforcement agencies across the region were still developing.

“Securing a human trafficking conviction is at the best of times a difficult 
process,” he said. “Intelligence-led policing is immature or non-existent, so 
the offenders arrested are less likely to be those organizing the trafficking, 
and police-to-police cooperation remains weak.”

All Asean governments are part of the Bali Process on People Smuggling, 
Trafficking in Persons and Related Transnational Crime. And with the exception 
of Laos and Singapore, all have passed anti-trafficking legislation.

Yet according to Febrian Ruddyard, director of international security and 
disarmament at the Indonesian Foreign Ministry, member countries may be 
hesitant to contribute funding for initiatives, both because the issue is still 
low priority in some countries and because the Bali Process is non-binding.

Ruddyard cited last year’s creation of a regional support office in Bangkok to 
implement practical arrangements to combat trafficking, and a plan to use the 
Jakarta Center for Law Enforcement Cooperation in Indonesia to train law 
enforcers across the region to better deal with human trafficking cases, as 
achievements of the Bali Process.

A local problem

Part of the problem lies at the local level.

Ahmed Sofian, national coordinator of ECPAT Indonesia, an NGO based in Jakarta 
working to end the commercial sexual exploitation of children, said there was 
little effort made by local law enforcement officials in Indonesia to deal with 
trafficking.

“There are economic benefits for those living close to the brothels that 
children are trafficked to,” said Sofian.

“Locals will gravitate to the area to sell food or provide security, and local 
police officers — often on low salaries — will ask for protection money from 
the owners of the brothels.

“This is why it’s so difficult to eliminate trafficking,” Sofian went on.

“There’s a local economy that grows up around it, and if the local government 
attempts to close these brothels, the police will become angry.”

Jonhar Johan, an official at the Indonesian Women’s Empowerment and Child 
Protection Ministry, agreed, saying local implementation was a problem.

Of Indonesia’s 497 districts, only 88 have anti-trafficking task forces.

“We need the commitment of district governments and police, but generally it is 
lacking,” he said. “The districts need to develop their own task forces.”

Johan also said that even when trafficking victims were identified and returned 
home by the authorities, they remained vulnerable to being re-trafficked.

“We offer them financial help so they can start up small businesses when they 
return home, but when we visit them to formalize this, we find they’ve gone,” 
he said.

“Many victims are poor and they see the economic gain from working abroad, so 
maybe they leave home again because of the money. Traffickers like these kinds 
of people.”
According to SISHA’s Looney, the Cambodian police’s efforts to tackle human 
trafficking at the district level is hamstrung by lack of funds.

“They don’t have access to basic operational costs [such as to shelter and care 
for victims in custody], and it’s unclear whether that’s down to ineptitude, a 
lack of funds, or whether funds are being siphoned off elsewhere,” he said.

Looney said SISHA was providing police in Cambodia with financial support and 
advising on investigations.

“Many local police officers are just looking for support so they can do their 
jobs. The average police officer wants to tackle the problem and help victims, 
but practical requirements make it difficult for them.”

Increasing complexity

Denis Nihill, the International Organization for Migration’s chief of mission 
to Indonesia, said that the changing nature of human trafficking made it more 
difficult to tackle.

“There’s been a lot of work done on the Greater Mekong Region for many years on 
trafficking, but it’s become more complex, as it’s now inextricably woven with 
labor migration, which is a much more difficult nut to crack because it is less 
easy to detect than trafficking linked to the sex industry.”

Nihill also pointed to the difficulties of tackling internal trafficking, which 
IOM’s 2011 counter trafficking report highlighted as particularly problematic 
in Indonesia.

“For cross-border trafficking, people must pass through the hands of several 
government agencies, but internally trafficked people need not come to the 
attention of any officials, so in many ways it’s a more alarming situation,” he 
said.

The US State Department’s 2012 Trafficking in Persons Report categorizes most 
Asean countries as Tier 2, meaning they do not fully comply with minimum 
standards for the elimination of trafficking, but are making significant 
efforts to do so.

IRIN


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