More trafficking of women reported
In Kachin State, north of Burma, not only Kachin women were trafficked, but of many other ethnic women like Shan, Palaung, Chinese and Burmese women were being sold to Chinese men as wives and sex industries on the Sino-Burma border while looking for work, according to a report by a Kachin group which came out today.
By Hseng Khio
Fah
5 August 2008
Because of the failing
political, economic and social situation in Burma, more people in Kachin State,
mainly young men and women, have left their homeland to search work in foreign
countries especially in China, said Eastward Bound launched today by
Kachin Women’s Association of Thailand (KWAT).
“Not only women from
Kachin State were being sold but also women from other ethnic States and proper
Burma were trafficked,” said Gum Khong, a member of KWAT. “We provide assistance
to all ethnic women and girls who escape to us without discriminating who they
are, even though our main focus is women in Kachin State.”
The new report
describes that the junta authorities issued temporary ID cards to ethnic people
to vote in the May 10 referendum buy they were withdrawn by the immigration
officers after the referendum was held.
Shirley Seng, spokesperson of
KWAT comments that, “There would be more human trafficking if the citizen
doesn’t have the ID cards.”
Citizens without ID cards are denied their
rights to travel and migrate legally. Thus they become vulnerable to
trafficking, said the report.
In September 2005, the Burmese regime’s new
anti-trafficking law was passed in order to curb trafficking and to protect the
rights of trafficked women. However, victims who had appealed to the Burmese
Embassy in Beijing were denied assistance and denied entry back to Burma, and
falsely accused of trafficking themselves.
“Anti-trafficking laws are
meaningless under a regime that systematically violates people’s rights, and
whose policies are driving citizens to migrate,” said Gum Khong, a researcher
for the report.
“International agencies must look holistically at the
trafficking problem, and not be complicit in any efforts by the regime to
further abuse people’s right under the guise of preventing trafficking,” said
Shirley Seng.
KWAT first exposed the trafficking of Kachin women on the
China-Burma border in their 2005 report “Driven Away.”
KWAT was
founded in Chiangmai on September 1999 and it is a founding member of the
umbrella organization, the Women’s League of Burma, comprising 12 women’s groups
from Burma.

