Vietnam a transit country as pandemic seen fueling Cambodian ‘bride trafficking’ to China
The trafficking of Cambodian “brides” to China has risen sharply this year with mass job losses caused by the Covid-19 pandemic.
It drives more young women and girls abroad to support their families, according to two charities that help victims.
Over the past decade, tens of thousands of women from Southeast Asia have been sent to China by criminal networks promising lucrative jobs, only to be sold as brides – some to abusive men – as China grapples with a huge gender imbalance.
Anti-trafficking organizations said the impact of coronavirus on Cambodia’s garment, hospitality and tourism sectors had fueled a spike in « bride trafficking » this year.
« There is no work, no options, for young women, so it has become even easier for perpetrators to persuade women and their families, » said Chan Saron, program manager at Chab Dai.
The charity has received reports of a new case every three days on average in 2020 – double the caseload of previous years.
Most of the victims are in their twenties but some are as young as 14, according to Saron, who said thousands of cases were likely going unreported.
Cambodian women who have returned from China often describe experiences of sexual, physical and psychological abuse, confinement, torture and forced labor.
Authorities in Cambodia have said the crime is difficult to tackle because victims’ relatives are often complicit and the promise of cash – up to thousands of dollars – by criminal matchmakers is difficult to resist for poor, rural families.
« The women, most of them know the risks, » Chou Bun Eng, deputy head of the Cambodian government’s counter-trafficking committee, told the Thomson Reuters Foundation.
« But they still go. It’s all about money, money, money, » she added. « (The crime) is increasing because the perpetrators are clever, they are tricky … promising wealth. »
Bun Eng said authorities in Vietnam – increasingly a transit country for women headed to China – had got better at spotting potential Cambodian victims and stopping them from reaching China.
Hanoi-based Blue Dragon Children’s Foundation, which rescues women trafficked to China, said its caseload of Cambodian victims had almost tripled this year to 19 from seven last year.
« Covid-19 has changed the trafficking landscape – for now, at least, » said Michael Brosowski, the head of Blue Dragon, which was forced to temporarily freeze rescue operations in late January as coronavirus related travel restrictions took hold.
« The drastic rise in the number of Cambodians trafficked through Vietnam is a sign of how traffickers are willing to try new routes and new tricks to keep their trade going. »
Reuters – December 13, 2020
Articles similaires / Related posts:
- Three men jailed for organizing illegal emigration from Vietnam to Cambodia Two Vietnamese men and one Cambodian national have been sentenced to a total of eight years and six months behind bars for arranging for others to illegally migrate from Vietnam to Cambodia....
- Young members of ethnic minority groups most at risk in Vietnam-China human trafficking trade The study by the Blue Dragon Children’s Foundation found that groups such as the H’mong and Thai were vulnerable to being caught up in the illicit trade. More than 60 per cent of victims and prosecuted traffickers were from these communities, and most of the latter had no prior criminal record....
- China’s defence ties with Cambodia raise red flags for Vietnam It has been over 40 years since Vietnamese military forces rolled into Cambodia and toppled the brutal Pol Pot regime. One of the drivers that led Vietnam to conduct a military campaign against Cambodia was its sense of strategic vulnerability, sandwiched between China to the north and the China-backed Cambodian regime to the south....