Showing posts with label Yunnan. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Yunnan. Show all posts

Wednesday, March 6, 2013

China Arrests Five for Trafficking 200 Burmese | The Irrawaddy Magazine

http://www.irrawaddy.org/archives/tag/patrick-boehler-the-irrawaddy

Source: The Irrawaddy Magazine



Ruili, in China’s Yunnan Province near the border with Burma, is the starting point for many Burmese nationals seeking work in the world’s second-largest economy. (Photo: www.dehong.gov.cn)


HONG KONG — Chinese authorities have arrested and charged five people with human trafficking in what could be China’s largest case of trafficking of Burmese nationals in recent memory.
Pre-trial detention has been approved for the Burmese and Chinese citizens on Thursday for charges of human trafficking in the southern Chinese manufacturing hub of Dongguan. They are charged with trafficking 200 Burmese workers to work illegally in factories in Guangdong Province.
The arrest came after 36 trafficked Burmese workers handed themselves in at a police station on the outskirts of Guangzhou on Dec. 8, asking to be taken back to Burma.
The Burmese were trafficked in 11 trips to work in Guangdong Province and were sent to work at an electrical appliance factory, a metal factory and a paper factory in Dongguan, according to a report by the local daily Dongguan Times.
The traffickers charged the workers 1,200 yuan (US $192) for the journey and took 3 yuan ($0.50) for every working hour off their salaries, the daily reported without mentioning their monthly salaries. The average monthly income of rural workers in Dongguan stood at 1,900 yuan ($305) last year.
The traffickers sent a first batch of relatives and friends to work at a factory in Huizhou, another manufacturing hub in Guangdong Province around February 2012. In August, they began to send the workers through an agency in Ruili, China’s largest border hub with Burma, in Yunnan Province.
The arrest is by far the largest single bust of such a trafficking ring and points to a rising trend of nationals of neighboring countries seeking work in the world’s second-largest economy.
Yunnan border police deported 5,228 Burmese civilians last year. No earlier figures were reported. Guangxi, China’s border province to Vietnam, arrested 2,606 Vietnamese nationals last year for illegally entering China, an increase of 33 percent compared to 2011.
Human traffickers face prison sentences from two to seven years, according to article 318 of China’s criminal law. Employers are fined up to 100,000 yuan ($16,000) for every illegal immigrant they employ, according to harsher regulations introduced last year.
Under the new regulations, illegal immigrants can be fined up to 10,000 yuan ($1,600) and be detained up to 15 days before being deported.
Some 40,000 Burmese nationals were living in China, according to the last national census conducted in 2010. Burma ranked fourth after South Korea, the US and Japan as country of origin for foreigners living in China.
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Monday, February 25, 2013

Conflict and Bride Trafficking: The Sino-Burmese Border | STAND

http://www.standnow.org/blog/conflict-and-bride-trafficking-sino-burmese-border

Source:  www.standnow.org

This piece is by Laura Hackney, from Stanford STAND

With the end of the ceasefire in 2011 between the KIA (Kachin Independence Army) and the national Burmese army*, fighting in the Kachin State has escalated across the vast province. Though peace talks have taken place recently in the Chinese border town of Ruili, the effects of this violence have destroyed lives and endangered the livelihoods of thousands of Kachin people living in the region. Additionally, the Palaung people in the Northeast Shan State of Burma have also suffered decades of fighting, increased food, education, and healthcare costs, as well as military seizures of land. The vulnerabilities of these minority groups (especially women) have intensified despite the political reforms coming from Naypyidaw.

Due to these various compounding factors, these states along the Sino-Burmese border have become a perfect breeding ground for the trafficking of women and girls into China’s Yunnan Province. Over the past 15 years, migration to China has increased as economic opportunities in towns such as Ruili have exploded.
 Once thought of as the “Wild West” of China, these border towns were the centers for the sex industry, drug trafficking, gambling, and a lucrative jade market. The local government has swiftly cracked down on these illicit activities (especially in Ruili) in the recent decade. However, there has emerged another lucrative market in the region, namely—women trafficked to become brides for Chinese men.

As with several other rapidly developing nations, China has experienced extraordinary demographic changes in the past three decades. In addition to an aging population, there exists in China an aggregate gender imbalance. This imbalance exists in various regional contexts, and has had its most extreme manifestations in rural areas. Due to land reform, the One Child Policy, the proliferation of ultra-sounds, and the overwhelming dependence on son to carry on the family name, the sex ratio at birth in some regions is greatly skewed (in some areas the imbalance is as high as 130 males per every 100 females). Traditional means of securing a bride is no longer available for some men, particularly those living in poor villages. Ruili’s location on the border between Yunnan and Burma acts as a gateway for women to be trafficked into Yunnan and then out to different provinces across the country.

Two Burmese NGOs, the Palaung Women’s Association and the Kachin Women’s Association, have been working in Thailand to document these cases of human trafficking. As with a large number of trafficking cases, traffickers are able to take advantage of the relative poverty of those victims who they wish to sell. Many young women living in the Palaung and Kachin areas of Burma are told that they will be able to find good jobs in prosperous China and send money home to their families. These women enter China, often without documentation, and are sold to Chinese families who need a wife and heir. Once in China, these women do not have access to many public services, can suffer abuse at the hands of their new husbands, or be forced to work without wages in various industries.

Both the Burmese and Chinese governments have established National Plans of Action against Trafficking of Women and Children; however, the root causes of this problem, especially in Burma, have yet to be addressed. The causes of trafficking can be complex, incorporating gender relations, conflict environments, economic resource allocation, globalization, proliferation of crime networks, and poverty--to name a few. In this light, human trafficking is an intolerable symptomatic of various forms of oppression. As a starting point, there must be awareness that a main factor pushing these women in the hands of traffickers is the lack of opportunities in their home cities or villages. An end to the fighting in the Kachin State and a focus on more equitable economic investment by foreign, private, and government entities should be the priority for those working for positive change in Burma.

*Note: “Burmese” here does not explicitly mean the Burmese ethnic group.

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Tuesday, September 6, 2011

Burma's women forced to be Chinese brides - Telegraph

Burma, an eccentric military dictatorship ruled by golf-playing, Buddhist-worshipping generals, is now the main source of forced brides in China. David Eimer hears their story.


Burma women trafficked into China
Image 1 of 2
The ancient temple city of Pagan Bagan in Burma Photo: ALAMY

Aba was just 12-years-old when she left her hometown of Muse in Burma to visit Yunnan Province in China's far southwest. When she crossed the border, she was expecting to spend only a few hours away from home.

But it would be three long years before Aba saw her family again. Like thousands of other young girls and women from Burma, she had been duped into coming to China so she could be sold into a forced marriage to one of the growing number of Chinese men who – because there are not enough girl babies born in China – cannot find wives any other way.

During her time in China, Aba endured routine beatings, while never being able to communicate with her family or even go outside on her own. Above all, she lived with the knowledge that she was destined to be married to the son of the family that had bought her – as if she was one of the pigs or chickens that ran around their farm.

"I was sold for 20,000 Yuan (£1,880)," said Aba. "I was too young to get married when they bought me. It was later that they told me I had to get married to their son. I was lucky in a way. If I had been two or three years older when I was taken, I'd be married to him now."

Most people wouldn't consider it fortunate to be kidnapped as a child and sold into virtual slavery. But Aba is one of the lucky ones. Not only did she escape a forced marriage, but she was rescued and was able to return home.

Source: The Telegraph
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Tuesday, October 26, 2010

30 Mekong youth leaders discuss human trafficking, migration - INQUIRER.net, Philippine News for Filipinos

Mekong and its main tributaries.Image via Wikipedia
First Posted 17:45:00 10/26/2010

BANGKOK, Thailand – Thirty youth leaders from Mekong have gathered here to discuss the problem of child trafficking and migration in the Asian sub-region and tell their governments what needs to be done, organizers said.

The youth delegates from Cambodia, Laos, Myanmar, Thailand, Vietnam, and Yunnan province of China tackle the vulnerabilities faced by children and youth in the Greater Mekong Sub-region.

“As we are all aware, human trafficking is a modern form of slavery and a severe problem worldwide. It is one of the worst violations of human rights,” according to the Ministry of Social, Development and Human Security in Thailand.

With a robust economy, Thailand is a favorite destination country for trafficked persons in Mekong, said Brian Jungwiwattanaporn, Regional Cross-border Program information coordinator of Save the Children-UK. Thailand hosts about two million documented and undocumented migrants, he added.

“Trafficked persons are deceived, sold or subjected to slavery-like conditions, under different forms and various sectors such as construction, agriculture, domestic service, prostitution, pornography, sexual tourism, and organ removal, among others,” the Thai ministry said.

The 2010 Mekong Youth Forum is the third such forum in the region. The Philippine Educational Theater Association helps facilitate the workshops.

On the last day of the forum Friday, senior government officials from the six Mekong countries will listen to the issues the youth delegates will raise in a bid to influence state policies to better protect children in the region, said Jungwiwattanaporn.

“The Mekong Youth Forum 3 is a time for them to speak and be listened to. It is also a time for them to listen more closely to each of us adults, especially those in government,” said Edelweiss F. Silan of Save the Children Regional Cross-Border Programme.

“There are expectations that after this forum, there will be joint actions between children and adults to bring about true changes that will curb the human trafficking and risky migration situations in our region,” Silan said.

The 2010 forum, which began on October 24 and will run until October 29, is also meant to institutionalize child and youth participation in local, national and regional anti-trafficking processes.

Hosted by the government of Thailand, this year’s forum is jointly organized by the International Labour Organization (ILO), Save the Children UK, World Vision, and the UN Inter-Agency Project on Human Trafficking (UNIAP). Dennis Maliwanag

30 Mekong youth leaders discuss human trafficking, migration - INQUIRER.net, Philippine News for Filipinos

Source: Inquirer.Net
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Thursday, September 9, 2010

Photos | China | Myanmar | Human Trafficking

A photographer documents the victims of human trafficking on the China-Myanmar border.
Burma's trafficking victims

This girl was nearly sold to a trafficker when she was 15. (Katsuo Takahashi/GlobalPost) Click to enlarge photo

Full Frame features photo essays and conversations with photographers in the field.

Last year Chinese police freed 268 Burmese women who had been trafficked and forced into marriages with Chinese men. Human rights activists believe that this represents only a small fraction of the growing number of Burmese forced to marry Chinese husbands.

The causes of this disturbing trend lie both in China and Myanmar (also known as Burma). Seeking to escape Myanmar’s military regime and the horribly mismanaged economy, young women are often lured by recruiters who speak of well paid employment. Many of the victims are from rural areas near China’s Yunnan province and belong to Myanmar’s persecuted ethnic minorities.

Beijing's "one-child policy," combined with the long-held national preference for male heirs, has resulted in a grossly lopsided male to female ratio; 120:100 in 2005. The massive shortage of potential brides drives many lonely Chinese men to resort to buying a foreign spouse.

Those women who are lucky enough to have escaped often tell a remarkably similar story. Usually they are recruited in their rural village and brought to the bustling towns on the Chinese side of the border. At this point they are handed over to another trafficker who will take them as far away as Beijing for their "job interview." The price of a bride depends on her age and beauty, but a Chinese buyer will typically pay between 40,000 to 50,000 yuan (roughly $6,000-$7,500).

Once married, escape is difficult, as the new bride is forced to do housework or farm for long hours. Her husband or his family members watch her at all times. Those who have escaped tell stories of rape, physical abuse and dire loneliness.

About the photographer:

Katsuo Takahashi is a Japanese freelance photographer based in Tokyo. He is a "voice of the voiceless" and shoots them to show their soul. He has been working on a documentary about Burmese migrants, which includes "Lured into a Trap."



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Wednesday, July 7, 2010

Vietnamese police bust human-trafficking ring | Earth Times News

Location map of Vietnam. Equirectangular proje...Image via Wikipedia

EARTH TIMES

Posted :
Mon, 05 Jul 2010 05:49:40 GMT By : dpa

Hanoi - Police in Hanoi arrested 19 members of an alleged international human-trafficking ring and rescued nine teenage girls, an official said Monday."This is the largest human-trafficking ring ever arrested in Hanoi," said Senior Lieutenant-Colonel Nguyen Van Thanh, deputy head of Dong Da District's Police Department. Officials said a 17-year-old girl on a train from Hanoi to the northern province of Lao Cai called out to other passengers on June 19, saying she was being abducted and sold to China. Under questioning, the girl's fellow passenger admitted he was taking her to China to sell.

Police unravelled the suspected trafficker's gang over the following weeks, arresting 19 others aged between 17 and 41, and rescuing nine girls aged between 13 and 16.Three of the girls were found confined in brothels, where they were beaten and starved if they refused to serve customers.One of the chief suspects, Ngo Manh Tien, 17, was said to live in Yunnan, China, and was arrested on June 23 on his return to Vietnam. The others living in Vietnam were arrested between June 24-29.The suspects admitted to having sold 12 women and children this year for between 2 and 12 million dong each (107 and 650 dollars), police said. If convicted, they face up to 20 years in prison for trafficking people under 16 years old, considered minors by Vietnamese law.

Thanh said members of the gang would befriend victims online, then invite them to go shopping in provinces near the Chinese border such as Lang Son and Lao Cai. There, they would be abducted and sold to China, or to brothels in the tourist town of Do Son in Hai Phong province.

The traffickers would sometimes pay off teenagers' debts to internet cafe owners to win their confidence, Thanh said. "We don't know exactly how many people have been sent to China for prostitution by this ring," he said. "We need more time to investigate."Police said at least 6,684 Vietnamese women and children have been trafficked abroad by June since 2005.

Copyright DPA


http://www.earthtimes.org/articles/news/333185,police-bust-human-trafficking-ring.html




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Saturday, March 6, 2010

Forced marriages driving human trafficking, UN says- Myanmar Times

By Juliet Shwe Gaung
(Volume 26, No. 512)

TWO-THIRDS of human trafficking cases uncovered by the Myanmar Police Force’s anti-trafficking units in 2009 involved women being trafficked into China for the purpose of forced marriage.

Out of 155 human trafficking cases uncovered in 2009, 103 involved the forced marriage of girls and women, the Myanmar Police Force figures show.

Most of the victims were lured by the promise of a relatively high-paying job in China but were then sold off to Chinese men, a spokesperson from the United Nations Inter-Agency Project (UNIAP) on Human Trafficking in the Greater Mekong Sub-Region told The Myanmar Times last month.

“Most of the trafficked Myanmar women were sold to men in villages and poor communities in China, where Chinese men do not think of this practise as trafficking; instead they consider it as paying a dowry,” UNIAP national project coordinator Daw Ohnmar Ei Ei Chaw said.

“Men pay anywhere from RMB20,000 to RMB40,000 (US$2900 to $5800) – or even more – to a broker for a trafficked woman to be their wife, depending on the woman’s looks and age. They even have a wedding ceremony in their village. However, if this happens without the consent of the woman, it is clearly a trafficking case,” she said.

One of the main factors driving demand is that the “dowry” for a Myanmar woman is often significantly less than for a Chinese woman. Myanmar women are also perceived to be obedient and, as foreigners, have little chance for recourse.
However, another factor is China’s one-child policy, which has indirectly led to a population ratio of 120 males for every 100 females and the country is now a major source, transit and destination point for human trafficking.

Of the 155 human trafficking cases uncovered in 2009, 130 cases were trafficking into China. Of the remaining 25 cases, 14 were trafficking into Thailand and 11 were internal trafficking, the figures show.

The forced marriage victims were generally repatriated by Chinese officials for being illegal immigrants.

“I met one woman who was sent back to Myanmar and she said she wanted to go back to China just simply because she missed her two children, who had been left with their Chinese father when she was rescued and returned to Myanmar,” she said.

According to a February 3 report in the English edition of China-based newspaper Global Times, at least 263 Myanmar women were kidnapped and sold into forced marriages in Yunnan Province in 2009, up from 87 recorded cases in 2008.
Prices had also increased, the report said, with Chinese men paying a minimum of RMB38,000 ($5510) for a trafficked Myanmar woman in 2009, up from RMB20,000 to RMB30,000 ($2900 to $4350) in 2008.

“Many parents have no idea their daughters are kidnapped and sold in China, instead they think they are having a better life; therefore they don’t call the police,” said Lin Huiming, the head of criminal police in Ruili on the China-Myanmar border.

Since 2008, at least 489 Myanmar women aged between 11 and 57 have been rescued and sent back to Myanmar, the report said.

“The neighbouring countries admire China’s economic boom; while in China, there is a growing population of men in poorer areas in several provinces including Anhui, Hubei and Sichuan who are desperate to have a wife,” said Li Shunqiong, team leader at China’s anti-human trafficking brigade.

Daw Ohnmar Ei Ei Chaw said many of the human trafficking victims were from poor families but that was not always the case.

“[Trafficking] can happen to anyone. We have trafficking victims who are university graduates, people from better-off families, male and married women,” she said.

Those with information related to a human trafficking case should contact the Myanmar Police Force’s Anti Trafficking Unit in Nay Pyi Taw (Tel: (067) 412-201), the Yangon Anti Trafficking Task Force (Tel: (01) 251-438) or Muse Anti Trafficking Task Force (Tel: (082) 528-90).

Forced marriages driving human trafficking, UN says- Myanmar Times


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Tuesday, December 29, 2009

Chinese border town emerges as new front line in fight against human trafficking - washingtonpost.com

Burma (Myanmar) (dark green) / ASEAN (dark grey)Image via Wikipedia

By Keith B. Richburg
Washington Post Staff Writer
Saturday, December 26, 2009

This booming little border town in China's southwestern Yunnan province, where the economic prosperity of China is separated from the destitution of Burma by nothing more than a flimsy, rusted metal fence, has emerged as the new front line in the worldwide fight against human trafficking.

On any given afternoon, a steady stream of people scale the six-foot-high fence, unperturbed by the Chinese border guards posted just a hundred yards away. Amid the Burmese men looking for day labor, or women coming to sell their vegetables in the wealthier Chinese markets, is traffic far less benign:

Burmese women being brought over for marriages with Chinese men -- some forced, some voluntarily arranged through "matchmakers." Babies being brought into China to be sold. And Chinese women from poorer inland areas being moved in the opposite direction, often ending up in Southeast Asia's sex industry.

In the shadowy world of human trafficking, say government officials and advisers with foreign aid agencies, China has become a source country, a destination country and a transit country all at once.

"Some of the Yunnan women and girls think they'll get a better job in Thailand," said Kathleen Speake, chief technical adviser for the United Nations' International Labor Office in Beijing. Burmese "are coming into China. We're looking at being trafficked for adoption, and women being trafficked for marriage."

No firm numbers are available on the extent of trafficking. Kirsten di Martino, a project officer in Beijing for UNICEF, said that from 2000 to 2007, China's public security bureau investigated 44,000 cases of trafficking, rescuing about 130,000 women and children. But, she added, "this is just the tip of the iceberg."
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China, she said, "is very big, and has a lot of border -- and has a whole lot of problems."

Here in Ruili, two criminal gangs were cracked and 14 women rescued in the first half of the year, said Meng Yilian, who works for the newly formed group China-Myanmar Cooperation Against Human Trafficking. Burma is also known as Myanmar.

A legally suspect vocation

"In the villages bordering Myanmar, there are some people working as matchmakers, " she said. "And some of them are human traffickers. It's hard to tell who are the matchmakers and who are the traffickers."

Matchmaking, which falls into a legally murky terrain, is rooted in Chinese tradition, which allows a man to make a gift to a woman's family in exchange for marriage.

In this border area, matchmakers are not hard to find. From Ruili, a gravel road leads west, running parallel to the Burmese border and past ethnic Dai villagers working in paddy fields. In Mang Sai village, the matchmaker is a heavy-set 28-year-old woman who said she has been in the business seven or eight years and had "successfully made 20 matches," including two involving Chinese buyers and Burmese girls.

The matchmaker -- she requested that her name be withheld because her profession is legally suspect -- said a local Chinese girl will cost as much as 50,000 renminbi, about $7,300. But a girl from Burma, she said, costs just 20,000 renminbi, or just under $3,000.

She said her matchmaking fee is 3000 renminbi, or about $440.

"I follow the principle: Only if the two people like each other is it a match," she said.

Further south, in Jie Xiang town, a pharmacist said it was often difficult to tell which Burmese girls come here voluntarily to marry Chinese men and escape poverty and which ones are the victims of traffickers.

The pharmacist, who spoke on the condition of anonymity because he feared reprisals from traffickers, said, "For the woman 25 to 30 years old, they come voluntarily. For those 25 and younger, it's hard to tell if they come voluntarily or were forced."

The pharmacist, 43, said he often speaks with the Burmese women because they come to his shop for carsickness medicine before they set out for long drives with their new husbands.

"They are forced by their economic situation at home," the pharmacist said. "They have no other choice."

He said he knows one trafficker in the town who is trying to find a buyer for an 8-year-old Burmese girl after selling the mother.

"The border is so long, and there are a lot of channels," the pharmacist said. "You can't watch every path. It's really easy for people to come across. There's no strict border here at all."

A long, porous border

A few hours at the border confirmed what the pharmacist said. While the official border crossing point at Jie Gao was relatively quiet -- just a few cars passing by and two pedestrians -- there was a steady flow over the rickety metal fence nearby, just out of eyeshot of the green-uniformed border policemen.
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A woman from Burma, Zei Nan, 51, climbed over the fence carrying a sack filled with vegetables she was hoping to sell. A young man, Zaw Aung, 29, said he crosses over from Burma almost every day, looking for day labor. Another woman, Huang Shuguo, 30, came to the fence to bring a change of clothes for her husband, who drives a motorcycle taxi on the Chinese side.

The spot is so well-known as a border crossing point that it could hardly be called secret. Red taxis and motorcycles cruised up and down the narrow street, hoping to pick up Burmese migrants. Others stopped to discharge their passengers at the fence.

Several people crossing said that on the rare occasions when the police intervene to stop people, the penalty is a fine and a day in jail. But Zaw Aung said, "We are seldom caught. Even the police know we are climbing over."

The government, however, recently launched a crackdown on the "matchmakers" as one step in the effort to combat trafficking. And there is evidence that the move has had some effect.

In Huo Sai village -- a place identified by area residents as a key transit point for trafficked Burmese women -- the matchmaker was nowhere to be found. Residents said the matchmaker had gone underground because of the increased police monitoring.

Researcher Wang Juan contributed to this report.

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2009/12/25/AR2009122501841_2.html?wpisrc=newsletter

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