亚洲-全球人口贩卖中心-火狐体育
Masthead for Asia Out of the Shadows Campaign

ASIA

全球三分之二的人口贩运受害者来自亚洲,亚洲是剥削妇女和儿童的最大中心。 推动这些地区人口贩运的一些最关键因素是缺乏就业、贫困、少数民族歧视和政治起义。 India and Pakistan are prime destinations for victims from less developed neighboring countries in South Asia and South East Asia. Agents or Dalal’s play a vital role in the trafficking of victims as they find ways to build trust with local people who are financially unstable and then traffic them to more affluent areas and cities to be exploited as sex workers, forced labor and used for organ harvesting. (Source)

Continuous media reports suggest that human trafficking in East Asia is also widespread and on the rise. But due to the particular challenges in conducting research-based studies in East Asia, publications on trafficking in this region are rather limited. (Source)

MAYA - SYRIA/LEBANON

Photo of Maya

Maya was 22 when she fled her home country of Syria due to conflict in the region. She was promised a job working in a factory in Lebanon, but when she arrived, she was forced into commercial sex along with more than 70 other Syrian women. They endured severe physical and psychological violence. Eventually, police raided the apartment units the women lived in and arrested 10 men and eight women who had been part of the sex trafficking scheme.( Source)
Learn more …
JAE-UN - NORTH KOREA

photo of Jae-Un

When Jae-Un’s father, brothers, and grandmother died when she was 11 years old, North Korean authorities sent her and her sister to an orphanage. The orphanage did not provide the children with extra clothes or shoes, and they were not able to bathe. Jae-Un slept in a small room that she had to share with more than 45 other children; they could barely move while sleeping. During the day, all of the children had assigned jobs doing manual labor, and each day were forced to work very long hours. Several years later, a missionary helped Jae-Un and her sister escape to China. ( Source)
Learn more …
MEI LING - CHINA/UNITED STATES

Photo of Mei Ling

Mei Ling jumped at the chance to work in the U.S. when she saw a newspaper ad for a cleaner at a suburban spa. Mei Ling met up with a recruiter in rural China, who told her, “you’ll be paid four times what you make now.”But when she arrived in the U.S., she was told she wouldn’t be cleaning—instead she would have to provide massages and commercial sex to customers. She wasn’t allowed to keep any money she made in the first year, and was told that she would be deported if she did not comply. “If you ever try to leave, the police will just throw you in jail,” her employers told her. Because of her language barrier and fear of the police, she has remained at the storefront brothel. ( Source)
Learn more …
PING - VIETNAM | CHINA

Photo of Ping

When Ping was 12 years old, an acquaintance offered her and a friend jobs in a different city in Vietnam. Ping and her friend accepted the offer. The recruiter took them to a local bus station and placed them on a bus with their “caretaker.” When they disembarked, the caretaker revealed they were in China and had been sold into prostitution with 20 other girls. When one of the girls refused to do as she was told, the owners beat her severely. Ping suffered in the brothel for almost a year before authorities raided the establishment, rescued the girls, and returned them to Vietnam. Although Ping still suffers from headaches and poor vision—including moments of blindness—as a result of her exploitation, she is training for a career in hairdressing. ( Source)
Learn more …
LUIZA - KYRGYZSTAN

Photo of Luiza

When she was 22 years old a woman offered her a waitressing job in Bishkek, the capital city in the north of Kyrgyzstan. But things took a turn for the worse after arriving in Bishkek. Karimova recalls that, “They held us in an apartment and took away our passports. They told us that we’d be photographed again for our new employment documents, to be registered as waitresses. It felt strange, but we believed them.” Then, Karimova and the other women were put on a plane to Dubai, handed fake passports instead of their real ones, and shepherded to an apartment after landing. “We were to be sex slaves and do whatever the clients wanted. The next day I was sent to a nightclub and told that I would have to earn at least 10,000 USD by the end of the month,” says Karimova. ( Source)
Learn more …
KHAWNG NU - MYANMAR

Photo of Khwang Nu

Khawng Nu is from Kachin, a conflict affected and impoverished state in northern Myanmar. There are few job opportunities, so when a woman from her village offered her work in a Chinese factory, Khawng Nu accepted the offer. Khawng Nu had been trafficked to birth babies, a type of trafficking that accounts for 20 percent of the trafficking of women in Myanmar. Khawng Nu recalls seeing more than 40 women on the floor of the building where she was kept, some as young as 16. “They give pills to women and inject them with sperm for them to carry babies for Chinese men,” explains Khawng Nu. They were beaten and bullied at any sign of resistance. Once the baby was born, the women would supposedly receive 1 million MMK (USD 632). ( Source)
Learn more …
FATEH, HASSAN, EMIR - INDIA

Photo of Fateh, Hassan, Emir

When Fateh, Hassan, and Emir’s father died, they inherited the debt he owed to the owner of the brick kiln where he worked. Through manipulation and deceit, the debt had ballooned in the ten years since its origination and continued to do so after the three brothers assumed it. The brick kiln owner forced Fateh, Hassan, and Emir to work for 13 years as bonded laborers, during which they endured 14-hour days molding and hauling heavy bricks, constant harassment, and physical abuse. The brothers were able to escape and sought assistance from a local NGO. With the help of a local government official, they received release certificates freeing them from the false debts and local law enforcement filed charges against their trafficker. ( Source)
Learn more …
KARMO - NEPAL/UNITED STATES

Photo of Karmo

In 2003, Karmo came to the US, seizing the chance to work in the US on a G5 domestic worker visa which provided a huge opportunity to improve her family’s living conditions. However, once she came to the US, Karmo worked under terrible conditions. She was forced to work from early morning until late at night, isolated and prohibited from talking to other people. Karmo’s passport had been confscated by her employer and she was told she could be picked up by the police if she complained. After her rescue, Karmo experienced anger, frustration and hopelessness as she recovered from her trafficking situation. Karmo states, “The sweat of my labor was in vain, it is gone like flowing water. I am getting old but I don’t have any money saved to live the rest of my life and my whole body is in pain.” ( Source)
Learn more …
SADI AHMED - PAKISTAN
MANSOUR - BANGLADESH/LYBIA
OMID, 15 - AFGHANISTAN

Photo of Omid

Omid (not his real name) is 15 years old. His father died in the fields, when he stepped on a landmine. As the eldest son, it’s his job to look after his mother – who begs on the streets – and two younger brothers. “I started dancing at wedding parties when I was 10, when my father died,” says Omid. “We were hungry, I had no choice. Sometimes we go to bed on empty stomachs. When I dance at parties I earn about $2 or some pilau rice.” Sometimes people take him to hotels. Omid says he is paid about $2 for the night. Sometimes he is gang raped. He does not go to the police to report the rapists. “They are powerful and rich men. The police can’t do anything against them.” ( Source)
Learn more …

Back to mapHome