14th
June 2011
Military
repression in Burma’s northern Shan State fuelling human trafficking to China
Press
Release
A new report released today by the
Palaung Women’s Organisation reveals alarming rates of human trafficking from
Burma into China, fuelled by large scale migration due to increased military repression
and economic hardship in northern Shan State.
Stolen
Lives documents
72 cases of human trafficking involving 110 people, which took place along the
China-Burma border mostly in the past six years. The majority of those
trafficked were young Palaung women from tea farming communities in northern
Shan State.
Burma’s military rulers have
tightened control of Palaung areas since the surrender of the Palaung State
Liberation Army in 2005, pouring in troops and militia who have imposed
increased taxes on agriculture and trading. Unable to survive on the meagre
profits earned from tea farming, young Palaung women have been forced to
migrate to China in search of work, leaving them exposed to the risk of being
trafficked.
‘Most Palaung women have no
experience of independent travel as they are expected to stay at home and look
after their children. As a result, many of the women have no idea they are
being trafficked until it is too late,’ says Lway Moe Kham, principal
researcher on Stolen Lives.
Survivors
provide harrowing accounts of being forced into marriages with Chinese men or into
sex work in destinations across China. Some ended up as live feed for leeches. Young
children and babies were also trafficked, some sold by drug-using fathers.
Opium cultivation in Palaung areas has skyrocketed in recent years due to official
complicity in the drug trade.
The report contradicts claims by
Burma’s regime that anti-trafficking measures introduced over the past few
years are effective, and highlights that the structural root causes of
migration and trafficking need to be addressed in order to tackle the problem. Political
and economic conditions have worsened in Palaung areas since Burma’s recent
election.
‘A genuine political dialogue which addresses the
needs and ambitions of Burma’s ethnic groups is a necessary first step if Burma
is to solve the complex economic and social problems fuelling human trafficking,’
says Lway Moe Kham.
Contacts:
Lway Moe Kham -
66-08-33302304 ,
Lway Aye Nang -
66-08-01159598
Lway
Poe Pheing -66-08-5605
6041
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