A young beggar sleeps near a market on Patpong Steet in Bangkok |
IRIN/Pak Kred
In an impoverished town in Thailand near the border with Myanmar, a
trafficker offered a desperate Burmese widow 5,000 baht (US$160) on the
spot, followed by an additional 4,000 baht ($120) per month for two of
her 10 children to sell flowers in the Thai capital, Bangkok.
The rent-a-child deal was to last three months, after which the boys would return home.
But the deadline passed and the monthly payments stopped. After
another three months the older brother, 10-year-old Ongsi, ran away and
managed to make his way home to tell his mother they had to return to
the capital to rescue eight-year-old Siyathon from a life of late-night flower selling and beatings.
Their case is not unusual. Across the city of more than 10mn, little Burmese vendors sell flowers and Cambodian children beg money from motorists, tourists and bar crawlers.
“Most of these children are not Thai,” said Witanapat
Rutanavaleepong, who manages the Stop Child Begging project for the
Mirror Foundation, a leading Thai NGO that has become a focal point for
child trafficking.
He estimates there are at least 1,000 child beggars and flower sellers working in cities and tourist spots around the country.
Since he began working with the Mirror Foundation two years ago,
Witanapat has come across only one case involving three Thai children,
although he handles up to 30 cases a month. The problem remains
intractable in the capital.
“Thailand has a problem with child begging that is hard
to solve because the authorities do not see it as a problem that affects
their (the children’s) future or society,” Witanapat said. “They see them as only child beggars, but the girls and some boys often go on to become sex workers, and the boys often become traffickers themselves.“
The initial journey from their village to Bangkok was harrowing, said
Siyathon, who speaks Thai fluently although he is Burmese. “I spent the
night in the forest, walked for a day, and then a truck took me to a
gas station where a taxi brought me to the house (where I stayed),” he
said at a boys’ shelter in Pak Kred in Nonthaburi Province, a northern
suburb of Bangkok. His brother joined him soon afterwards. “If we sold well, we were not beaten, but even if we sold 2,000 or 3,000 baht ($60 or $95) worth, it still wasn’t enough.”
One day, Ongsi, his older brother, managed to escape with some
friends, and eventually made his way home to Mae Sot Province, several
hundred kilometres away. Ongsi returned to Bangkok with his mother, but
they were unable to find Siyathon on their own and sought help from the
Mirror Foundation and the police, who sent plainclothes officers to an
area known for trafficking children. In late April they spotted a child
who fitted the description.
“One female officer called out his name, ‘Siyathon!’ and he turned to
face her. We found him,” said Lt Col Choosak Apaipakdi, of the police
anti-human trafficking division. “When the owner of the home followed
the boy out, we assumed she was the trafficker. Police confronted and
arrested her.”
The UN Inter-Agency Project on Human Trafficking (UNIAP), said the
number of children begging and selling flowers remains unclear, but the
problem is significant. Lisa Rende Taylor, chief technical advisor for
UNIAP for Southeast Asia, said children are being rented or sold by
their families or guardians, and then controlled in order to make money
for someone, and whether or not permission was granted, these children
are victims of trafficking.
“The definition of child trafficking is essentially the act of
recruiting, harbouring, or receiving a child for the purpose of
exploitation. The child could go along with it, the parents at home
could go along with it – it doesn’t matter – there does not need to be
deception or force. If it is a child, if someone receives and controls
them, it is trafficking,” Rende Taylor said. “You just have to walk the
streets of Bangkok or Pattaya (a resort town) to know that this is still
an issue.”
The typical payment for a rented child is reportedly around $25 a
month, she said. However, it is hard to crack down on the trade when
there is a “revolving door at the border”, and a focus on the children
rather than on the criminal perpetrators.
According to the US State Department, Thailand remains a source,
destination, and transit country for trafficking men, women and
children. Most of the trafficked victims identified in Thailand are from
neighbouring countries like Myanmar, Cambodia and Laos, and have been
forced, coerced, or defrauded into labour or commercial sexual
exploitation.
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