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| Many Rohingya Muslims are leaving Bangladesh's squalid refugee camps, in an attempt to reach Malaysia and Indonesia for work (AFP Photo/JANUAR) |
Australia pledged US$55 million to fight human trafficking in Southeast Asia on Thursday, vowing to tackle "modern slavery" ensnaring vulnerable populations across the region, from low-paid workers to underage brides and Rohingya refugees.
The funding
is part of a 10-year scheme that includes training for police and judges to
probe criminal networks, Australia's foreign affairs minister Marise Payne said
at an Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) meeting in Bangkok.
"The
initiative will also support joint international investigations to help rescue
victims and ensure traffickers are charged," she said.
Rising
demand for cheap labour, especially in the fishing and construction industries,
has spurred trafficking networks across Southeast Asia where porous borders
allow for the easy movement of people.
China's
thirst for brides from the Mekong region has also fuelled an illicit trade of
mostly young women, thanks to Beijing's decades-long one-child policy and
preference for boys.
"There
are many deep-rooted factors that enable transnational crime, from corruption
through to the unequal status of children and other vulnerable groups,"
Payne added.
The
persecution of Rohingya Muslims in Myanmar's restive Rakhine state is also
prompting new and dangerous networks to form.
Some 740,000 of the stateless Rohingya fled Myanmar for Bangladesh, following a brutal military crackdown in 2017 -- but many are leaving the squalid refugee camps in an attempt to reach Malaysia and Indonesia for work, where they are vulnerable to exploitation.
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Australia's
Foreign Minister Marise Payne pledged $80 million to combat human
trafficking
in Southeast Asia (AFP Photo/Romeo GACAD)
|
Some 740,000 of the stateless Rohingya fled Myanmar for Bangladesh, following a brutal military crackdown in 2017 -- but many are leaving the squalid refugee camps in an attempt to reach Malaysia and Indonesia for work, where they are vulnerable to exploitation.
The
sophisticated and lucrative trafficking trade in Southeast Asia was exposed in
2015 when Thailand tried to shut down a million-dollar people smuggling route
for Rohingya Muslims from Myanmar.
The route
came to light after the discovery of the migrants' mass graves in southern
Thailand.
Payne
highlighted the Rohingya's plight on Thursday.
"We
are also concerned by the situation in Rakhine State. We're committed to
working with Myanmar, with Bangladesh, with ASEAN, and other partners towards a
long term and durable solution," she said.
John
Quinley from Fortify Rights, which documents trafficking cases in the region,
called on ASEAN countries to boost cooperation and punish perpetrators.
"Human
trafficking is a transnational crime that needs a transnational solution,"
he said.
In 2016,
there were an estimated 25 million people trapped in modern slavery across
Asia-Pacific, according to the Global Slavery Index.
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