Page 34 - Dignity and justice for all of us our voices are heard in Thailand
P. 34

Universal Declaration of Human Rights
      A female victim of trafficking
      from Lomsak district,
      Petchaboon province


                                        Voice



        “She worked tirelessly          In a recorded interview conducted by the Ministry of Social Development and Human Security
             to ensure that             in 2006, a Thai woman who had travelled abroad in the hope of finding employment recounts
                                        her story.  The woman, the mother of three children, had decided to go to another country to
           women would not              find her fortune. Instead, she says that she became a victim of slavery and was forced into sex
             continue to fall           work. Her story has been publicized in recent years and has successfully raised the awareness of
                                        many Thai people about the terrible nature of modern-day human trafficking.
            victim to human

               trafficking”             In the late 1990’s, this woman was living in poverty but needed to support her family, including
                                        her husband, a person with a disability, and their three children, when she heard about a job
                                        opportunity in another country. She explains that her good intentions were exploited by an
                                        illegal employment agency that charged her a fee of 40,000 Thai baht. Instead of finding her a
                                        good job, the agency delivered her into the hands of a sex worker gang. She reports that she
                                        was brought to a squalid apartment, told that she had been purchased and that if she wanted
                                        to leave, she would need to reimburse the payment made for her purchase. She was 32 years
                                        old, had been sold and now apparently “owed” a large amount of money, and was forced to
                                        endure vicious beatings, she explains.

                                        She eventually met a Thai man working in that country, who agreed to help her escape.  She
                                        later became quite ill and in October 2005, upon learning that she had cancer, she returned to
                                        Thailand to spend the remainder of her days with her family.  Until her death, she worked
                                        tirelessly to ensure that women would not continue to fall victim to human trafficking.  She
                                        worked with the Ministry of Social Development and Human Security and the Child Protection
                                        Development Foundation to carry out awareness campaigns against human trafficking.
                                        She died when she was 38 years old, on 19 May 2006. Both her story and her considerable
                                        efforts are a stark reminder that much remains to be done to combat human trafficking and
                                        slavery, especially in terms of implementing preventative measures.







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