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Heartless.
That’s the treatment we give millions of Pakistanis who toil abroad to annually
earn more than $ 4 billion foreign exchange so that the government can squander
it away according to its whims.
The government and private sharks reserve the worst treatment for those who were
trafficked abroad — smuggled or sent through illegal routes and means — since
the Middle East oil boom of the early 1970s. Private sharks, aided and abetted
by the government’s very own law enforcers and immigration bureaucracy,
trafficked these thousands, who paid hefty sums of money to get smuggled merely
as chattel — a commodity bundled and bailed as any other export. Millions of
families and generations of those who paid to be trafficked were ruined, as all
the stakeholder sharks amassed huge amounts of wealth. Hundreds of them were
thrown back home, maimed, injured, mutilated and amputated. For thousands of
families, the homecoming of their dear ones was tragic. Many families received
nothing but bodies.
One government after the other pretended they were protecting their nationals
abroad. Later, dozens of national and international conferences, meetings and
seminars — the latest one in Islamabad has just ended — revealed that the
suffering of our own people in hostile, unknown lands has not abated.
Dilshad Nasir spent Rs. 450,000, raised by selling his father’s taxi and
mother’s dowry, to get trafficked to Greece. As the latest anti-trafficking
international conference was going on in Islamabad, Dilshad Nasir hobbled home,
without one leg and the other leg without a foot, snow-bitten and amputated in
Greece. End of the story. End of his family. Prime Minister Shaukat Aziz, can
you help him? Can you stop this long, continuing tragedy, turning hundreds of
our young men into Dilshad Nasirs? Can his tormentors and looters, Muhammad
Arshad Warraich of village Maajar, Gujrat and the mafia, be put behind bars
after public trials? Arshad alone has trafficked 500 people to Athens on fake
travel documents, told Aftab Ahmed Sherpao, speaking at the three-day regional
conference on ‘Development of a Conceptual Framework and Strategies to Combat
Human Trafficking’. It was organized by the International Organization for
Migration (IOM) and Canadian International Development Agency (CIDA). The
conference, as a follow up of the formation of Pakistan Thematic Group on Human
Trafficking, had gathered all stakeholders to study the crime of trafficking and
its complexities and the action to combat it.
Not long ago, so many people from across Pakistan, specially Gujrat, were being
trafficked into Britain that it compelled Prime Minister Tony Blair to consider
banning PIA flights landing at UK airports.
“This action against the scandal would have been too strong and would have
permanently damaged relations between the two countries. This is why Mr. Blair
was advised against it,” diplomats told me.
Should Islamabad’s anti-trafficking conference adopt Dilshad Nasir as its tragic
symbol, an eye-opening ‘mascot’, if you like that label? I think the
Excellencies from Afghanistan, Bangladesh, India, Iran, Nepal, Pakistan, Sri
Lanka and Turkmenistan who attended the conference, should. This symbol lays
bare the intricacies of the task ahead of them. Trafficking violates human
rights. Its scale is particularly alarming in South Asia, home to the largest
number of the global poor, destitute, malnourished and the ill.
Sherpao told the conference, “The menace of human trafficking is a matter of
great concern…In order to control it, anti-trafficking legislation is being
updated.” For this purpose, the government has also signed an agreement with
Iran, India and Greece. Afghanistan also wishes to join in. Sherpao said,
“Pakistan will share its expertise with our regional partners to ensure more
effective prevention of human trafficking.”
Abdul Monem Mustafa, IOM’s regional representative, said his organisation has
been working with Pakistan for four years to “tackle this form of irregular
migration”. It is running a shelter home for victims of trafficking to provide
them medical, psychological and legal help, besides their safe repatriation to
and rehabilitation in their country.
The conference explored the idea of formation of a South Asian Association for
Regional Cooperation (SAARC) Police Force to curb human trafficking in this
region.
The participants proposed “exemplary punishment to human traffickers through
special courts,” and enforcement of anti-trafficking laws at country and
regional level. It agreed to provide legal assistance to the regional countries
under the SAARC Convention on bilateral and multilateral treaties on extradition
and extra-territorial jurisdiction.
The region’s governments can also cooperate under the SAARC Convention on
Preventing and Combating Trafficking in Women and Children.
Besides stiff legislation, cleaning up of law enforcers, immigration officials
and the police, and a speedy system of justice, the region also direly needs a
national and regional code of conduct for licensed recruiters and travel agents.
Canada’s John J. Moore appreciated Pakistan’s efforts to control human
trafficking that led to its removal from the watch list of countries with
growing trafficking.
But Zubaida Jalal, Minister for Social Welfare & Special Education, was of the
view that, “Without joint efforts of Pakistan, Iran and Afghanistan, smuggling
of humans cannot be checked in the region. Women and children are the main
victims of trafficking. It encourages prostitution and other social evils.” The
continued smuggling of young children out of Pakistan into the Gulf states to
serve as camel jockeys, and the growing trafficking of Central Asian women for
prostitution into Pakistan and other regional countries extending right up to
the Gulf, too, need immediate curbing. Sitting at Dubai airport, I have seen
chartered planes bringing in Central Asian girls, brought mainly for
prostitution in the region.
What is the scale of trafficking? Tariq Pervaiz, Director General FIA, says
trafficking is slowing down. Britain has moved Pakistan from a “high risk” to
“low risk” country, “on the basis of FIA’s performance in checking illegal
immigration to UK.” The US State Department, acknowledging FIA’s role in
checking trafficking, has improved the country’s rating. However, the biggest
challenge being faced by FIA is to reduce human trafficking through Iran and
Turkey. 20,000 persons smuggled to different countries were deported and sent
back to Pakistan. They included 10,000 deported from Amman and 10,000 from Iran,
Turkey and Greece last year. An inter-agency task force headed by Tariq Pervaiz
was formed in September 2005. It has arrested 3,500 persons while crossing the
Pakistan-Iran border. Nearly 3,900 cases of human smuggling were finalized in
2005, up from 2,393 in 2004, of which 1,125 cases led to conviction in 2005, up
from 585 convictions in 2004. A record 1,006 human smugglers were arrested in
2005. In 2005, 554 persons were stopped from travelling on fake documents,
compared to 267 in 2004.
Moving forward, yes. But a lot more needs to be done.
All this shows the scale and magnitude of human trafficking. All this also
reveals the huge task still ahead to curb human trafficking, as well as
preventing smuggling of women for prostitution and trafficking of our children
abroad. It is a call for action all around. It is a call for everyone — a call
not to be heartless.
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