Wednesday, November 22, 2006

Keep Girls Safe

Of all of the crimes perpetrated against the poor of our world, perhaps the most despicable is the practice of human trafficking. This dark, underworld industry is at its most appalling when it targets children. We don’t hear about it much as we go about our merry lives in the West, but this evil trade is alive and well in most of the developing nations of our world. At its best, the kids face a life of indentured slavery in a dark factory making the clothes that we wear or some of the daily products that we use. At its worst, girls as young as ten years old are locked in brothels and forced to perform hideous sexual acts, 24/7.


In Asia, the country of Thailand is considered to be the largest exporter of young girls for the world sex trade. Here is what happens. Recruiters from Bangkok travel to the remote villages of northern Thailand with enticing “offers of employment” for the children of the village. The parents are told that there is a huge demand in Bangkok for workers in the restaurant and entertainment business. Their children will get good jobs as waitresses, actresses, musicians, dancers, or karaoke workers. Others may be offered jobs in factories, or as custodial workers in the big offices in Bangkok. To poor, undocumented, indigenous parents, barely able to feed their children, this seems like a wonderful opportunity. Without Thai citizenship, they are not able to travel outside of the province they are in, which severely limits the options of a child from the Hill Tribes. But, now suddenly a door has opened!


Parents are told that special arrangements have been made that will allow their children to travel to and live in the city. The deal is then often sweetened by offering the parents money up front for the work that the children will do. By accepting the offer of employment, parents receive an “advance payment” of about $150 USD for every child that they sign up. This is the equivalent of about one year’s income for the parents and makes the proposal very enticing to the unsuspecting villagers. Not only would their children now be assured of regular food every day, a good job in Bangkok, opportunity for a better future then they would have in the village, but they also receive an instant year’s salary. Many parents fall for the scam and sign a contract that they cannot read. As the children pull out of the village on the back of a pickup, it is usually the last time they are seen or heard of by the community that has let them go.


Some of the children may actually stay in Thailand, but many others are exported to industrialized nations such as Japan or America where they locked up in highly secure apartment buildings where they are sexually exploited.


To combat this evil industry, ADRA Thailand has launched a program called, “Keep Girls Safe”. ADRA workers go out into the remote villages and educate parents about what really happens to their children after they wave goodbye. Young girls who may be in particular danger, such as orphans, are invited to a safe house where they are given good housing, food and an education. As part of the program, these girls also visit schools and villages throughout the region to do peer education. Through skits and talks, they let other girls know about what really happens to “waitresses” and “karaoke workers”. Parents are offered positive alternatives, such as scholarships for their children, literacy classes for them and income generating programs to help them meet the daily needs of their family.


This powerful program is having an excellent effect. Word is getting out and recruiters are having a more difficult time meeting their quotas!


If you would like to help ADRA in this wonderful program, please visit the ADRA website for your country and make a donation. Be sure to specify that you would like your donation to go to the “Keep Girls Safe” program in Thailand.

posted by Frank Spangler @ 7:32 PM   1 comments

Sunday, November 19, 2006

People Without A Country

Born in the remote jungles in the highlands of the northern part of Thailand, ethnic people, numbering in the hundreds of thousands, are without documentation. If you have ever visited South-east Asia, you may have noticed these colorful tribal peoples, often referred to as "Hill Tribe" people. They show up in markets, selling their handy crafts or jungle herbs. Their traditional dress, and unique culture and customs are so intriguing, that in many parts of Southeast Asia, it is possible for tourists to arrange overnight tours to hike into the jungle and spend a night in a Hill Tribe village.

Like the Amerindian people of South America, these ethnic people groups of South East Asia can be quite nomadic and drift past country borders unnoticed. The woman standing in a Thai market selling her crafts could just as easily have been born in Burma, China, Laos, Cambodia or Vietnam as in Thailand. She probably has no idea herself what country her parents were living in when she entered the world.

Unable to prove that they were born in Thailand, these ethnic people are not able to obtain Thai citizenship. Depending on the tribe they are from, they may be able to obtain an identity card, but without citizenship they are not able to purchase land, and travel within Thailand is restricted. While education is open and "free" to all residents of Thailand, all other government services that are free or subsidized to citizens are not available to ethnic groups. A trip to the hospital would be very difficult financially for a tribal person.

Because many of the villages of these tribal groups are not accessible by road and lack even the most basic services, such as running water or toilets, government health workers and teachers rarely make more then a fleeting visit. Recently, new government policies are putting increasing pressure on ethnic people groups. In an effort to preserve the highlands from illegal poaching and logging, new laws restrict the agricultural activity that the people are able to do around their villages. Loosing their ability to produce food, the people are being forced to consider a new life in the lowlands.

For the first time, tribal peoples are considering a new option. Rather then migrate to an even more remote jungle location, like their ancestors before them, they are deciding to integrate into modern Thai life and culture. Like most parents everywhere, these mothers and fathers want the very best for their children, and are attracted to the government schools in the valleys. Perhaps, if their sons and daughters could get a good education, they would be able to have a better life and perhaps even be able to support them in their old age.

As a result of this new trend, many poor communities are rapidly springing up around the established government schools in the lowlands. Removed from their life of subsistence from the jungle, these indigenous people are now facing a difficult new life in the valleys. With limited employment opportunities, each day is a struggle just to survive. Average incomes hover around $150/year which is barely enough to cover rent from their new Thai landlords and food. As I walked through some of these villages, I noticed that every boy carried with him a sling shot. Constantly looking up in the trees, they were hoping to be able to add something to the evening meal of rice and duck egg.

On some of these unsuspecting souls, an age-old scam against the poor, is perpetrated. They are persuaded by unscrupulous people that they have become eligible to purchase land and are even extended credit to "buy" rice fields where they can start a new life as a valley rice farmer. Their new "friends" are even willing to extend them the credit that they need for tools, seed and fertilizer to help them get started. When it comes time for the harvest, their friendly merchant will even buy the rice from them so they do not need to worry about how they will transport the heavy sacs of rice to the local town. As you might suspect, after the interest, the inflated price of the seed and fertilizer, and the low price that they receive for the harvested rice, these new farmers never get ahead. They are told, "if you want to produce more rice, you need to buy more land, or use more fertilizer". As each year goes by, they become deeper and deeper in debt.

I told my ADRA guide that this sounded like the story of a song we have in my country, about how poor people working in the mines of early America, would become so indebted to the company store that the would never be able to break away from a life of virtual slavery. She said, "Oh, here too! In Thailand, many factories hire undocumented workers from other countries and they must purchase all of their goods from the factory store, at inflated prices. Over time they get deeper and deeper in debt and can never leave the factory."

If you have ever visited Bangkok and marveled at the highways, beautiful high rise office buildings and wonderful new transportation systems, you may think that Thailand is a very highly developed country and no longer in need of the services of the development programs of an organization like ADRA. But, it is to these poor ethnic people-groups, struggling to find their identity in a strange new world, that ADRA works. With the co-operation and labor of the people, ADRA develops water systems for the new settlements, and follows up with training in basic health and principles of sanitation.

Then, with some of the most basic necessities covered, ADRA will invite people to join co-operative groups for education in adult literacy in the Thai language, simple finance and agricultural instruction. Basic skills are developed into income generating activities and through the strength of the co-op, people are able to receive small, low-interest loans to initiate their new businesses, from a community revolving fund. The people are educated about the schemes of the unscrupulous land owners and merchants, and how to avoid getting into debilitating debt. They are shown how to decrease household expenses, use natural fertilizers and market their products at a profit.

Even though government education is considered "free", the costs of uniforms, school supplies, transportation to the school and food at the school is usually beyond the reach of the new settlers. ADRA does it's best to try and arrange scholarships for as many of the children as they can. A good education for the children is the best chance that these families have of breaking free from a life of poverty.

Hopefully, as the years pass, the government of Thailand will recognize these people as assets rather then liabilities and fully integrate them into their society. In the meantime it is organizations like ADRA and the generous support of their donors, that help "people without a country", like the ethnic groups of Thailand, survive, as they make their transition from the hills to a new life in the lowlands. If you would like to help ADRA serve these ethnic groups of Thailand, please be in touch with your local ADRA office to make a contribution.

posted by Frank Spangler @ 1:23 AM   0 comments