Nepali women are being trafficked to China and sold as
wives
Bride-buying is becoming
increasingly prevalent in China, where men far outnumber women.
Shuvam Dhungana
Shuvam Dhungana
Published
at : September 9, 2019
Sunita Tamang said her mother was worried about her marriage
prospects.
With a small income from farming,
there wasn’t much room for the 22-year-old from Lamjung to consider marriage.
That’s when she met Bharat Tamang, from the same town, who told her all about
China: lucrative jobs, great facilities, and a red passport that she too could
get if she married a Chinese citizen.
“I wasn’t
convinced at first but he was persistent and I started to think that it could
be beneficial, not only for me but also for my mother,” Sunita told the Post,
recalling the conversation with Bharat, who would arrange her marriage with a
Chinese man she had never even met. “I didn’t have any proper work to do here,
so I agreed.”
Bharat took
Sunita to meet a woman, who convinced her that this was a good opportunity for
her. The woman then brought her to Kathmandu, where they stayed at the Tokha
home of a family. Sunita was introduced to Rina Tamang, who spoke fluent
Mandarin. Over the next ten days in Tokha, Rina showed Sunita photos of her
potential groom on social media.
“She
arranged a meeting with the man, who had come from China to get married,” said
Sunita. “The three of us met at BG Mall in Gongabu and after some conversation
with him, Rina told me to arrange all the required documents for marriage.”
Sunita never
really spoke to the man, Qin Liyang of Hubei, but she agreed to marry him,
based on the stories that everyone else had told her. After all the necessary
documents were ready, she was given a ticket for August 28 and told to board
the 4pm flight to Guangzhou en route to Wuhan in Hubei province. But at the
last moment, Sunita got cold feet.
“I was
afraid to go to a foreign country with someone I didn’t even know,” she told
the Post. She turned her phone off, never boarded the flight, and returned home
in Lamjung.
Sunita narrowly escaped becoming a victim of human traffickers’ latest method
in Nepal, trafficking Nepali women, mostly from rural areas, to China by luring
them into marrying Chinese men. When the women get to China, they are then sold
to other Chinese men in a practice known as “bride buying”, according to the
Anti Human Trafficking Bureau of Nepal Police.
On August
31, Nepal Police arrested 10 people from Tribhuvan International Airport
on suspicion of trafficking. Among those arrested were Bharat Tamang, Rina
Tamang, Amrita Gurung and Parbati Gurung—all involved in convincing Sunita to
marry a Chinese man—in addition to four Chinese nationals and two Nepali women
they were taking along as their wives.
“Our
investigations led to the rescue of five women—two from Lamjung and one each
from Sunsari, Chitwan and Kaski,” said DSP Sudheer Raj Shahi of the Anti Human
Trafficking Bureau.
This was the
first instance of “bride buying” since 2015, when police had rescued six women
from similar situations—five were being sent to South Korea and one to China.
This time, all women were headed to Hubei, a small land-locked province in
central China.
“At her home
in Tokha, Parbati would give girls training on becoming a perfect bride to
Chinese men while Rina worked as a middle-woman since she spoke both Nepali and
Mandarin,” said Shahi.
Chinese men
pay around Rs 1.5 million to marry Nepali women, according to Senior
Superintendent of Police Ishwar Babu Karki of the Anti-Trafficking Bureau. They
also provide lavish gifts worth up to Rs 60,000 to potential brides, he said.
This helps to convince the girls and their families that they will have a
better life in China.
“Agents are
able to convince families that their daughters will have a luxurious life in
China. I was surprised to learn that one family had already sent their younger
daughter and was in the process of sending their older daughter too,” said
Karki.
China’s now-repealed ‘one-child policy’ has led to a grossly-skewed sex ratio,
with more men than women. In 2015, the sex ratio at birth was 113.5 boys for every 100 girls. This
gender gap has made it difficult for many Chinese men to find wives and has
fuelled demand for women trafficked from abroad. Once the women reach mainland
China, they are resold to other men looking for wives.
“In the
past, the majority of women used to be trafficked into China from Cambodia and
Vietnam but they have now tightened regulations. So now traffickers are
targeting countries like Nepal, Pakistan and India,” said Karki.
Nepal’s
Human Trafficking and Transportation Act 2007 does not limit trafficking to
taking “a person out of the country for the purposes of buying and selling”;
trafficking is also defined as “taking anyone from his/her home, place of
residence or from a person by any means such as enticement, inducement,
misinformation, forgery, tricks, coercion, abduction, hostage, allurement,
influence, threat, abuse of power and by means of inducement, fear, threat or
coercion to the guardian or custodian and keeping him/her in one’s custody or
taking to any place within Nepal or abroad or handing him/her over to somebody
else for the purpose of prostitution and exploitation.”
According to
Anjana Shakya, chairperson of the Alliance Against Trafficking of Women and
Children, if a person is taken abroad for one purpose and ‘used’ for another, that
too may be defined as trafficking.
“Although
Chinese nationals take Nepali women by following all legal processes, these
women are at high risk of being used as sex slaves or unpaid labourers,” said
Shakya.
According to
a Human Rights Watch report on bride buying, “women and girls are typically
locked in a room and raped repeatedly, with the goal of getting them pregnant
quickly so they can provide a baby for the family. After giving birth, some are
allowed to escape—but forced to leave their children behind.”
But because
these Chinese traffickers are legally married to the Nepali women, it is
difficult to establish a case for trafficking, said police.
“Their intention is wrong but they have all the required documents,” said
Shahi. “However, we are still verifying the documents. We will submit our
investigation report to the court and the court will decide whether to punish
them or not.”
According to
the Anti-Trafficking Bureau, those arrested admitted to having sent six women
to China. Investigations are ongoing to ascertain just how many women have been
trafficked similarly.
Shuvam Dhungana
Shuvam Dhungana is a crime reporter for The
Kathmandu Post. He previously worked for The Himalayan Times and Republica.
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