Myanmar: Human Trafficking Driven by Forced Marriages
23 March 2010
In 2009, two-thirds of the human trafficking cases uncovered by the Myanmar Police Force’s anti-trafficking unit involved the forced marriage of girls and women in
“Most of the trafficked Myanmar women were sold to men in villages and poor communities in China, where Chinese men do not think of this practice as trafficking; instead they consider it as paying a dowry,” said Daw Ohnmar Ei Ei Chaw, UNIAP national project coordinator.
The price paid for a trafficked woman ranges from $2900 to $5800 depending on the woman’s looks and age.
While many of the human trafficking victims are from poor families, Daw Ohnmar Ei Ei Chaw noted that it is not always the case: “[Trafficking] can happen to anyone. We have trafficking victims who are university graduates, people from better-off families, male and married women.”
Compiled from: Juliet Shwe Gaung, “Forced Marriages Driving Human Trafficking, UN Says,” Myanmar Times Online (4 March 2010).
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Please visit the Trafficking in Women section of this website.
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