Cochin: Ending one and half month period
saga, a Malayali women from Ernakulam who was recruited by an
agent to work in Oman as housemaid, has reached home safely.
In a special interview given to keralamonitor , the girl has
alleged that even though she was recruited by one Malayali agent
-Mr.Maniraj from Ernakula to work as housemaid, he had been behaving
badly with her. (View her letter
written after reaching Cochin)
"I reached Muscat on June 10 and
the (person who recruited me) came to the airport and took me
to his house. Since then he had been behaving and talking badly,"
she said without revealing details. She alleged that he forced
her to give a written statement, which was read out in front
of a video camera to prove that there is no complaint about the
whole episode. The girl was told that she will be put behind
bars for her entire life if she refused to give such a statement.
"They did not harm me physically, but I faced severe mental
torture for one and half months. I never thought I would be able
to escape from that place."
"The first day when I asked him
where I will be sleeping, he told me that all girls who come
to work there sleep in his bedroom." As she refused to obey
such commands and was sleeping in a beauty shop (in the same
building) till her departure. She also refused to serve liquor
to visitors. There is illicit liquor sale and a beauty shop in
the same house .
"After the first Asinet news about
me, I was taken to the Police Station and to the Indian Embassy."
Due to their threats and to escape from the place I told them
"I have no problem." After the second Asianet News,
they took me again to the police station and Indian Embassy .
"I told one Malayali Indian Embassy official (Rahim) about
all the problems and he told the problem to the Indian Ambassador.
Next day my employer forced me to write a statement saying that
I had no problem and this statement was given to the Indian Embassy."
"Next day they made me read the same statement in front
of a Video Camera. When I refused to make the statement in front
of the camera, they threatened me with dire consequences-- I
was told that throughout the life, I would be put in prison in
Oman. Therefore I obeyed and made the statement in front of the
video camera." "Since nobody was there to speak on
my behalf or support me in Gul , I gave such written statements
to the Embassy," she said. When she was produced, the Embassy
did not call her neighbour who made the first complaint about
the case or involve any social organisations.
"They were searching for the people
who complained to the Indian Embassy and the correspondent. They
threatened me saying that whoever is behind this news will be
found out and she will be send home only after that."
The unmarried young Malayali lady (30 years) from a village
in Ernakulam district was brought to the Gulf to work as a sales
girl in a beauty shop. According to Keralamonitor.com investigations,
one Mr. Suresh Kumar, a local visa agent in Ernakulam gave the
visa issued by one Mr. Maniraj, who is known to be running a
beauty shop in Oman.. She arrived in Muscat on June 10, 2001
and after that the parents had no information about her whereabouts.
Inquiries made through a neighbour indicated that the girl was
in the custody of some people and according to him the girl might
have been locked up in some unknown places.
Due to the repeated efforts made by her neighbours who made
a formal complaint to the Indian Embassy and the Royal Oman Police,
the lady was contacted for a brief notice and she said wanted
to escape from the place. The story was published in the media
and the lady was produced before the Indian Embassy where the
officials claimed that she was willing to give a written statement
saying that there is "no complaint" against anybody.
According anonymous phone calls received at her residence
in Kerala, the girl was to be sent back to Trivandrum Airport
soon. Another anonymous phone call to the neighbour from a similar
lady said the girl is being locked up in a room without giving
any food she refused to do what the sponsors wanted her to do.
Even two weeks after this episode, the Indian Embassy officials
were keeping studied silence and the girls worried mother did
not get any information about her daughter. Her mother sent another
formal complaint to the Indian Ambassador informing him about
the entire story and the local Malayam media published the story,
Indian Embassy officials called the sponsor again and the girl
was produced before the Embassy officials. Repeating the same
old style, the officials obtained a written statement from the
girl saying that "she has no complaint"
A Public Notice issued by an anonymous
Gulf based Socio-Cultural Organisation about the Growing number
of Malayalis involved in bringing Kerala women as housemaids,
office secretaries, cooks, etc to work in immoral trade.View
Other Recent Cases
The story of this Malayali girl is the situation facing a
number of innocent girls who are lured into a lucrative immoral
trafficking racket from India to various Gulf countries. According
to a Kerala based cultural association, there are more than 15
main Malayali agents in Muscat alone who have been regularly
bringing innocent girls from different parts of India, mainly
Kerala and forcing them to do prostitution.Investigations made
by Keralamonitor.com revealed that the flesh trade has grown
like a big industry in various Gulf countries and many Malayalis
including ladies are engaged in such dubious deals.
Read the case of a Malayali nurse who was brought to one of
the Gulf countries by a visa agent who promised her a work in
a good hospital. It was only after reaching the Gullf country
that the lady realised that she was brought to work as a prostitute.
Naturally the good looking girl was unwilling to obey her sponsors
and was locked up in a room. Gradually she was forced "to
do business" and the way she escaped from the brothel is
similar to a Bollywood story. When a sympathetic Malayali customer
came to the brothel, she narrated her tragic story to him. As
the customer was having a mobile phone with him, the lady made
a phone call to the hospital in Hydrabad where she was working
and send an SOS to the doctor, who made a complaint to the concerned
embassies and other authorites. This girl was fortunate enough
to escape from the brothel, but we believe that there are several
brothels in various Gulf countries where innocent girls are brought
to work in the immoral trade. These girls are totally at the
mercy of the Malayali goons who keep them their passport and
visa, labour card and they are cut off from the outside world.
If any girl is creating problem or intransigent, she will be
handed over to "Pakistanis" or "Bangladeshi"
gangs. The purpose is to prevent such girls from communicating
with Malayali customers.
How the Gang Operates:
The immoral trafficking gang members have a strong network
of agents, subagents, pimps, Arab sponsors and influencial contacts
everywhere. These agents target economically poor families with
good looking girls and promise them lucrative jobs in the Gulf.
Girls are given a rosy picture about the potential benefit from
the Gulf job as housemaids and some ladies are also employed
to lure girls to the racket. It is learned that many of the Malayalis
who bring girls to the Gulf region are from the Northern part
of Kerala but they target girls from the Southern parts. Travel
agents who are specialising in this trade do not recruit people
from their locality and attract girls from other regions through
local agents. Girls are brought to the Gulf in the guise of working
as beautician, housemaids, baby sitters, cooks and even nurses.
According to sources, there are main agents who control the flow
of girls to the Gilf region and in each country there is a main
supplier who give these girls on sub contract basis to brothels
in different regions of that country.
In addition to the established players in the market, anybody
who failed to make good money in the Gulf are offered lucrative
business options: If you can arrange a secure room and bring
customers for the trade, the main agent is willing to supply
girls on profit sharing basis. In such brothels silently run
by Malayalis in residential areas, girls are send for a particular
period and taken back after the working hours. In order to avoid
problems from law enforcement authorites, the agents also manage
to make duplicate marriage certificates from Kerala and Indian
embassies.
It is learned that in some of the embassies, corrupt officials
are also part of the racket and they arrange marriage certificates
for girls brough by the gang. There are several agents who make
marriage certificates in return for Rs. 2500 and in case the
certificate is needed the same day, the rate will go up to Rs.6000.
With the help of such documents, agents and girls are apparently
living like a family in residential areas giving no room for
suspicion. Even if there is a police raid, the culprits go scot
free because they are living as a nromal family. The male members
of the family, sometimes an elderly man, bring customers from
outside and the business goes normally. There are a number of
players in the racket including women, politicians, travel agents
and even some highly placed officials.