Skip to main content

Malaysia Increases Surveillance as Human Trafficking Increases



10 June 2009

In Malaysia, authorities have increased border surveillance amid reports that people-smuggling is on the increase as more Afghans arrive seeking illegal passage to third countries like Australia.

Afghans hoping to escape years of conflict in their home country are legally arriving in increasing numbers in Malaysia where most are automatically granted a three-month tourist visa.

Once here, the dealings begin between local agents and Afghans prepared to spend up to $15,000 for a boat ride to Australia. The vessels are rickety, the trip dangerous, and customs officials at the other end are always unwelcoming towards illegal immigrants.

source: http://www.voanews.com/english/2009-06-10-voa23.cfm

A Jakarta-based regional security analyst with Concord Consulting, Keith Loveard, says countries such as Malaysia and Indonesia have made a significant effort in dealing with the issue. But he says the problem needs to be tackled at the root causes in places like Afghanistan, Iraq, and Pakistan.

"Until such time as you get some meaningful economic progress in those countries, you are not going to have much appeal for the middle people who have normal middle-class aspirations for themselves and children to stay and do something about it," said Loveard. "They do not see a way out of there, so they are willing to take enormous chances to find an alternative."

Of the hundreds that have attempted the sea crossing to Australia this year, some have drowned and many more have been turned back or deported to their country of origin, after losing their life savings.

The few that made it to Australia's shores faced growing public hostility and a lengthy period in detention while the authorities process their claims. Most are then forcibly repatriated back to Afghanistan or the border camps of Pakistan.

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

US Stocks Surge to Highest Level of Year on Housing News

By Mil Arcega Washington 24 July 2009 The benchmark Dow Jones industrial average of the top US companies broke the 9,000 point mark Thursday on strong earnings reports and an improving housing picture. Wall Street extended its recent gains Thursday after a new housing report showed sales of previously owned U.S. homes rose at an annual pace of 3.6 percent in June. It was the third straight month of rising home sales. "The markets are reacting to the news today in the context of other things they've been seeing and reading in recent weeks, and that's that the economy does appear to have hit a bottom," said David Resler, chief economist at Nomura Securities. Investors reacted positively to earnings reports from Ford, Ebay, AT&T and higher sales of Apple's new iPhone. Resler says the positive earnings give a much needed confidence boost for the struggling U.S. economy. "I think...

Dangdut divorcees to reinvigorate scene

The Jakarta Post | Thu, 07/21/2011 9:47 PM JAKARTA: Wanting to reinvigorate dangdut, Anang Hermansyah has added some color to the genre by forming Tiga Kembang (Three Flowers), a trio of divorced dangdut singers. He wants dangdut to become the music of Indonesia all over again, he said. Cici Paramida, Ikke Nurjanah and Kirstina were Anang’s picks for the dangdut group. But, wanting such huge names, how did he make this dangdut supergroup happen? “I was hanging out with my friend Irvan Nat. Irvan said, ‘this song Goyang Sayang would be great if it was sung by those three, can this be arranged?’ Then Irvan Nat called each of them,” Anang said as reported by kapanlagi.com. But the song was not written for Tiga Kembang but for Krisdayanti and Siti. Because the latter project ended up not happening, the song was given to Tiga Kembang. Anang said Goyang Sayang was filled with nuance, the rhythm of the song upbeat and fresh. “I witnessed the development of dangdut and how it beca...