Photo: Mujahid Safodien/IRIN. Linda and Mahleki were trafficked by a woman they knew from their village
Source: IRIN
QUTHING, 28 June 2012 (IRIN) - At the age of 15 and with no money for
school shoes or a uniform, Linda* was forced to accept that her
education was over and it was time to look for a job. In Lesotho’s
southern Quthing District, where she lived, it is accepted wisdom that
finding a job means crossing the border into South Africa, which
completely surrounds this mountainous kingdom of 1.8 million people and
dwarfs its tiny economy.
Linda’s own mother made the move five years ago and never returned. “I
don’t know where she is,” said Linda, whose sister also lives in South
Africa.
In May 2011, Linda was approached by a woman she knew from her village
who had a business about 50km across the border in the town of
Sterkspruit. “She invited me to come and stay with her and work for her
as a shop assistant,” recalled Linda.
She did not question why she and her new employer had to cross a
freezing river to enter South Africa instead of using the nearest border
post, and for the first three months she was treated well enough and
received a small salary. But when her employer abruptly left, putting a
relative in charge of the shop, no more pay was forthcoming and Linda
embarked on a relationship with the night watchman. By the time her
sister arrived in December to bring her home, she was pregnant.
“I feel so sorry and angry,” said the girl, now eight-months pregnant and living with her ailing grandmother.
Four months after recruiting Linda, her employer returned to the village
and met Mahleki*, another 15-year-old school dropout and orphan. This
time she offered to help the girl attend school in South Africa.
“I didn’t really believe her,” said Mahleki, “but my brother forced me to go because he couldn’t look after me.”
After another river crossing, Mahleki was put on a bus to Rustenberg, a
mining town in the country’s North West Province, and then taken to a
tavern where she worked from 7am until midnight for the next seven
months. In return she received two meals a day and a one-off payment of
R350 ($42) to buy clothes.
In April of this year Maggie Monongoaha, a member of the Lesotho Mounted
Police Service’s Child and Gender Protection Unit (CGPU) who happened
to live in the same village as Mahleki and Linda, made a phone call to
their recruiter demanding she send Mahleki home. The woman complied but
remained in Rustenberg where she faces no legal charges.
What happened to Linda and Mahleki is not unusual in Lesotho but until
recently, it is unlikely that anyone in their community or even local
authorities would have identified them as victims of human trafficking,
which the UN’s 2000 Palermo Protocol defines as: “the recruitment,
transfer, harbouring or receipt of persons, by means of the threat or
use of force or other forms of coercion, of abduction, of fraud, of
deception… for the purpose of exploitation”.
Human trafficking survey
In 2010, the Ministry of Home Affairs together with the UN Development
Programme (UNDP) commissioned a rapid assessment of human trafficking in
Lesotho to try to gauge the magnitude of the problem. The findings
did not provide much in the way of hard data, but did highlight some of
the conditions that have made the country particularly vulnerable to
trafficking both internally from rural to urban areas and
transnationally. These include Lesotho’s high levels of poverty and
unemployment, the large number of children orphaned by HIV/AIDS, and its
porous borders and long tradition of migration to South Africa which
began with Basotho men going to work in the mines.
The report noted that men, women and children are trafficked not only
for sexual exploitation, but also for forced labour on farms, for cattle
herding, construction work and domestic work.
In January 2011, the Lesotho government passed anti-trafficking
legislation under pressure from the USA, an important donor which had
placed Lesotho on its Tier 2 Watch List for countries not showing
sufficient progress in combating human trafficking.
“It’s common knowledge that it was rushed through,” said Sonya Martinez,
director of the Beautiful Dream Society (BDS), a faith-based US NGO
which runs a shelter and transition programme for victims of human
trafficking in Maseru, the capital. “The move to pass the law was very
good, but training and infrastructure are lacking.”
Although the CPGU has been tasked with investigating trafficking cases,
no budget has been allocated and training of its officers has so far
been limited to Maseru. Of 40 cases reported in 2011, only one
conviction was made under the new law and the offender was later
released from a 15-year prison sentence after successfully appealing the
verdict.
The recently released US State Department’s 2012 Trafficking in Persons Report
notes that the government has yet to complete a national action plan on
human trafficking which would guide implementation of the new law, and
that NGOs are the sole providers of protective services to victims.
NGO helps victims
Since opening its shelter in April 2011, BDS has helped 21 trafficking
victims with trauma counselling, skills training and legal assistance,
about half of them Basotho nationals and the rest Ethiopians,
Zimbabweans and one Chinese. Martinez noted that the foreign victims
were often more visible and tended to be perceived as more serious than
the cases involving locals. “I believe there are many more local cases,”
she said, adding that orphans and young people with a history of abuse
or who were the sole breadwinners for their family were particularly
vulnerable.
Martinez said the greatest barrier to prosecuting more traffickers is
the lack of resources for the CPGU to travel to South Africa to
investigate suspected cases and bring victims home. “Often nothing ever
happens to the perpetrators in South Africa,” she told IRIN. “We’ve
helped out with funding for rescues on a couple of occasions; the
government hasn’t budgeted any funds for this.”
Senior Superintendent and Head of the CGPU Mamojela Letsie said her unit
relied on a good working relationship with the South African Police
Service for tip-offs which had resulted in the rescue of several men
from Quthing who were promised jobs in a factory but ended up “sold” to
remote cattle posts.
However, a CPGU officer based in Mohale’s Hoek, about 50km north of
Quthing, said that although his office sometimes received reports of
locals promised employment in South Africa who ended up being exploited,
it was difficult for them to follow up.
“For us at district level, it’s not yet clear how we can investigate cross-border cases,” he said.
At the level of prevention and awareness-raising, both the CPGU and the
Ministry of Home Affairs are conducting campaigns in areas identified as
high risk. NGOs including BDS, Lesotho Save the Children and World
Vision are also targeting schoolchildren, border officials and radio
listeners with information about the threat of human trafficking.
But Letsie admitted that most Basotho still do not know what human
trafficking is. “Once people know, we think there’ll be many more
cases,” she said.
*not their real names