Koopkrachtplakkaat

EnergieplakkaatC

173646265 10222054268599783 1356797931624160070 n

Delen van artikels

road e1559307570666
Christine Nambereke left Uganda for Oman last September, thinking we she was on her way to a good-paying job as a domestic worker. When she returned to Uganda this May, she was dead.

She’s just one of 16 Ugandans who have died in the Middle East in the past year. All of them died of unnatural causes and reported being abused.

Take Action: Help End Domestic Slavery

For years there have shocking reports from migrant workers about domestic slavery in the Middle East. And now eastern Uganda is becoming a hotspot for recruiting women and girls, effectively bought in what Ozy calls public slave markets.

Ozy reports:

At fast-spreading weekly markets, some women are promised jobs in the Gulf only to be sold once they get there, while others — many of them girls between the ages of 10 and 18 — are directly and publicly “bought” as slaves in Uganda and then resold in the Middle East, according to Ugandan authorities, Interpol, independent experts, legislators, victims and their families.

The public sale of women started at Arapai, eastern Uganda’s second-largest market located 180 miles northeast of the capital Kampala, in January 2018, says Edina Nagudi, the local government’s officer in charge of the region’s markets.

It began with the auction of around five girls on each day of the market, but the number rose to 20 within two months, she says. The practice quickly spread to other regional markets such as Chapi and Sire. At Arapai alone, up to 50 girls are now auctioned in a day, says Nagudi. Overall, more than 9,000 girls and young women are estimated to have been bought at these markets since last year — for as little as 50,000 shillings ($14), according to Betty Atim, a member of Parliament.

Officially, Uganda bans its citizens from seeking work in most Middle Eastern countries. But the ban hardly works when Ugandans are promised well-paying jobs abroad, often triple what they could make at home.

The Ugandan government is coming under pressure to address the problem. Thus far, the Ugandan police say they plan to raid the eastern Uganda markets where girls are being sold. The country’s Ministry of Gender, Labour and Social Development has also sent a team to Uganda’s east to conduct an investigation on the slave markets.

Even the archbishop of the Anglican Church in Uganda, Stanley Ntagali, is charging the government with failure to tackle the problem.

“The government should ensure that the rights of children are respected and the act of selling them in markets is brought to an end,” he said.

Bron and info: https://www.freedomunited.org/news/public-markets-selling-ugandan-girls-for-as-little-as-14/?trk_msg=9FAA9DLI517KP8EQEIB4B4E2Q0&trk_contact=OS7M16IE8SNLTRRM2FGTNS48UK&trk_sid=STUG6LFM00K5BQOMUCJBB96M0S&utm_source=Listrak&utm_medium=email&utm_term=https%3a%2f%2fwww.freedomunited.org%2fnews%2fpublic-markets-selling-ugandan-girls-for-as-little-as-14%2f&utm_campaign=News+Digest&utm_content=News+Digest_06092019