Our staff was monitoring at a train station when they noticed two minor boys, Pankaj* (13) and Aman* (12). The boys were shabbily dressed and looked worried and scared, so our team approached them for questioning.
At first, the boys refused to respond, but after our monitors explained their work and assured they only wanted to help, Pankaj and Aman slowly started sharing their story.
They told our team they had been visiting a market near their village when they met a man named Kanha* who offered to take them to a "nice place." Although he didn’t mention the name of the place, he promised they would have a lot of fun, and he eventually convinced them to accompany him. They collected their meager belongings and went with him to an unknown destination.
Since they were traveling without any money, they were in a vulnerable situation and did not know what to do. With no other option, they ended up following some street boys who were collecting bottles and cardboard for money. They began doing the same thing and managed to earn enough money to barely survive. Pankaj and Aman spent their days wandering around the market area, eating scraps of food distributed to the street dwellers. At night, they slept near the shops.
After spending a few days this way, they decided to try to return home. They had no knowledge of the train system and did not know which train to board or how to return home. However, Pankaj and Aman were determined to somehow get back to their village, which is why they were at the train station when our staff first noticed them and intervened.
After listening to their story, our staff comforted them and offered their assistance. They took the young boys to the police station and explained their situation to the officer in charge. After receiving medical care, Pankaj and Aman were sent to a shelter home where they will stay until our team can locate their parents and help them return safely home.
Our staff was monitoring at the border when they noticed the couple trying to take the two girls across at night. During questioning, it was evident that the young girls were unaware of their destination. When our staff contacted their parents, they learned that they also did not know the girls would be traveling to a different country. Due to the suspicious circumstances, our team intercepted Sovina and Sumitra and handed them over to their families.
One of our monitors noticed the three women in the company of a man who seemed to be a stranger to them, so she approached them for questioning. During the interview, our monitor uncovered multiple contradictions in their stories and called the police for assistance. The male suspect was arrested. Our team spent time educating Marie, Divina, and Natasha about human trafficking and then made arrangements for them to travel safely back home.
Kakazi*, an 18-year-old female, was recently intercepted by our team at the main border in Lwakhakha. She was traveling with a broker who had enticed her to accept a job offer working as a domestic helper in Nairobi, Kenya, with a promised salary of Ush 450,000 ($121 USD)—an amount that is significantly higher than the normal pay of Ush 200,000 ($54 USD). During the interview with our monitors, Kakazi and the broker made several contradictory statements, which increased our staff’s suspicions about the situation.
After listening to Kakazi’s story, our monitors were concerned that she might be in the process of being trafficked since she did not know the broker’s name and could not provide any detailed information about her promised job. When our team called the employer to verify the details of the work, she stated that she was hiring a bar attendant, not a domestic helper.
The suspect was handed over to the police for further investigation, and a case was filed against him. Our monitors educated Kakazi about the dangers of human trafficking and then facilitated her transportation home.
During our team’s normal monitoring duties at a transit station, they saw Jasna*, a 12-year-old girl. She was sitting on a bench by herself and seemed to be waiting for someone. Due to her young age, our staff was concerned for her safety, so they went up to see if she needed any help. At first, she was reluctant to provide any information about herself, but after our team showed their identification documents and explained their work, she slowly opened up to them.
After talking with Jasna, our team determined that the boy was deceiving her because the promised salary was double the normal pay. Furthermore, he hadn’t given her any official documentation proving the legitimacy of the job, and she was unable to provide the address or phone number for her future place of employment. After receiving counseling from our team, Jasna asked if they could help her return home. Our staff kept her at their shelter house for one night. Then, they escorted her home the next day and handed her over to the care of her mother.
Our staff recently intercepted a 39-year-old man with a grade 12 certificate who was pursuing a suspicious job. While talking to our team, he mentioned that he had never worked in any type of formal employment and was dependent on a government social relief fund of R350.00 ($20 USD).
Based on the information gathered, our team determined that the promised position did not exist. The fact that the recruiter would not disclose the name of the alleged hotels where the man would be working was a red flag of deception. Additionally, when our team contacted the recruiter, he was reluctant to divulge any more specific information about the post and disconnected the call after stating that he felt like they were asking too many questions. Finally, the promised salary package was unrealistic for the position advertised. Our team advised the young man to stop pursuing the job, warning him that if he continued, he would likely find himself at risk of being trafficked or forced into sexual abuse or exploitative labor.
Ama and Abina eventually revealed that they had secretly left their homes without their parents’ consent. Our monitors intercepted them because they were at high risk of being trafficked. They educated them on the dangers they might face if they continued their journey and advised them to return home. After talking with our staff, Ama and Abina understood the risks and decided to go back to the safety of their village.
Tanzania: Monitors Intercept Young Mother and Baby and Help Them Return Home
Jailu*, an 18-year-old mother, traveled from her village to Dar es Salaam along with her 8-month-old baby for the purpose of work. Jailu’s friend had promised to meet them at the bus station when they arrived. However, upon their arrival, she was not there. Although Jailu eventually managed to contact her, the friend said she couldn’t help her find work or lodging. Our staff intercepted Jailu and her baby and helped them return home where they were reunited with family.
He told one of our monitors that he was going to South Africa because his alleged friend had found a job for him working on a farm with a promised monthly salary of R1,000.00 ($55 USD). The most interesting part of the young man’s story was that he had never met or even communicated with his alleged employer over the phone about the details of his job. Instead, he was blindly trusting the word of his friend.
Upon further questioning, the young man mentioned that he did not know the hours that he would be working or even where he would be staying. One of our monitors educated the man about human trafficking, explaining the dangers he might face if he continued his journey. After talking with our staff, the man decided to return home.
Upon interviewing Mwamamisi, our team discovered that she lacked relevant experience to perform the job and she was not in possession of the required travel documents. Even though she did not have an identification document, Kombo had assured her that he would be able to process the necessary paperwork for her to travel abroad. Furthermore, she mentioned that this would be her first time traveling overseas, and when asked, she was unable to tell our team the exact address or city for her destination.
After checking a website to verify the legitimacy of Kombo’s alleged agency, our staff discovered that it was not listed with the government of Kenya. Because they were unable to confirm the job, they intercepted Mwamamisi, educated her about human trafficking and safe foreign employment, and then helped her return home.
Our staff recently intercepted a 20-year-old man who had left his home province after being promised a job working as a farmer in the crop fields in Maputo, earning a monthly salary of 6,000 MZN ($94 USD), which is higher than the usual pay of 4,000 MZN ($63 USD).
The man who had offered him the work was someone he knew, so he had no reason not to trust him. Despite not knowing the exact destination and not being able to speak the local language in Maputo, the young man decided to accept the offer without consulting his family. The man who had offered him the job paid for his transportation and gave him travel instructions over the phone, promising to meet him at the bus station in Maputo.
When the young man arrived in Maputo, the man was not waiting for him as promised. Although he waited at the bus station for a long time, the man never came to pick him up. Stranded, the young man became afraid because he knew he was in a high-risk area for human trafficking. When our team found him, he was sitting alone and seemed very apprehensive.
Our monitors warned him about human trafficking and all the dangers he was exposed to being in the dangerous city of Maputo. He listened to their warnings and then gave them the contact information for the man who had arranged the work for him. When our team contacted the man, he said that he had not promised a job, but the possibility of furthering an education.
When our team asked the man some more questions, he was unable to answer and ended up turning off his cell phone, making it clear that it was a case of human trafficking. Our team advised the young man to return to his home, and he agreed to do so. Since he did not have the resources to pay for his ticket home, our team arranged and paid for his transportation.
Jeremiah*, a 12-year-old boy, was spotted by our team picking up bottles near the Chirundu border, a place known for human trafficking. During questioning, he told our team that after he collects the bottles, he takes them to various places in exchange for a small amount of money. He further mentioned that he has never been enrolled in a school.
Although she was aware that Jeremiah was going to the border to do work, she did not know about the risks facing minors in the area. After being educated about human trafficking and child labor, she assured our team that she would not allow him to go the border unaccompanied ever again.
When asked about where he took the bottles after picking them up, Jeremiah mentioned that there were several places, most of which were homes in communities near the business center. The bottles were washed, refilled with tap water or the Zambian traditional drink, chilled, and then sold off.
Our staff followed up on one of these places and found a woman in her home. She confirmed that she paid an incentive to anyone who brought bottles to her. She said that people knew about her place and brought her the bottles on their own accord. Our team explained to her that doing that with children under the age of 16 was considered child labor and was against the law in Zambia. She said she was not aware of that, and then she assured them that she would no longer collect bottles from minors.
Fortunately for this minor, his bus stopped at one of our monitoring stations, and our staff approached him for questioning. After he told them his story, they provided him with counseling, educating him about human trafficking and warning him of the potential risks he was exposing himself to. Convinced, the teenager voluntarily decided to turn back and return to his family.
To learn more about how you can get involved in preventing vulnerable people from becoming victims of human trafficking, visit here.
*Names, photos, and locations changed or omitted for the security and privacy of those involved.