Human trafficking on the rise in RP
Trafficked into slavery as a young girl, Geralyn Quezo, 17, sits quietly by the window of a halfway house amid the deafening cacophony of life in
Now and then a smile breaks from her cracked lips, only to quickly fade as memories of her ordeal come flooding back in a wild seesaw of emotions.
“I am now free. But now I do not know what to do,” she told AFP at the Bahay Tuluyan refuge for rescued victims of human trafficking on a busy roadside at Manila’s North Harbor.
A distant relative had duped Quezo’s father into allowing her to travel with him to
The relative turned out to be a broker for a human trafficking syndicate, but decided to keep Quezo as his personal slave. For three years, the young girl worked for him as a cook, nanny and maid – and was not paid a cent.
She thought her parents had given her up for dead and it was not clear why they never made the trip to
“Perhaps they did not have money. We lived on a remote farm, and we lived a day to day existence,” Quezo said. “They may have given me up as a lost cause because I had many other siblings they needed to feed.”
She lost all contact with the outside world, she said, and would cringe at the sound of passing vehicles. At night she would curl up in a corner and cry herself to sleep.
Then one day, her captor forgot to lock the gates and Quezo escaped, only to end up lost in the dank alleys of
She later met social workers who referred her to the Visayan Forum Foundation, a non-government organization that works to combat trafficking and which runs the halfway house.
Quezo is now rebuilding her life, learning livelihood skills that should help her reintegrate into society. She remains hesitant about going home, fearful of her parents’ reaction.
“I don’t know if they would still remember me. I only have a vague memory of their faces,” she says.
Sad as Quezo’s case may be, it is an increasingly common one in the
Human trafficking has also become the dirty secret of economic expansion, with many criminal organizations preying on unsuspecting rural families who send their young children off on false promises of money and prosperity.
Often, they end up in the hands of illegal recruiters who sell them as virtual household slaves.
Many end up in suburbs around
“Many think that once they get to
There have been cases of Filipinas trafficked to
In one celebrated case, a group of Filipinas recently rescued from the
Ullegue said: “It is easy to lure these mostly uneducated people to leave their rural homes, and traffickers know how to make a pitch.”
Many of those rescued by the foundation at first were distrustful and angry that they were being prevented from earning money they could send home, she said.
“The emotions are so high because they want to help their families, but many do not realize that they have fallen in the net of recruiters.” – AFP
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