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Nine-year-old
Shakil and 11-year-old Irshad were overjoyed when they were told
by their parents that they would go on a journey by plane. "We
had seen planes flying and used to run to catch a glimpse of this
strange machine," recalls Shakil who said that the very idea
of sitting inside this 'flying tube' was exciting for both of them.
Shakil and Irshad, five and seven years old at the time,
didn't have any idea where the plane would take them, but they had
overheard that they would be travelling to a Gulf state for a job.
They had no inkling of the kind of job they would be doing.
"The family used to discuss that if the job came through, it
would help them to pay back loans that they owed to a local
landlord," says Irshad.
Their family, which still resides in a shanty town in Rahim Yar
Khan district in southern Punjab, had been working for a local landlord
as bonded labourers for many years. The idea of sending Shakil and
Irshad to the United Arab Emirates (UAE) occurred to Mohammed Siddiq,
their father, when a local agent approached him and apprised him
of the prospects of sending his adolescent kids to participate in
the camel races as jockeys.
"You are not the only one who will be sending your children.
There are so many in the area who have already earned fortunes that
way," the agent told Siddiq, who thought this might be the
way to release the family from an unending cycle of debt. It would
also provide the money needed for the marriages of his three daughters.
Camel racing is the favourite sport of the oil-rich Arabs. While
the tradition dates back several centuries, the sadistic practice
of using young children as jockeys is a recent one, dating back
to the early 1970s. Every year, scores of young children between
the ages of two and 11 years, belonging to impoverished families,
are smuggled from South Asian countries to the UAE for this purpose.
Many of these children are maimed and killed while participating
in the camel races in the desert kingdoms. Their desperate parents,
meanwhile, are more concerned with solving their own financial problems.
Siddiq agreed to hand over both his sons after the agent promised
to pay a monthly sum of 500 dirhams each, for their services. Once
the father gave his consent, the agent showed up with a scale to
measure the weight of the boys and confirmed that both of them weighed
below 16 kilograms.
They made an unwritten agreement, according to which the agent would
bear all the expenses incurred on the journey including the money
that he would pay for obtaining forged documents needed for their
travel.
In no time, documents were prepared and the boys dispatched to the
UAE from Karachi. Along with another four boys, the two brothers
travelled with their fathers and three women who pretended to be
their mothers.
Irshad said it was fun travelling in the aircraft where they were
given nice food and candies. "We felt we were flying like birds,"
he says about his first ever journey in an aircraft. The real test
of the boys, however, began when they arrived at the airport, where
they were handed over to an Arab of Bedouin origin. "I started
crying hysterically when my father hugged us goodbye, but he consoled
us, saying he would meet us shortly," says Shakil. Theseboys, who were not to meet their father for another couple of years,
were taken to a nearby camp, one of many in the area. Says Irshad,
"Most of these camps were occupied by young children. There
was a Bengali caretaker and a boy of our age from Sudan sleeping
in the camp where we were housed."
The boys were taught to graze camels as a first step towards handling
them. "The Bengali caretaker trained us in camel riding and
made us ride these camels at least two to three hours every day,"
says young Irshad. The boys were weighed every week to ensure that
their weight did not increase. According to human rights activists,
the organisers of these races keep the weight of these boys under
control because there is a general rule that the younger and lighter
the child, the greater the speed of the camel. "They used to
give us wheat-flour bread (roti) and either daal or lobia, and meat
only once a week so that we should not put on weight," says
Shakil.
Shakil and Irshad ended up living in these camps for the next four
years. They participated in a number of camel races and Irshad even
managed to win two of the major races. "The Shaikh gave a Land
Cruiser and a precious sword as a gift to our Bedouin when I won
these races. I got a purse of 50 and 100 dirhams as a reward for
my achievement," Irshad said proudly.
Irshad said his brother Shakil fell down from the camel once and
slightly injured his foot. He recalled another incident in which
the boy from Sudan fell during one of these races. He did not escape
lightly, and had his ribs broken and leg fractured. "He was
sent back home, was declared unfit permanently."
Shakil and Irshad said their Bedouin owner did not maltreat them.
"But the Bedouin owner in the nearby camp was very cruel. He
used to beat up the jockeys and made the boys as well as the camels
stand in the sizzling heat in the desert for hours if they did not
win the races," says Irshad, recalling the ordeal of his colleagues
in the nearby camps.
Lady luck, meanwhile, knocked at the doors for Shakil and Irshad
when their Pakistani passports expired. The embassy officials asked
to renew them suspected the boys were being used as camel jockeys,
and their suspicions were soon confirmed.
Following up leads, they found two dozen others who were also employed
as camel jockeys. Taking up the case with the UAE government, they
managed to get the boys released. All the 23 children were evacuated
and sent back to Karachi to be reunited with the families.
Some cases have been detected even before the boys tipped for the
races could be flown into the UAE. However, hundreds of children
continue to be smuggled every year to these oil-rich Gulf States
through sea, road and air routes to participate in the races.
Other children have similar stories to tell, of families in debt
and parents duped by unscrupulous agents. Most of them belong to
either southern Punjab and adjoining areas, including Ghotki, Jacobabad
and Larkana districts, says Mohammed Ali, field investigation officer
for Madadgaar, a joint project of LHRLA and UNICEF. "We have
learnt that the agents are hoodwinking the impoverished families
with impunity and there is no one who is interested in taking action
against them."
The camel races begin with a colourful ceremony on tracks on the
outskirts of the Gulf states with 50 or more camels competing in
each standard race. The legal age for jockeys has now been fixed
at 10 and weight at a minimum of 40 kilograms, but this requirement
is flouted with impunity. Some of the children look barely old enough
to ride bicycles, let alone camels. They are tossed on the animals'
backs by their trainers just before the start of the race. The barefoot
boys, in their brightly coloured silk outfits with matching caps
attached to their heads by elastic bands and batons in their hands,
look like circus performers. A square foot of matching Velcro is
strapped to the camel's rump and another, smaller square, stitched
onto the back of the jockey's trousers to reduce the risk of the
child falling and being trodden upon. The trainers also strap radio
receivers to the boys' chests, so as to be able to communicate with
them and give instructions during the race.
The firing of a pistol usually signals the start of the race. "While
camels do not run as fast as horses, they can reach speeds of 12
miles an hour," says a Pakistani who has worked as a caretaker
in one of these camps.
Four-wheel vehicles carrying trainers and the sheikhs who own the
camels speed around the inside of the tracks during these races,
firing off instructions to their respective jockeys over the radio.
The helpless children riding the camels are often petrified. Says
another local, who has witnessed these races many times, "The
children are employed to scream and whip the camels to make them
run faster."
There is a great display of jubilation after each race, with the
spectators rushing towards the winning camels. They hug and kiss
the winning camel as well as its owners, while the tiny riders are
given short shrift. The victorious camels are smeared with a reddish
gold potion made of saffron and henna and then led to the lawns
in front of the grandstand. The value of a camel increases exponentially
with each victory; some winners are worth 50,000 to 60,000 US dollars
after just one good day at the track.
Fortunes are thus at stake during the camel races. While the government
does not allow betting on the grounds that it is prohibited in Islam,
it showers the owners of the winning camels with lavish prizes and
publicity. Prizes include luxury vehicles as well as expensive watches
and cash.
These little riders, however, are treated like mere commodities.
As soon as one race is over, they are lifted down from the camels,
tossed in vans that ferry them back to the starting line, and saddled
up for the next race, which starts within minutes.
There have been several instances where these fatigued children
have fallen during the race, at times being dragged to their deaths
by the loosened rope binding them to their mounts. On occasion,
skittish camels have thrown off the young jockeys. Sabir, a boy
who hailed from Dera Ghazi Khan, had been dispatched to the treacherous
deserts of the UAE in '98 to serve as a camel jockey. After undergoing
an intensive year-long training, he was promoted to active competition.
His career, however, was tragically short-lived. While spurring
the camel towards the finish line, the boy lost his nerve and fell
from his mount. Sher Ali, the man who took him to Dubai on forged
documents, pretending to be his father, was witness to the fateful
race. "He started very well, but then became terrified and
lost control over the camel," he says. Sabir's body arrived
in a wooden box in the month of October last year at Karachi airport
to be transported to his ancestral village in Dera Ghazi Khan in
southern Punjab for burial.
The young jockeys face a life of danger, misery and loneliness in
the training camps. They are made to sleep on the floor of corrugated
iron huts, even during the sweltering summer and are underfed to
keep their weight low. In this sport, 11-year-olds are deemed veterans,
approaching the fag end of their careers.
The children's safety is obviously not a priority with those who
sponsor this activity. For them, a few human lives lost is a part
of any game; winning at any cost is all that counts.
The treatment accorded to the camels, however, is in contrast to
that meted out to the children. Special grooms are employed to take
care of them and train them. A nutritionally balanced diet and exercise
plan is set into place to ensure that the camel becomes a perfect
racing machine.
Factories have been set up to prepare the grain consumed by the
animals, where dirt is carefully extracted by machines and magnets
siphon off metal particles. The racing camels are given a high-nutrition
mix consisting of milk, honey, dates, barley and clover, sometimes
spiked with vitamins. Physio-logists and nutritionists are hired
to pamper these treasured animals.
There are an estimated 14,000 active racing camels in the Emirates.
There is a substantial market for jockeys in the camel-racing countries.
The children of low-paid immigrant workers in the UAE can, in fact,
earn more money as jockeys than their parents can ever make as manual
labourers.
Managing to stay atop a running camel is extremely difficult. Says
one observer, "Since it is a dangerous game and slipping from
the saddle can result in broken bones or even being dragged to death,
that may be the reason that children from the poor South Asian countries
are preferred."
However, an expert contends that the Arabs prefer children from
South Asian countries because they tend to be lighter than Arabs
of the same age. Also, he adds, these children, who, unlike the
locals are not used to riding camels, scream uncontrollably with
terror during the race, which spurs the camels to running at greater
speeds.
The US State Department's annual report on trafficking in women
and children estimates one to two million people are trafficked
worldwide each year, of which 225,000 are from South Asia, with
women and children comprising an overwhelming majority. The report
states: "Trafficking is now considered to be the largest source
of profit for organised crime, behind only drugs and guns, generating
millions of dollars annually."
Human rights activists believe that poverty is largely responsible
for trafficking. However, there are other factors, which compound
the problem such as the absence of laws specifically dealing with
trafficking, corrupt security forces and porous borders. "Many
of the children are so young that they are still clutching a milk
bottle in their hands when they are taken away to be trained as
camel jockeys," says Amir Murtaza, an activist of Madadgaar.
The trafficking of children for the sport started on a small scale
in the early '80s when recruiting agents offered visas to those
aspiring to go to the Gulf if they took a child along with them.
Says one local, "At that time everyone wanted to find employment
in the Gulf countries to cash in on the petro-dollars, but not everyone
had the money and resources to get there; this was the easiest way
to reach the promised land." Gradually, the practice evolved
into a regular business. As a result, hundreds of children were
'imported' to the Gulf and used as camel jockeys.
Once human rights groups got wind of this business, they raised
a hue and cry, following which governments in Pakistan and neighbouring
countries introduced legislation preventing children from travelling
abroad unless they were accompanied by their parents. The agents
then devised the modus operandi of sending children on forged documents
with a woman who would pose as their mother.
Over the years, trafficking has been honed to a fine art by regional
gangs who have links with various law-enforcing agencies, which
is why only a very small percentage of the traffickers are apprehended.
Says advocate Zia Ahmed Awan, who heads Lawyers for Human Rights
and Legal Aid (LHRLA), "In this sport-cum-business, where millions
of dirhams are at stake, the Emirates, primarily Abu Dhabi and Dubai,
actively purchase and force children to serve as camel jockeys."
A number of missing children from Bangladesh have also landed up
in the UAE to work as camel jockeys. While some of the children
smuggled to the UAE are procured through kidnapping, others have
been bartered in exchange for monetary remuneration by their impoverished
parents in Pakistan, India, Bangladesh, Sri Lanka or Nepal.
Many feel they have little choice in the matter. Bashiran Bibi,
a widow in her mid-thirties, has six children and no means of support.
She sent her son Shehzad to the UAE with recruiting agents some
three years ago, when he was six. The 7000 to 8000 rupees she receives
every month since then remain her only source of income. Bashiran,
sitting in her one-room house crowded with five children and some
scrawny chickens, admits that, "Most of my relatives were opposed
to sending Shehzad away, but they could not feed me and my children."
Many labourers in Pakistan's countryside, who were exposed to the
petro-dollar in the late '70s in the Gulf, also transport their
minor kids to UAE markets to make an easy fortune. Says 11-year-old
Rahmat Brohi, who lives in a small village near Shahdadkot Tehsil
in southern Sindh, "When my uncle was taking me with him to
Dubai to participate in camel racing, I ran away from the village
for a week." He claimed he was terrified at the prospect because
he had heard disturbing accounts about his young cousins who had
been taken to UAE for the sport. "Only last year we received
the dead body of my cousin Shah Jehan," he says.
Many of Brohi's young cousins in the UAE are helping their families
to achieve a better standard of living. They also send home items
such as stereos and cameras, which they receive as gifts when they
win a race.
According to reports, in Bombay, children as young as nine are bought
for up to 60,000 rupees at auctions where Arabs and Indians bid
against each other. Human rights organisations maintain that in
cross-border trafficking, India is not only a resource country but
also a transit station for children from Nepal and Bangladesh on
the way to the Middle East.
According to investigations conducted by the police and the Department
of Child Care and Probation in Sri Lanka, clandestine agents are
known to dupe unsuspecting, poverty-stricken villagers into parting
with their young offspring with promises of large sums of money
among other benefits, while claiming that their children will be
used as camel riders in slow-moving colourful pageants and processions.
In the past, a number of cases have been reported of child smuggling
to the Arab states by sea from Makran and the Shah Bandar coast
in southern Pakistan. Says an official of the Edhi Foundation, "Many
of those children who are taken through coastal routes get sick
in the boats and some of them even die during these harsh journeys."
When the camel-racing season in the UAE began last year, Pakistani
authorities busted a couple of gangs before they could make it to
the UAE. A bunch of five children, all younger than seven, were
arrested after immigration officials in Islamabad stopped them.
Police detained a couple posing as the children's parents and two
other people believed to be involved in an organisation supplying
child jockeys to the Emirates.
Immigration officials said suspicions were aroused when they noticed
that the children seemed scared as they prepared to board a flight
from Islamabad to Dubai. "When they arrived near the immigration
counter, the children started crying," immigration officer
Gulzar Ahmed said. The couple tried to console the children but
"we doubted from their body language that they were the real
parents," Ahmed said. Under questioning, the couple, who are
husband and wife, admitted to police that they were taking the children
to the United Arab Emirates to be used in camel racing.
Likewise, another group of 14 people, including seven minor children,
were apprehended in the month of September last year from an apartment
in Shah Faisal Colony in Karachi's central district, just two days
before they were to catch a flight for Dubai on forged documents.
Two months earlier, six couples along with over a dozen boys - all
between five and seven years of age - were arrested by personnel
of law-enforcing and intelligence agencies on the charge of attempting
to smuggle the children across the Pak-Iran border. Their destination,
too, was the Middle East and its racecourses.
Haji Bashir, a member of one of the gangs busted in Karachi, was
employed for several years as caretaker in a camel stable. He visits
his village near Multan in southern Punjab every year and returns
to Dubai with as many children as possible, earning a fortune from
this business. This despite the fact that he pays between 6,000
to 8,000 Pakistan rupees per month to the parents of each child.
Haji Bashir, who is currently in police custody in Karachi, defiantly
asks, "What else can one do in the face of poverty? When people
don't have enough money to eke out a living, this is the best way
to supplement one's income."
Since there is no telephone network in most of the villages from
where the children hail, and most of them are unlettered, they record
messages on audiocassettes, which they send to their parents. Shahul
listens to her son Mukhtiar who has been in Dubai for the last four
years, "It's me, Mukhtiar... ma, don't worry. It's really me.
You may not recognise my voice, it has changed." The hapless
mothers listen to the voices of their children, rewinding the tapes
time and again and breaking down when they listen to the tale of
their hardships.
Sometimes, the younger children who have lived in the UAE for several
years forget their mother tongue and become more fluent in Arabic,
the language of their captors. Many of the boys kidnapped from South
Asian countries face problems once they are repatriated to their
home towns as they can barely communicate with their relatives.
A case in point is that of six-year-old Saddam Hussein, kidnapped
from Shahdadkot tehsil while on his way to his school and smuggled
to Dubai in 1996. He was forced to compete in the camel races for
at least three years. Saddam's family learnt of his whereabouts
when one of the locals from his village saw the boy riding a camel
in the UAE and, recognising him from the photographs that had appeared
in Pakistani newspapers, informed them. "However," says
Hayat Shaikh, "When we approached the UAE authorities, they
were reluctant to cooperate." The return of the boy was made
possible only when former Prime Minister, Nawaz Sharif, made a personal
request to Sheikh Zayed.
When reunited with his parents, Saddam was hardly able to speak
his mother tongue, and was more comfortable talking in Arabic. Recalling
his experience in broken Sindhi mixed with Arabic, he said that
he had witnessed many children sustaining serious injuries when
they fell off the camels during races. "Several died of their
wounds," he revealed.
Slavery and forced labour is prohibited under the law and legislation
against the trafficking of children and women has been promulgated
in South Asia in recent years. Buying, selling and trafficking or
dealing in slaves is punishable for life and sometimes with a death
sentence. As yet, however, no major punishments have been awarded
to these traffickers, although several have been arrested. According
to Mustafa Mahesar, a lawyer in Pakistan, "The traffickers
either exploit loopholes in the system or use money and influence
to avoid conviction."
Says Malik Tariq, an FIA assistant director in Islamabad, "Policing
the trade in children is difficult because there is no specific
law against adults transporting children overseas. Most alleged
smugglers were charged with immigration violations, which carry
a minor penalty."
Moreover, allege human rights groups, while child-trafficking gangs
have been busted many a time in Pakistan and other Asian countries,
the investigations never go beyond the local buyers and sellers.
Discloses Asghar Ali, Deputy Superintendent of the Police at Al-Falah
police station in Karachi, who is investigating the case of one
of the recently apprehended gangs, "Preliminary investigations
often reveal that very influential personalities from within and
outside the country are involved in this trade and those who are
arrested by us are no more than their touts."
Sources in the police admit that the big guns that run these dens
either buy out the police or intimidate them through their powerful
connections.
Human rights groups maintain that, prior to 1993, on average a dozen
innocent children lost their lives every week due to the dangerous
sport of camel racing. The situation improved to an extent after
UAE President, Sheikh Zayed bin Sultan Al-Nahyan, imposed a ban
on the use of children below 10 as camel jockeys. A Camel Race Association
was formed to organise the sport along the prescribed code of conduct.
Nevertheless, according to available reports, the rules are often
flouted with impunity. Comments a human rights activist, "Where
camels belonging to the Sheikhs are concerned, no rule really applies."
Ironically, although the involvement of Arab influentials in child
trafficking for camel races is beyond doubt, the authorities in
South Asian countries have never lodged official complaints with
the Arab countries. Says an observer, "Evidently, the poor
South Asian countries cannot afford to risk jeopardising their relations
with these rich countries."
Human right activists, however, believe that the global trafficking
of women and children continues unabated simply because this trade
has proved even more profitable than the smuggling of arms and drugs.
They disclose that the chain of beneficiaries includes recruiting
agencies, promoters, transport agencies, different government agencies
and the families of the children, all of whom reap rich rewards
from the trade.
In the words of a human rights activist, "While the traffickers
must be apprehended and tried for the horrendous criminal offences
they commit, nevertheless the trafficking of women and children
cannot simply be dealt with as a criminal phenomenon. It is directly
related to the socio-economic realities of the society and compounded
by the forces of the free market economy."
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