Endemic misogyny holding back Nepal’s progress

Posted By : Telegraf
7 Min Read

[ad_1]

Trafficking of Nepal’s young men and women and children is a blight on the country and an indictment of successive Nepalese governments’ failure to stamp it out.

As a trustee of the The Umbrella Foundation, I know only too well the misery and destruction of young Nepali lives brought about by this evil trade. It thrives on populations whose economic standards are fragile and where the opportunities for worthwhile employment are disproportionately few.

Over the last 60 years, there has been a vast migration from the farms in the Himalayan foothills into the urban areas. But the job opportunities in the conurbations are few and far between, particularly for those without a good secondary education or a useful skill.

That, in turn, has led to armies of people living on the bread line in the cities or returning to their ancestral farmlands to wrest a living in some of the most challenging of settings.

One avenue of relative escape was the demand for labor in the Middle Eastern construction markets of Dubai, Qatar, the United Arab Emirates and Saudi Arabia. Regrettably, stories abound of these laborers being exploited not just by the recruiting agencies but by every Nepalese government agency through whose hands they had to pass before they reached the country of employment.

[ad_2]

Source link

Share This Article
Leave a comment