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Monday 1 June 2015

"Every night they raped," the disclosure of human trafficking camp

The discovery of mass graves are said to be the grave of the victims of human trafficking syndicate shocked the world

ALOR SETAR: Women Rohingya detained in transit camps trafficking syndicates in Padang Besar, Thailand treated exactly sex slaves.

They are victims of mass rapes by the camp guards. The disclosure was made by a woman Rohingya, Nur Khaidha Abdul Shukur, 24, who was detained for eight days with his son who was only a few months in the transit camps.

"Every night, two or three young ladies were quite beautiful Rohingya, will be taken out of the cage and taken to a detention hidden by the camp guards."

"She was raped en masse by their (camp guards), even in the camp, there were two young women who were pregnant are believed to be an act of the guard," he told reporters through an interpreter Bernama here today.

According to Nur Khaidha, there are some women who "carried" by the camp guards for several days to become a victim of their sexual savagery.

"They (women) will be missing for two to three days after it was taken by the guards. After they returned to the cage, I did not ask but I know what has happened to them."

"From their faces, we know," he said, adding that the women who were detained in the cage was not allowed to talk to each other, or be beaten.

Both women were pregnant Rohingya believed to have been raped controller, said Nur Khaidha, have been detained in the transit camps for more than six months.

He said that in the transit camp where he was detained last year, there were 15 women Rohingya victims of the syndicate, with five of them have small children.

The five children who have also been detained in a cage together with their children, but are not harmed by the guards involved.

"Maybe because we have small children, so the guards do not act raping us. But whatever, I pray every day so that they do not become victims of rape," he said.

Nur Khaidha, originating from Maungdaw, Myanmar ventured across the Andaman Sea by boat to Malaysia with his little son to keep track of her husband.

A few months earlier, her husband, Nurul Amin Nobi Hussein, 25, was from Maungdaw by boat to Ranong, Thailand, in an attempt to gain a foothold in Malaysia.

Unbeknownst to her, he was detained by human trafficking syndicates in their transit camp in Bukit Wang Burma, Wang Kelian.

Against Nur Khaidha detained for eight days in transit camps in Padang Besar, her husband was detained in camps in northern homeland for 22 days, before daring escape.

Nurul Amin, who now works at a workshop in Alor Setar says, the desire to seek a better life makes him, his wife and their son to risk his life up "death boats" to Malaysia.

Just as revealed by his wife, Nurul Amin was also telling the story of the Rohingya women raped.

"At night, some of the guard coming into the cages housing the women and pulled them out somewhere nearby."

"We heard the screams and cries of the women as a place where they raped us very close to the cage ... we just can not see," he said.

Now almost a year later, Nurul Amin and his wife, thankfully been free of punishment and suffering in the camps trafficking.

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