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Trafficked Nepali, Bangladeshi women suffering beatings, torture and rape in Syria

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Nepalese migrant worker Sunita Magar with her children at their house in Dhadhing district, Nepal. Photo: AFP
Agence France-Presse

Nepali villager Sunita Magar thought she was heading to a safe factory job in Kuwait, but only when she landed in Damascus did she realise “something had gone very wrong”.

Frequently beaten with a baton and given only one meal a day, Magar says she spent 13 months working as a maid for a Syrian household and pleading to be allowed to go home.

“I was just in shock, I couldn’t stop crying,” the single mother-of-two said.

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Magar is among scores of poor Nepali and Bangladeshi women who travelled to the Middle East on the promise of a good job, only to be trafficked into Syria, wracked by five years of civil war.

Nepalese migrant worker Sunita Magar (centre) who was trafficked to Syria, being greeted by her children in Dhadhing district, 100 kilometres west of Kathmandu. Photo: AFP
Nepalese migrant worker Sunita Magar (centre) who was trafficked to Syria, being greeted by her children in Dhadhing district, 100 kilometres west of Kathmandu. Photo: AFP
Nepal’s top diplomat in the region said nationals from the Philippines, Indonesia and other countries, which, like Nepal and Bangladesh, have large migrant labour populations, stopped working in Syria because of the dangers involved.
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“Since then traffickers have been targeting Nepalis,” said Kaushal Kishor Ray, head of Nepal’s diplomatic mission based in Cairo.

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