Myanmar fisherman goes home after 22 years as a slave
Associated Press | 1 July 2015
TUAL, Indonesia (AP) — All he did was ask to go home.
The last time the Burmese slave made the same request, he was beaten
almost to death. But after being gone eight years and forced to work on a
boat in faraway Indonesia, Myint Naing was willing to risk everything
to see his mother again.
So he threw himself on the ground and begged for freedom. Instead,
the captain vowed to kill him for trying to jump ship, and chained him
for three days without food or water.
He was afraid he would disappear. And that his mother would have no idea where to look.
Myint is one of more than 800 current and former slaves rescued or
repatriated after a year-long Associated Press investigation into
pervasive labor abuses in Southeast Asia's fishing industry.
Thailand's booming seafood business alone runs on an estimated
200,000 migrant workers, many of them forced onto boats after being
tricked, kidnapped or sold. It's a brutal trade that has operated for
decades, with companies relying on slaves to supply fish to the United
States, Europe and Japan — on dinner tables and in cat food bowls.
Myint, his family and his friends recounted his story to AP, which
also followed parts of his journey. It is strikingly similar to accounts
given by many of the more than 330 current and former slaves from
Myanmar, Cambodia, Laos and Thailand interviewed in person or in writing
by AP.
In 1993, a broker visited Myint's village in southern Myanmar with
promises of jobs for young men in Thailand. Myint was only 18 years old,
with no travel experience, but his family was desperate for money. So
his mother finally relented. When the agent returned, he hustled his new
recruits to grab their bags immediately.
A month later, Myint found himself at sea. After 15 days, his boat
finally docked on the remote Indonesian island of Tual, surrounded by
one of the world's richest fishing grounds. The Thai captain shouted
that everyone on board now belonged to him: "You Burmese are never going
home. You were sold, and no one is ever coming to rescue you."
Myint spent weeks at a time on the open ocean, living only on rice
and the parts of the catch no one else would eat. As Thailand's seafood
export industry has expanded, overfishing has forced trawlers farther
into foreign waters. So migrants are now trapped for months, or even
years, aboard floating prisons.
During the busiest times, the men worked up to 24 hours a day. There
was no medicine, and they were forced to drink boiled sea water. Anyone
who took a break or fell ill was hit by the captain. Fishermen said that
workers on some boats were killed if they slowed down, while others
simply flung themselves overboard.
Myint was paid only $10 a month, and sometimes not at all. By 1996,
after three years, he had had enough: He asked for the first time to go
home.
His request was answered by a helmet cracking his skull.
He ran away. An Indonesian family took mercy on Myint until he
healed, and then offered him food and shelter for work on their farm.
For five years, he lived this simple life. But he couldn't forget his
relatives in Myanmar, otherwise known as Burma, or the friends he left
behind on the boat.
In 2001, he heard one captain was offering to take fishermen back
home if they agreed to work. So, eight years after he first arrived in
Indonesia, he returned to the sea.
But the conditions were just as appalling as the first time, and the
money still didn't come. If anything, the slave trade was getting worse.
To meet growing demand, brokers sometimes even drugged and kidnapped
migrant workers to get them on board.
After nine months on the water, Myint's captain told the crew he was
abandoning them to go back to Thailand alone. Furious and desperate, the
Burmese slave once again pleaded to go home. That, he said, was when he
was chained to the boat.
Searching desperately, he found a small piece of metal to pick the
lock. Hours later, he heard a click. The shackles slid off. He dove into
the black water after midnight and swam to shore.
Myint hid alone in the jungle in Tual. He couldn't go to the police,
afraid they might hand him over to the captains. He had no numbers to
call home, and he was scared to contact the Myanmar embassy because it
would expose him as an illegal migrant.
He had lost nearly a decade to slavery, and had suffered what
appeared to be a stroke, leaving his right arm partly paralyzed. He
started to believe the captain had been right: There really was no
escape.
By now, he had forgotten what his mother looked like and knew his little sister would be all grown up.
In 2011, the solitude had become too much. Myint moved to the island
of Dobo, where he heard there was a small community of former Burmese
slaves. He continued to live quietly, surviving on the vegetables he
grew.
Then one day in April, a friend told him an AP report on slavery had
spurred the Indonesian government to start rescuing current and former
slaves. Officials came to Dobo and took Myint back to Tual — the island
where he was once enslaved — to join hundreds of other free men.
After 22 years in Indonesia, Myint was finally going home. But what, he wondered, would he find?
The flight to Myanmar's biggest city, Yangon, was a terrifying first. Myint, now 40, was a stranger to his own country.
Making his way to his small village, he spotted a plump Burmese woman.
They exploded into an embrace, and the tears that spilled were of joy
and mourning for all the lost time apart. "Brother, it's so good that
you are back!" his little sister sobbed. "We don't need money! We just
need family!"
Minutes later, he saw his mother, running toward him.
He howled and fell to the ground. She swept him up in her arms and
softly stroked his head, cradling him as he let everything go.
He was finally free to see the face from his dreams. He would never forget it again.
____
EDITOR'S NOTE — Myint Naing's story comes from interviews with him,
his family, his friends and other former slaves, and through following
his journey to his home in Myanmar. He's among hundreds rescued and
returned to their families after a year-long AP investigation exposed
extreme labor abuses in Southeast Asia's seafood industry. Reporters
documented how slave-caught fish was shipped from Indonesia to Thailand.
It can then be exported to the United States and cloud the supply
chains of supermarkets and distributors, including Wal-Mart, Sysco and
Kroger, and pet food brands, such as Fancy Feast, Meow Mix and Iams. The
companies have all said they strongly condemn labor abuse and are
taking steps to prevent it.
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