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Posted: KATHMANDU: A young man climbs atop a human pyramid and performs a perfect handstand, while nearby, a girl effortlessly swings a dozen glittered hoops around her hips. Like most troupes around the world, performers from Nepal's Circus Kathmandu have been practising their tricks for years. But unlike others, most of these artists, until recently, were not given a choice. Eleven of the thirteen-strong troupe are rescued victims of child trafficking who had been sold into circuses in neighbouring India and made to perform to crowds. Now they are free to perform because they can, not because they have to. "I like the fact I'm not being forced into doing anything now," says Anjali Chhetri Khadka, 20, who joined the troupe when it formed in 2011. "I'm performing on my own free will and I can do whatever part of the performance I choose." When she was seven years old, Anjali's parents sold her to traffickers. She was smuggled across the border into India where she spent the next four years doing unpaid work at a circus in Darjeeling before being rescued. Families, impoverished and desperate, receive as little as 1,000 Nepalese rupees (RM32.90) for the sale of their child, experts say. They are often tricked into believing a better life awaits their child across the border. But the reality is usually quite different. Like many trafficking victims, Anjali does not like to talk about her past. "There are children there (in some circuses) as young as five or six years old," explains Leslie Brown, the Nepal representative for Freedom Matters, a British-funded non-governmental organisation that works to rehabilitate rescued circus performers. "They are taught to interact with and perform with wild animals, and they are very commonly abused, neglected and sexually molested," she says. Young Nepalis have traditionally been favoured by circus owners due to their small builds and fair complexions, according to Brown. Once far away from their country and families, and unfamiliar with the local language and culture, trafficked children are easier to exploit and control, and less likely to run away, she says. A typical day at a circus starts at dawn with several hours of gruelling training followed by at least three shows to the public that last late into the night. "Some young girls are forced to carry out private performances to groups of men," according to Shailaja CM, who works for non-profit group Sano Paila and has carried out dozens of raids on Indian circuses since 2004. Working alongside Indian authorities, they have rescued almost 400 trafficked Nepalis, including most of those now at Circus Kathmandu. When they find them, 80% have tuberculosis, some are pregnant and most are suffering from injuries after years of physical abuse by trainers, she says. "At the worst circuses, the children are normally happy to see the rescuers, but at others, they are frightened because the circus owners have told them that we will sell them into brothels and not take them home." Years of successful raids and the criminal conviction of circus owners, encouraged the Indian and Nepali governments to continue to crack down on the exploitation of these children. In 2011, India's Supreme Court also ordered circuses to stop employing children and instructed the government to rescue and rehabilitate working minors. The following year, Nepal endorsed the National Plan of Actions Against Trafficking of Persons which focused on preventing trafficking of women and children and prosecuting those responsible. As a result, numbers of both child performers and children being trafficked for that purpose have "dramatically dropped", according to Shailaja. But the rehabilitation of those already rescued continues. Most children return home to the lives they lost, but for some, reintegrating back into their families is impossible. "It depends on many factors, for example, stigma within the community, the belief that the child has brought back HIV/AIDS with them, that they are somehow spoiled," says Brown from Freedom Matters. The organisation works to provide medical care and shelter to those in need and then helps get them back on their feet by teaching them new skills so they can earn a living. Sunita Karki was trafficked into a circus when she was nine and rescued three years later. Now 20, she is studying for a law degree in Kathmandu and wants to help those who have suffered a similar fate. "I'm going to work with organisations that rescue people from circuses," she says. "I want to become a professional lawyer and be good at what I do so I can help those in similar situations." But for members of Circus Kathmandu, performing is a way of life and has become a career. Theirs is the only contemporary circus in Nepal, and they have set their sights on performing overseas, with a debut planned in Britain next year. — AFP |
Mother sues daughter over share of property Posted: A 63-year-old woman, who is being sued over a Housing Board flat by her mother, claimed that 91-year-old widow Eileen Chia Yoke Mui had been "put up" to it by her sons, who are not party to the case. Yvonne Goh Mei Ling yesterday told the High Court that her siblings, Eric Goh Wai Mun, 69, and Evan Goh Wyming, 65, had "orchestrated" proceedings to reverse a move by their parents to share the property in Clementi with her and her sister Yvette Goh Meich'ang, 53. She insisted that her father – late scout pioneer Dennis Goh Chin Chye – wanted them to have a "home base" to stay whenever they return from England, where they live. Chia claimed, however, that Yvonne harassed her into making her two daughters the joint owners of the property in 2009, and that she had not been properly advised on its legal implications. The sisters claimed that the partial transfer was a gift from their parents. When a co-owner dies in a joint tenancy, her share goes to the other owners. But if Chia is successful and the sisters' names are removed, all four siblings will get an equal share when their mother dies. — The Straits Times/ Asia News Network |
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