government task force has rescued nearly 2,000 victims of human trafficking across the country over the past month, but this could be “the tip of the iceberg”, an official has said, as more people fall prey to employment scams.
Coordinating Legal, Political and Security Affairs Minister Mahfud MD, who is serving as an advisor on the human trafficking task force, said on Tuesday that from June 5 to July 3, the police had named 698 suspects in the trafficking of more than 1,934 victims.
The victims included about 600 people who were about to be sent abroad from Tunon Taka seaport in Nunukan, North Kalimantan.
Of the 1,934 victims, 65.5 percent were migrant workers, 26.5 had been forced into sex work, 6.6 percent were below the legal working age and 1.4 percent were lured into working illegally as crew on ships.
Some of the migrant workers were tricked with promises of high salaries into working for online gambling scams. Others were forced into prostitution or made to sell their organs.
“This process [of cracking down on human trafficking] will continue to be carried out,” Mahfud told journalists on Tuesday.
Read also: Dozens of trafficked Indonesians repatriated
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