Protect Migrant Workers and End Human Trafficking in Southeast Asia

The Issue

Human trafficking in Southeast Asia is not only a criminal issue—it is a human rights crisis fueled by exploitative labor systems, weak migrant protections, corporate negligence, and economic inequality. Every year, thousands of migrant workers are trapped in forced labor, debt bondage, wage theft, and sexual exploitation across industries such as fishing, construction, agriculture, manufacturing, and domestic work. Many are recruited through deceptive contracts and abusive labor agencies long before exploitation officially becomes “trafficking.”

 

Despite regional agreements and anti-trafficking laws, governments continue to focus primarily on border enforcement and criminal prosecution while failing to address the root causes that make vulnerable populations easy targets for exploitation. Punishment alone cannot solve a crisis sustained by systems that profit from cheap and disposable labor.

 

We call on ASEAN governments and regional leaders to adopt a comprehensive, prevention-focused anti-trafficking framework that prioritizes labor rights, survivor protections, and corporate accountability.

 

We demand the following actions:

 

• Establish a legally binding ASEAN migrant worker protection framework that guarantees ethical recruitment standards, fair wages, multilingual contracts, and legal protections for all migrant workers.

• Ban worker-paid recruitment fees and strengthen oversight of labor recruitment agencies to prevent debt bondage and coercion.

• Expand survivor-centered and trauma-informed services, including long-term housing, healthcare, education, legal aid, and employment support for trafficking survivors.

• Hold corporations accountable by requiring supply chain transparency and enforcing penalties against companies benefiting from forced labor.

• Integrate anti-trafficking protections into refugee assistance, disaster response, and climate displacement programs to protect vulnerable communities during crises.

Human trafficking thrives when governments treat exploitation as an isolated crime rather than a structural issue rooted in inequality and labor abuse. 

 

Southeast Asia has the opportunity to lead with policies grounded in human rights instead of reactive enforcement alone. But meaningful change will only happen if governments, corporations, and the international community are held accountable.

 

Sign this petition to demand stronger labor protections, ethical recruitment systems, survivor-centered policies, and real regional accountability to end human trafficking in Southeast Asia.

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The Issue

Human trafficking in Southeast Asia is not only a criminal issue—it is a human rights crisis fueled by exploitative labor systems, weak migrant protections, corporate negligence, and economic inequality. Every year, thousands of migrant workers are trapped in forced labor, debt bondage, wage theft, and sexual exploitation across industries such as fishing, construction, agriculture, manufacturing, and domestic work. Many are recruited through deceptive contracts and abusive labor agencies long before exploitation officially becomes “trafficking.”

 

Despite regional agreements and anti-trafficking laws, governments continue to focus primarily on border enforcement and criminal prosecution while failing to address the root causes that make vulnerable populations easy targets for exploitation. Punishment alone cannot solve a crisis sustained by systems that profit from cheap and disposable labor.

 

We call on ASEAN governments and regional leaders to adopt a comprehensive, prevention-focused anti-trafficking framework that prioritizes labor rights, survivor protections, and corporate accountability.

 

We demand the following actions:

 

• Establish a legally binding ASEAN migrant worker protection framework that guarantees ethical recruitment standards, fair wages, multilingual contracts, and legal protections for all migrant workers.

• Ban worker-paid recruitment fees and strengthen oversight of labor recruitment agencies to prevent debt bondage and coercion.

• Expand survivor-centered and trauma-informed services, including long-term housing, healthcare, education, legal aid, and employment support for trafficking survivors.

• Hold corporations accountable by requiring supply chain transparency and enforcing penalties against companies benefiting from forced labor.

• Integrate anti-trafficking protections into refugee assistance, disaster response, and climate displacement programs to protect vulnerable communities during crises.

Human trafficking thrives when governments treat exploitation as an isolated crime rather than a structural issue rooted in inequality and labor abuse. 

 

Southeast Asia has the opportunity to lead with policies grounded in human rights instead of reactive enforcement alone. But meaningful change will only happen if governments, corporations, and the international community are held accountable.

 

Sign this petition to demand stronger labor protections, ethical recruitment systems, survivor-centered policies, and real regional accountability to end human trafficking in Southeast Asia.

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