Post by: So Jin Kim
When the fireworks cracked to celebrate the New Year 2020
and smoked away, I was getting settled in Thailand to begin my winter
internship with TLCS Legal Advocate (TLCS). It was a Thai law firm located in
the center of Bangkok. The law firm worked mainly to provide legal consultation
for corporate businesses, but it was also leading a highly effective pro bono
program aimed at combating human trafficking in the fishing industry on the
side. It was called the Multi-Stakeholders Initiative for Accountable Supply
Chain (MAST), co-founded and currently led by Attorney Dornapha Sukkree (Dorna),
who was also the director of TLCS. Working as an intern for MAST, I was able to
closely discuss about human trafficking in Thailand with Dorna, as well as with
her wide network of NGOs fighting against human trafficking in Thailand. The
discussions enlightened me to the practical aspects of not only rescuing the
victims from bonded labor or sex trafficking, but also providing them with
aftercare, especially compensation.
I was given some compensation cases to research and edit
a legal guidebook to prevent bonded labor in the fishing industry. The cases
were Thai court orders that were pending to be enforced in the relevant foreign
countries where victims or the traffickers were from. The court orders were
born out of judgements against the traffickers, requesting compensation for the
crime of bonded labor or sex trafficking. I was able to join meetings and do
research about how the foreign judgements were enforced and how fighting
against human trafficking not only required legal knowledge but also good
communication and networking skills with the government institutes, law firms
and NGOs. We had to reach out to the foreign law firms in the countries where
the compensation case had to be enforced, as well as the local governmental
bodies and NGOs that were representing the victims in Thailand.
One of my most memorable experience was attending one
meeting with the government officials and the local NGOs representing the
victims of sex trafficking and bonded labor. The meeting took full three-hours
without a single break. Some of the facts discussed in the meeting involved numerous
minor children exploited in brothels around Thailand. While it was
heartbreaking to discuss these facts, the decision-makers and caseworkers discussed
the challenges and solutions with great concentration. The scene was quite
inspiring to behold. It was like as if God was working through the government
officials, the NGO workers and our law firm lawyers to enforce His justice for
the lost and captured souls.
I was reminded how human trafficking was still very
real in our world no matter how many times I try to forward with my life of given
freedom. I was grateful and honored to have had a glimpse of God in action in
Thailand.
This post was written by a Center for
Global Justice Intern. The views expressed in this post do not necessarily
reflect those of Regent University, Regent Law School, or the Center for Global
Justice.
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