Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Figures and Tables
- Preface
- Abbreviations
- 1 Introduction: Informal exchanges and contending connectivity along the shadow silk roads
- 2 Fragmented sovereignty and unregulated flows: The Bangladesh-China-India-Myanmar corridor
- 3 In and out of the shadows: Pakistan-China trade across the Karakoram Mountains
- 4 Circulations in shadow corridors: Connectivity in the Northern Bay of Bengal
- 5 Past and present: Shadows of the China-Ladakh-Pakistan routes
- 6 Formal versus informal practices: Trade of medicinal and aromatic plants via Trans- Himalayan Silk Road
- 7 Formal versus informal Chinese presence: The underbelly of hope in the Western Balkans
- 8 State approaches to non-state interactions: Cross-border flows in Xinjiang and Kazakhstan
- 9 Integration in post-Soviet Central Asia: Shadow-economy practices and the cross-Eurasian flow of commodities
- 10 In the shadow of constructed borderlands: China’s One Belt One Road and European economic governance
- 11 High-end globalization and low-end globalization: African traders across Afro-Asia
- Index
- Publications / Global Asia
4 - Circulations in shadow corridors: Connectivity in the Northern Bay of Bengal
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 21 November 2020
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Figures and Tables
- Preface
- Abbreviations
- 1 Introduction: Informal exchanges and contending connectivity along the shadow silk roads
- 2 Fragmented sovereignty and unregulated flows: The Bangladesh-China-India-Myanmar corridor
- 3 In and out of the shadows: Pakistan-China trade across the Karakoram Mountains
- 4 Circulations in shadow corridors: Connectivity in the Northern Bay of Bengal
- 5 Past and present: Shadows of the China-Ladakh-Pakistan routes
- 6 Formal versus informal practices: Trade of medicinal and aromatic plants via Trans- Himalayan Silk Road
- 7 Formal versus informal Chinese presence: The underbelly of hope in the Western Balkans
- 8 State approaches to non-state interactions: Cross-border flows in Xinjiang and Kazakhstan
- 9 Integration in post-Soviet Central Asia: Shadow-economy practices and the cross-Eurasian flow of commodities
- 10 In the shadow of constructed borderlands: China’s One Belt One Road and European economic governance
- 11 High-end globalization and low-end globalization: African traders across Afro-Asia
- Index
- Publications / Global Asia
Summary
Abstract
The Northern Bay of Bengal has a legacy of human trafficking from at least the seventeenth century. It has left its footprint in the popular culture of Bengal. Today, human trafficking is still running very high but is almost invisible. This invisibility thrives on the pre-modern sea transportation system being unrecorded and considered as part of the informal economy. In turn, this invisibility facilitates the luring of job seekers by middlemen and slavery across the Bay towards Thailand. The dramatic situation of the Rohingya in the Arakan State in Myanmar and the instability at the border with Bangladesh strengthen the trafficking network along unsettling borders.
Keywords: shipbuilding, Indian Ocean, contemporary slavery, human trafficking network, border instability
Introduction
Across borders: Shadow ‘Malaysia airports’ and shadow human circulation
Himchari National Park and Reju canal are on a strip of hilly and riverine land, south of Cox's Bazar Town, between the Bay of Bengal and the Naf river dividing Bangladesh and Burma (Myanmar). This strip is known for being at the receiving end of clandestine and dramatic migration from Arakan state in Burma to Bangladesh. Cox's Bazar district accommodates United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) camps for Rohingya refugees in Kutupalong and Nayapara, a few miles south of the Reju River. The camps host around 30,000 people, and approximately 500,000 Rohingyas are estimated to be living clandestinely in Bangladesh. The new wave of exodus in summer 2017 may have doubled this uncertain figure. Many of them share the same linguistic basis and many cultural features and therefore move through the Chittagong region in relative anonymity (Berthet, 2013).
One evening in 2012, I was enjoying the cool breeze of the Reju canal south of Cox's Bazar. The mouth of the Reju canal can be seen from there, opening on both sides of the Bay of Bengal and found on one of the world’s longest and most beautiful sand beaches. Moonboats are dotted along the beach like notes on a silken music sheet. The channauka in Chatgaya (the Chittagonian language), or the chengudulu in Arakanese, is a versatile type of ship that can sail in the shallow coastal waters, crossing the sandbars close to the shores and landing directly on the beach, or sail up the even shallower rivers during high tide.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Shadow Exchanges along the New Silk Roads , pp. 97 - 124Publisher: Amsterdam University PressPrint publication year: 2020