Bigger cages, longer chains
Several years after his first stint as a migrant worker in the Gulf emirate of Qatar, 30-year-old Tanka Kumar Limbu of Morang district in southeastern Nepal, decided to try his luck working in Malaysia. With its relatively moderate weather and growing migrant population, the Southeast Asian country was touted as an ideal destination for Nepali workers.
A lean man with a face that breaks easily into a smile, Limbu's hard-earned Qatari riyals had helped him marry and settle down in a dusty village not far from the East-West highway. But he still had to win bread for his family of three, including a four-year-old son. However fertile, the tiny patch of land (about 1.6 acres) that he shared with his younger brother's family and parents was never going to be enough to support the increasing costs of his young family. A debt that he had taken for 'family matters' (he would neither explain why he took the loan nor disclose the amount) was becoming burdensome.