Saturday, February 27, 2010

Former NBA Player Alvin Robertson Arrested on Child Sex Trafficking Charges | Cleveland Leader

Submitted by Leader Staff on February 27, 2010 - 5:03pm.

On Friday, former NBA All-Star player Alvin Robertson was arrested and charged with child sex trafficking after his alleged involvement in kidnapping a minor for illegal sexual transactions. According to Texas officials, Robertson was a part of a seven-man group involved in kidnapping, human trafficking, and sexual assault of a child.

Robertson, who was born in Barberton, Ohio, is said to be part of a group that kidnapped a 14-year-old girl from San Antonio in 2009, and then forced her to have sex with clients and dance at a Corpus Christi night club. An investigation that led to his arrest was launched when the girl escaped her captors and flagged down a police cruiser. The girl was able to identify her captors, as well as the places she was taken in great detail.

As shocking as the allegations may be, Robertson is no stranger to having trouble with the law. Robertson has a history of off-the-court problems. He was arrested on charges related to domestic violence three times, and was sentenced to three years in prison for a probation violation involving a rape accusation in 2002.

A four-time NBA All-Star, Robertson played for four different teams over the course of his NBA career (San Antonio, Milwaukee, Detroit. and Toronto). In 1986 he won Defensive Player of the Year and Most Improved Player. He also holds the record for most steals in a season (301) and is fourth on the all-time steals list.


Former NBA Player Alvin Robertson Arrested on Child Sex Trafficking Charges | Cleveland Leader

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They don't belong to YOU!

Thursday, February 25, 2010

A look at human trafficking in Canada and Bill C268 - a private members bill seeks to create minimum sentences for those convicted of trafficking persons under the age of 18.

[TRAFFICKING MONITOR: Click on URL to listen to the report.]
http://theydontbelongtoyou.blogspot.com/2010/02/look-at-human-trafficking-in-canada-and.html
Produced By: Denise Lodde

FEATURED IN REPORT:

Timea Nagy-Trafficked From Hungary/Forced To Work As A Stripper

http://www.walk-with-me.org

Naomi Baker-Canada Fights Human Trafficking

http://www.canadafightshumantrafficki...

Joy Smith-MP, Kildonan St Paul Winnipeg/Drafted Bill C268

http://www.joysmith.ca

Peel Regional Police Vice Unit

http://www.peelpolice.on.ca

Posted by Carrie Eigbrett at 8:25 PM

They don't belong to YOU!: A look at human trafficking in Canada and Bill C268 - a private members bill seeks to create minimum sentences for those convicted of trafficking persons under the age of 18.






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Thursday, February 25, 2010

The Parthenon - West Virginia talks human trafficking

Map of USA with West Virginia highlightedImage via Wikipedia

By KIMBERLY BRADLEY

Published: Tuesday, February 23, 2010
Updated: Tuesday, February 23, 2010

The First Wesleyan Church in Huntington hosted a community forum Saturday to address human trafficking nationally and within West Virginia.

The panel included Cristina Suarez-Ross, victim advocate of the CONTACT Rape Crisis Center, Lt. Donald Frye of the W.Va. State Police, Detective Rodney Pell of the Huntington Police Department, Rhonda Farley, director of Branches, Sherriff Thomas McComas, Social Service Supervisor Hope Smith of the Cabell County Department of Human Resources and Glen Robinson of the First Wesleyan Church.

The panel addressed human trafficking in our state and shared the situations that they had encountered.

Forum director and Special Agent of the FBI Joseph Ciccararelli recognized human trafficking on a national level.

“Human trafficking is a high priority in the FBI,” Ciccararelli said. “I don’t think it’s a huge problem here but we may have issues involved here with human trafficking that we are not aware of.”

Ciccararelli provided tips of how to identify a potential victim.

“Nationally, victim characteristics are usually undocumented citizens that are economically disadvantaged, have a lack of education and have a language barrier,” Ciccararelli said.

Terry Roberts, facilitator of the event, read a recent article written by Amanda Kloer on human trafficking in Ohio.

The Trafficking in Persons Study Commission found that 1800 people are trafficked in Ohio every year, according to the change.org article. This includes 800 immigrants who are exploited in commercial sex and factory work, as well as about 1000 American-born children who are forced into prostitution.

“Trafficking is in our backyard, and talking to people within our own city and state, there are situations that certainly need that definition,” Roberts said.

Lt. Donald Frye of the W.Va. State police said he could remember two situations in W.Va. in which persons tried to sell their children.

“This happens right here at home,” Frye said. “Within the last month at least 1,000 computers have lit up in W.Va. with child pornography. Child abuse and child pornography is a form of child trafficking,” Frye said.

Hope Smith and Rhonda Farley both shared their experiences with cases involving trafficking.

“Homeless children in Cabell County are increasing dramatically,” Smith said. “Some of these children don’t have anything and could easily be victims of a trafficker. We’ve also had teenage prostitution here in Huntington, some are runaways, and some are involved in drugs and in need of money.”

“We have a lot of kids on the streets, and we just really need to reach out and give,” Smith said.

“At Branches I’ve seen one to two cases a year that fit trafficking,” said Rhonda Farley, director of Branches. “I’ve seen a Milton woman sold for prostitution to earn money for her family.”

Farley also had a case where a trafficker kept a woman captive and abused in Barboursville.

“We usually find these victims by complaints in the community,” Ciccararelli said. “Also, the local law enforcement’s response to an incident or information received from non-governmental organizations, churches and community service providers.”

“Service providers and the faith-based community may be in the position to make everyone aware of these issues,” Ciccararelli said. “It’s good for the community and us to work together.”

The U.S. Department of State estimates between 600,000 and 800,000 people are trafficked worldwide. Eighty percent of those victims are female.

There are currently 212 pending investigations in the U.S., Ciccararelli said.

The panel encourages one to contact the National Human Trafficking Resource Center at 1.888.373.7888 or contact your local law enforcement with information about a victim of human trafficking.

Kimberly Bradley can be contacted at bradley82@marshall.edu.

The Parthenon - West Virginia talks human trafficking




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Government To Assess Issues On Human Trafficking

Map indicating Western AfricaImage via Wikipedia

Thursday, 25 February 2010 08:49

Human trafficking is a crime that is pervasive and growing in West Africa. Like many parts of the world, the sub-region has witnessed a dramatic expansion in the trafficking in persons in the last few years. Women and Children are most affected by this crime.

This was contained in a speech read by the Minister for Women and Children's Affairs, Hon. Juliana Azumah Mensah at an annual meeting for law enforcement agencies with the theme, “Assessment of Human Trafficking in Ghana.”

Hon. Azumah Mensah reiterated that, the government of Ghana has ratified relevant international conventions dealing with Human Trafficking, as well as all those dealing with Human Right Protection to promulgate national laws on human trafficking and child’s right and protection.

“Ghana made a great headway in 2005 when the Human Trafficking Act was passed, other national legislative interventions include the Domestic Violence Act 2007 (Act 732), the Children’s Act 560 and the Criminal Amendment Code are all good legal frameworks for combating Human Trafficking in Ghana”, she added.

Hon. Azumah Mensah highlighted that the government of Ghana has established Anti-Human Trafficking Secretariats and the Ghana Police Service with the support of UNICEF has established three new Units in the Central, Western and the Ashanti Regions.

A draft National Plan of Action is in place and various Anti-Human Trafficking Units have been established in the Ghana Police Service, Ghana Immigration Service and the Attorney General’s Department.

Hon. Juliana Azumah Mensah said the Ministry of Women and Children’s Affairs in collaboration with Rescue Foundation is establishing a data base on human trafficking and it entreats all to contribute towards its effective establishment.

Source: ISD (Priscilla Aidoo)


Government To Assess Issues On Human Trafficking


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THISDAY ONLINE / Nigeria news / African views on global news

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By Mohammed Aminu, 02.23.2010

Nigeria has, over the last two decades, been bedevilled by myriad of problems. Most of the problems can be attributed to the pervasiveness of some of the ills that hamper the attainment of even a modicum of good governance. And, in most cases, the ills are evidenced by the act of wanton profligacy among the political leadership which continues to pauperise the citizens.

The advent of the current democratic process has done a lot to return the country to the comity of nations, as hopes rose that the squalor, penury, deprivations and many of the obstacles to human development would be ended and a period of bliss and prosperity will ensue. Unfortunately, the optimism that heralded the return of democracy after decades of military dictatorship and adventurism has, to a very large extent, given way to despair and gloom even among the greatest optimists.

As a result of the ills that currently hamper the development of the country, human trafficking has become widespread and now occupies a pre-eminent position among the ills that pervade the Nigerian society. While it may appear that the problem seem endemic in the Southern parts of the country, there are indications that no part of the country is immune from this social malaise that has ravaged many communities.

There are an estimated 80 million child workers across Africa and the figure could rise to 100 million by 2015. The International Labour Organisation (ILO) recently estimated that over 12 million Nigerian children are engaged in child labour. The survey also estimated that over 10,000 Nigerians were engaged in prostitution in Italy which constitutes about 60 percent of all prostitutes in the Italian sex market. Most of these women and girls are initially trafficked victims. The lucrative nature of the illicit trade, in providing bountiful harvest to the traffickers, while subjecting the trafficked to gloom and despair, seems to explain the booming profile of the criminal act.

The Illela border town in Sokoto state has become a strategic route for the human traffickers to carry out their nefarious activities. In fact, the victims, who are mostly young girls, are trafficked through Illela town en route Niger Republic, through Libya to Europe. Indeed, the profound criminality of the trafficking crime is evident in the fact that these under-aged girls who were hitherto promised good jobs and prosperity, end up doing arduous, risky and poorly paid jobs. They become not only prone to physical assault and molestations, but may also be used as objects of sex and for other forms of lewdness.

Ignorance is easily the biggest tool traffickers use to get their victims. With promises of good jobs and prosperity, victims are easily lured and parents who are already under the heavy burden of economic hardships agree without a thought. But the National Agency for Prohibition of Traffic in Persons (NAPTIP) is making frantic efforts to educate people on the ills of human trafficking as a way of steaming the menace. And, as part of these efforts, the agency organised a workshop in Sokoto recently.

Speaking at the workshop, the Minister of State for Foreign Affairs, Ambassador Bagudu Hirse attributed the increase in trafficking in persons and child labour to porous borders, poverty as well as the zeal to get rich-quick among the youths. He noted that thousands of Nigerians have become victims of this nefarious trans-national organised crime, which has not only posed great health hazards to the people but has also affected the nation’s international image.

Hirse observed that Nigeria has witnessed migration of virile youths to western countries in search of non-existent greener pasture, lamenting that many of these illegal migrants, especially women have been forced into prostitution, have been exposed to social and health hazards. Similarly, trafficked children are being exploitatively used as cheap labour in farms, plantations and as domestic servants in homes.

The Minister however noted that the commission of this heinous crime, in some cases, is facilitated by unscrupulous security officers, who provide cover and issue fake documents to ensure easy passage for the victims along our international borders. According to him, the negative effects of this crime, whose proceeds are in billions of dollars, are inimical to national development and sub-regional integration efforts.

He added that in order to address the ugly trend, the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS) has entered into a joint action plan with the Economic Community of Central African States to tackle the menace of trafficking in persons especially women and children. He challenged state governments to ensure adequate increase in the enrolment of children in schools so that the children would not be used as child-labourers.

Also speaking, the Sokoto Zonal Head of the National Agency for Prohibition of Trafficking in Persons (NAPTIP), Mr Shehu Omar said rapid urbanisation, low literacy levels and high school-drop out rates are some of the reasons why many Nigerian children are vulnerable to trafficking. He noted that parents with large families are prone to the traffickers’ deceit and promises of a better life for the children.

According to him, the amended NAPTIP Act 2005, stipulates that no child under the age of 18 years should be employed as part of a ‘domestic staff’ outside his or her family environment, pointing out that the essence of this provision is to fortify the rights of the child as provided in the Child Rights Act and to ensure full mental and physical development of a child. He maintained that the Act is not meant to destroy the African traditional foster system but rather to supplement the African value for the protection of the vulnerable in the society especially the ‘Almajiri’ child.

Omar noted that the demand for cheap commercial sex workers in destination countries, especially Europe, strongly contributes to the growth of the phenomenon and the success of the criminal network. He stated that since the creation of the Sokoto Zonal office, about 60 suspected traffickers have been arrested while 573 victims were also rescued, adding that 24 victims were empowered. He further explained that the zonal office has secured 22 convictions and called on stakeholders to join hands with the agency so that modern day slavery can be eradicated in the Nigerian society.

In his remarks, a lecturer in the Department of Political Science, Usmanu Dan Fodio University, Sokoto, Dr Muhammad Zaiyan Umar attributed the high incidence of human trafficking to poverty as evidenced by the inability of many people to feed, cloth and meet requirements of basic and decent living. He explained that this was why all kinds of vices including prostitution, thuggery, drug abuse and trafficking are thriving. He linked the menace to the failure of the state to provide economic and social safety nets for its poor, adding that, “it is no wonder that due to this deficit, a promise for job outside the country, mostly with false pretence for some in Europe elicits frenzied responses from not a few parents, who see it as the golden opportunity to move out of the humiliating pangs of poverty.”

Umar described illiteracy as part of the problem that further exacerbated human trafficking in the country, pointing out that the educational profile in Nigeria has remained so precarious that six years to the 2015 MDGs target year, not many Nigerians believe that the millennium development goals on education are feasible due to faulty design and implementation of educational policies.

According to him, demands for cheap labour further worsened the menace of human trafficking, as it gives not only cheap labour to homes and factories, but ensures that the victims become submissive to their bosses in ways that denigrate their fundamental freedom. He lamented that porous borders also pose considerable problems as they make detection and apprehension not only difficult but risky.

The university don noted that attempts by government at combating the menace of human trafficking through ratification and adoption of international legislations such as United Nations Protocol to Prevent, Suppress and Punish Trafficking in Persons Law Enforcement and Administration Act 2003 and the Child rights Act 2003 have not yielded the desired objectives.

He therefore stressed the need for the federal government to ensure free education at all levels in the country, as a means of curbing illiteracy and poverty. “Since functional education imparts skills that could be deployed in the quest for economical survival, its attainment remains important for individual and societal well being. And this must be promoted in the task of preventing the menace of human trafficking and child exploitation”, Umar averred.

It is indeed well acknowledged that government alone cannot win the battle against human trafficking and child labour. Thus, it has become pertinent for civil society, comprising of international organisations, non governmental organisations, youth organisations, women groups as well as other professional groups in the society to complement the efforts of the government through awareness campaigns, as a means of curbing the ugly trend. They could also do so through counselling and other services that not only discourage the act, but also rehabilitate victims of human trafficking. And, the NAPTIP workshop was a good starting point.


THISDAY ONLINE / Nigeria news / African views on global news


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8 Human Trafficking Cases Brought to Courts in Past 2 Years - Jamaica Information Service

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KINGSTON (JIS):
Wednesday, February 24, 2010

Justice Minister and Attorney General, Senator Dorothy Lightbourne Q.C. (left), greets Political Officer, United States Embassy, Kingston, Dr. Don Baker, during the opening of the Ministry of Health's two-day workshop on the theme: 'Human Trafficking: A legal, medical/healthcare, economic and social dilemma', at the Mona Visitors Lodge and Conference Centre, University of the West Indies (UWI), Mona on Tuesday (February 23). The workshop was staged in collaboration with the organization for Strategic Development in Jamaica (OSDJ); the Norman Manley Law School, UWI; and the International Leadership Institute. Looking on is Independent Jamaica Council for Human Rights (IJCHR) member, Nancy Anderson.

Eight suspected cases of human trafficking have been successfully investigated by the police and brought before the courts over the past two years, yielding two convictions, Attorney General and Minister of Justice, Senator Dorothy Lightbourne, Q.C., has disclosed.

Human trafficking is defined as the practice of humans being tricked, lured, coerced or otherwise removed from their home or country, and forced to work with no or low payment, or in terms which are highly exploitative.

Senator Lightbourne was speaking at the opening of a two-day workshop on the theme, "Human Trafficking: A legal, medical/health care, economic and social dilemma", hosted by the Ministry of Health, at the Mona Visitor Lodge and Conference Centre, University of the West Indies (UWI), St. Andrew, on Tuesday (February 23).

She said that the eight cases investigated incorporated five raids conducted last year, resulting in 22 persons being interviewed, of which four were arrested and three brought before the courts. Two of those cases yielded the convictions.

Senator Lightbourne alluded to the United States Department of State's Trafficking in Persons 2009 Report which, she said, revealed that the activity had expanded to some 175 countries, reflecting 90.2 per cent of the world's nations.

She said that, additionally, the United Nations International Labour Organization (ILO) reported that, globally, there are 12.3 million adults and children and children "at any time" in "forced labour and sexual servitude", resulting from human trafficking.

Justice Minister and Attorney General, Senator Hon. Dorothy Lightbourne Q.C. (left), consults with Chief Justice, Hon. Zaila McCalla, during the opening of the Ministry of Health's two-day workshop on the theme: 'Human Trafficking: A legal, medical/healthcare, economic and social dilemma', at the Mona Visitors Lodge and Conference Centre, University of the West Indies (UWI), Mona on Tuesday (February 23). Senator Lightbourne was guest speaker at the workshop, which was staged n collaboration with the organization for Strategic Development in Jamaica (OSDJ); the Norman Manley Law School, UWI; and the International Leadership Institute.


"The financial crisis which has affected the world, over the past two years, has led to more workers, especially females, being willing to take greater risks for economic opportunities for themselves and their families, making them more vulnerable to traffickers, who lure them with promises of jobs and other prospects," the Minister noted.

She pointed out that "reports" indicate that, in Jamaica, it is primarily poor women and girls and, increasingly, boys who are trafficked from rural to urban and tourist areas, for "commercial sexual exploitation."

She asserted that with human trafficking being the second largest and fastest growing international criminal activity globally, "we must become aware of the legal, medical/healthcare, economic and social aspects of the dilemma in our effort to fight it in Jamaica and the Caribbean."

Senator Lightbourne advised that administration has undertaken the establishment of legislation and other activities aimed at curbing the incidence of human trafficking, locally. These include passage of the Trafficking in Persons (Suppression and Punishment) Act in 2007 to "advance our national efforts."

"The Act provides for increased penalties for persons who have committed, facilitated or, knowingly, benefited from human trafficking, with a fine of up to 10 years, or both fine and imprisonment," she outlined.

She added that the Act also facilitates support for victims, by providing access to medical, psychological, legal and victim protection services.

Justice Minister and Attorney General, Senator Hon. Dorothy Lightbourne Q.C. (left), conversing with Independent Jamaica Council for Human Rights (IJCHR) member, Nancy Anderson, during the opening of the Ministry of Health's two-day workshop on the theme: 'Human Trafficking: A legal, medical/healthcare, economic and social dilemma', at the Mona Visitors Lodge and Conference Centre, University of the West Indies (UWI), St. Andrew, on Tuesday (February 23).


Other pieces of legislation, which the Minister said have been enacted, specifically aimed at protecting children, are the Childcare and Protection Act, which stipulates a fine or imprisonment of up to 10 years, and the Child Pornography (Prevention) Act, and the Sexual Offences Act, which she pointed out, all "seek to crack down physical and sexual exploitation in forms that can lead to or promote human trafficking."

Senator Lightbourne also advised that upwards of $25 million was slated to be spent to refurbish three buildings, which will be used as safe shelters for victims of human trafficking in Jamaica.

"These shelters are discreet, but they are located in the northern, southern and central areas of the island and will provide bedrooms, a counselling centre where victims can receive therapy or meet with legal officers, she explained.

They also contain: a sick bay; a training room; a recreational room for adults; and a play room for children; outdoor space for recreational activities; and living quarters for a house mother and a security officer; as well as security fencing around the houses.

The Minister disclosed that one shelter has already been completed at a cost of $10.7 million, adding that the second is 75 per cent complete at a cost, to date, of $8 million. Fifty per cent of the third shelter has been completed, at a cost of $2 million thus far. Cumulatively, they will be able to house 36 persons.

Upon completion, the shelters will be handed over to the Ministry of National Security for their management, and the Ministry of Justice will continue to provide assistance to the victims through the role that the Victim Support Unit (VSU) plays in the justice system, by counselling and other forms of support, Miss Lightbourne said.

She also noted that a Trafficking in Persons (TIP) Unit, within the Organized Crime Investigation Unit (OCID) of the Jamaica Constabulary Force (JCF), has also been established. The Unit is staffed by five officers, assigned to investigate cases of trafficking.

The workshop, which ends on Wednesday (February 24), brings together stakeholders from various sectors and interests for discussions on the issue of human trafficking, and the way forward for Jamaica in effectively addressing the matter.

The Ministry of Health is staging the event in collaboration with the Organization for Strategic Development in Jamaica (OSDJ); the Norman Manley Law School, UWI; and the International Leadership Institute.

8 Human Trafficking Cases Brought to Courts in Past 2 Years - Jamaica Information Service



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Texan, girlfriend get 9 years for baby trafficking  | ajc.com

A picture of a young childImage via Wikipedia

By MARK WALSH

The Associated Press

MONTERREY, Mexico — A Texas man and his girlfriend were sentenced to nine years in prison for recruiting Mexican women to give birth in the U.S. and sell their babies to couples there, a judge said Wednesday.

Amado Torres, of Harlingen, Texas, and Maria Isabel Hernandez, of Mexico, paid women up to $3,000 for their newborns, Tamaulipas state Judge Jose Luis Bazan told The Associated Press. He handed down their sentences for child trafficking on Jan. 29.

Bazan said the pregnant women were smuggled into the United States to give birth so their babies would be U.S. citizens, making them more easily adoptable.

Torres, 65, denies the charges and will appeal, said Eduardo Cabanas, his defense lawyer.

Three women who testified that they sold their babies to the pair out of economic desperation were sentenced to six years in prison. They said Hernandez, 26, helped look after them during their pregnancies in the United States.

One of the women, Claudia Pantoja, said she was five months pregnant when she agreed to sell her baby in November 2007, according to court secretary Mario Alberto Cervantes. Pantoja said she and Hernandez met Torres a month later at a house in Harlingen where two other pregnant women were waiting to give birth.

Torres and Hernandez received up to $13,000 from U.S. couples for the babies, Cervantes said.

Bazan said the formal accusation against Torres mentions at least six babies but the pair likely sold more. Investigators believe they had been operating their trafficking ring since 2005.

None of the babies involved have been found, Bazan said.

Torres and Hernandez were arrested in May 2008 in Rio Bravo, a border town in Tamaulipas. Police said they found the couple at a house with an infant and a notebook with a list of babies.

Torres, originally from Puerto Rico, initially claimed he was a missionary helping pregnant mothers unable to pay for their medical expenses and the costs of raising a child.

In a 2008 interview with The Monitor newspaper, Torres said he was engaged in legitimate efforts to help the women and any money that may have changed hands came from adoptive parents looking to ensure prenatal care.

Cabanas said Wednesday that Torres' initial statements to prosecutors were made under duress and authorities failed to provide him access to U.S. consular representation. He said his client now denies having anything to do with the babies.

Cabanas also said investigators lack evidence of any money Torres and Hernandez allegedly earned from the trafficking ring.

"There are a flood of irregularities," Cabanas said. "I think this sentence is very illogical."
___
Associated Press writer Alexandra Olson in Mexico City contributed to this report.
___

February 10, 2010 01:35 PM EST

Texan, girlfriend get 9 years for baby trafficking  | ajc.com

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allAfrica.com: Nigeria: Minister Condemns Human Trafficking in Borno

Ahmed Mari
25 February 2010

Maiduguri — The Minister of State for Foreign Affairs, Alhaji Jibrin Maigari has condemned human trafficking and child labour, describing it as a source of embarrassment to the country.

The minister said this when he paid a courtesy call on the Borno State Governor, Senator Ali Modu Sheriff at Government House Maiduguri, recently.

He said he was in the state to launch an enlightenment campaign on eradication of human trafficking and child labour which is denting the image of country on the international scene.

Alhaji Maigari said the enlightenment campaign would be launched in the six geo-political zones of the country, adding that the choice of Borno in the North-East geo-political zone is strategic as it is the only state in the country that shares borders with three countries namely, Chad, Niger and Cameroon.

The minister said human trafficking is carried out in the name of seeking greener pastures in countries like Saudi Arabia, France, Italy, Spain USA and other developed countries.

Responding, Governor Sheriff said Borno State which shares borders with three countries serves as a gateway to human trafficking and called on security agencies in the state to be vigilant especially at the borders, which he described as being very porous.

He assured the minister that the state government will do everything possible to checkmate the activities of human traffickers and advised the public to report any suspicious movements to security agencies.

allAfrica.com: Nigeria: Minister Condemns Human Trafficking in Borno

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State laws sought on human trafficking | al.com

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By Erin Stock -- The Birmingham News
February 24, 2010, 11:48AM

Alabama has seen a hand­ful of high-profile cases of human trafficking within state lines in recent years -- from a 2007 raid on a brothel at an Albertville mo­bile home to the arrest last year of a Florence man charged with coercing a mi­nor to perform a sex act for money.

While federal prosecutors have moved on those cases, they can't pursue them all, say some victims' advocates and state lawmakers. They're pushing for a state law against human traffick­ing that supporters say would lead to more pros­ecutions in Alabama of what's considered modern­day slavery.

"Right now we've only got one arm of government that's involved, and we're depending on the federal government to take care of everything in Alabama," said state Rep. Jack Wil­liams, R-Vestavia Hills.

Williams and Sen. Wen­dell Mitchell, D-Luverne, in­troduced bills this session that would criminalize hu­man trafficking. Mitchell's version passed the Senate on Tuesday and now must go to a House committee, while Williams' bill passed a House committee earlier this month. Such a law would bring Alabama in line with 43 other states, accord­ing to the Polaris Project, a national organization that supports the legislation.

"The federal government just cannot prosecute all the cases of human trafficking in the states," said Kristin Fortin, the group's policy counsel.

Beyond criminalizing hu­man trafficking, the pro­posed law would provide mandatory restitution for victims and give them a means to bring civil cases against traffickers. The crime of human trafficking in the first degree would be punishable by 10 years to life in prison, as a Class A felony. In addition, anyone who interferes with an investigation into trafficking could be charged with a Class C felony and be sen­tenced to one to 10 years behind bars.

Now, such acts must be prosecuted on the state level under charges such as "pro­moting prostitution" or kid­napping, said Barry Matson, deputy director of the Ala­bama District Attorney's As­sociation.

"We as prosecutors and law enforcement need to be able to have every tool we can to make those cases," he said. "This gives us another means to protect people who need protecting."

A state law gives local law enforcement an incentive to focus on trafficking cases, Fortin said. Ultimately, it will empower state and local officials to root out more of these crimes, Williams said.

It's difficult to estimate the number of human traf­ficking victims in Alabama, or anywhere, because vic­tims are hidden and often moved regularly, said Sara Jane Camacho, executive di­rector of Freedom to Thrive. The Birmingham-based nonprofit organization seeks to raise awareness about human trafficking.

Traffickers likely pass through Alabama, she said: "We're on the routes from Atlanta down to Texas and Florida, which are huge pockets for sex trafficking."

One gauge of human traf­ficking in the state is the Po­laris Project's hotline, which has received 13 calls about potential human traf­ficking in Alabama since De­cember 2007, Fortin said. She guessed the number would be higher if the hotline were better publicized.

Another indicator of the problem, Camacho said, is the presence of runaways. One of every three teenagers on the street will face sexual exploitation for money or other economic reasons within 48 hours of leaving home, she said, citing Na­tional Runaway Switch­board statistics.

E-MAIL: estock@bhamnews.com

State laws sought on human trafficking | al.com

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New Texas task force will tackle human trafficking | Dallas | News from Fort Worth, Dall...

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Posted Tuesday, Feb. 23, 2010

By the numbers

14,500-17,500 people are trafficked into the United States
5,000-7,000 people are trafficked into the U.S. from East Asia and the Pacific
3,500-5,500 people are trafficked into the U.S. from each of these areas: Latin America, Europe and Eurasia

Source: Annual estimates based on 2004 U.S. Trafficking in Persons Report


By ALEX BRANCH
abranch@star-telegram.com

DALLAS -- A new state task force will take an aggressive stand against human traffickers, who have turned Texas into a hub for international and domestic forced labor and prostitution rings, Texas Attorney General Greg Abbott said Tuesday in Dallas.

The Texas Human Trafficking Prevention Task Force will coordinate, fortify and expand law enforcement tools to prosecute traffickers and help better identify victims of "modern-day slavery," he said.

"We are not going to be defeated by human trafficking," Abbott said. "It is a horrific crime that affects far too many people."

Abbott spoke about the task force, which held its first meeting last month, at the Texas Summit on the Trafficking and Exploitation of Children, organized by Children at Risk.

The Texas Legislature created the task force last year, calling for the attorney general's office to oversee a mix of state and local law enforcement officers, state social services personnel and representatives from nongovernmental organizations.

While Texas already has several task forces related to human trafficking that are funded by the U.S. Justice Department, the new task force will connect investigations and intelligence throughout the state, officials said.

"Human traffickers in Houston may have connections to human traffickers in Dallas and Fort Worth," said Bill Bernstein, deputy director of Mosaic Family Services, a Dallas nonprofit that helps trafficking victims. "This will increase communication and allow a broader view of these illegal operations."

Major destination

Texas is considered a major destination for victims of domestic and international human trafficking. In 2008, 38 percent of all calls to the National Human Trafficking Resource Center hot line were dialed in Texas, according to statistics.

Texas was among the first states to enact a law against human trafficking, in 2003. However, Abbott said that awareness of the law is low -- even among some prosecutors, law officers and judges. He said he has assigned two investigators in his office to work on trafficking cases with jurisdictions statewide.

"I think we will begin to make real progress," he said.

Victims' rights workers have called for more safe houses and increased public awareness. A common misperception is that victims are always forced into the sex trade. But, advocates say, more than half are forced into other types of labor, so clues about their situation are often ignored.

Bernstein gave several examples of such jobs:

One young man was rescued from a McKinney dry-cleaning business where he was forced to work 14-hour days, sleep on the floor and eat three meals a day at Burger King.

Several young boys from Africa were forced to sing in a Dallas-Fort Worth traveling church choir.

A few years ago, about 70 Latin American women were rescued from forced labor at nightclubs in Fort Worth.

Difficult mission

Investigations into human-trafficking schemes are often difficult because the people trafficked don't always realize they are victims, Bernstein said.

"They think, well, they owed someone money and they couldn't pay it off so they had to take this job," he said. "They are with their own people, speaking their own language and might come from a country where law enforcement is viewed with suspicion.

"They don't seem to realize they are in need of being rescued."

State House Bill 4009, which mandated creation of the task force, requires it to report statistics on the number of people trafficked and the number of traffickers convicted. It also must report on ways to curb demand for the services that victims provide and study the routes used by traffickers.

Interstate 10, which links El Paso to San Antonio and Houston, is considered the most active route.

Rep. Paula Pierson, D-Arlington, who attended the conference, said abuse, particularly of women and children, has gone on for "years and years."

"We can't just bury our heads in the sand and pretend it does not go on," she said. "We have to take a stand and stop it."

ALEX BRANCH, 817-390-7689

New Texas task force will tackle human trafficking | Dallas | News from Fort Worth, Dall...

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Sex trafficking victims speak out against trade - 2/25/10 - Los Angeles-Southern California-LA Breaking News, Weather, Traffic, Sports - abc7.com

Tuesday, February 23, 2010

Adrienne Alpert

WESTLAKE, Calif. (KABC) -- As many as 17,000 human slaves are trafficked into the United States every year. Los Angeles is a prime destination. With the city's diverse culture, people from foreign countries blend in. They blend in in agriculture, in sweatshops, and in an Eyewitness News second-part look at human trafficking, they blend in as the domestic slave next door.

The family who bought an 8-year-old girl for a domestic slave does not live in their house any more, but the home is still impressively big in an Irvine guard-gated community. A garage door hides the place where the girl lived.

The Egyptian girl slept inside the garage when she wasn't working a 16-hour day. In Egypt, Shyima was sold to cover a theft an older sister was accused of.

"I went there with my mom to visit and I never went back home," said Shyima.

Now age 20, Shyima can talk about the experience. She was a 10-year-old housekeeper. She cooked and cleaned for the family's five children, who emigrated from Egypt and had Shyima smuggled along to continue working for them, while she slept on a filthy mattress and had to wash her clothes with dish soap.

"Every country has outlawed slavery, and yet it's still taking place and, in fact, is growing," said Kay Buck, executive director, Coalition to Abolish Slavery and Trafficking (CAST).

Buck cites the number of people working with little or no pay at 27 million worldwide.

"It's really the human rights issue of the 21st century," said Buck.

A neighbor finally called authorities three years ago, concerned about the little girl who was always working and never went to school.

Abel Ibraham was convicted and sentenced to three years in federal prison and deported. His now ex-wife, Amal Motlieb, served nearly two years, and she was deported. They were ordered to pay Shyima $76,000 for the two years she was their slave.

When asked when she finally realized it was wrong, Shyima said, "When I finally got taken away, and when they told me this is not legal here."

Fear keeps modern day slaves from running away, fear that facing the law will be worse.

"She said that the police would arrest me and put me in jail and a lot of bad people that could rape me," said Ima Matul, a former domestic slave. Ima was a 16-year-old slave from Indonesia working without pay as a nanny when she finally got help escaping.

She recently joined a panel on Eyewitness Newsmakers to speak out.

"I feel powerful to tell my story," said Ima.

The little girl who was a domestic slave wants to join that army and work for Immigration and Customs Enforcement.


"ICE, yes, I'm going right into ICE for all immigration, helping with human trafficking and being out there to rescue others and be part of it," said Shyima.

She is Shyima Hall, adopted by a loving family. She's a college student with a bright future.

The Los Angeles Human Trafficking Task Force has a hotline to assist victims and prosecute traffickers: (800) 655-4095.

For more information about the Coalition to Abolish Slavery and Trafficking (CAST), visit www.castla.org
(Copyright ©2010 KABC-TV/DT. All Rights Reserved.)

Sex trafficking victims speak out against trade - 2/25/10 - Los Angeles-Southern California-LA Breaking News, Weather, Traffic, Sports - abc7.com

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Modern Day Slavery Series Starts February 28th

Library Day at Seattle Art Museum | Main

It is hard to believe and difficult to fathom that you could, today, in the 21st century, find yourself living next door to a slave. Author, Kevin Bales describes how a person might find him or herself in such a dire predicament in the book The Slave Next Door: Human Trafficking and Slavery in American Today.

According to the Washington State Office of the Attorney General, human trafficking is the "fastest growing criminal industry in the world today." In 2003, the State of Washington had the distinction of being the first state to pass a law criminalizing human trafficking. Between 14,500 and 17,500 people are trafficked into the country each year, according to the U.S. Department of Justice estimates.

Washington State is grappling with this knotty issue. If you are interested in increasing your knowledge and awareness of the topic, please plan to attend the three-part series The Price of a Life: Modern-Day Slavery and Human Trafficking at the Central Library. Sara Lerner, reporter/announcer for KUOW radio will moderate the series which is designed to highlight local, regional and national efforts in addressing the problem of human trafficking.

Be sure, also, to tune into Morning Edition on National Public Radio, March 16–19, for Sara Lerner's in–depth look at labor trafficking in Washington State. She received a KUOW Venture Fund Grant Award to focus on the topic.

In addition to the series, The Price of a Life: Modern-Day Slavery and Human Trafficking Resource List features books, government documents, CDs, DVDs and websites. This list has been developed to increase understanding and knowledge of slavery and trafficking and the human cost of the loss of family, personal liberty and livelihood. (Print copies of this list are available at the History, Travel and Maps desk on the 8th floor of the Central Library).

Legislating to Liberate
2 p.m. Sunday, Feb. 28

Learn how and why Washington State is in the forefront of national legislation regulating against human trafficking and slavery.

Jeanne Kohl-Welles, Washington State Senator, 36th District
Velma Veloria, Activist, first Filipina-American, Asian American and first woman elected to Washington State Legislature.

The Cost of Capture
2 p.m. Sunday, March 14

Hear firsthand accounts of how victims of forced bondage obtained their freedom.

Tim Matsui, Photojournalist and Documentary Filmmaker
Emma Catague, Activist, Co-Founder of Asian & Pacific Islander Women & Family Safety Center

Stopping the Traffic
2 p.m. Sunday, March 28

Discover how local organizations are addressing the illegal trade in human beings.

Sara Lerner, reporter/announcer for KUOW Puget Sound Public Radio
Detective Harvey Sloan, Co-chair of the Washington Advisory Committee on Trafficking (WashACT), a Human Trafficking Task Force
Ye-Ting Woo, Co-chair of the Washington Advisory Committee on Trafficking (WashACT) a Human Trafficking Taskforce
Kathleen Morris, Program Manager for the Washington Anti-Trafficking Response Network.


Posted by Seattle Public Library at February 25, 2010 6:00 a.m.


Modern Day Slavery Series Starts February 28th

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Wednesday, February 24, 2010

Protecting Haiti's Children: Good Intentions or Child Trafficking? - Up Front Blog - Brookings Institution

Wednesday February 24, 2010

Rebecca Winthrop, Co-Director, Center for Universal Education
The Brookings Institution

February 24, 2010 —

The January 12 earthquake that shook Haiti was a huge blow to the country’s delicate social and political balance. Like other large-scale natural disasters, the aftermath saw massive aid efforts mobilized from large and small nations, nonprofits and religious groups, all intending to help the ravished country. Despite the positive work many of these groups are doing, the recent media focus has been on the American missionaries accused of child kidnapping.

The group, which was associated with two Idaho-based Baptist churches, was caught with 33 Haitian children, attempting to take them to the Dominican Republic on January 29 without proper paperwork. Questions were raised about the children’s status and whether they were truly orphans or just separated from their families. As of today, eight of the 10 Americans have been released by the Haitian judge overseeing the case; however, the group’s leader and one other member are still being held for questioning. This case highlights the important issue of child protection in humanitarian crisis. Where is the line between good intentions and human trafficking?

Human trafficking is at once a horrific crime and a global phenomenon. Virtually every country in the world sends or receives human beings for exploitative purposes through global trafficking networks. The United Nations estimates that at any given moment 2.5 million people are in forced labor, including sexual exploitation, as a result of trafficking and that these people come from 127 countries and reside in 137 countries. The majority of people trafficked are children and youth with 1.2 million children under the age of 18 estimated to be trafficked each year. The United Nations defines human trafficking as the use of force, fraud, or other coercive methods, including abusing a position of vulnerability, to recruit, transfer or receive people for exploitative purposes.

Tragically, calamitous events such as Haiti’s earthquake are breeding grounds for child traffickers, seeking to take advantage of chaos and weakened government law enforcement. Accusations of child kidnapping and trafficking were widespread following the 2004 tsunami in South Asia, where Indonesian officials took action to protect children from trafficking by posting guards around camps sheltering displaced people.

It is often difficult to quickly discern the difference between well-intentioned but completely uniformed voluntary groups and child traffickers. In 2007, members of the French group, Zoe’s Ark, were accused of child abduction after attempting to fly 103 children out of Chad. At the time, U.N. officials said it was not clear that the children were actually orphans or that they were from the war-ravaged Darfur region of Sudan, as the group claimed; but rather they were Chadian children with living parents and relatives. The organization appears to be made up of well-intentioned volunteers wanting to assist needy children. But they were not professionally trained or experienced workers; nor did they have familiarity with the issues and an understanding of the best practices associated with supporting children’s needs in the midst of conflict and disasters in developing countries.

In these difficult contexts, good intentions are not enough. These incidents overshadow the positive work many volunteers and aid groups do to help children in disaster situations, and highlight the importance of professional humanitarian workers who are especially trained to assess and respond to children’s needs without doing harm. Most importantly, these good intentions can cause serious emotional and psychological damage to the innocent children that just survived a major crisis by removing them from their families and communities. Research and past experience in helping children of humanitarian crises has shown that by far the best way to assist the majority of children, even orphans, is to ensure that they are living with extended relatives or caring adults in their own communities. In such humanitarian crises, where children’s well-being is at stake, aid agencies and volunteer groups are best advised by the principles set forth in the Inter-agency Guiding Principles on Unaccompanied and Separated Children, which was created in 2004 by a group of international United Nations and civil society humanitarian agencies. These guidelines address situations in which children are separated from their families, whether orphaned or accidentally lost, in the wake of crises and disaster. They articulate clear steps, including supporting family unity, to ensure that each child’s best interests are followed.

Haiti’s recovery will take years. The desire to help children left without proper care is both noble and necessary; however, the urge to volunteer is best channeled through raising funds to support professional organizations with expertise in disaster response and child protection, such as the United Nations Children’s Fund, the International Rescue Committee, or Save the Children. Otherwise, well-intentioned volunteers can risk doing more harm than good.


Protecting Haiti's Children: Good Intentions or Child Trafficking? - Up Front Blog - Brookings Institution

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In Our Own Backyard: Child Prostitution and Sex Trafficking in the United States

The Department of Justice building in Washingt...Image via Wikipedia

Luis CdeBaca
Ambassador-at-Large, Office To Monitor and Combat Trafficking in Persons

Prepared Testimony Before Subcommittee on Human Rights and the Law of the Senate Committee on the Judiciary
Washington, DC

February 24, 2010

http://link.brightcove.com/services/player/bcpid1705667530?bctid=68364037001

Good morning. I would like to thank Chairman Durbin, Ranking Member Coburn, and Members of the Committee for convening this critical briefing on the sexual exploitation of children. And I thank you for inviting me to speak to what the State Department is doing to fight these crimes.

As President Obama’s Ambassador-at-Large to Combat Human Trafficking, I am responsible for coordinating our efforts in the global fight against contemporary forms of slavery. Prior to directing the Office to Monitor and Combat Trafficking in Persons, I served as a federal prosecutor, and have seen the real harm, violence, and trauma perpetrated on trafficking victims, and the greed and cruelty of the traffickers. I have witnessed children exploited and preyed upon. In these roles I have experienced firsthand how our international objectives are furthered by a strong domestic response on this issue.

Today, I will speak about trends and policies, and our international efforts. The Attorney General’s Report to Congress and Assessment of U.S. Government Activities to Combat Trafficking in Persons sets forth many policies and accomplishments, but, this issue—like all important ones—is best thought about not just on the bases of a report or data, but in terms of people and principles; not just legal structures or programs, but what we stand for as a nation.

We have a long way to go both here and abroad to recognize victims and bring their perpetrators to justice, and provide for the compassionate care mandated by law and our common ethic; to raise awareness and combat the demand that traffickers rush to meet through violence and exploitation.

Our domestic response to this issue falls primarily to the able hands of the Justice Department and the Department of Health and Human Services, and I believe you will see through U.S. Attorney Beth Phillips’ testimony, the incredible commitment and progress DOJ brings to fighting these heinous crimes. Still, I don’t think any of us will sit before you and argue that our governmental response has been perfect or that there is not more that can—indeed, should—be done. Sadly, in our day, we find children enslaved not just in commercial sex, but in agricultural work, factories, and private homes. We recognize that a comprehensive child protection approach addresses all vulnerabilities and all forms of suffering.

And so in our legal and diplomatic efforts, as reflected in the annual Trafficking in Persons Report, we are very clear:

* It does not matter if a victim once consented to work for their trafficker;
* It does not matter if the victim returned to their trafficker after he or she was freed;
* It does not matter if the victim’s enslavement was through chains of mental dependency or psychological manipulation as opposed to being physically locked up;
* It does not matter if their trafficker was at times nice to them or gave them presents or if they veered between feelings of love and fear for their pimp.

If that adult was held for labor or sex through force, fraud, or coercion, they’re a trafficking victim. In the case of minors in sex trafficking, there is no requirement to show force, fraud, or coercion. No child can consent to being sold into commercial sex. If a pimp used a child for commercial sex that child should be treated as a victim, not a criminal. Frankly that’s all that matters.

Historically, countries worldwide have confronted the issue with too much judgment and too little compassion. However that judgment of who is most deserving and who makes a more sympathetic victim clouds our ability to properly identify and care for victims. The consequences have been borne by the most vulnerable:

* the trafficking victim who is locked up for prostitution or immigration offenses even where there is evidence they were enslaved;
* the woman forced into prostitution whose violation is compounded by a government unwilling to accept her back as their national, or only willing to recognize her citizenship through her relationship to a man, be it father or husband, neither of whom will acknowledge her now;
* and the boys, too often so stigmatized by society’s refusal to acknowledge that they too could be victims, and that they suffer in silence.

If we’re honest with ourselves, we echo some of those judgments here in the U.S. in more subtle but equally damaging ways. As we look to monitor and combat trafficking around the world, we know that sex trafficking victims may not all be saints, may not understand that they are victims, and may consider our help unwanted interference – but that does not make them any less deserving of a compassionate response.

As President Obama has repeatedly emphasized about our general approach to the promotion of human rights, our ability to help other governments combat trafficking is only as strong as the example we provide through the strength of our domestic response. As the chairman of the Senior Policy Operating Group which coordinates interagency policy and supports the President’s Interagency Task Force to combat human trafficking, I’m proud to support the Department of Justice as it continues to lead the world in its prosecutions of all forms of traffickers and work with its staff at home and abroad on our collective mandate to stop child sex trafficking.

The State Department, along with significant contributions from the Department of Justice, recently compiled information provided from numerous federal agencies on the U.S. Government’s efforts to protect children from sexual exploitation. As part of our larger initiatives to protect children both here and abroad, and to report in a timely way on the implementation of our treaty obligations, the United States on January 22 submitted to the U.N. Committee on the Rights of the Child its periodic reports on U.S. implementation of the two Optional Protocols to the Convention on the Rights of the Child. One report was submitted pursuant to the Optional Protocol on the sale of children, child prostitution and child pornography. The other report was submitted pursuant to the Optional Protocol on the involvement of children in armed conflict. These reports, in particular the one addressing the Optional Protocol on the Sale of Children, document the extensive legal, policy, and programmatic efforts at the Federal and State levels aimed at preventing various forms of child exploitation and holding accountable individuals who victimize children. Each of these reports represents an ambitious undertaking, involving contributions by and coordination among many departments and agencies within the U.S. government, as well as information about state efforts, as well as input from non-governmental organizations. In the next year or so, the U.S. expects to reappear before the Committee on the Rights of the Child to discuss these two reports and answer questions.

In the multilateral context, the U.S. Government has engaged with the United Nations, the Group of Eight (G-8), and the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe to introduce and support resolutions, to host side events focused on combating commercial sexual exploitation of children, and to produce a “best practices” document on effective law enforcement measures to address child sex tourism. Additionally, a large interagency U.S. delegation participated in the World Congress III against Sexual Exploitation of Children and Adolescents, and its preparatory regional conferences to share U.S. Government efforts and guide future global initiatives. The U.S. is currently working with other member states of the Organization for American States to develop a regional plan of action on trafficking in persons, which will include actions to assist and protect children.

We recognize that combating child sex trafficking whether at home or abroad requires many partners in the public and private sector. It is through our colleagues and foreign partners that we have learned about new and evolving forms of child sex trafficking—both the new ways that offenders are using chat rooms, message boards, and specialized Web sites to obtain information about where young victims can be found, but also how new technologies can be harnessed for the good of identifying traffickers, pimps, and customers, and to facilitate arrests, prosecutions, and convictions of exploiters.

We have learned that across the globe, the most vulnerable are often runaways, so-called throwaways, and street children, with a history of child physical and sexual abuse in the home or the extended family. In addition to sexual exploitation, many children are forced to steal or sell drugs by adult street gangs or beg—often making their first interactions with law enforcement about the smaller crime rather than the larger ones just beneath the surface.

As I mentioned earlier, though often unreported due to social stigmas, boys around the world also face the trauma of commercial sexual exploitation. The sexual exploitation of boys frequently takes place in informal, unorganized settings, making them vulnerable to abuse and less likely to be identified by authorities. Young street boys form relationships with older boys for protection, and are sometimes forced by these boys to have sex with older men for profit as part of the relationship. These young boys may also be prostituted at public meeting places such as parks, bus terminals, rail stations, markets, hotels, or beaches. Armed with the knowledge that street children and runaways are among the most vulnerable, and that boys have long been an under-reported and unrecognized population, we must redouble our efforts to focus attention and resources on these often forgotten children.

As I imagine the grim news of late has reminded you, in the aftermath of natural disasters, where people are displaced and separated, children are at higher risk and vulnerable to sex trafficking. We know that partnerships are critical in protecting vulnerable children, registering unaccompanied and separated children, educating citizens about the risks of giving away children in times of crisis, rebuilding the capacity of local NGOs, and tracing and reuniting families.

The U.S. Government has worked to foster good working relations with civil society, recognizing their expertise and resources. Whether at home or abroad, we know that civil society partners often provide victim identification training to first responders, such as law enforcement, medical professionals, and teachers; critical information on the special needs of trafficked minors; and the provision of direct services. We urge foreign government officials to engage social service providers in direct outreach to vulnerable populations, for example teenage runaways, and refer potential victims to hotlines or assistance programs. We encourage foreign governments to fully support NGOs that provide care and immediate-need assistance, such as medical care, food, and clothing, as well as long-term rehabilitation of the victims, including education, vocational training, medical and psychological care. Much of our assistance is provided through grants to NGO service providers abroad. We also press other governments to have investigators, prosecutors, law enforcement victim-witness coordinators, and non-governmental victim advocates collaborate so that investigations proceed in an appropriately child-friendly manner.

As is set forth in the Trafficking Victims Protection Act’s minimum standards for assessing foreign government efforts to combat trafficking, we also press foreign governments to address demand, recognizing that demand for children in prostitution provides the profit-motive for the pimps and traffickers. With government support, NGOs have collaborated with law enforcement to address demand for exploited children in prostitution and to develop public awareness campaigns aimed at deterring Americans from traveling abroad and engaging in child sex tourism. Echoing the President’s words in Tokyo when he stated our resolve to ensure “that a young girl can be valued not for her body but for her mind; and so that young people everywhere can go as far as their talent and their drive and their choices will take them,” I will continue to speak out on the need for men to stand up and reject the notion that women and girls are commodities.

The Trafficking in Persons (TIP) Report is the most comprehensive worldwide report on governments’ efforts to combat trafficking in persons in all of its forms –for labor and sex, of children and adults, and of foreign born victims and citizen victims. It represents an updated, global look at the nature and scope of trafficking in persons and the broad range of government actions to confront and eliminate it. Child sex trafficking is an issue addressed by the TIP Report and in our subsequent foreign government engagement.

This year, our public diplomacy will be strengthened by incorporating in the TIP Report a self-assessment of the United States’ anti-trafficking efforts. We take very seriously our role as a global leader in the fight against human trafficking and understand that if we are assessing the world that we, too, must be assessed. Moreover, the United States gains a great deal of credibility by acknowledging and being transparent about our own challenges. We are currently working together with our interagency colleagues government-wide to carry out a collaborative self-assessment.

America has been a leader on the human trafficking issue and foreign governments will continue to press us for progressive answers and innovative solutions. Most importantly, trafficking victims and survivors are counting on us not to fail them.

When I was a prosecutor, a girl told me that she had felt so scared and alone when she was being turned out to the “clients.” With all of us, and those who we will touch, young people need to know that they are not alone: that we will not turn a blind eye to their abuse. Thank you.


In Our Own Backyard: Child Prostitution and Sex Trafficking in the United States

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Filipino group helps women find life outside of trafficking - CNN.com

By David Challenger, CNN
February 22, 2010 12:22 p.m. EST

STORY HIGHLIGHTS

* Angeles' sex industry is fueled by sex tourists who travel from all over the world
* One former prostitute was able to leave the sex industry with help from Renew Foundation
* U.N. estimates 60,000 to 100,000 children in the Philippines are involved in prostitution rings

Angeles City, Philippines (CNN) -- Sitting in the backyard garden of a women's outreach center, a woman recounts a life that seems to belie her young age of 20 and her name, Joy.

"I started working as a prostitute in Fields Avenue when I was 15," said Joy, a native of this city in the northern Philippines.

"I needed the money to support my baby, as I was already so poor. But after awhile the bar's "mamasan" (the name given to a woman who oversees work in businesses such as brothels and bars) said I should go to Malaysia to work, where I could make a lot more money."

After her mamasan organized the contract, Joy found herself working in Sandakan in eastern Malaysia, but the promise of good money and working conditions quickly evaporated.

"First I was made to take drugs. Then I was made to service as many as 20 men a day. If I refused they threatened to put me in jail without food," she said.

World's Untold Stories: Undercover to combat child sex slavery

The traffickers refused to let her go home, and she was only able to make her way back after her grandmother's continual pleading with Philippine government officials. Six weeks later, Joy returned to Angeles without having received a cent.

Broken financially and in spirit and determined to leave Angeles' sex industry, Joy was able to make contact with a non-government organization called the Renew Foundation, established in Angeles in 2005 in order to help eradicate trafficking and empower victims of prostitution.

Funded by individual donations, as well as grants from UNAIDS and the U.N. Office on Drugs and Crime, Renew offers shelter-based programs, housing, food, legal representation and education courses, all of which aim to help women return to their families or reintegrate into the community.


"I was made to service up
to 20 men a day. If I refused
they threatened to put me in jail"
--Joy, former Angeles prostitute


Renew also has a keen interest in helping child victims of the sex trade; an estimated 60,000 to 100,000 children in the Philippines are involved in prostitution rings, according to Minette Rimando, a spokeswoman for the U.N.'S International Labour Organization's Manila office.

"Most child prostitutes are recruited from rural areas to work in urban areas or even abroad," she said. "They are exposed to hazards that include contraction of STDs, physical violence and harmful psychological effects."

Cities such as Angeles can present all of these hazards for girls and women.

A two-hour drive north of Manila, Angeles (pronounced "angle-ease") sits opposite what used to be the massive Clark U.S. Air base.

In 1991 the cataclysmic volcanic eruption of nearby Mount Pinatubo helped prematurely close the base, culminating in some lean years for Angeles' well-established prostitution trade, experts said.

But the city's sex industry has since come back, fueled by sex tourists who travel here from all over the world. Many are older men, looking for their version of fun with some help from so-called "Viagra" pills -- sold on street corners like candy, chemical makeup unknown.

The city appears grimy and soulless. There are no pristine beaches or tropical forests, the traffic snarls and the poverty is endemic. But there is sex for sale, it's cheap, and there's a lot of it.

"Mate," an overweight, chain-smoking Australian growls in between gulps of a San Miguel beer as he teeters on a bar stool. "This place is heaven -- the girls are young, the beer's cheap, and it's never cold. What's there not to like?"

Along Angeles' main road of Fields Avenue where Joy once worked, the bars are filled with inebriated men leering at young women walking by. Most of the women are dressed in skimpy outfits and walking shakily as they plod along in poorly made high-heels.

The road is lined by countless bars where sex is readily available from dancers for about 1,200 pesos ($26).

Just over 80 percent of women who enter
our program don't return to prostitution
--Paulo Fuller, Renew Foundation director


Focusing on those bars and brothels in Angeles City, Renew uses outreach workers to identify women who have been trafficked or abused, said director Paulo Fuller.

"If someone needs help escaping from the industry," he said, "our outreach workers liaise with police and authorities to help initiate a rescue. We also have cards with contact numbers that are distributed throughout the area, and flyers."

Most of those helped fall into four categories: Girls and women subjected to sex trafficking; girls exploited in the commercial sex industry; and girls who are at risk of being prostituted and/or trafficked.

Renew director Fuller claims a high success rate. "Just over 80 percent of the women who come into our program don't return to prostitution," Fuller said. "After providing them with the support they need, like housing, education courses and employment, that's the figure that don't return back to the bars."

Joy has been living at Renew's shelter now for just over two months. She says she's not sure when she'll leave, but wants to try and finish her studies first. "After I leave I hope to get work to support my son and work as a hairdresser or in a beauty salon," she said enthusiastically.

Back at the bar, the chain-smoking Aussie is informed of Joy's harrowing experience in Angeles. He shrugs his shoulders half heartedly, weighing his reply as a bunch of Harleys driven by riders adorned in Swedish flags rumble past.

"I don't know, I mean it's just all a bit of fun. Those girls have a free will, right?" he asks. "Live and let live, I say."

And with that, he walks off down Fields Avenue through the stifling heat, dodging the tumult, lighting up another cigarette.

Filipino group
helps women find life outside of trafficking - CNN.com


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