Thursday, March 31, 2011

Asia-Pacific Countries First to Sign Agreement to Combat Human Trafficking | Asia | English

WOSM-Asia-Pacific RegionImage via Wikipedia
Angela Dewan | Nusa Dua, Indonesia  March 30, 2011

The Asia-Pacific region has become the first to produce a framework agreement to combat human trafficking. Member nations agreed to share responsibility for the regional problem and showed some support for a controversial proposal by the Australian government during a Bali Process meeting.
 
Thirty-two nations in the Asia-Pacific region agreed to take a regional approach to human trafficking and people smuggling during the fourth Bali Regional Ministerial Conference on People Smuggling, Trafficking in Persons and Related Transnational Crime. While the framework is non-binding, it is the world’s first such agreement.

The framework draws up the way in which nations should deal with people smugglers, asylum seekers, illegal immigrants and trafficking victims. The nations agreed that treatment of all parties should promote human life and dignity and reflect the principles of burden-sharing.

The Asia-Pacific region hosts 3.9-million refugees, according to the United nations, and includes source, transitional and destination nations for asylum seekers, illegal immigrants and trafficked people. Pakistan hosts 1.7-million refugees, Iran hosts more than one million, and around 150,000 refugees are residing in Thailand.

One of the Bali Process co-chairman is Indonesian Foreign Affairs Minister Marty Natalegawa. "Undocumented migration is increasingly an issue within the region. It is estimated that some of Asia’s largest undocumented migration flows may be among the largest of overall contemporary flows," he said.

Indonesia is often used as a transit nation for Australia-bound asylum seekers. It is also a source for victims of human trafficking.

The Bali Process is a 10-year-old initiative spearheaded by Australia and Indonesia. As a destination country, Australia has been struggling to deal with asylum seekers that arrive on its shores as its detention centers reach capacity.

The framework has been called a success by the Australian government, which has for years been looking for regional support on the issue. Australia Foreign Minister Kevin Rudd said the framework committed states to harmonized regional arrangements. "It also provides for the proper handling of those deemed to be refugees. It also provides for the returning of those found not to be refugees, and all done in a manner compatible to the relevant international standards," he said.

But the Australian government failed to make progress on a controversial proposal to build a refugee-processing center in the small nation of East Timor. It has for nine months been pushing the poorest nation in the region to host the facility, but East Timor has repeatedly rejected the proposal, saying it has other priorities.

Australia is celebrating one small victory, member nations showed support for a processing center, although no location was specified.


Asia-Pacific Countries First to Sign Agreement to Combat Human Trafficking | Asia | English
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Sands of Silence Chelo Alvarez- Stehle Documentary Filmmaker Interview on Human Trafficking


Reporting and interview done by Dena Betacourt
Uploaded by on Dec 8, 2010

YouTube - BAVC PI09 #2 - SOS Slaves

by Draxtor Despres

Uploaded by on Jun 8, 2009
"Every year, SF based Bay Area Video Coalition brings filmmakers together with technologists to develop new media strategies for their projects at the annual Producer's Institute. Draxtor Despres had the chance to talk to Spanish-American documentarian Chelo Alvarez-Stehle about her project on sex-trafficking, called "Sands Of Silence", which will be accompanied by a flash-based game."



YouTube - BAVC PI09 #2 - SOS Slaves
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Wednesday, March 30, 2011

BBC News - Edinburgh human trafficking claim made by woman

Police The police have confirmed they have launched an investigation into the human trafficking claims
Police are probing a case of human trafficking in Edinburgh following claims from an Eastern European woman.

It is understood the woman visited a sexual health clinic in the city and told NHS staff she feared for her life at the hands of her violent partner.

The woman sought refuge at the clinic last week.

Council officials found emergency accommodation for her before workers for the Migrant Helpline charity moved her to a safe house.

A Lothian and Borders Police spokesman said: "We can confirm that we are investigating a report of alleged human trafficking, and inquiries are currently at an early stage.

"Lothian and Borders Police is committed to identifying victims of human trafficking, and we will fully investigate any report or intelligence we receive where someone is identified as being subject to exploitation.

"We work closely with partners to provide support and assistance to victims, and we would encourage anyone who is a victim of human trafficking, or who has any information that can assist us in identifying potential victims, to contact us.

"Rest assured that any information we receive will be fully investigated, and treated in the strictest confidence."
Outreach clinics
Dr Alison McCallum, NHS Lothian's director of public health and health policy, said: "NHS Lothian works closely with a range of partner organisations to provide support to individuals who may be affected by issues in the sex industry, gender-based violence or human trafficking.

"This includes running outreach clinics in local areas and specialised training sessions for our staff on identification and appropriate responses to gender-based violence."

Staff working in substance misuse and sexual health services were routinely given the training, which includes human trafficking issues, she added.

An Edinburgh City Council spokesman said: "Human trafficking is an issue we take extremely seriously and when alleged victims are brought to our attention we will immediately contact our partners in the police, NHS and UK Border Agency to offer whatever support and help we can."

"We have procedures in place to ensure that where human trafficking is suspected, our staff report their suspicion to the relevant authorities and ensure the appropriate care, support and personal safety planning is in place for the individual."

Source: BBC News
BBC News - Edinburgh human trafficking claim made by woman
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Bali Process IV begins; set to establish framework on trafficking | The Jakarta Post

Bagus BT Saragih, The Jakarta Post, Nusa Dua, Bali | Wed, 03/30/2011 1:12 PM |

The process begins: Foreign Minister Marty Natalegawa (at the podium-left) leads the Fourth Bali Regional Ministerial Conference on People Smuggling, Trafficking in Persons and Related Transnational Crimes — also known as the Bali Process. He is accompanied by Australia’s Foreign Minister Kevin Rudd (right). (Antara/Nyoman Budhiana) 

The process begins: Foreign Minister Marty Natalegawa (at the podium-left) leads the Fourth Bali Regional Ministerial Conference on People Smuggling, Trafficking in Persons and Related Transnational Crimes — also known as the Bali Process. He is accompanied by Australia’s Foreign Minister Kevin Rudd (right). (Antara/Nyoman Budhiana)

Co-chairs Indonesian Foreign Minister Marty Natalegawa and Australian Foreign Affairs Minister Kevin Rudd officially launched the Fourth Bali Regional Ministerial Conference on People Smuggling, Trafficking in Persons and Related Transnational Crimes, dubbed the Bali Process, at a hotel in Nusa Dua, Bali, on Wednesday.

“This forum should continue to provide a regional framework for addressing the challenges on these issues. These issues are multidimensional and multifaceted, and therefore the framework should be comprehensive and inclusive. This forum has to provide a solution for all nations affected and I am confident that we are heading in the right direction,” Marty said in his opening speech.

He highlighted the importance of the role of law enforcers.

“Our approach is multi-pronged. It involves not only socio-economic agencies, but also law enforcement agencies. We need to continue strengthening the capacity of our law enforcement agencies,” he said.
Rudd, meanwhile, emphasized the significant increase in numbers of refugees and asylum seekers around the world.

“There will be new transit countries; there will be new destination countries.

“This forum is among 15 regional processes on the way, worldwide,” Rudd said, stressing how important the issues had become for many countries around the globe.

The forum, initiated by Indonesia and Australia in 2002, involves officials from 41 Asia-Pacific countries that have been affected by a  continued increase of people smuggling cases, mostly related to those seeking refugee status and asylum in Australia.

Officials from the United Nations High Commission for Refugees (UNHCR) and the International Organization for Migration (IMO) are also attending the conference as observers. The two organizations, along with Indonesia, Australia, Thailand and New Zealand, have been appointed as members of the conference steering group.

A senior officials meeting was held on Tuesday as a preliminary discussion prior to the conference, but was off limits to the media.

Indonesia has been considered a vital player in the issue since the country has been used as a transit point for illegal immigrants seeking Australian asylum. Asylum-seekers from the Middle East and Sri Lanka are also believed to have used Indonesian people smugglers’ services to take them to Australia.

Source:  thejakartapost.com
Bali Process IV begins; set to establish framework on trafficking | The Jakarta Post
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BERNAMA - Malaysia Makes Inroads In Battling Human Trafficking

A composite image of icons of Kuala Lumpur and...Image via WikipediaBy Kurniawati Kamarudin

KUALA LUMPUR, March 30 (Bernama) -- They are promised good paying jobs in another country but upon arrival they are sent to the sex trade against their will or forced labour in what is now considered as modern day slavery.

They are the victims of a highly organised crime known as human trafficking, now considered the third biggest cross border crime after drugs and weapons.

Human trafficking is a global problem that notably has been on the rise over the last decade. According to Amnesty International, since 2004 about 700,000 people have been trafficked annually for the sex trade alone.

However, it is most unfortunate that Malaysia is seen as a lucrative place by human trafficking rackets to carry out their activities.

MALAYSIA'S RECORD IN HUMAN TRAFFICKING

This had blemished the country's reputation and efforts have been taken by the authorities to redeem the nation's image.

Nonetheless, the unwavering effort of the authorities have helped to improve the nation's standing in the United State's Trafficking In Persons (TIP) report compiled by the State Department to Tier 2 in 2010, an improvement from Tier 3 in the 2009.

The TIP ranks individual nations based on conformity to the minimum standards set for efforts taken in combating human trafficking where Tier 1 indicating full compliance to Trafficking Victims Protection Act (TVPA), Tier 2 indicating significant efforts taken to comply with TVPA while Tier 3 denotes no efforts being taken to conform with TVPA.

MALAYSIA'S VULNERABILITY

Malaysia's overall progress has been attracting people from all corners of the world and this has opened the doors wide for both human trafficking and human smuggling.

Concurrently, the presence of a big number of migrant workers in the country has opened the doors for vice syndicates to bring in women, legally and illegally, from China, Indonesia, Thailand, Balkan states and even India to cater for the sexual needs of this group.

One will be surprised that even small towns, plantations and industrial areas with big foreign population are well served by the vice rings who are in cahoots with human traffickers.

At the same time the rising number of vice dens, massage parlours and entertainment outlets catering for locals also fueled the demand for young women who are brought in by the same human trafficking syndicates.

Other than this, Malaysia's strategic geographical location, right in the middle of the Asean region has also made the country an attractive transit point for human traffickers and human smugglers as well.

Being aware of the problem, the country enacted the Anti Human Trafficking Law in 2007 but the enforcement has yet to be effective enough to stop completely the syndicates from trafficking persons, especially women and young girls into the flesh trade and domestic labour market.

Moreover, the covert modus operandi of the syndicates is well coordinated and in fact the syndicates bring in the people legally through social visit passes or under student visas, which make it more difficult for the authorities to identify the culprits and the victims of human trafficking.

MEN AND CHILDREN NOT SPARED

Yet even the men and children are not spared as they are often recruited into forced labour. Those coming from Indonesia, Bangladesh, Nepal and Vietnam end up into forced labour though they were initially promised decent jobs and salaries.

They are often forced to sweat out up to 18 hours a day under very difficult conditions often without any remuneration.

Small children and babies are in high demand as well as they are used by syndicates to beg or sold to childless couples.

According to the statistics provided by the Anti Human Trafficking Council (MAPO), from Feb 28, 2008 to Dec 21, 2010, a total of 304 cases were reported relating to various types of human exploitation with 434 people arrested for being involved in the crime.

During the period, 1,930 victims of human traffickers managed to obtain Interim Protection Order (IPO) while another 708 were given protection including 189 victims of sexual exploitation, forced labour (58), human trafficking (24), and selling of babies (11).

LACKING IN AWARENESS

The Malaysian society's awareness on human trafficking is still low with many not clear of the definition of human trafficking.

While human trafficking is relatively a new crime, it covers a wide scope and the understanding on the matter is still limited noted MAPO's chairman Datuk Seri Mahmood Adam who is also the Home Affair Ministry's Secretary General.

During an interview with the local media recently, he noted that even the people at the enforcement side were not clear on human trafficking.

The definition is more complicated as it differs from human smuggling where many tend to consider both being the same.

Human trafficking refers to the recruitment, transportation, transfer, harbouring or receipt of persons, by means of the threat or use of force or other forms of coercion, of abduction, of fraud, of deception, of the abuse of power or of a position of vulnerability or of the giving or receiving of payments or benefits to achieve the consent of a person having control over another person, for the purpose of exploitation.

Exploitation shall include, at a minimum, the exploitation of the prostitution of others or other forms of sexual exploitation, forced labour or services, slavery or practices similar to slavery, servitude or the removal of organs.

People smuggling, is where people voluntarily request or hire an individual, known as a smuggler, to covertly transport them from one location to another. This generally involves transportation from one country to another, where legal entry would be denied upon arrival at the international border. There may be no deception involved in the (illegal) agreement. After entry into the country and arrival at their ultimate destination, the smuggled person is usually free to find their own way.

However, the actual definition is more complicated because the human smuggler can turn into human trafficker and those who are smuggled can end up as victims of human trafficking as well.

GOVERNMENT IS SERIOUS IN BATLING HUMAN TRAFFICKING

Thus, the Anti Human Trafficking 2007 Act has been amended include the human smuggling element and therefore the Act now is known as Anti Human Trafficking and Anti Migrant Trafficking 2007 that came into force in Nov 15, 2010.

The amendment is to make the law more comprehensive and help in countering international syndicates that make Malaysia as their transit point in human smuggling to third countries, especially Australia.

Most of the human trafficking victims are from Afganistan, Pakistan and Myanmar. They are brought into Malaysia first before making their way into Indonesia and then Australia.

Bukit Aman's Criminal Investigation Department's Director Datuk Mohd Bakri Zinin gave assurance that the police would step up operations to counter human trafficking.

More police personnel will be stationed in trafficking hotspots like the Strait of Melaka and South China Sea that often serve as the main entry point before making their way into third countries.

Other than this, the government is also taking a systematic approach through the National Anti Human Trafficking Plan that sets the direction and focus in eradicating human trafficking.

The five year plan (2010-2015) is a testimony of the government's efforts and commitment in combating human trafficking.

Malaysia's target of achieving Tier 1 this year is a testimony of the government's commitment in battling human trafficking, a crime against humanity and in line with the National Key Result Areas goal to reduce crime.







Source: bernama.com
-- BERNAMABERNAMA - Malaysia Makes Inroads In Battling Human Trafficking
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Tuesday, March 29, 2011

Kosovo | Human Trafficking | International Crime

Kosovo's Mafia: A hotbed of human trafficking

Part III: Allegations of sexual slavery reach the highest levels

Kosovo thaci 1024 683
(Illustration by Antler/Photo by Armend Nimani/AFP/Getty Images)

PRISTINA, Kosovo — The man in the black leather jacket preferred to speak about his past in the security of a car parked in a distant, rural part of Kosovo.

“The big guys don’t take a cut in this business — they run it,” said the man, who gave his name as Luan and acknowledged that he previously made his living from trafficking women and girls into Kosovo against their will so that they could be forced to have sex with paying customers. “The system is highly organized and there’s no police or anything to stop it. Everything is corruption from top to bottom.” Every day, an enterprise of trafficking women thrives in this country.

In the aftermath of the U.S.-led war in Kosovo in 1999, this nascent democracy, born of an international effort to protect human rights, has become a hub of the global trade in human beings, according to human rights investigators who monitor human trafficking.

This industry, which operates in a shadowy underworld where former members of armed militias have turned into murderous enforcers in a criminal enterprise, nets an estimated $32 billion globally every year and is widely considered by international human rights’ investigators to be the fastest growing criminal activity in the world.

According to an International Labor Office (ILO) report, a single female held for sexual exploitation yields an average of $67,200 annually in Western Europe. In a three-month investigation, GlobalPost has uncovered mounting allegations that the highest levels of the U.S.-backed Kosovo government are involved in this human trafficking.

The victims of the trade are typically teenage girls who are recruited, seduced and often forced into what amounts to sexual slavery. There is prostitution in Kosovo that services the international community, the U.S. and NATO military forces and the U.N. and aid workerts who operate here. But more frequently, investigators say, Kosovo is a trafficking hub for women sold into prostitution rings in the United Arab Emirates, Israel, Western European capitals and elsewhere. Much has been written about these victims, but less has been written about the men who carry out the trafficking.

In the course of its investigation, GlobalPost gained access to several men, including Luan, who say they were directly involved in the trade. The detailed information they provided helped to assemble an impressionistic picture of how the trade works here in Kosovo and beyond. And their statements combined with several intelligence reports and the findings of ongoing criminal investigations into organized crime in Kosovo reveal how the syndicate that carries out this trafficking does so with the complicity — and in some cases direct involvement — of the very highest levels of Kosovo’s political leadership.
 
Sources point to the top
The United States and its NATO allies, and the United Nations, have said publicly for some years that corrupt officials within Kosovo’s government and police have at times taken part in the illegal trade of women and girls for sex.

“Trafficking-related corruption continued to hamper the government’s anti-trafficking efforts,” the State Department writes in its 2010 Trafficking in Persons Report, citing experts in trafficking. “Foreign trafficking victims often arrive in Kosovo with valid documents and employment contracts stamped by Kosovo officials who may be aware that the document holders are trafficking victims.”

But the privately discussed rumors that have circulated for almost as long among American officials, Western diplomats and ordinary people in Kosovo are much worse: that the corruption goes beyond low-level officials, all the way to high-level politicians.

No senior Kosovar official has ever been charged in relation to human trafficking in Kosovo. GlobalPost reporters, during the course of a wider investigation into allegations of broad criminality by former senior Kosovo Liberation Army (KLA) commanders and their ties to the United States and other Western countries, interviewed three men involved in sex trafficking in Kosovo, two Albanians and Luan, a Kosovar Albanian. All three men insisted that some senior political figures, specifically former KLA commanders, were indeed involved in the trafficking of women and girls. Furthermore, GlobalPost has obtained several intelligence reports from NATO military and intelligence services that also claim senior former KLA commanders have been involved in the sex-slavery business. Further bolstering the claims, various well-informed people, including a former NATO intelligence official who worked in Kosovo and a Western diplomat with experience in the region, all say that it has been common knowledge in American, NATO and U.N. circles for years that the former guerrilla commanders — many of them now in positions of great power in Kosovo — are believed to be linked to sex-trafficking.

Luan said that officials in the parties of two former KLA commanders are closely tied up in the trade. The parties are: the Democratic Party of Kosovo (PDK), whose leader is the current prime minister of Kosovo, Hashim Thaci; and the Alliance for the Future of Kosovo (AAK), whose leader is Ramush Haradinaj, a former prime minister who is currently in custody at the International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia in The Hague as he awaits trial on charges of war crimes.

“The whole thing, as well as any other illegal business, is controlled by the state both in Kosovo, Albania and all of former Yugoslavia,” said one of the Albanian men, who called himself Rexhep. “No one can do [smuggle] drugs, women, cigarettes or anything without blessing from above. I mean, you can try but you’ll be found in a ditch somewhere after many days already half-eaten by worms and dogs, which has happened to some.”

The three traffickers who made the allegations against the former KLA commanders are self-described criminals and their stories could not be independently confirmed. They insisted on anonymity, saying they did not want to face retaliation from other criminals or arrest from law enforcement officials. Two GlobalPost reporters have for many years interviewed criminal figures in the Balkans and in every previous case the stories of the criminals have held up to scrutiny. The three traffickers agreed to be interviewed because they trusted the intermediaries used to arrange the interviews and the reporters, who have been working in the region for many years. The traffickers do not know each other; GlobalPost reporters found them through separate channels.
 
Intelligence reports finger Thaci
One of the NATO intelligence reports obtained by GlobalPost features a diagram linking Thaci to two other men who are then linked to prostitution. The report, like four other Western intelligence reports GlobalPost has viewed, links Thaci and other former KLA commanders to a broad array of organized crimes.
Another NATO intelligence report, written in November 2000, claims that a close associate of Thaci is involved in sex trafficking: “Prostitution: arrival of women mostly from Bulgaria, Czech Republic and Slovakia is under [the man’s family’s] indirect control and it receives profit.”

A third intelligence report, which is dated March 10, 2004, and is marked “SECRET Rel USA KFOR and NATO” and was confirmed by a Western diplomat as being viewed by U.S. government officials, describes one of Thaci’s close associates — former KLA commander Xhavit Haliti — as believed to be “highly involved in prostitution,” among other alleged crimes, including murder.

“We just controlled the main border crossings while petrol, drugs and trafficked women continued to be poured in both through official and illegal entries,” the former NATO intelligence officer said. “We lacked resources and permission from higher authorities to act since the number one priority was peace and stability and they wouldn't allow anything to disrupt that.”

The official added: “A lot of trafficked women entered Kosovo without any hurdle. The people behind the brothels and sexual slavery were all with the government, KPC [the Kosovo Protection Corps], the PDK and the AAK. No one outside these structures had even a remote chance to run it on such a large scale.”

In spite of the longstanding allegations against Thaci, which American officials have known about for years (the NATO and other intelligence reports have been in wide circulation among American and European diplomats for years, sources tell GlobalPost, and two are even on the internet for all to see), Thaci has received strong support from the United States. He visited Vice President Joseph Biden at the White House in July and has hosted Secretary of State Hillary Clinton in Kosovo.
 
The "FedEx" of trafficking women
Describing himself as “the Balkan version of DHL and FedEx” for trafficked women and illicit goods, the second Albanian trafficker, who gave his name as Gjon, said he had worked for and with Kosovar organized crime groups headed by former senior KLA commanders.

During the 1999 war, in which the KLA was based in Albania, its intelligence service, SHIK, was involved in sex-trafficking, Gjon said. “Groups [of trafficked women] were arriving in Durres and Fushe Kruja [in Albania], that were almost exclusively for the KLA, who were there during and after the war,” Gjon said. “SHIK escorted them. After a while some of them were shipped to Italy while others [were sent] to Kosovo. I've been to parties where they had to serve you all the way.”

Rexhep said he was a former proud KLA fighter and is now a successful businessman with legal and illegal businesses in Kosovo and other countries. In spite of his pride in fighting with the KLA during the war he acknowledged that SHIK and former KLA officials were involved in the sex-trafficking trade.

“Is the KLA involved? Are you kidding me? It’s all KLA or those who contributed [to the war] somehow,” he said. “All the big money flows are directly controlled by SHIK and without their blessing you better not start anything if you mean well to yourself and your family.”

GlobalPost made repeated attempts to interview the American ambassador to Kosovo, Christopher Dell, about U.S. relations with senior former KLA figures and allegations of criminality, but he declined to accept interview requests or respond to written questions. State Department officials also declined to respond to questions or be interviewed. Thaci also declined repeated requests for an interview.
 
Catering to the expat community
The three men involved in trafficking gave GlobalPost a rare look inside the criminal side of a trade that caters to Kosovar men and NATO troops and other international officials who have been in Kosovo in large numbers since 1999. All three men said that NATO troops, U.N. officials and other internationals working in Kosovo made up a significant proportion of the clientele for trafficked women, something repeatedly confirmed by anti-trafficking organizations. The former U.N. administration in Kosovo, UNMIK, regularly published an “Off-Limits List” of brothels, hotels, bars, clubs and other locations where staff were ordered to “STAY OUT” of. The 2008 spreadsheet lists 109 establishments and states: “By frequenting bars, brothels, strip clubs and night clubs, international representatives and by default their organizations are condoning and supporting the sexual exploitation and slavery of women and contributing to the profits of organized crime.”
Prostitution “is a state-sanctioned business with tacit approval of foreigners and for their enjoyment,” Rexhep said.

In recent years, the U.N., NATO, EULEX and the Kosovo police have improved their anti-trafficking efforts, according to trafficking experts and the State Department. But the demand from foreigners, and locals, remains strong, the three traffickers say.
 
Recruitment tactics
To meet that demand, the three men and their colleagues in the organized crime world looked beyond Kosovo’s borders.

“We were mostly bringing girls from Moldova, Ukraine and Russia,” said Luan, 30, who started his criminal career as a thief in Germany and Switzerland before he became a trafficker. “But sometimes we also had girls from Serbia, Romania, Czech Republic.

“In each place there’s a man who’s specialized in finding and recruiting,” he continued. “They are either girls from rural places looking for a job abroad or waitresses or those who work in some kind of administration but are poorly paid. They would take them to cafes or pubs, seduce them or give them some dope for free, mostly hashish or marijuana and later something heavier. After gaining their trust or becoming lovers or just making them dependant on drugs they would offer them ‘good and well-paid jobs abroad’ and free drugs as well. Then I would go to pick them up, usually in Bulgaria, sometimes Serbia, Romania other places.

“For each girl I would pay 2,000 to 3,000 euros. I was mostly taking groups of three girls. They crossed the borders together like any other passengers and I was discreetly accompanying them while pretending I was travelling alone. Sometimes they would be sent to cross the border illegally, if they had problems with documents or because they were underage. That’s more difficult because they have to walk through the forests. I would usually wait for them on the other side. They had no idea what was going to happen to them once they were firmly in our hands.”

Once in Kosovo, the nightmare would begin for the foreign girls and women.

“We would take them to a town hall to register them for temporary residence from three to six months,” Luan said. “It depends on what deal we make with municipal authorities and if the girls are really good-looking they stay six months. Clients don’t like to [have sex with] the same women too many times so there’s a regular rotation. When we get them registered for temporary residence we take away their passports and send them to their respective places. Most of them work as waitresses, dancers or strippers till midnight or 2 a.m. After that they have to do the other part whether they like it or not.”

When asked what happened to the women if they refused to have sex with the clients, Luan said: “There’s no ‘no’ as an answer here. They know that disobedience is really bad for them so their unwillingness is never a matter of discussion. There is no chance to refuse. We usually tried to be nice to them and give them drugs like heroin to calm them down and relax them. Well, those who become addicts can’t say no to 'guests' if they want their drugs.”

Luan said the men who had bought the girls and women often beat them or burned them with lit cigarettes as a form of punishment and intimidation. Rexhep confirmed the violence that some of the women are subjected to. “Girls are generally treated well but sometimes they cause trouble or want to go home before the agreed time so they have to be disciplined,” he said.
 
Shame and rationalizations
For thuggish men involved in modern-day slavery, Luan and Gjon are nevertheless aware of the moral challenges of their trade. Gjon, who also works frequently in Bulgaria and, like Luan, transports girls and women into Kosovo, insisted he did not enslave women. “I never ever kept a girl against her own will,” he said. He claimed he acted as their protector. “I look after the girls that I ship. No one is allowed to do them any harm or rape them.”

But Gjon’s sense of right and wrong can become suspended by his need to make a profit. “You have to understand, when I take a package and ship it over I am responsible for the damage or loss,” he said. “If she changes her mind and wants to go back I say ‘no problem’, here’s your passport and you are free to go, but I don't intend to pay the loss from my own pocket. If she can pay her way out, or her family [can], no problem, she is free to go. Otherwise, she has to stay and obey and her passport is with me until another takes her over. It’s not I who enslave them. I am only doing shipping.”

Gjon may live in the comfort of self-justification but Luan seems genuinely ashamed of what he did.

“I wish I could rewind the tape of my life and erase that film of the past,” he said. “I was selling lives for money. That’s worse than selling drugs.”

When he spoke about his feelings he lowered his head and looked away.

“Some girls get a cut of the fee paid by clients, some don’t get anything,” he said. “It all depends on their owners. After they serve in Kosovo they are sent elsewhere because clients get tired of them and they want new flesh … . Some of them are only 16 years old.”

Five years ago Luan was arrested in Bulgaria and convicted of trafficking. Prison in Bulgaria was brutal, he said. He was released after four years. “Only depraved people feel no remorse for what they are doing,” he said. “That’s why I am not in this anymore. I feel terribly, terribly sorry for what I did.”

For now, Luan is trying to find a way to make a living in a country whose citizens have the lowest per capita annual income — $2,500 — of any country in Europe.

“I earned a lot of money,” he said, “and I spent most of it but I will find other ways to live.”

Rexhep, like Luan, has done time in Bulgarian prisons, as well as in Germany and Turkey, where he implied he was raped by other prisoners. And although he continues to traffic girls and women into Kosovo to be sex slaves, he insists he never hurts them, never gives them drugs and despises customers who abuse the women. He can, he says, empathize with them. “I was so [messed] up in Bulgaria and Turkey,” he said, “so I know what it is like to be alone and helpless.”
 
(GlobalPost funding for human rights reporting on stories like these is provided in part by a grant from the Galloway Family Foundation.)

Source:  globalpost.com
Kosovo | Human Trafficking | International Crime
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Threats force Utah group to curtail helping trafficking victims - ksl.com

March 28th, 2011 @ 4:22pm
By Amy Joi O'Donoghue

SALT LAKE CITY — Threats that escalated in both severity and frequency have prompted Utah's lead agency that coordinates assistance to human trafficking victims to cease services to any future clients.

Jocelyn Romano, executive director of the Utah Health & Human Rights Project, said the decision to stop offering those services to new clients was made last week after a series of threats led to concerns of personal safety for staff.

Victims now being helped in the program will be transitioned to other providers over the next six to eight months. She said the group wants to continue to help victims by consulting with other providers to set up a program where law enforcement takes more of an active role.

By the numbers
Each year on average:
  • 600,000 to 820,000 men, women and children are trafficked across international borders
  • About 80 percent are women and girls
  • Up to 50 percent are minors.

The Salt Lake Police Department is investigating the threats, which Romano said were "generalized and non-specific ... but still they had to be taken seriously. As they were continuing, they were increasing in frequency and we had to make the incredibly difficult decision to stop providing those services at this time."

The project, she stressed, will not abandon its core mission of helping victims of torture and other severe human rights abuses to overcome their history and become self-sufficient.

In 2006, the organization took on helping victims of human trafficking — which presented a new dynamic to overcome.

"With human trafficking, it is an active crime situation, not a crime that occurred years ago. The perpetrators may be right here."

Romano said that presents problems because the very nature of the project's mission is to operate with transparency to shed light on what has happened to people who suffered from torture or other abuses.

"We are a vulnerable agency not set up in a secure and private location," such as domestic violence shelters, which often operate out of nondescript buildings with no markings as a way to shield their victims.

Since the project began working with human trafficking victims — serving more than 200 people — it has had to take on a victim advocacy role Romano says is better suited for law enforcement.

In those instances, rape victim advocates or those assigned to be front-line help for domestic violence victims typically are employees of police departments also trained to respond to volatile situations.

Romano said that in the months to come it would be ideal if the project could work with other providers such as social services agencies, police and those offering legal help to come up with more suitable model to help victims.

"With human trafficking, it is an active crime situation, not a crime that occurred years ago. The perpetrators may be right here." -Jocelyn Romano, Utah Health & Human Rights Project

"We'd like to design a program in conjunction with law enforcement going forward," she said. "Because of the very complex and violent nature of these crimes, that model of having that victim services provider in law enforcement has been successful in other states."

A human trafficking task force was established in Utah several years ago, drawing on membership from multiple local law enforcement departments and federal agencies including the FBI and Immigration and Customs Enforcement.

It is headed up under the auspices of the U.S. Attorney's Office for Utah, which spokeswoman Melodie Rydalch said will continue to shepherd cases.

"Victims of human trafficking will continue to be served, and we are confident there will be no break in services," Rydalch said. "Having said that, (the project) has done some outstanding work and we are sorry they cannot participate."

Romano said the project has identified and served both U.S. citizens and illegal immigrants who have been subjected to the sex trade, agricultural and labor trade or put into domestic servitude. There have also been cases involving mail-order child brides. Trafficking victims have been men, women and children, Romano said, and entire families have been rescued.

"The victims become beholden to their captors, who threaten them to keep them in control or threaten to harm their families," she said. "They rely on a tremendous amount of fear and intimidation to retain control."

E-mail:aodonoghue@ksl.com

Source: ksl.com

Threats force Utah group to curtail helping trafficking victims - ksl.com
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Monday, March 28, 2011

U.S. Awareness of Human Trafficking

Executive Summary of Survey Findings

A new survey of Americans’ awareness of human trafficking reveals that the majority of
Americans do not realize the severity and scope of this crime that affects nearly every
country in the world, including the United States.


Simply defined, Human Trafficking constitutes forcing or manipulating a person against
their will into sexual or labor exploitation, within their own country or across borders.

SUMMARY OF FINDINGS

A majority of Americans underestimate, or simply don’t know,
how many people fall victim to human trafficking worldwide

 Nearly nine out of ten Americans (88%) were unaware of the number
of people living in sexual slavery or some form of forced labor in the
world today. The International Labor Organization (ILO) estimates
that there are over 12 million adults and children living in forced labor,
bonded labor and commercial sexual slavery at any given time.

 Only about one quarter of Americans (28%) knew that 1 million or
more children are victims of the global sex trade each year. It is
estimated by the U.S. Department of State that one million children
fall victim to the global sex trade each year.

A majority of Americans underestimate, or don’t know the amount
of profits generated by human trafficking

 Human trafficking is one of the fastest growing criminal industries in
the world, already worth an estimated $32 billion in annual profits,
according to the UN Office on Drugs and Crime. Yet, nearly eight in ten
Americans (78%) couldn’t identify just how much profit is generated by
human trafficking each year.

Nearly half of Americans don’t know what human trafficking is;
many confuse the issue with illegal immigration

When asked what best defines human trafficking, nearly half of
Americans (48%) were unable to choose the accurate definition,
or simply stated they didn’t know.

 Over one-third of Americans (37%) mistakenly believe that human
trafficking is defined as smuggling people without proper documentation
across international borders, when in fact human trafficking happens
primarily within borders. In the U.S. alone, the U.S. Department of Justice
estimates that 100,000 citizens under the age of 18 are prostituted each
year – all of them considered human trafficking victims under the law.

This opinion survey
of 2,500 Americans,
commissioned
by LexisNexis in
collaboration with
Polaris Project,
was designed to
explore Americans’
understanding of
the nature of
human trafficking,
the magnitude of
the problem and
who is impacted
by this fast growing
criminal activity.

For more information
please contact:

Christine Alberti
LexisNexis
212-448-2118
christine.alberti@lexisnexis.com

The survey was conducted by Taylor Nelson Sofres (TNS) Global among a nationally representative sample of 2,500 Americans age 18+. The study was conducted online in May 2010 and has a margin of error of 1.96 percentage points at the 95% confidence level.

POLARIS PROJECT
FOR A WORLD WITHOUT SLAVERY


LexisNexis
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Human Trafficking as a Public Health Crisis Part 3: What One Person Can Accomplish | Health

Mar 25, 2011 7:38 PM CDT

I'm a writer at Justmeans in the Health category. I am also currently the Director of Biomedical Research and Development at Gallifrey Systems. I finished my PhD in experimental psychology in 1997 and have worked covering legislative initiatives, building statistical models and in technology development. I'm an expert in the areas of health behavior and health policy. I'm a huge proponent of c... Read More>>


Tri4FreedomWhat can one person accomplish? Dr. Paula Heron is a a postdoctoral fellow at the University of Kentucky. Born in Zimbabwe, she's lived most of her life in South Africa. Ten years ago, Ms. Heron came to the US to complete her Ph.D. in neuroscience and has remained here. She decided to combine her triathlon experience with a passionate stand against human trafficking. The following is a verbatim record of my interview with Dr. Heron. For her, it began with a movie...

1.. What is Tri4Freedom and when did you start it?

"Tri4freedom is something I conceptualized less than a year ago with the intention of using the sport of triathlon as a platform to raise public awareness about human trafficking. The success and effectiveness of this mission hinges upon the support and commitment of fellow triathletes and community at large willing to take a stand against human trafficking."


2. What motivated you to take such an interest in human trafficking?

"Initially my own awareness about human trafficking stemmed from a movie about a young woman from an eastern European country who thought she was coming to the United States to pursue a dream job as a model but once she arrived she was forced into sex slavery. What struck me was the relative ease with which this travesty was committed by the trafficker and the finality of what had occurred from the victim's perspective. The excitement associated with arriving in a new country - something I can well relate to - is abruptly replaced with an indescribable fear. This I find terrifying and the realization that human slavery occurs within our communities and areas we deem safe to live, haunts me."

3. How surprised are people to learn the extent of human trafficking, both in sheer numbers and global extent?

"I have found that the majority of people I speak to either have no idea what human trafficking is or they have heard of it but fail to recognize how prevalent it is in the United States. Most people see it as a third-world issue. People's responses have varied greatly when they hear that human trafficking occurs in their own cities. Some people prefer to continue ignoring the issue, while some are alarmed and take a genuine interest in what they can do to help the situation."

4. It's literally an ancient crime. In terms of modern solutions, do you feel governments willfully ignore human trafficking or is it just so difficult to solve that it slips below the radar?

"Governments are certainly aware of the issue. Many states have anti- human trafficking laws; however law enforcement alone is not sufficient to combat the problem. The Not For Sale Campaign, a non-profit organization committed to the fight against human trafficking, maintains that abolishing slavery can only be achieved by creating a community task force. I think the fact that human trafficking occurs unnoticed to the general public has contributed to its escalation into the 32 billion dollar industry it is now. If people knew the extent of human trafficking it should prompt public outrage which would force governments into finding effective ways to combat it."
5. How doe Tri4Freedom help the problem?


"As an individual deeply disturbed by the issue of human trafficking I created tri4freedom in an attempt to merge my passion for triathlon with my desire to see an end to human slavery. Firstly, Tri4freedom can raise substantial awareness about human trafficking within the triathlon community, including spectators of major races such as Ironman. Secondly, Tri4freedom aims to support The Not for Sale Campaign by raising funds and highlighting the efforts this organization is doing to combat the issue."


6. Why the link between triathlon and the cause?

"Triathlon by definition is comprised of three sports presenting a challenge that only the most dedicated and zealous individuals find appealing. Not surprisingly, demographics have indicated that the majority of triathletes are highly successful and educated professionals. For this reason I am hopeful that tri4freedom will spark enthusiasm from fellow triathletes who are entrepreneurs, lawyers, healthcare workers, teachers and community leaders. Collectively triathletes are in professional positions most likely to have an influential impact on finding effective solutions to combat human trafficking."

7. How much support are you receiving through the Tri4Freedom website? Domestically, internationally?

"The support I have received so far has stemmed from letters I have written requesting sponsorship or from individuals that know me. The purpose of the website is to provide interested people with information and resources to help in the fight against slavery. As I promote my site more in the coming months I hope to achieve greater support from the general public and fellow triathletes."

8. Who are some of the "good actors" organizations that either partner w/Tri 4 Freedom or provide support in some way?

"First and foremost the Not For Sale Campaign has demonstrated continuous support for Tri4freedom, which is raising funds for their Free2play initiative. In collaboration with this organization, we are working on promoting fair trade athletic apparel and increasing media awareness about Tri4freedom's contribution to their efforts in abolishing human slavery.

Local businesses have been very supportive. Most notably, Green's Toyota of Lexington has provided financial assistance to help promote the Tri4freedom event in June. This event would not have been possible without the support of SpindleTop Hall who kindly offered to host the event and help with local promotion. Ad-Venture Promotions, and In His Image Designs have also shown enthusiastic support for Tri4freedom. HFP racing has been very supportive in helping promote Tri4freedom at two of their race weekends this summer which will reach almost 1500 athletes. Newton Running has generously donated a free pair of their running shoes for me to wear during my 27 hour triathlon."

9. What is this 27-hour event you are planning this summer?

June 18th-19th I will do a solo triathlon lasting 27 hours, which I named "Free2tri" after Free2play, which is the sole recipient of all funds we raise. 27 hours has significance- 27 million people are currently enslaved around the world. The event will be hosted by Spindletop Hall and will begin at 6am starting with a 2.5 hour swim, followed by a bike ride until sunset and ending with an overnight run until 9am the following morning. In collaboration with Not For Sale and our sponsors, planning is underway to encourage public attendance and donation incentives. As the date approaches we will release updates on the website. The purpose of "Free2tri" is to showcase Tri4freedom in the hopes of gaining athlete support, to raise funds for the Not For Sale Campaign and most importantly to highlight the widespread travesty of human trafficking.

10. How can individuals help draw attention to and combat the problem of human trafficking?Talk about it. Get angry. Acknowledge that human trafficking exists and accept the reality that an end to human trafficking is going to require a change in behavior. For example one way to help is by only purchasing fair trade products. This ensures that employee's lives are enhanced. The current reality is that fair trade is expensive because there is no overwhelming consumer demand to drive the price down. We need to demand that companies and their supply chains adhere to a slave-free workforce. The success of this approach has been demonstrated in the chocolate industry where a few companies have been pressured by the public to make their chocolate fair trade.

People could further this issue by being vigilant in identifying potential victims of human trafficking and contacting local authorities or dialing the National Human Trafficking hotline 1888-3737-888. There are numerous resources available on the web that describes human trafficking cases and how the public can help. I good place to start is http://www.notforsalecampaign.org and my site http://www.tri4freedom.com
Image courtesy of Paula Heron at Tri4Freedom.com

Source: justmeans.com
Human Trafficking as a Public Health Crisis Part 3: What One Person Can Accomplish | Health
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Video on products made by slaves « ALLIES of Central Texas


Posted by: ALLIES of Central Texas | March 23, 2011

Most good, human loving people will be surprised to know that they own stuff that was produced by slaves. Consumers and businesses can unite to fix this problem.



Video on products made by slaves « ALLIES of Central Texas
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20 Ways You Can Help Fight Human Trafficking

Human Trafficking (TV miniseries)Image via Wikipedia

After first learning about human trafficking, many people want to help in some way but do not know how. Here are just a few ideas for your consideration.

  1. Learn human trafficking red flags and ask follow up questions so that you can detect a potential trafficking situation.
  2. In the United States, report your suspicions to law enforcement at 911, Department of Justice at 1-888-428-7581, and the National Human Trafficking Resource Center at 1-888-3737-888. Victims, including undocumented individuals, are eligible for services and immigration assistance.
  3. Be a conscientious consumer. Make socially responsible investments. Let your favorite retailers know that you support their efforts to maintain a slavery free supply chain. Encourage your company or your employer to take steps to investigate and eliminate human trafficking throughout its supply chain and to publish the information for consumer awareness. Refer to the Department of Labor's List of Goods Produced by Child Labor or Forced Labor.
  4. Hire trafficking survivors.
  5. Volunteer your professional services to help an anti-trafficking organization that need help from lawyers, doctors, dentists, counselors, translators and interpreters, graphic designers, public relations and media professionals, event planners, and accountants.
  6. Donate funds or needed items to an anti-trafficking organization.
  7. Organize a fundraiser and donate the proceeds to an anti-trafficking organization.
  8. Join or start a grassroots human trafficking coalition.
  9. Encourage your local schools to include modern slavery in their curriculum. As a parent, educator, or school personnel, be aware of how traffickers target school-aged children.
  10. Meet with and write to your local, state and federal government representatives to let them know that you care about combating human trafficking in your community.
  11. Create and distribute public awareness materials such as t-shirts, posters, and public service announcements for radio. Or distribute already existing materials available from the Department of Health and Human Services or Department of Homeland Security.
  12. Host an awareness event to watch and discuss a recent human trafficking documentary. On a larger scale, host a human trafficking film festival. Several noteworthy films and documentaries have been produced in the last several years that bring attention to the plight of victims worldwide.
  13. Write a letter to the editor for your local paper about human trafficking in your community.
  14. Incorporate human trafficking information into your professional associations’ conferences, trainings, manuals, and other materials as relevant.
  15. STUDENTS: Join or establish a university club to raise awareness about human trafficking throughout the local community and identify victims. Request that human trafficking be an issue included in such university courses as health, migration, human rights, social work, and crime. Increase scholarship about human trafficking by publishing an article, teaching a class, or hosting a symposium.
  16. COMMUNITY ORGANIZATIONS: ensure that your staff is able to identify and assist trafficked persons.
  17. LAW ENFORCEMENT OFFICIALS: join or start a local human trafficking task force.
  18. MENTAL HEALTH OR MEDICAL PROVIDERS: extend low-cost or free services to human trafficking victims assisted by nearby anti-trafficking organizations.
  19. IMMIGRATION ATTORNEYS: learn about and offer to human trafficking victims the immigration benefits for which they are eligible.
  20. EMPLOYMENT LAW ATTORNEYS: look for signs of human trafficking among your clients.

Source:state.gov

20 Ways You Can Help Fight Human Trafficking
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