Monday, October 31, 2011

The New School for Social Research : Human Rights and the Global Economy, November 9-10 2011

Following this link:

http://newschool.edu/cps/human-rights-global-economy/

Please pass along to interested colleagues. Thanks.

Human trafficking in Romania -- low risk, high income business (SETimes.com)

Source:
http://www.setimes.com/cocoon/setimes/xhtml/en_GB/features/setimes/articles/2011/10/31Link/reportage-01

Iana Matei, a psychologist by training, is the leading figure in Romania's fight against human trafficking. In an interview with SETimes correspondent Paul Ciocoiu, she describes her efforts to rescue young girls amid a flawed legislative system.

By Paul Ciocoiu for Southeast European Times in Bucharest -- 31/10/11

photo

Reaching Out founder Iana Matei. [Victor Barbu/SETimes]

SETimes: Tell us how your organisation, Reaching Out, started.

Iana Matei: It was established in 1999, becoming the first such organisation directly protecting victims of human trafficking, at a time when the Palermo Protocol was not in place yet, nor did we have specific legislation in Romania. The first victims I worked with were under age -- we would call them abused children -- and had been trafficked in the former Yugoslav countries where they had been lured with the promise of well-paid jobs.

SETimes: A method which is still being used, isn't it?

Matei: Indeed, but now we also have this so-called lover boy method in which traffickers pick the future victims one by one after they spend a couple of months with a girl until they convince her they allegedly want to marry her. What is worse in these cases is they start recruiting girls at the age of 12 and13, when they are easy to manipulate and control.

SETimes: Are most of the victims under age?

Matei: At this moment, yes. Unlike the first years of our activity in 1999-2003, when 70% of the victims were over 18 years old, and 30% were under age. Now this percentage has reversed. At this very moment, the youngest victim in my care is 13 years old.

The first funds came from the US Department of State. Then an American partner organisation … a German governmental organisation, UNICEF, then came the European funds. Lately, we have received funds from Make Way Partners, a US organisation.

I started by raising awareness among the women and girls in the whole country about what human trafficking really was. I did that by means of a movie I myself shot with a hidden camera in Macedonia and that I showed in schools. The movie showed the entire route from recruitment, transportation to exploitation based on the testimonies of the girls I had saved.

SETimes: How many employees are there here? And how many girls have you saved so far?

Matei: Eight employees, me included. And we have managed to save about 460 girls since we started.

SETimes: Why did you choose to work with trafficked women?

I started doing prevention in the orphanages to talk kids out of running away. One day, the police called me and told me they had three prostitutes in custody and needed my help to take them to a medical examination. But when I got there, I found three scared girls still crying, with their faces smeared with mascara. They were 14, 15 and 16 years old.

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Reaching Out requires girls to go to school and to learn a skilled trade. [Victor Barbu/SETimes]

When I asked them how they ended up in the street they told me pointblank they had been sold [by their parents]. I remember being furious for the following couple of months that something like that could happen in Romania.

When I started asking around, I realised no one wanted those girls, not even the Child Protection Authority, which said the girls would be taken to an orphanage. This is how I started my programme.

SETimes: How do the girls get to your organisation?

Matei: They are brought by the police, by the NGOs in the destination countries and girls we identify and take them away from traffickers. We currently have 12 girls at the centre, the most was 19.

SETimes: A small number compared to the proportions of the phenomenon.

Matei: I agree, but the assistance we give them is a complex process and cannot be done in haste, as happens in the state institutions. These kids have problems, have special needs; they need attention. They go out in the street because they lack love, care in their families; this is the starting point.

SETimes: How much time does a victim spend at your centre?

Matei: That depends on their age. Those who are above 18 integrate faster; we work with them more easily because they are mature. Those under age spend an average of one year here because otherwise they risk falling victims to human trafficking again.

SETimes: What exactly do they go through here during this reintegration process?

Matei: First, medical assistance. Then psychological assistance, individual and group therapy.

Also life skills: that is what they weren't taught in their families. Every day a girl is on duty, she cooks or cleans for the rest of the group. We also have a sewing workshop, then professional training and school.

If they are under age they go to school, regardless of the educational stage. I insist they graduate at least from primary school (8th grade) and professional training. We place a great accent on education because they have to know they can do something in this life, and they ended up this way because they were told at home they are good for nothing.

photo

Matei says family dysfunction is a root issue and anti-trafficking legislation is flawed. [Reuters]

SETimes: How many of them do reintegrate in the end?

Matei: About 86%. These girls complete a school cycle, get a job and keep in touch with us afterwards.

SETimes: What is the main obstacle that prevents reintegration?

Matei: The flawed system, the lack of co-operation among state agencies. Then, even the school. We have to conceal the real stories of these girls when enlisting them back in school because they risk being discriminated against or even harassed.

SETimes: What about their families? Do they accept them back?

Matei: We always started from the premise children are born good. We do family counseling, negotiate the parent-child relationship and if all goes well, the child returns home and we keep an eye on her. But most of the time the obstacle resides in the parents themselves and that is the main obstacle in preventing them from reintegrating.

SETimes: Overall, what is the main cause of human trafficking?

Matei: Disorganised families, lack of education and information about human trafficking, an educational and health system that malfunctions, child protection that malfunctions. And all these components pass the responsibility to each other.

SETimes: What has been concretely done by state authorities to approach this problem? And what still needs to be done?

Matei: Anti-traffic legislation, a national strategy and an action plan, but all these have been done in haste, by fits and starts, because these measures were asked for by the EU and the US State Department. It was all put on paper to look good to the West but then we realised what was written there doesn't work.


We also have conflicting laws. For instance, as concerns under age victims, one law says we have to reintegrate them into their families. But how can we do that if the mother sold her daughter for a bottle of vodka and a pack of cigarettes?

Another obstacle is Article 44 of the Romanian Constitution, which says all the assets are legally obtained. We are interested in confiscating a trafficker's fortune because this is how we deal him a serious blow. Money is the very reason he does human trafficking.

But in Romania, it is the prosecutor who has to prove this money was illegally obtained, unlike the legislation in many Western countries, where the defendant has to prove he got his assets in a legal manner.

In Romania, human trafficking occurs at low risk, with high profit.

This content was commissioned for SETimes.com.

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Friday, October 28, 2011

Are hotel giants fighting global human trafficking? - USATODAY.com

Source: http://travel.usatoday.com/hotels/post/2011/10/human-trafficking-hearing-hilton-marriott-ecpat-modern-slavery/559075/1

By Barbara De Lollis, USA TODAY


WASHINGTON D.C. - Why were hotel giants Hilton, Starwood, Marriott and Carlson mentioned on Capitol Hill Thursday during a hearing on global human trafficking?

In a hearing that Rep. Chris Smith (R-N.J.) called to examine findings in this year's Trafficking in Persons report, he noted that "American chain hotels in China as well as in Mexico have been locations of sex trafficking."

Police raided a five-star Hilton in China last year and found prostitution and other criminal activity in the hotel's independently operated bar, which forced Hilton to briefly close the hotel.

Citing Hilton by name, Smith asked the three State Department officials there to testify to discuss hotels' involvement:

"What are you doing specifically to work with hotel chains including Hilton to make sure they're not complicit in human trafficking? Are we taking any harder line?"

Luis CdeBaca, the State Department's Ambassador-at-Large for trafficking issues since 2009, acknowledged that the hospitality industry does indeed have a "slavery footprint."

But he answered Smith's questions by playing up the positives - and even a reward, rather than pointing out any new measures that the government may be trying to bolster anti-trafficking efforts.

Carlson: Anti-trafficking leader

Carlson Hotels - parent of the Radisson and Country Inn and Suites chains, as well as TGI Friday's casual restaurant chain - is the leader when it comes to anti-trafficking efforts, CdeBaca said.

"We know they're doing their best to fight slavery," he said.

Anti-trafficking groups have praised Carlson for being the first U.S. hotel company to sign the international Code of Conduct to fight child sex trafficking. Among other things, Carlson trains employees for signs of what trafficking situations might look like inside hotels and reports incidents to a special, non-government organization.

Marriott and Starwood: Improving

But while "we've seen leadership from Carlson," CdeBaca said, "we're also seeing leadership in some other ways from hotels."

Marriott and Starwood, he noted, are trying to give trafficking survivors a future by bringing them into training programs in Brazil, Mexico and elsewhere.

"We think the best victim protection is a good job, a safe job," CdeBaca said.

In the wake of Hilton's China scandal

Despite the raid at Hilton's luxury hotel in Chongqing, China, the State Department also gives the company a thumbs up for its response. "Unfortunately, it often takes a scandal to deal with this," CdeBaca remarked.

After the incident, and following months of pressure from social justice advocates such as Change.org, Hilton signed the same code of conduct as Carlson (created by ECPAT International) . As a result of its signing, Hilton received some new business from the State Department.

"We made it very clear to Hilton that that was one of the reasons why we selected the Hilton downtown Miami (for a conference) when we have a choice of a number of properties," he said. "It was in recognition of the fact that they had done so."

"We don't have a rule that this is something we always have to do, but we're looking at it. If there's a Radisson, a Hilton or somebody that's put their money where their mouth is, then we as consumers should reward that type of behavior."

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Catherine McKinnell: Marking Anti-Slavery Day 2011

Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.co.uk/catherine-mckinnell/marking-antislavery-day-2_b_1014327.html



Catherine McKinnell


1807 is the date that is commemorated as the year in which Wilberforce's campaign to abolish slavery succeeded, with the passing of The Slave Trade Act 1807. But it was not until 1833 that the Abolition of Slavery Act was passed - Wilberforce died just three days after. His public work and tireless campaigning on this issue of profound importance was done.

Yet - almost 180 years after slavery was abolished - there is one form of trade that is still thriving in austerity Britain: the modern-day slavery that is the trafficking of human beings.

October 18th marks the UK's second Anti-Slavery Day in an attempt to raise awareness of this heinous and hidden crime.

The sheer number of children being brought illegally into the country is deeply concerning. Figures from the Child Exploitation and Online Protection Centre show an average of 300 children are trafficked into the UK per year. But it is the purposes for which they are brought that cause the most alarm. These include sexual exploitation, domestic servitude, benefit fraud, cannabis farming, street begging, theft and shoplifting. And a recent and sinister BBC report suggested at least 400 African children have been abducted and trafficked to the UK in the last four years, allegedly for witchcraft purposes.

Children identified as victims of trafficking in the UK are taken into local authority care, but as The Observer reported earlier this year, a disturbing number of these children simply go missing - often permanently, with many falling into the clutches of their abusers again.

That's why ECPAT UK has been working alongside The Body Shop (and indeed politicians from all parties) to campaign for the Government to establish a proper system of guardianship for the children who are victims of this appalling crime - delivering a 730,000-strong petition on the issue to Downing Street in May.

A guardian appointed to every victim would ensure that they get the right care, accommodation, education, healthcare and language support, and of particular importance, that the child has access to legal representation. This proposal is backed by the UN, and the UK Parliamentary Joint Committee on Human Rights. It is also a requirement of Article 16 of the new EU Directive on Preventing and Combating Trafficking in Human Beings and Protecting Victims, which the Coalition finally agreed to opt-in to in March.

Sadly, Ministers disagree - repeatedly arguing that Section 11 of the 2004 Children Act gives local authorities a statutory duty to ensure that they safeguard and promote the welfare of all children. Yet, this duty clearly isn't working, and how would Ministers know anyway? The Children's Minister Tim Loughton recently indicated in answer to a parliamentary question that the Government has no records of how many child trafficking victims are currently in care, or how many may have gone missing.

A proper system of guardianship would also help to increase the dismally low prosecution rate for trafficking offences against children - providing victims with the support they need through the prosecution process. But, the Attorney General - responsible for the CPS - made it quite clear in the Commons recently that the matter was outside of his remit. More worryingly, the CPS appears unable to track its own progress on the issue as it has admitted it 'has no records to identify how many prosecutions and convictions there have been of cases involving allegations of trafficking children'.

Despite the Government's attempts to take human trafficking seriously, all of this displays a worrying lack of joined-up thinking on the issue. What better way for Ministers to demonstrate they really are serious about tackling this growing problem - and indeed to mark Anti-Slavery Day 2011 - than to agree to establish a proper system of guardianship for child trafficking victims? It would not only change the lives of those vulnerable children, but also ensure that Wilberforce can rest in peace.

Follow Catherine McKinnell on Twitter: www.twitter.com/catmckinnellmp
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Dr. Caroline Cicero: Exposing the Sex Trade: The Cause of Choice for a New Generation

Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/dr-caroline-cicero



Dr. Caroline Cicero

10/18/11 12:34 PM ET

As a college student in 2007, Mike Masten spoke to his peers at Pepperdine University in Malibu, California. In a week-long series of events, Masten, an International Relations major, described women their same ages being sold into sex slavery in unlikely places across Southern California and around the world.
Nevin James was in that audience, and the words he heard that morning stuck with him. While James didn't get involved in the human trafficking cause right then, he recalls what he had heard at Pepperdine coming back to him when he was halfway around the world.

"I was walking in Amsterdam three years ago. I saw a woman in the window that I could buy if I wanted. She didn't look like she wanted to be there. That image really stuck with me." Together, the seed Masten had planted and that red-light district image inspired James, now 22 years old, to write and direct a passionate and inspired Death and Victory in Paris: A Social Justice Rock Opera.

James and his 12 member band performed the 9-song Rock Opera this month on Pepperdine's campus. James gathered together his musicians from campus and "around the music world" over the past couple years. The twelve performers debuted Death and Victory in Paris in Pittsburgh in June, before they moved onto New York, Richmond, Atlanta, and Louisville. He said he met and spoke with an audience member this summer who herself had been trafficked. She told him the show resonated with her and offered some healing.

Raised by a cardiologist and a former nurse in Pittsburgh's suburb of Upper St. Clair, James credits his musical inspiration to his parents exposing him to the classic male songwriters of their generation: Bob Dylan, Billy Joel, and Elton John with Bernie Taupin. If you watched Bravo's show Platinum Hit this summer, you may have seen James compete, as he was one of 6,000 musicians to audition but among the most talented who were chosen for the show. "But I wanted to not just release music, but use it to do something, to make a piece of art that people could react to and respond to, to move them" James explains.

James' creative vision takes the audience around the world in a visual and musical story that follows one young woman but rings true for millions of girls and women each year. Masten says that women who end up in sex trafficking were often offered a false job opportunity. "They may have been offered a career in modeling or even in a film," he says. Instead, they end up entrapped into a dark, exploitative, and violent world from which they cannot escape.

Since graduating in 2008, Masten co-founded Project-Exodus to free women who are enslaved by the sex-trade. He is training new surveillance teams to start their volunteer work in Los Angeles' San Fernando Valley, known as a pornography hotbed, and according to Masten, "loaded up with brothels." Project Exodus sends out 4 individuals to observe one location. They work undercover. Before starting operations in an area, they meet with local law enforcement agencies, and after they make a report, they work with the Department of Homeland Security and the Federal Bureau of Investigations. Having uncovered sex trafficking in areas you might expect it as well as in the cleanest, most affluent towns, Masten says, "No place is immune to it."

Masten sees a "revival and brand new movement" of youth activism. "Because of the internet age, we can see pictures immediately, whether they are Rwandan Genocide or the Congo" he says. "And there is a genuine righteous anger. Education and the internet have empowered the youth of our generation. We are tired of watching things happen without doing something about it."

When asked how and why today's young adults seem more aware and responsive to the issue of sex trafficking than their parents' cohort, James replied: "Our generation would much rather have the truth than have something packaged and pretty for us. It (human trafficking) might be hard to think about, but it's our job, to know and do something about it."

While James' parents are supportive of his artistry and cause, Masten says his parents "think I'm insane", and he knows what he is doing is dangerous work. With the Baby Boomer generation before them having fought for Civil Rights and Women's Rights, both Masten and James are examples that this generation of emerging young adults is passionate about their art, their faith, and connecting those parts of their lives to making the world a better place for the most vulnerable. Their form of social justice is both creative and entrepreneurial. James explains, "God says to take care of the widow and the orphan. God takes care of us, and we can help to take care of others."



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Thursday, October 27, 2011

Kristin Lindsey: None of Us Are Free

Kristin Lindsey: None of Us Are Free


Kristin Lindsey

Posted: 10/26/11 01:21 PM ET

Two weeks ago, an estimated 50,000 people gathered with the president and civil rights leaders to honor the new Martin Luther King Jr. Memorial on the National Mall. Dr. King's courage moved our nation to unite for racial equality and human dignity. He inspired countless others around the globe to demand freedom from oppression. Dr. King's return to the Mall is a reminder that we must keep fighting for justice. What was true in Dr. King's time remains true today: None of us are free until all of us are free.

Last weekend, I had the distinct honor of speaking at the third annual DC Stop Modern Slavery Walk, where thousands gathered on the Mall to raise awareness about human trafficking and lend their voices to those silenced by slavery. It is fitting that King's dedication led into this event, symbolizing a passing of the torch to the next generation of civil rights leaders and advocates.

Growing up, just after the 1960s, I feared that I had missed my chance to take part in the most important movement in our country. I now know that I have found my place -- and that all of us can step up and join a movement that matters. This year, I became CEO of The Global Fund for Children, which invests in innovative grassroots organizations that fight for millions of the world's most vulnerable children. They are vulnerable because they were born poor, or born in places where they were forced to work. Or to be soldiers. Born disabled, or born girls. Our work serves the larger dream that King envisioned. It is their potential that should matter, the content of their lives. Not their color, religion, gender or the circumstances of their birth.

Some of the most important work we do ensures that children are safe from trafficking and exploitation. We have the privilege of working with grassroots leaders in 72 countries whose work and dedication ensures that children can be free from slavery. These are some of the most courageous people I have ever known, working with children in circumstances many of us could never imagine or survive. They make sacrifices every day, putting their own safety at risk, to help others gain freedom and independence. To be rescued, rehabilitated, reunited with their communities and to be whole -- and children -- again.

Human trafficking is the third largest and fastest-growing criminal industry in the world. In fact, more people are enslaved today than at any other time. It affects over 1.2 million children and young people each year, of which 80 percent are under the age of twenty-four and some are as young as six.

In South Africa, I met girls as young as seven who were trafficked into Johannesburg. I've also met incredible grassroots leaders working in Johannesburg who ensure these rescued girls are sheltered, safe, counseled, educated, and never return to trafficking.

I am humbled by brilliant, brave leaders like James Kofi Annan with whom I shared the stage on Saturday. James established Challenging Heights in Ghana so that his experience as a child slave would not be repeated.

Whether in Guatemala, Serbia, India, Mongolia, Senegal or other places around the world, The Global Fund for Children finds and supports local NGO leaders, visionaries and slavery survivors who fight so that all of us can be free.

Before I give you the wrong impression, let me be clear. Slavery is not confined to remote parts of the world. It happens in our own country, even here in Washington, every day. There are workers in hotels and factories and farms of every sort who don't get paid and who aren't free to leave.

The partner groups involved in the DC Modern Slavery Walk have come together to spread the word that anyone and everyone can help put an end to human trafficking. There are various ways to get involved and make a difference. Whether it's by donating, partnering, interning, volunteering, or learning more about organizations that specialize in the cause, we must stand behind these courageous men and women who fight to end exploitation and trafficking in their communities. We have the ability to help them become seen and heard.

The torch has been passed to us. Putting an end to modern day slavery is our civil rights movement. Now it's our time to make a difference, and we must continue to work together to ensure that people everywhere are free.

Kristin Lindsey is the CEO of The Global Fund for Children in Washington, DC. For over twenty years she has worked with foundations, nonprofits and policymakers in Chicago, DC and various spots around the globe. The Global Fund for Children invests in innovative, community-based organizations working with some of the world's most vulnerable children and youth. To date, GFC has invested $21 million in over 500 grassroots organizations in 78 countries, serving over 1 million children.

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TODAYonline | Commentary | A modern-day slavery problem on our hands

sOURCE: http://www.todayonline.com/Commentary/EDC111025-0000378/A-modern-day-slavery-problem-on-our-hands

Products from forced labour enter the global economy, and countries need to cooperate to nail traffickers

I am looking into the eyes of Mr Siddharth Kara (picture), the former investment banker who walked away from a lucrative career in finance 10 years ago to dedicate his life to fighting people trafficking and sex slavery.

nothing
Photo by SION TOUHIG

There is sadness in them and he looks as though he is carrying the weight of the world on his shoulders. Both characteristics almost certainly emanate from the horrors he has witnessed during his research.

These scenes are etched into his mind forever and sometimes, he says, trying to make a difference is like pushing water upstream.

But for the moment this Fellow of Harvard University, who advises governments and lawmakers around the world on trafficking policy, is determined to fight on. Explaining that all of us have a part to play in fighting the underground slave trade, the 36-year-old American academic says: "The process of acquiring and transporting individuals into some kind of coerced labour touches our lives more than we think because these people are put to work on all kinds of products which enter the global economy.

"So we may consume, on the other side of the world, unknowingly and unwittingly, but at some point in that supply chain it could be tainted by child servitude or human trafficking or some other kind of forced labour."

Mr Kara was recently invited by the United States Embassy in Singapore to enlighten academics, politicians and schoolchildren to the evils being committed by modern-day slave-drivers and how unsuspecting consumers are fuelling the process. His daring research in the field has seen him recognised as the world's leading authority on illegal slave trade and he is in constant demand from both the US government and the United Nations.

He says that much of the media spotlight focuses on the illegal sex trade, especially prevalent here in South-east Asia. It is a massive problem which, although involves a tiny proportion of trafficking victims, maybe only 4 or 5 per cent, generates as much as 40 per cent of total profits from forced labour.

"Sex trafficking gets the preponderance of the attention for obvious reasons," he concedes. "But while it's true that more people are trafficked into other forms of labour, sex trafficking is by far the most profitable form of human trafficking. A distant second might be organ trafficking."

"When you coerce a young woman, or even a boy, into 10, 15 or more commercial sex acts a day, day after day, month after month, year after year, the profits can be staggering. If you are exploiting someone through agriculture, mining or manufacturing, you can certainly make a lot of money but that rapid turnover of revenue generation only exists in forced prostitution.

"But I have investigated numerous industries. For example, fish and frozen shrimp are tainted throughout South-east Asia. Countries like Bangladesh, Vietnam, Thailand and China are involved. Rice, sugar, pig iron, mining for minerals throughout the Congo, these minerals which end up in our electronic devices, these mines are often tainted by forced labour; your granite work-tops could come from a mine in South-east Asia. The list of items and products is often endless," he says.

Mr Kara's biggest fear is the authorities are failing to nail the big bosses behind these scams and do not have the investigative or legislative firepower to cope with these fast-evolving systems.

He explains: "The criminal penalties for human trafficking are disproportionately anaemic to the benefits you can enjoy. It may be very short prison terms but, more importantly, small economic penalties. And human trafficking, like slavery, throughout history is an economic crime - people seek to maximise their profits by eliminating the cost of labour.

"In terms of organised crime networks, at most we are sometimes catching the finger of the hand, and the organisms still exist and can still function quite well."

Last year, Mr Kara wrote his first book, Sex Trafficking: Inside the Business of Modern Slavery, and next year, he hopes to launch the first fully-equipped research and policy centre for people trafficking at Harvard's John F Kennedy School of Government.

But he warns: "The traffickers are continuing to evolve and they are co-operating with each other very effectively. What's alarming to me is that Albanian mafia are cooperating with Italian mafia, who are working with Nigerian mafia, who are working with Chinese mafia to acquire people, move them into areas of exploitation, very seamlessly and effectively.

"It's far more sophisticated and complex now than when I started my research. We are numerous steps behind them in terms of international cooperation. They keep moving forward in their ability to do this internationally and we are stuck arguing on borders and jurisdictions, and in the meantime people are suffering."

Paul Gilfeather is the principal correspondent at Today.
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Black-Market Babies: Broken Families in China, Confused Children in the U.S. - Sushma Subramanian & Deborah Jian Lee - International - The Atlantic

Source: http://www.theatlantic.com/international/archive/2011/10/black-market-babies-broken-families-in-china-confused-children-in-the-us/247329/

by Sushma Subramanian & Deborah Jian Lee - Sushma Subramanian is a freelance health and science journalist. Deborah Jian Lee is a freelance journalist and independent radio producer. Both are based in New York.


Oct 27 2011, 7:00 AM ET 4 Corruption at Chinese adoption agencies has led to a market for children,
stolen from their families and sold internationally for steep prices and under false pretenses,
often to parents in the U.S.

pulitzer oct25 p.jpg

Children playing outside their home in the village of Lang Shi Cun in Hunan Province / Deborah Jian Lee

HUNAN PROVINCE, China -- This spring, the business magazine Caixin made headlines around the world when it uncovered corruption at Chinese adoption agencies involving children stolen from their families in Hunan Province and sold for steep prices in the international adoption arena. The news hit hard in the United States, which is home to about 60,000 children adopted from China, mostly girls. Adoptive parents are grappling with the news now that the myth they were once sold on -- that orphanages are overrun with abandoned Chinese girls -- has been shattered.

For years, even social scientists supported this narrative. Two decades ago, when the gender ratio first started to skew sharply toward boys, they assumed these official figures were distorted by millions of unreported newborn girls. The country's strict one-child policy, they reasoned, prompted a widespread number of parents to conceal their additional children to avoid harsh penalties. Because of an enduring preference for boys, they surmised, many parents hid their girls or simply abandoned them.

In recent years, that theory has come undone. "The more we look at the data, the more we realize the hidden children, they are not there," says Yong Cai, a sociologist at University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. "They have never been born or they have simply been aborted." While some do conceal their children or abandon them, sex-selective abortion and poor health care for baby girls account for most of the sex ratio disparity for very young children, which now stands at about 120 males for every 100 females, Cai says.

Here, we tell the stories of families on both sides of the adoption scandal -- an adoptive mother in the United States who discovered her daughter's adoption papers were forged and a Chinese father whose baby was taken from him. We have not used real names to protect the identity of the American woman's adopted daughter and for the Chinese parent's safety.

A Mother's Story (as told to Sushma Subramanian and Deborah Jian Lee)

Late one night, my then 4-year-old daughter, whom I'll call Cathy, was having trouble sleeping. With tears in her eyes, she said something that shocked me -- "I miss my birth mom." "Of course you do," I replied. I sat down and cried with her. "What would you like to tell her?" I asked. "I love her. And I miss her," she said. A few months later, she asked me to find her biological mother. Since then, it's become my mission, but I never guessed what it would lead me to discover.

I adopted my daughter in 2005 from an orphanage in Guangdong Province. The director took me into a room full of little girls and introduced me to Cathy. At 39, I really wanted a child and I was set on helping a little girl who was likely abandoned by her family. I wanted to bring her up to know that as a woman, she is absolutely valued. I believed the fee of $7,000 would go to the orphanage. I took Cathy into my arms, and the director gave me a bag of soil from her homeland so she would always know where she was from.

I've always talked to her openly about her adoption. I read her stories like "I Love You Like Crazy Cakes" about a girl who was adopted from China. We host play dates with several other neighboring families with children from China. For the Autumn Moon Festival, the kids write letters to their birth moms and send them up into the sky in helium balloons.

While a few of the other kids have also started asking about their biological parents, I'm the only parent I know searching for them. I contacted a man named Brian Stuy, who founded Research-China.org, which helps adoptive families look for the birthplaces of their children. When I told him about Cathy, he said she could have been involved in a scandal like the one in Hunan, where orphanages bought babies and placed them with foreign families. Recent stories show that many children were kidnapped and sold into adoption.

After that discovery, I spent many nights sobbing at my computer. I felt so guilty, like I was part of a crime. How was I going to tell my daughter? The information made me double my effort to find her birth parents.

I hired Stuy's wife to travel with me to Guangdong. According to orphanage papers, a man found two-day-old Cathy in a public place, abandoned, and took her to the orphanage. I tracked down this man, a director of civil affairs. He confessed the story had been made up. He was a friend of the orphanage director. Over Skype, I had to tell my daughter that I wouldn't be able to find her birth mom. "So China tells lies," Cathy said.

Cathy started telling her group of adopted friends about "China's lies" and one of their mothers told me that the girls might have to stop spending time together. Other parents I've encountered in online forums admit that they feel scared and believe their kids are better off in the United States. I told Cathy there are some people who wouldn't understand her desire to find her birth mom and she probably shouldn't talk about it with them. We've patched things up with her friend's family.

Today, at seven, Cathy is an outgoing girl who enjoys jazz dance and excels in her Mandarin classes. I still haven't told her the whole story. I'll wait until she's older. I've hit a dead end on my search, but I'm not going to stop trying. If I ever find her birth mother, I'd want to help Cathy get to know her, if that's what she wants. There are thousands of adopted Chinese children living in the United States, and it's their human right to know where they come from. Good or bad, we all deserve to know our history.

A Father's Story (as told to Sushma Subramanian and Deborah Jian Lee)

I have a family picture of my daughter from my last trip home, and it might be the very last image I'll ever see of her. As a migrant worker, government restrictions prevented me from raising my daughter in the city where I work, so I left her behind in my village with her grandparents. Because of the great distance between us and my limited vacation, I couldn't visit home regularly. I couldn't call often either because the phone connection doesn't always work. In fact, I didn't hear that the government took my baby girl until weeks after it happened.

I'm from a rural town deep in the mountains, and my family is very poor. Our house is so old the walls and ceiling are cracked, and we worry the bricks might fall when the wind blows hard. The villagers survive on growing rice and vegetables and raising children, ducks, pigs and cows. I knew I could provide better for my family by moving to a big city for factory work. So just half a year after my daughter, my first child, was born in July 2004, my wife and I had to leave for Shenzhen to find jobs. In the city, our days are long and hard, and we live in a small dorm, not the kind of environment to bring up children.

The next spring, the local family planning officials stormed my parents' house and took my baby away. They said the child was illegal, but gave no further explanation. At the time, I was in my thirties, but my wife was just shy of 20 years old, the legal marrying age for women. When my wife gave birth, we decided to register the child after my wife turned 20. Many people in our village had done this before.

I called a few weeks later, and my parents gave me the terrible news. I rushed home. We went to a nearby village, where a government official said that we had to pay 6,000 RMB (about $940) to get our daughter back. My monthly salary is just 2,000 RMB, which is usually enough to pay rent and other living expenses for me and my wife and to send a little back home, so we had only 4,000 RMB saved. A few days later, when I returned with the money, the official balked, saying even if I paid 1 million RMB, I would never get my daughter back. She had already been given away to an orphanage.

He tried to cut me a deal, giving me permission to have another child, more than the one-child policy allows. I was furious. I tracked down the orphanage, but by the time I got there, she was gone. As I talked to more people about what happened to my daughter, I discovered that other families had also had their children taken from them. If I speak up, I don't know if the government would help me find my girl, or try to shut me up or detain me.

Now, years later, I continue to live as a migrant worker, making backpacks in a small factory and sleeping in a dorm with roommates. I have a 6-year-old son who attends kindergarten in my hometown, and my parents watch over him. I wish I could see him more often than I do. If I ever find my daughter, I would tell her how badly I've longed for her. I want to let her know that I didn't give her up for adoption. She was stolen from me.

This article was supported by a grant from the Pulitzer Center on Crisis Reporting, an Atlantic partner site.


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Clergy call on Village Voice to shut down sex trafficking site – The Religion World – Orlando Sentinel

Source: http://blogs.orlandosentinel.com/features-the-religion-world/2011/10/25/clergy-call-on-village-voice-to-shut-down-sex-trafficking-site/

Thirty-six prominent clergy took out a full-page New York Times advertisement Tuesday demanding that Village Voice Media discontinue a Web site used for the sex trafficking of girls and boys.

The ad featured a letter calling on the Village Voice company to immediately shut down the Adult section of its Web site where this activity is taking place. The clergy also launched a nationwide petition in partnership with Change.org’s more than one million members.

“Village Voice Media CEO Jim Larkin and his Board of Directors need to stop Backpage.com from serving as a platform for the sex trafficking of girls and boys immediately. For over a year, advocates have demanded action, but the responses they have been given are half-measures and delays. We are tired of Village Voice’s delay tactics,” said Rev. Dr. Katharine Henderson, president of Auburn Seminary. “The only way to end the sale of minors for sex on Backpage.com is by shutting down the Adult section for good.”

The newly formed multifaith coalition is made up of mainline Christians, Catholics, Jews, evangelical Christians, Muslims, Sikhs, Humanists and other moral and religious leaders. Groundswell, Auburn Seminary’s social action initiative, convened the group.

Arrests of adults using Backpage.com to sell minors for sex have been reported by the media in a number of states, including Colorado, Florida, Georgia, Kansas, Maryland, Massachusetts, Minnesota, New Mexico, Ohio, South Dakota, Tennessee, Texas, Washington, and Wisconsin.

The National Association of Attorneys General has “tracked more than 50 instances, in 22 states over three years, of charges filed against those trafficking or attempting to traffic minors on Backpage.com,” it wrote in an August 31, 2011 letter to Backpage. Fifty-one Attorneys General have signed on to that letter. Access the letter from the Attorneys General here.

Backpage.com asserts it has put in place “effective measures” to prevent child prostitution from occurring on its Web site, yet it is still happening. According to the letter from the Attorneys General, even Backpage.com Vice President Carl Ferrer has admitted this, stating “the company identifies more than 400 ‘adult services’ posts every month that may involve minors.” The Attorneys General maintain that it is “very difficult to accurately detect underage human trafficking,” and therefore call on Backpage.com to “eradicate” child sex trafficking on its Web site by shutting down the Adult section. The clergy join them in this call.

“As a pastor I have seen the devastating effects of the sex trafficking of minors first hand. It is a moral abomination,” said the Rev. Otis Moss, III, Pastor of Trinity United Church of Christ. “My message to Village Voice Media is this: protect these young girls and boys by immediately taking down the Adult section of Backpage.com.”

Groundswell plans to rally additional clergy and Americans of moral commitment to sign a petition and join in its call to Village Voice Media. The clergy still welcome the opportunity to meet with the Board of Directors of Village Voice Media to discuss their concerns.

“We know there is much more to be done to end the sex trafficking of minors beyond what we’re asking of Village Voice Media,” said Valarie Kaur, Sikh-American activist and Director of Groundswell. “We need educational campaigns, robust law enforcement, and solutions to the poverty and abuse at the root of the practice. But we can do something right now to shut down a prominent commercial platform used for the sex trafficking of girls and boys.”

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The Youth Career Initiative pilots human trafficking awareness training for hotel staff in Mexico

Source: http://www.youthcareerinitiative.org/AboutUs/Latest%20News/October%202011-%20Human%20Trafficking%20Training%20Pilot.aspx

20 October 2011

The Youth Career Initiative (YCI), a six-month education programme that provides disadvantaged young people with life and work skills in leading hotels, launches its first training workshop in Mexico this week for hotel staff working with participants who have survived human trafficking.

Course attendees include General Managers, HR and training managers, representatives of YCI’s local coordinating partners, and staff of local shelters.

The half-day training programme is also aimed at representatives from other partner organisations in the target locations for this project. This workshop is conducted with partial support from the U.S. Department of State Office to Monitor and Combat Trafficking in Persons (G/TIP).

The training has two main aims: to raise awareness about the complex issue of human trafficking, particularly within the context of the hotel industry; and to enable hotel staff coordinating the YCI programme to better support participants who have survived human trafficking. Facilitated by a team comprised of human trafficking experts, as well as hotel staff, the training workshop offers a general overview of the issue before delving into particular challenges within the hospitality industry. It also provides an insight into the victims’ experience including the rescue and recovery process, while encouraging discussions about how to support the re-integration of survivors.

"The training course was developed with input from a range of local shelters, anti-trafficking organisations, governmental organisations and hotel companies. "

Leading hotel companies participating in this Mexico pilot include InterContinental Hotels Group, Marriott International Inc., and NH Hoteles.

As a new adaptation of the YCI model, this pilot project aiding the re-integration of survivors of human trafficking will initially run in three pilot countries (Mexico, Brazil and Vietnam). The first pilot is currently running in Mexico City with 45 young people, 15 of whom are survivors of human trafficking. The eventual aim is to scale up the project to involve all 11 participating YCI countries.

ENDS

Notes to Editors

- Funding for this training workshop was made possible in part by an award from the Office to Monitor and Combat Trafficking in Persons [S-SGTIP-10-GR-0078]. The views expressed in written conference materials or publications and by speakers and moderators do not necessarily reflect the official policies of the Department of State nor does the mention of trade names, commercial practices, or organizations imply endorsement by the U.S. Government.

- The Youth Career Initiative (YCI) www.youthcareerinitiative.org is a six-month education programme delivered in partnership with the international hotel industry that provides disadvantaged young people with life and work skills. YCI aims to empower young participants to make informed career choices and realise the options available to them, enabling them to improve their employability and enhance their long-term social and economic opportunities. The initiative has been in operation since 1995 and provides a practical platform for governments, companies, and non-profit organisations to work collaboratively towards the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) – in particular poverty alleviation.

For further information, please contact: Alberto Canovas, YCI Programme Manager
Email: alberto.canovas@iblf.org. Tel: 020 7467 3643.

- The International Tourism Partnership (ITP), founded in 1992 and part of the International Business Leaders Forum, brings together the world’s leading international hotel companies to provide a voice for environmental and social responsibility in the industry. It works to demonstrate in a very practical way that environmental and social responsibility makes good business sense. ITP does this by highlighting best practice, offering a range of practical products and programmes and tackling emerging sustainability issues through its collaborative working groups. ITP’s programmes and products include, among others, the Youth Career Initiative, the Green Hotelier online magazine, the Environmental Management for Hotels handbook, and Sustainable Hotel Siting, Design and Construction. The combined reach of the membership extends to over 22,000 properties, over 3.2 million rooms and over 1.5 million employees in over 100 countries worldwide.

For further information, please contact: Francesca Leadlay, Programme Manager Sustainability
Email: francesca.leadlay@iblf.org. Tel: 020 7467 3646.

Image courtesy A. Scotti for UN.GIFT/UNODC, www.ungift.org

Integrated and sustained efforts are key in ending human trafficking

Source: http://www.unodc.org/unodc/en/frontpage/2011/September/integrated-and-sustained-efforts-are-key-in-ending-human-trafficking.html?ref=fs1

23 September 2011 - Speaking at two separate yet related events this week on the issue of human trafficking, UNODC Executive Director Yury Fedotov reiterated the need for sustained efforts in fighting this crime at all levels: "It is only through working together from the community-level right through to the international arena that we can break this crime and put an end to human trafficking."


The Executive Director's comments follow the launch of a new human trafficking portal - Freedom Without Borders - and an address made to an event entitled "Innovative Collaborations to Combat Trafficking" co-organized by the US, Brazilian and Dutch Missions to New York.

As a multi-billion dollar crime and one which enslaves an estimated 2.4 million people at any given time - many of whom are children - each and every action against trafficking is critical.

Freedom Without Borders has been established by the First Lady of the Dominican Republic, H.E. Dr. Margarita Cedeño de Fernández, who is a member of the United Nations Global Initiative to Fight Human Trafficking (UN.GIFT) Women Leaders' Council. The website acts as a database and focal point for useful information within the area of human trafficking covering aspects from official documents and activities to educational materials and assistance tools. "With females disproportionately affected by human trafficking, it is encouraging to see the actions of the Women Leaders' Council and those of Dr. Cedeño de Fernández which demonstrates the vital role of women in the fight against this crime" said the Executive Director.

Attending the discussion on "Innovative Collaborations to Combat Trafficking", Mr. Fedotov noted that if human trafficking is to be eradicated, collaboration and partnership must not be a destination, but a point of departure. As the guardian of the United Nations Protocol on Trafficking in Persons, UNODC supports strong partnerships that reach across borders and in this acts as a bridge between Inter-Governmental and Non Governmental Organizations, between the public and private sectors, and between those who are aware of human trafficking and those who should be concerned.

Carrying on the theme of knowledge dissemination which was the topic of the Freedom Without Borders launch, the Executive Director highlighted the work of two key UNODC supported initiatives - the UN Voluntary Trust Fund for Victims of Human Trafficking and the UN.GIFT.HUB. The latter is an example of effective cooperation and partnership within the UN, while the former takes an innovative and collaborative approach in its fundraising. Through donations from Governments, the private sector and people from all walks of life, the Trust Fund works to provide humanitarian, legal and financial aid to victims of human trafficking.

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Tuesday, October 25, 2011

Migrants tell of troubles on fishing boats | Oman Observer

Source: http://main.omanobserver.om/node/65241

Sun, 18 September 2011

By Kelly Macnamara - THOUSANDS of men from Myanmar and Cambodia set sail on Thai fishing boats every day, but many are unwilling seafarers — forced to work in brutal conditions under threat of death. The day Hla Myint saw the sea for the first time was when traffickers delivered him, after a week’s trek through the jungle from Myanmar, to a ship on Thailand’s coast.

He said it was the beginning of seven months of hardship, during which there were beatings “every day, every hour”.

His is one of a multitude of stories of slavery in Thailand’s multi-million dollar fishing industry, which campaigners say relies on forced labour to provide seafood for restaurants and supermarkets around the world.

Hla Myint decided to escape — throwing himself into choppy waters and clinging to a life buoy for five hours before reaching land — after seeing his captain kill a crewmate.

The man, who had been caught trying to escape, was savagely beaten and tortured in front of the rest of the fishermen.

“Later they took him to the back of the ship, stood him on the edge and shot him in the head. My heart pounded so hard when I saw that,” said Hla Myint, whose name AFP has changed to protect his identity.

Now he works with a local aid group helping others to flee.

He told his story during a dash to rescue four young Myanmar men hiding in bushes near the coastal town of Rayong, just hours after they broke out of a locked room and ran for their lives.

“They threatened that if we tried to run away, one bullet cost only 25 baht ($0.83),” said Myo Oo, 20, whose name has also been changed.

Another member of the group, a teenager clearly still petrified.

The UN recently acknowledged Thailand’s “significant progress” in efforts to tackle trafficking, but said it needed to go further and warned that trafficking of labour in the fishing industry was “growing in scale”.

Sirirat Ayuwathana of Thailand’s Ministry of Social Development and Human Security, which is in charge of tackling trafficking in the country, said authorities were aware of the problem and planned to set up a commission to work on registering all fishing boats and crew members.

“We cannot know what happens when the boats leave the shore. The workers could be tortured or detained. The captains have total control of the boat, and they may mistreat these people,” she said.

Life on the boats is incredibly hard. Men toil for up to 20 hours a day, seven days a week, only able to snatch a few moments for food and rest between hauling nets, according to a report by the International Organisation for Migration (IOM).

Some boats use “mother ships” to refuel and take on new crew to avoid returning to land and many fishermen spend months or even years trapped in waters as far away as Somalia, the IOM said.

Phil Robertson of Human Rights Watch, who wrote the report, said marine police in one Thai coastal area told him they found up to 10 bodies a month washed up on the shore.

In a 2009 study, more than half of Cambodian migrants trafficked onto Thai boats surveyed by the United Nations Inter-Agency Project on Human Trafficking (UNIAP) said they had seen their captains killing one of their colleagues.


But Mana Sripitak, of the National Fisheries Association of Thailand, said it was “impossible” that forced labour was used, saying migrants were willing workers.

The Thai fishing industry is a lucrative business. According to official figures, 16.95 billion baht ($565 million) worth of fish was hauled into Thailand from the sea in 2010.

China, the European Union, the United States and Japan were among the major export destinations.

There are 35,000 migrants officially registered as working on the boats, mostly from Myanmar and Cambodia. But campaigners say poor working conditions put off Thai seafarers, so captains use trafficking victims to restock their crews.

Robertson said thousands of people had been trafficked onto boats over the last decade.

“This has been essentially a lawless industry for years and within that the system of brokers and trafficking has grown up as the de facto model for a fishing boat captain... They know who to call,” he said. The US State Department has placed Thailand on a trafficking in persons “watchlist” for two years running.

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The Brandeis Hoot » Rabbi discusses human trafficking trade in Israel

Source: http://thebrandeishoot.com/articles/10722

September 16, 2011

“In the state of Israel, someone does not have sex with prostitutes but rapes sex slaves.” Rabbi Levi Lauer, the founding executive director of ATZUM-Justice Works, reiterated this point repeatedly Tuesday at a lecture he gave at Brandeis University titled “When Hope Ends in Slavery: Human Trafficking in Israel.” The lecture was sponsored by the Schusterman Center for Israel Studies and the Schuster Institute for Investigative Journalism.

ATZUM is an Israeli nonprofit organization with four goals: helping Israeli survivors of terror attacks; assisting non-Jews who helped Jews during the Holocaust; educating and assimilating Ethiopian youth; and ending the sex-trafficking trade in Israel.

ATZUM’s Task Force on Human Trafficking has been working for six years with the Israeli law firm Kabiri-Nevo-Keidar to change Israeli policy to prevent the trafficking of women and the slavery of women once within in Israel. The law firm’s pro-bono work with ATZUM allows ATZUM to spend “more time and less money” on this project, according to Lauer.

For their work, on May 8 Lauer and ATZUM received Hebrew Union College’s 2011 Roger E. Joseph Prize, which grants $10,000.

“There are 3,200 women annually who are going to be raped daily and brutalized in ways unimaginable,” Lauer informed the audience of about 40 people. Approximately 3,200 women—although there are no official statistics on this—are forced into Israel, stripped naked, sold on the block and distributed to pimps, mainly in Tel Aviv, Lauer said. “After 12 months, many of them are physically and emotionally useless. They are dumped on the street, arrested and deported.”

The first group of men responsible is the slavers. These men lure women, mainly from the former Soviet Union, to Israel, where they sell them to pimps. “Some [women] came expecting to be pole dancers or lap dancers; they were not told they were going to be raped 15 to 20 times a day,” Lauer said. “And even if they were, should they be left to be brutalized?”

The second group of men responsible is the pimps. These men run the brothels and strip clubs.

The third group of men responsible is the customers. Of these men, 8 percent are foreign workers; 20 to 25 percent are Arabs; 30 percent are Haredi, ultra-Orthodox Jews; and the rest blur all lines.

The biggest aid to sex trafficking in Israel is lax border patrol in the south and the airports. While Israeli officers patrol for terrorists and weapons, they turn a blind eye to enslaved women. The northern border is well-patrolled due to Hezbollah; the Jordanians patrol their own border—according to Lauer, “because the Jordanians were smart enough to dump the Palestinians in our lap and now they don’t want anyone coming back their way”; and trafficking via the Mediterranean is possible due to bribery but is expensive.

This leaves Egypt and the airports. Soldiers used to allow women smuggled over the Egyptian-Israeli to be picked up by Bedouins to be sold in Israel due to a tacit agreement that the Bedouins would not traffic in weapons. But now, with the political climate in Egypt changing, the non-compliance of the Bedouins and the imminent completion of a border fence, the Egyptian border is a less viable option.

This leaves the airports, where many women are brought in with fake identities in order to claim citizenship. “If [the airports become guarded], Bibi [Prime Minister Netanyahu] will get the Nobel Peace Prize for being the first country in the world without sex trafficking.” According to Lauer, it is that easy.

While working to lock down Israel’s borders, Lauer and ATZUM are also working to institute a Nordic law, currently in place in Norway, Denmark, Sweden and Finland, which would “decriminalize the person providing services and criminalize those paying for services.”

ATZUM has matched 119 lobbyists with Knesset members to advocate for this change in the laws because, ultimately, this change would be more effective than closing the borders. Firstly, not all sex slaves are foreign. “Increasing numbers of Israeli young girls and women, as young as 16, are more vulnerable to the sex trade,” Lauer said. “While we are trying to dry up the supply side externally, we have been unable to dry up the demand side.”

Additionally, a law like this “would allow the press to publish the names of those convicted—a column of ‘caught with your pants down,’” Lauer explained. “Ninety-five percent said that if there was a chance of family finding out, they wouldn’t do it because of the shame.”

It is shame that Lauer hopes will eventually end the sex-slave trade in Israel. It is shame that has kept the sex slaves primarily female. “The stigma associated with homosexuality and lesbians in Israel is still very strong,” Lauer said in an interview with The Hoot. Israeli men fear being caught with a male prostitute and Israeli women rarely buy sex.

Lauer has faced many barriers, however, in this fight. A common mantra he hears as he tries to enlist help is, “But Levi, you’re asking us to wash the dirtiest laundry of the Jewish people at this particularly sensitive time.”

He admits that this is true but always counters, saying, “The state of Israel is in trouble. There will never be a time when there isn’t trouble for Israel. I say, let’s once and for all wash it and hang it out to dry.” He added, “Something worse than washing the dirtiest laundry of the Jewish people at this particularly sensitive time is wearing it.”

The fight against sex trafficking in Israel is not the same fight found in other countries, particularly the United States. The issue in the United States is ignorance of the problem. In Israel, “The only people that say they don’t know are either the men who compulsively rape sex slaves and say they are having sex with prostitutes or those who don’t want to know.”

A big problem in Israel is that the police do not enforce the laws. “Israel has some of the toughest anti-trafficking laws on the books but they are unenforced—most laws are,” Lauer said. “Too many people come from too many cultures where the laws never helped them, so [they think] ‘why should I follow them now.’ … Routinely the Supreme Court tells the police to enforce them and they don’t.”

Lauer spoke of an incident in which he gave a list of the names of 40 slavers to a high-ranking police officer in Tel Aviv and the officer asked him how he had found these men’s names and personal information. He replied, “We did our job. We went out on the streets and asked.”

The men named on the list were not arrested.

Another problem Lauer faces is preconceived notions about Russian women. When he goes to officials to lobby for sex-trafficking law reformation, “at some point in the conversation they would ask ‘Levi, are any of these women Jewish?’ All they care about are Jewish women. They think, all those women are Natashas, all Russians are loose,” said Lauer. “They, excuse my language, they really don’t care about these shiksas, these non-Jewish women.”

Another question Lauer frequently hears is: “What do they look like?”

“These are people’s daughters and sisters,” Lauer stressed. “They’re not Russian whores or Natashas who don’t deserve our respect.”

The first sex-trafficking case brought to Lauer’s attention six years ago was that of an Uzbek woman, who had escaped her pimp and slaver and wanted to go home to her mother. She was dying of multi-drug resistant tuberculosis, weighed 36 kilograms and had been raped 15 times in the preceding 36 hours—she died 72 hours later.

Lauer has been working to get justice for her but continually runs into red tape and officials who don’t care. A judge even threw out a lawsuit against the state of Israel on the grounds that the victim was not there to appear in court. “By that criteria, you can’t convict anyone of murder,” Lauer said.

Recently, however, after six years, ATZUM and Kabiri-Nevo-Keidar won 525,000 shekels and sent it to the woman’s mother. They now plan to sue the pimp and slaver.

The largest project ATZUM organizes is Woman To Go, which brings attention to the issue and seeks signatures for a petition to criminalize buying women. Woman To Go was featured on CNN after they placed actresses wearing revealing clothes, black eyes and bloody lips in storefront windows with price tags attached to them in a Tel Aviv mall.

Woman To Go may soon be seen in the United States as well. Karen McLaughlin, formerly of the Massachusetts Task Force on Human Trafficking and currently an adviser for Demand Abolition, praised Lauer’s initiative at the end of his lecture and asked his advice in bringing Woman To Go to Boston. “I want to bring sex slavery in Massachusetts—in the United States—to people’s attention,” McLaughlin told The Hoot. “After this lecture, I also want to bring attention to how it works internationally—here, in Israel, all over.”

This is exactly what Lauer hopes for. Lauer wants to destroy the sex slavery industry in Israel “and then let’s tell the whole world how we did it so they can emulate our success.”

This event was cosponsored by the Hadassah-Brandeis Institute, International Center for Ethics, Justice, and Public Life; the Peace, Conflict and Coexistence Studies Program; the Social Justice & Social Policy Program; the Women’s and Gender Studies Program; and the Women’s Studies Research Center at Brandeis University.



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