Thursday, November 29, 2012

Trafficking and modern day slavery - TrustLaw

http://www.trust.org/trustlaw/news/slavery-beyond-the-sex-trade/

Wed, 28 Nov 2012 10:00 GMT

Source: Trustlaw // Katie Nguyen
A 19-year-old trafficking victim from central Myanmar who, two years ago, managed to escape two brokers who promised a job in a nearby town but instead took her to a town in the far north and tried to get her to become a sex worker. October 12, 2012. REUTERS/Minzayar Oo
By Katie Nguyen 
LONDON (TrustLaw) - In Haiti, it's the little girl who is kept home from school and forced to clean her sister's house or else be beaten with electric cables.
Thousands of miles away in India, it's the shy, young woman left at the mercy of an agent who finds her a job as a maid but takes her earnings. In Bahrain, it's the Filippino domestic worker who, abused and exploited by her employer, cannot leave.   
Millions of people around the world today are trapped in slavery, like seven-year-old Wisline was in Haiti.
"My sister came to get me at my mother's house, saying she would put me in school but when I got to her house, she started making me work and cook for her and she began mistreating me," says Wisline, who now lives in a refuge with other former child slaves outside of Port-au-Prince.
Exactly how many people are enslaved is impossible to know.
Estimates range from 27 million, cited by advocacy group, Free the Slaves, to the International Labour Organisation's (ILO) figure of 20.9 million people - of which about 2.2 million are forced labourers of the state, for example, working in prisons.
While women and girls account for the greater share of 21st century slaves, coverage of their plight has been dominated by stories of sex trafficking and lurid tales of being forced to sell their bodies in brothels and on street corners.
Yet data from the ILO suggests that far more women and girls are victims of domestic servitude and other types of forced labour than they are of the sex trade.
Of the estimated 11.4 million women and girls in forced labour globally, around 4.4 million are subjected to sexual exploitation in foreign countries, according to the ILO.
That leaves some 7 million trapped in labour exploitation. Unlike sex trafficking, most of it is taking place in the victims' own countries.   
DESPERATE FOR WORK
Although the ILO gives no breakdown, campaigners say forced labour involving women and girls includes everything from being enslaved in private homes as servants, cooks and nannies to working in factories, farms and textile mills, and even, according to some reports, nail bars and cannabis farms.
Another notable trend has been the trafficking of women into forced marriages in regions where men outnumber women. For example, 70 percent of the trafficking cases in Myanmar in 2011 involved local women being lured into neighbouring China - often on the pretext of finding work - only to be forced to marry Chinese men.
"Today you don't have to kidnap people, use violence to pull people into slavery," said Kevin Bales, co-founder of Free the Slaves. "There are so many people who are desperate for work ... that you just have to offer people a job."
Despite the scale of the problem and the suffering it causes, eradicating modern day slavery has proved elusive.
One of the hurdles is identifying victims.
Those in domestic servitude - whether migrant domestic workers or not - are less visible than in sex trafficking, which is one of the reasons why the sector has been overlooked, activists say.
So-called domestic slaves tend to be isolated and hidden from view, with abuses usually occurring behind closed doors.   
DOMESTIC SERVITUDE
In the privacy of their own homes, employers are often able to get away with violations that amount to enslavement, activists say. It can start with them confiscating their maids' passports and identity documents or not paying them - and escalate to not feeding them, insulting them verbally and beating them.
"There are so many cases of adults and children being fed scraps, having to sleep under the dining room table, being at the beck and call of their bosses," said Anti-Slavery International spokeswoman Elizabeth Muggleton.
"With child domestic workers, they might just look like another member of the family. It takes a slightly keen eye to recognise that there's only one child who's carrying the shopping bags," she said, referring to "Cinderella-style" cases of children forced to look after other children, and being badly mistreated.
In recognition of their particular vulnerability, governments adopted ILO's Convention 189 to protect domestic workers last year in a boost for millions of exploited women. To date, three countries - Uruguay, the Philippines and Mauritius - have ratifed the treaty.
Yet at the same time, many countries like Britain and the majority of Arab states have tied work permits for domestic workers to a single employer.
It's a policy that exposes workers to the risk of forced labour because it leaves them with few alternatives but to stick it out with a potentially abusive employer, experts say.
The fight against slavery has been championed recently by the United States with what advocates say was a landmark speech by President Barack Obama in September.
Calling it "one of the great human rights causes of our time", Obama announced a string of initiatives to combat the problem including an executive order designed to strengthen U.S. efforts to stamp out slavery from federal contracts.
While giving credit to countries such as Brazil and the United States for taking the lead in addressing forced labour, Beate Andrees, head of ILO's special action programme to combat forced labour, said: "We don't have the critical masses yet."
"There are many leaders and governments who can deny (it) and don't want to address it, so we are still a long way from eliminating the problem," Andrees told TrustLaw in a telephone interview from Geneva.
WHAT DOES IT TAKE TO END SLAVERY?
Besides political will, tackling corruption, pushing governments to enforce their anti-slavery laws and companies to scrutinise their supply chains would go a long way to ending slavery, experts say.
So would boosting the number of convictions for trafficking.
"The very numbers of identified victims or convicted traffickers remain very, very low," Silke Albert, a crime prevention expert for the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC), told TrustLaw.
Last year, 946 trafficking cases were referred to the British authorities, yet only eight human trafficking convictions were secured in England and Wales.
"Trafficking is a very complex crime," UNODC's Albert said.  "Many victims are for example in illegal situations. They have been brought in illegally or they have not been employed legally ... so they fear the police instead of turning to the police, and of course, they are badly controlled by their traffickers."
Women are both the victims of trafficking and the perpetrators, according to a UNODC report in 2009, which said female offenders had a more prominent role in present day slavery than in most other crimes.
It is unclear whether that is because women have been coerced into recruiting other women or because they can more easily approach and gain the trust of their victims.
What's certain is that women and girls will continue to suffer - and slavery will continue to thrive if its root causes are left unaddressed.
"The root causes of slavery are in social injustice, in discrimination, in poverty," Gulnara Shahinian, the U.N. Special Rapporteur on Contemporary Forms of Slavery, told TrustLaw. "Where all of these things are existing in a country, slavery will exist."
This article is part of a Thomson Reuters Foundation special report on trafficking and modern day slavery.
Trafficking and modern day slavery will be high on the agenda at the Trust Women conference, Dec 4-5
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Wednesday, November 28, 2012

Unauthorized migrants are targets of labor trafficking Page 1 of 2 | UTSanDiego.com



Read the Report:

"Looking for a Hidden Population: Trafficking of Migrant Laborers in San Diego County" - prepared by Sheldon X. Zhang, Ph.D., Principal Investigator, San Diego State University, Department of Sociology



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Drawn by ‘human for sale’ | Selangor Times

http://www.selangortimes.com/index.php?section=news&permalink=20121123110209-drawn-by-a

Source: Selangor Times

Writer: Lee Choon Fai 
Published: Fri, 23 Nov 2012
SUBANG JAYA: Instead of the usual clothing apparel, Offline Blogshop in Sunway Pyramid had real living, breathing human beings in store on Nov 17, which drew curious looks from shoppers.
‘Human for sale’ attracting attention.
However, the public need not worry as they are not actually for sale; the people being displayed are volunteers on a mission to create awareness of human trafficking in Malaysia.

The campaign, dubbed ‘Human for Sale’, was jointly organised by Offline Blogshop and anti-human trafficking non-governmental organisation (NGO) Change Your World.

A separate display will be held in Berjaya Times Square in Kuala Lumpur on Nov 24 and 25.

Shop owner Sharon Lim said she had done her own research regarding the matter and wanted to spread the word to the general public.

“You would be surprised how many people do not know about it (human trafficking); I believe this is the first time (learning about human trafficking) for many shoppers,” said Sharon.

Through her own research, she realised the scope of the problem in Malaysia and said raising awareness can help counter the problem greatly.

It was reported by AsiaOne News, a Singaporean online news portal, that 7,662 children went missing in Malaysia between 2008 and 2011, which means about five children go missing daily.

“Our goal is to create awareness so that people will be more vigilant and can look out for their children, friends and family,” said Sharon.

While there have been similar “Human for Sale” campaigns around the world, this is the first in Malaysia.
More than 100 volunteers are working to promote their cause while 55 of them pose as human trafficking victims for display in the shop.

Change Your World founder Kelvin Lim said the campaign on Sunday was all about making the problem known as public ignorance is a major obstacle in addressing human trafficking.

“Malaysia is a transit for human trafficking, victims are often kept in housing areas and go unnoticed. If people know of this and keep their eyes open I believe it can help,” said Kelvin.

The campaign is also an attempt to engage the younger generation and use their creativity to combat what Kelvin called “modern day slavery”.

At the 2pm launching ceremony, Kelvin said: “People were created to be loved, things were created to be used. The reason the world is in chaos is because things are being loved, and people are being used.”

Subang Jaya assemblyperson Hannah Yeoh said human trafficking is a serious problem in Malaysia as it is becoming cheaper and easier to move people around.

“From what I heard, Bandar Sunway used to be a trafficking hub about two years ago,” said Yeoh. She added that the problem is especially prevalent in the Klang Valley and the state had ordered local councils to set up anti-human trafficking committees in all local councils to address the situation.

Also present at the event was Offline Blogshop chief executive Yeo Bee Sean.

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Monday, November 26, 2012

Five Ways Your Company Can Avoid a Crisis Like Ikea's

Five Ways Your Company Can Avoid a Crisis Like Ikea's: Ikea used forced prison labour to make furniture—headline in The Independent. On Thursday it was business as usual at Ikea. On Friday the results of an independent investigation by Ernst & Young revealed that in the 1980s political prisoners in the former East Germany provided some of the labor that helped [...]
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An Escape from Cambodian Sex Slavery - Newsweek and The Daily Beast

http://www.thedailybeast.com/newsweek/2012/11/25/an-escape-from-cambodian-sex-slavery.html

Source: Newsweek and The Daily Beast


Enslaved as a child, a young woman gives voice to the horrors of human trafficking with a breakthrough radio show.

She remembers a home that looked fancy on the outside but ominous on the inside, a dark maze of bare chambers. She remembers the parade of men, one after the other, day by day, forcing her to have sex. She remembers contemplating death. She wasn’t yet 10 years old.

Sex Slave
A former sex slave finds solace at a center run by the Somaly Mam Foundation. (Jesse Pesta)

Her name is Sreypich Loch, and she was a slave in a Cambodian brothel. If she refused sex, she says, she would be beaten, shocked with an electric cord, denied food and water. “What else could I do?” she asks.

Loch, now around 20 years old, managed to escape that world and works today to rescue other girls. She helps grab them out of brothels, and she hosts a radio show in Phnom Penh, giving the girls a forum for their stories. It’s a groundbreaking effort for a young woman and former sex slave in this male-dominated society.

She hopes that by talking about her past, she will help people understand that slavery is alive and well. When people “hear the voice of the survivor,” she says on a recent visit to New York City, “we can help others.” She traveled to the U.S. with the group that helped save her, the Somaly Mam Foundation, named for another survivor of the sex trade in Cambodia.


Loch’s story may sound extreme, but it is not some isolated incident. An estimated 27 million people are victims of slavery around the world, according to the U.S. State Department. The buying and selling of humans is a multibillion-dollar global business, ensnaring vulnerable people who are often kidnapped or tricked into the trade.
Loch’s nightmare began when she was a child in Phnom Penh. Her stepfather raped her, she says, when she was just a girl; she thinks she was around 7 years old. He threatened to kill her if she told anyone. She would be raped again that year, by a stranger who snatched her from the street. He made the same threat, she says: tell anyone and die.
She stayed silent. “I was young. I was scared,” she says, speaking softly. “In Cambodia, many fathers rape their daughters; brothers rape their sisters.” Consistently ranked as one of the poorest and most corrupt nations in the world, Cambodia is still reeling from the brutal Khmer Rouge regime, which massacred as many as 2 million people in the 1970s. Intellectuals and city dwellers were targeted and tortured in an attempt to create a completely agrarian society. Families were ripped apart.

One day Loch worked up the nerve to tell her mother about the rapes. She’s not sure how much time had passed since the assaults, she says, as she was just a child and memories fade. But she has a vivid memory of her mother’s response. “She hit me,” Loch says. “She didn’t believe me. I think: she does not love me.”

Loch ran away from home, having lost faith in her family, she says. She remembers a heavy rainfall and the feeling of not knowing where to go. She hadn’t thought that far ahead. “I cried and cried,” she says. And then she was found by a gang of men. “Five men raped me on the street,” she says. “I wanted to die.”

That might have indeed been her fate if a woman hadn’t come along, offering to help. The woman took Loch to her home—or so Loch thought. The house turned out to be a brothel. She was locked in a basement room and forced to “sleep with many, many men every day,” she says. “I couldn’t see light, just dark.”

Her eyes fill with water at the thought of it. Then she pauses, closes her eyes for a moment, and continues. “If I said no, pimp hit me,” she says. “I tell pimp, please kill me.” Then she adds, “I am people. I am not an animal. How could they do me that way?”

Somaly Mam
Sreypich Loch (right) with her rescuer, Somaly Mam, on a visit to New York City. (Courtesy of the Somaly Mam Foundation)

Loch’s story mirrors that of many rescued Cambodian girls, who report being drugged, locked in coffins, whipped, even covered with biting insects in order to make them submit to sex. While their stories can be difficult to verify independently, the U.S. State Department confirms that the enslavement of girls in Cambodia is pervasive. “The sale of virgin girls continues to be a serious problem in Cambodia,” the State Department said in its annual Trafficking in Persons Report released this summer. “Cambodian men form the largest source of demand for child prostitution, though a significant number of men from the United States and Europe, as well as other Asian countries, travel to Cambodia to engage in child sex tourism.” Among local men, demand is often fueled by myths that sex with a virgin brings luck or good health.

Cambodia “does not fully comply with the minimum standards for the elimination of trafficking,” the State Department report says, but is making “significant efforts to do so.” Officials reportedly convicted 62 trafficking offenders this past year, an increase from 20 offenders the prior year.

Years had gone by, Loch says, when a client took her out of the brothel to his own home. There, she found an open window and fled, she says, hiding in the shadows until a policeman found her. “My body was bad, smelled not good,” she recalls. When she told her story, the police connected her with anti-trafficking officials. They in turn referred her to a center run by former sex slave Somaly Mam, according to a spokeswoman for Mam’s foundation, a grassroots group with shelters across Cambodia. No police action was taken against Loch’s captors, the spokeswoman says. Loch, for her part, remembers seeing all the girls at the shelter and thinking she had been sold to another brothel.

That was around four years ago, when Loch was in her midteens. At the center, she learned to sew and began attending school. In 2010 she joined an offshoot of Mam’s foundation called Voices for Change, a group of young slavery survivors who rescue girls from brothels. The activists gain access to the brothels by bringing supplies such as soap and condoms. Once inside they tell the sex workers that they can escape, with the help of the foundation and the police. The victims often need convincing. Many have been enslaved in the sex trade for so long, they don’t know how to function in the outside world; they wonder how they would support themselves. The activists tell them they can learn a trade, such as sewing or hairdressing, at the shelters.

The year Loch joined the group of young activists, she received an invitation to tell her story on a commercial radio station in Phnom Penh. The show sparked a storm of interest, with listeners calling in, reporting suspicious situations and asking about sentencing for pimps and traffickers. Loch saw an opportunity to help the public understand the shadowy world of slavery. This year she launched her own show, which she now hosts five days a week, interviewing former sex slaves as well as lawyers and legislators. She believes it’s the personal narratives of the girls that make people stop and listen.

Loch says she is “so happy” about her job. At the same time, she says it’s difficult to be reminded every day of her life in captivity. She is also haunted by the absence of her mother in her life; she has not seen her since she left home as a child.

She draws strength, she says, from her fellow survivors. The bond between these women is clear. On her trip to New York with two other young survivors, Sina Vann and Sopheap Thy, she holds their hands and hugs them frequently as they attend events and tour the city. In jeans, sneakers, and T-shirts, their dark hair pulled back into ponytails, the young women are quick to laugh at themselves and at one another. Vann jokes that Loch has great strength because “she eats a lot.” Loch makes fun of Thy for taking photos of flowers instead of Manhattan skyscrapers.

They look for restaurants that serve familiar dishes—rice and fish—and they marvel at the enormous platters of food that arrive. They look forward to going home and sharing their stories with the rest of the rescued girls. They call each other “sister.”
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