Source: 4Traders
Ethnic Hmong, Lao and Montagnard girls, including children, are being
abducted and forced into marriage and prostitution at an alarming rate
by corrupt government and military officials in Vietnam and Laos
according to statements issued jointly today by non-governmental
organizations.
Continue here:
http://www.4-traders.com/news/Vietnam-Laos-Officials-Involved-in-Abduction-Trafficking-and-Sex-Slavery-of-Women-Children--17421199/
Tuesday, November 26, 2013
Cambodian police break up major child abuse ring after an ITV investigation - ITV News
Source: ITV News
Cambodian police have broken up an international child abuse ring that trafficked youngsters to British paedophiles following an ITV Exposure investigation.
Continue here:
http://www.itv.com/news/2013-11-10/cambodian-police-break-up-major-child-abuse-ring-after-exposure/
Cambodian police have broken up an international child abuse ring that trafficked youngsters to British paedophiles following an ITV Exposure investigation.
Continue here:
http://www.itv.com/news/2013-11-10/cambodian-police-break-up-major-child-abuse-ring-after-exposure/
Our View- Human trafficking bill would spur talk on violence against women | The Portland Press Herald / Maine Sunday Telegram
Source: The Portland Press Herald / Maine Sunday Telegram
Legislators will consider a bill next session that would allow judges to vacate prostitution convictions for women forced into the act through human trafficking. Legislative leaders originally rejected the bill, sponsored by Rep. Amy Volk, R-Scarborough, but that decision was reversed last week upon appeal.
Continue here:
http://www.pressherald.com/opinion/Our_View__Human_trafficking_bill_would_spur_talk_on_violence_against_women_.html
Legislators will consider a bill next session that would allow judges to vacate prostitution convictions for women forced into the act through human trafficking. Legislative leaders originally rejected the bill, sponsored by Rep. Amy Volk, R-Scarborough, but that decision was reversed last week upon appeal.
Continue here:
http://www.pressherald.com/opinion/Our_View__Human_trafficking_bill_would_spur_talk_on_violence_against_women_.html
Related articles
Labels:
Anti Trafficking,
human trafficking,
Maine,
Women's rights
Sunday, November 24, 2013
Beaten and brainwashed: Story of the three south London women held as slaves - and there may be 6,000 others across Britain
Source: The Independent
The three women thought to have been held as slaves for more than 30 years were beaten and brainwashed into a life of servitude but presented to the outside world as a “normal family”, police said today.
Continue here:
http://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/crime/beaten-and-brainwashed-story-of-the-women-held-as-slaves--and-there-may-be-6000-others-across-britain-8958198.html
The three women thought to have been held as slaves for more than 30 years were beaten and brainwashed into a life of servitude but presented to the outside world as a “normal family”, police said today.
Continue here:
http://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/crime/beaten-and-brainwashed-story-of-the-women-held-as-slaves--and-there-may-be-6000-others-across-britain-8958198.html
Labels:
Domestic servitude,
London,
Malaysia,
Scotland Yard
Thursday, November 21, 2013
Genesee County health care professionals learn to spot symptoms of sex trafficking | MLive.com
Source: MLive.com
GRAND BLANC, MI -- Sheila Meshinski said she has seen a lot during her 35-plus years as an emergency room nurse, including a number of human sex trafficking victims – only she didn't know it at the time.
Continue here:
http://www.mlive.com/news/flint/index.ssf/2013/11/lawmakers_health_care_professi.html?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+michigan-news+(Michigan+News%2C+Updates%2C+Photos%2C+Videos+and+Opinions+-+MLive.com)
GRAND BLANC, MI -- Sheila Meshinski said she has seen a lot during her 35-plus years as an emergency room nurse, including a number of human sex trafficking victims – only she didn't know it at the time.
Continue here:
http://www.mlive.com/news/flint/index.ssf/2013/11/lawmakers_health_care_professi.html?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+michigan-news+(Michigan+News%2C+Updates%2C+Photos%2C+Videos+and+Opinions+-+MLive.com)
How To End Modern Slavery And Human Trafficking - Forbes
Source: Forbes
Check out an op-ed by Somaly Mam here
http://www.forbes.com/sites/skollworldforum/2013/11/15/how-to-end-modern-slavery-and-human-trafficking/
Check out an op-ed by Somaly Mam here
http://www.forbes.com/sites/skollworldforum/2013/11/15/how-to-end-modern-slavery-and-human-trafficking/
Related articles
Human Trafficking Trends in the United States | Polaris Project | Combating Human Trafficking and Modern-day Slavery
Source: Polaris Project
Since 2007, we have worked closely with local partners to help tens of thousands of callers connect with the help and services they need. As a result of the calls, emails, and online tip reports fielded by the hotline over the course of our first five years of operation, the NHTRC maintains one of the most extensive data sets on the issue of human trafficking in the United States.
Continue here:
http://www.polarisproject.org/resources/hotline-statistics/human-trafficking-trends-in-the-united-states
Since 2007, we have worked closely with local partners to help tens of thousands of callers connect with the help and services they need. As a result of the calls, emails, and online tip reports fielded by the hotline over the course of our first five years of operation, the NHTRC maintains one of the most extensive data sets on the issue of human trafficking in the United States.
Continue here:
http://www.polarisproject.org/resources/hotline-statistics/human-trafficking-trends-in-the-united-states
Tuesday, November 19, 2013
Feds settle worker abuse lawsuit against Del Monte - KansasCity.com
SOURCE: KansasCity.com
HONOLULU — Del Monte Fresh Produce Inc. will pay $1.2 million to settle a federal discrimination lawsuit claiming Thai workers on Hawaii farms were subjected to uninhabitable housing, insufficient food, low wages and deportation threats, a federal agency said Monday.
CONTINUE HERE:
http://www.kansascity.com/2013/11/18/4631938/eeoc-settles-hawaii-suit-with.html
Read more here: http://www.kansascity.com/2013/11/18/4631938/eeoc-settles-hawaii-suit-with.html#storylink=cpy
HONOLULU — Del Monte Fresh Produce Inc. will pay $1.2 million to settle a federal discrimination lawsuit claiming Thai workers on Hawaii farms were subjected to uninhabitable housing, insufficient food, low wages and deportation threats, a federal agency said Monday.
CONTINUE HERE:
http://www.kansascity.com/2013/11/18/4631938/eeoc-settles-hawaii-suit-with.html
Read more here: http://www.kansascity.com/2013/11/18/4631938/eeoc-settles-hawaii-suit-with.html#storylink=cpy
Human trafficking—or something that looks a lot like it—has been taking place in Hawaii – Quartz
SOURCE: Quartz
It seems that Thailand and Hawaii have more in common than just being tourist paradises. Thailand is trying to get itself removed from the US human trafficking watch list, where it risks heavy sanctions if it doesn’t clean up its act. And American fruit giant Del Monte has just agreed to pay $1.2 million to a group of migrant workers—who are, ironically, Thais—in Hawaii, over some of the very same practices that have bedeviled Thailand.
CONTINUE HERE:
http://qz.com/148766/human-trafficking-or-something-that-looks-a-lot-like-it-has-been-taking-place-in-hawaii/
It seems that Thailand and Hawaii have more in common than just being tourist paradises. Thailand is trying to get itself removed from the US human trafficking watch list, where it risks heavy sanctions if it doesn’t clean up its act. And American fruit giant Del Monte has just agreed to pay $1.2 million to a group of migrant workers—who are, ironically, Thais—in Hawaii, over some of the very same practices that have bedeviled Thailand.
CONTINUE HERE:
http://qz.com/148766/human-trafficking-or-something-that-looks-a-lot-like-it-has-been-taking-place-in-hawaii/
Related articles
Labels:
Del Monte,
Hawaii,
Migrant worker,
Thailand
Why Are Children Working in American Tobacco Fields? The Nation
Source: The Nation
Young farm workers are falling ill from “green tobacco sickness” while the industry denies it and government lets it happen.
Continue here:
http://www.thenation.com/article/177136/why-are-children-working-american-tobacco-fields#
Young farm workers are falling ill from “green tobacco sickness” while the industry denies it and government lets it happen.
Continue here:
http://www.thenation.com/article/177136/why-are-children-working-american-tobacco-fields#
Wednesday, November 13, 2013
Human trafficking discovered near home
Source: The Argus | theargus.ca
Public awareness of human trafficking in the area spiked after University of Minnesota Masters student Christine Stark spoke out about her research into the sexual servitude of Aboriginal women and cited Thunder Bay as a hub for human trafficking of women and children. Stark says the port at Duluth is notorious among First Nations people as a site for trafficking women and says she has anecdotal reports of women, teenage girls and boys, as well as babies being sold on ships for sex.
Read more:
http://www.theargus.ca/articles/news/2013/11/human-trafficking-discovered-near-home
Public awareness of human trafficking in the area spiked after University of Minnesota Masters student Christine Stark spoke out about her research into the sexual servitude of Aboriginal women and cited Thunder Bay as a hub for human trafficking of women and children. Stark says the port at Duluth is notorious among First Nations people as a site for trafficking women and says she has anecdotal reports of women, teenage girls and boys, as well as babies being sold on ships for sex.
Read more:
http://www.theargus.ca/articles/news/2013/11/human-trafficking-discovered-near-home
The Devastating Impact of Human Trafficking of Native Women on Indian Reservations
SOURCE:
Testimony of Lisa Brunner, Program Specialist, National Indigenous Women’s Resource Center
Hearing on “Combating Human Trafficking: Federal, State, and Local Perspectives” before the Committee on Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs
Monday, September 23, 2013
Human Trafficking of Native women in the United States is not a new era of violence against Native women but rather the continuation of a lengthy historical one with the colonization of America through wars, forced removal from their homelands to reservations, boarding schools and forced urban relocation. Domestic human trafficking in the United States has a longstanding history.
Native women experience violent victimization at a higher rate than any other U.S. population. Congressional findings are that Native American and Alaska Native women are raped 34.1%, more than 1 in 3, will be raped in their lifetime, 64%, more than 6 in 10, will be physically assaulted. Native women are stalked more than twice the rate of other women. Native women are murdered at more than ten times the national average. Non-Indians commit 88% of violent crimes against Native women.
Given the above statistical data and the historical roots of violence against Native women, the level of human trafficking given the sparse data collected can only equate to the current epidemic levels we face within our tribal communities and Nations.
As an enrolled member of the White Earth Ojibwe Nation in Minnesota, I live, work and raise my children on my reservation. I have worked for over 15 years addressing domestic violence and sexual assault of Native women and have witnessed and heard countless stories of human trafficking occurring to the point that we have girls as young as 12 years olds who are victims. With the introduction of heroin, we now have an epidemic of the same age group and up of girls and women who are trafficked now have heroin needles in their arms. Native women and girls are sold for $20 worth of heroin.
We have mother’s call local county sheriffs departments reporting their daughters missing only to be told, “We have better things to do with our time or why don’t you be a mother and know where the hell your daughter is”. It is difficult given the jurisdictional complexity of the 566 federally recognized tribes in the country with non-Public Law 280, Public Law 280, 638 Contract, Land Claim Settlement States, Oklahoma’s checkerboard and Alaska Native villages. To add to the complexity, if
the perpetrator is non-Native, then the Tribes and Alaska Villages do not have criminal jurisdiction
With the recent wide-range impact of extractive industries such as oil fracking and pipelines is predatory economics at its worse for the Fort Berthold Nation in North Dakota and Fort Peck Reservation in Montana. With the fracking of the Bauken formation, comes “man camps’. The victim advocates responding to calls for service on Forth Berthold said there has been a doubling and tripling of numbers of sexual assaults, domestic violence and human trafficking incidents since 2008.
The multiple layers of issues that have come to the forefront are the lack of documentation of these man camps. Emergency services often can’t find their locations and since they are located in isolated and desolate areas, there often are no cell phone services available. There are two types of man camps: documented and undocumented. Undocumented camps are often 50-100 trailers that a rancher or farmer has set up on his land to rent out and make money. These undocumented camps present a special problem for emergency services and organizations since they don’t exist on a map or have addresses.
The other issue involved with the man camps in Forth Berthold is lack of monitoring and registration of sex offenders whether they are in the documented or undocumented man camps that pose a serious threat to the safety of women and children in the area.
In Montana, the Bauken Oil Boom has impacted the largest reservation, Fort Peck, and residing counties have experienced both a population and crime explosion.
The majority of employees from the oilrigs are not from Fort Peck Tribes or Roosevelt County or even from Montana. There have been documented increases in drug use and human trafficking, theft, alcohol related incidents and assaults within the last year. Law enforcement response, tribal DV/SA services, and medical response to these crimes have tripled in the last year.
Within Northeastern Montana there are currently three man camps with several more only seventy miles away in the neighboring state of North Dakota. Many
Tribal advocates have responded to victims that have been trafficked at the man camps often preying on young native women. Groups of men from the man camps use free access to drugs and alcohol as a method of coercion for young native women to “get in the car” and go party. This has resulted in 11 young native women ranging from the ages of 16-21 years of age reporting rape, gang rape and other sex acts; the majority of these victims are afraid to report due to fear and shame.
The Fort Peck Tribes SORNA program reports that one year ago there were forty-eight registered sex offenders and now there are over six hundred registered sex offenders. The struggle has been that non-native sex offenders to do not recognize the tribal jurisdiction and feel they “do not” have to report to the tribal SORNA program. However, the U.S. Marshals and other law enforcement agencies have assisted in gaining registration of known sex offenders on the tribal registry.
Another aspect of to the domestic human trafficking issues in the U.S. and Tribal Nations is the U.S. Adoption Industry. In an article in Indian Country Today titled: Trafficking of Native Children: The Seamy Underbelly of U.S. Adoption Industry brings to light the practice of selling Indian infants and children to the highest bidder which brings in revenue for lawyers from $25,000-$100,000 per child. In this article, it is stated that in 2012, 50 Native children were adopted out from North Dakota to South Carolina. These adoptions are done without the Tribes knowledge or consent or that of the biological fathers.
To really gain insight to domestic human trafficking in the U.S., one must take examine the many sectors in which this is facilitated, whether it be extractive industries, pimps, gangs, cartels, family members or lawyers working in an adoption industry. Many different avenues must be examined and taken into account to fully understand what leads to this epidemic of human trafficking that not only impacts Tribal Nations and Alaska Villages but all citizens of this country.
I am a Program Specialist with the National Indigenous Women’s Resource Center. Our role as an organization is to serve as a National Indian Resource Center that provides technical assistance/training, resource development, policy development, research activity and public awareness that also seeks to enhance Native American and Alaska Native tribes, Native Hawaiians, Tribal and Native Hawaiian organizations to respond to violence against Native women.
Related articles
Native American Youths: Combating Human Trafficking: Federal, State, and Local Perspectives
SOURCE:
Minnesota Indian Women’s
Resource Center
2300 15th Avenue South (612) 728-2000
Minneapolis, Minnesota 55404 FAX (612) 728-2039
Contact: Suzanne Koepplinger, Executive Director
skoepplinger@miwrc.org or 612-728-2008
Testimony before the U.S. Senate Committee on Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs at hearing titled “Combating Human Trafficking: Federal, State, and Local Perspectives”.
September 23, 2013
Dear Chairman Carper, Ranking Member Coburn, and Committee Members:
On behalf of the women and children we serve at the Minnesota Indian Women’s Resource Center in Minneapolis, I thank you for this opportunity to bring to your attention a grave and egregious human rights violation being perpetrated against vulnerable Native Americans in our country. Sex trafficking and the commercial sexual exploitation of children is of growing concern in our community. In 2009, the Minnesota Indian Women’s Resource Center published the first research on the scope of sex trafficking of any demographic group. Our Shattered Hearts: the commercial sexual exploitation of American Indian women and children in Minnesota report found highly disturbing indicators that American Indian females were being targeted by sex traffickers for commercial sexual exploitation (CSE). For example, of women and girls screening into three direct service programs during the study, 40 % of incoming clients reported involvement in some type of commercial sexual exploitation and 27 % reported activities defined as sex trafficking under the Trafficking Victims Protection Act (TVPA). Our current direct service program for trafficked and high risk Native girls is screening all youth entering the program for sexual exploitation risk factors and involvement. Using standardized assessment tools we found that 71 % of girls entering the program had experienced long term homelessness, had a family member diagnosed with mental illness, and had experienced harassment and/or physical or sexual violence. Eighty six percent had a history of child protection systems involvement, and the same percentage (86%) of these girls reported some exposure to the sex trade. At a six month follow up screening, 71% of the girls were safely housed and 100% had begun receiving mental health care. All girls in this program also reported that they now knew where to get help and how to avoid high risk situations and people who were a bad influence on them. Three girls from the current cohort graduated from high school this year, the first in any of their extended families to do so. This program is the only one of its kind to provide these culturally strength based services to this population, has a wait list, and is receiving more referrals from law enforcement agencies every week.
We continue to receive reports from girls in our programs, from Greater Minnesota tribal sexual assault advocates, and local law enforcement that Native girls are being targeted for recruitment by traffickers to the oil fields of North Dakota and being sold in the “man camps”. One alleged incident involved a 14 year old Native girl who was reportedly sold to 40 men in one night. A 15 year old girl in our program reported that her brother’s best friend had been making frequent attempts to take her to North Dakota where, he said, she could “make lots of money” for them.
The Minnesota Indian Women’s Sexual Assault Coalition’s 2011 report Garden of Truth: the Prostitution and Trafficking of Native Women in Minnesota interviewed 105 Native women with prostitution arrest records. They found that a majority of the women had been sexually abused as children, had been raped, and were currently or previously homeless. Anchorage Police and FBI statistics show that Alaska Native women represent 33 % of all prostituted and trafficked women in the city, yet Alaska Natives make up less than 8% of the total population. Most Native females are sold in urban areas, but it is unknown how many of these women initially came from reservation communities or are city residents. We have no data on the scope of exploitation of boys or GLBTQ or “Two Spirit” youth, but recognize them as also vulnerable. National statistics tell us that over 70 % of American Indian people in this country reside in urban areas, not on their home reservations. Solutions must include tribal and urban populations for maximum benefit.
We believe the data we have on hand to reflect only a small portion of the true picture of those who have been trafficked into prostitution, for a number of reasons. The widespread normalization of sexual violence in American Indian communities has numbed many youth to the point where they minimize and rationalize what is happening to them just as domestic violence victims do. Many are engaged in survival sex simply to have a place to sleep at night. Others are gang raped in by Native Mob or other local street gangs and are living in fear of the consequences if they do not comply. Native Mob is only one of the gangs we have seen involved in the trafficking of Native girls due to their unique vulnerability. Methods of recruitment can involve what we call “guerrilla pimping”, which is simply gang rape with brutal beatings, or “finesse pimping” , which is often much more difficult to detect and interrupt. This is a grooming process, and has a manipulative pattern similar to domestic violence perpetration, where the initial relationship is loving but becomes increasingly more controlling, with the end result being girls caught in a web of violence and abuse with little hope to escape. Drugs are often used to ensure compliance. Most of these girls have multiple risk factors such as homelessness, early sexual abuse, and/or addiction or mental illness of parents/caregivers. Willingness to report or cooperate with law enforcement is rare due to the lack of secure housing and deep, complex trauma these children suffer from. As they are reluctant to report to law enforcement, they are not counted in the national data sets as trafficking victims. The current requirement to have a law enforcement certification of victimization in order to be counted as a trafficking victim has limited our understanding of the scope of the problem nationally. We believe that 80 – 90% of trafficked youth are under the radar and not being reported for this reason.
The damage to the victims is severe in human and economic terms. Our 2012 research report Early Intervention to Avoid Sex Trading and Trafficking of Minnesota’s Female Youth: A Benefit-Cost Analysis, found the quantifiable damage to a juvenile female recruited into sexual slavery includes high rates of physical damage including traumatic brain injury, damage to reproductive systems, and injuries from violent assaults. Mental health issues such as PTSD, dis-associative disorders, complex anxiety disorders are common. We cannot quantify the damage to a child’s spirit, or self-esteem, or to her family. Yet this analysis shows a definitive return on investment to the taxpayer of $34 for every $1 spent on early intervention and prevention services. We know what works, and have the evidence that it not only saves lives, but saves taxpayer dollars. It is now a matter of prioritization.
Since the publication of our Shattered Hearts report, the Minnesota Indian Women’s Resource Center has engaged our local community and tribal partners in solutions. The Fond du Lac Band of Lake Superior Ojibwe is working to collect more data and create systemic responses to sex trafficking. I have conducted training in indigenous communities across the country, including the Choctaw Nation of Oklahoma and the Ft. Berthold Reservation in North Dakota. In each instance, there is a need for more awareness of the tactics being used by perpetrators, and requests for technical assistance in identifying and responding to this crime. There is a gap in the need for coordinated responses and the resources available. In North Dakota, for example, tribal sexual assault advocates report numerous young women who had reportedly been victimized by sex traffickers but were too frightened by threats of consequences to their loved ones to report these crimes to law enforcement. The Bakken Oil Fields are indeed a boon to the economy of the region, and have also created an explosive market for sex traffickers who find vulnerable victims among Native American and other marginalized groups. This presents the opportunity for the businesses that are profiting from the oil industry to step into their leadership role. There is a great need for more law enforcement, more awareness and education, and more victim services in this region. I hope that the industry will seize this opportunity to invest in the wellness of the entire community in which they now work and live.
The Minnesota Human Trafficking Task Force has created a strong multi-disciplinary response to human trafficking. In 2011 the State passed the Safe Harbor for Youth Act, which aligns state statute with the Federal Trafficking Victims Protection Act in recognizing any juvenile sold into prostitution as a victim of a crime. In 2012 we presented a state-wide housing and services response called No Wrong Door for Services to the legislature. This is a comprehensive approach – developed by teams of prosecutors, police officers, county child protection workers, social workers, faith community, public health professionals, educators, and front line advocates – to create an effective system of housing and services that would work in partnership with law enforcement and county child welfare teams to effectively identify victims of CSE and route them into appropriate healing services rather than the juvenile justice system. We were successful in securing initial funding to begin implementing the No Wrong Door Model, but are seeking additional resources to fully fund the comprehensive approach that includes more accurate data collection systems to help us better understand the scope of the problem. We are collectively designing more effective approaches to reduce the demand for sexually exploited persons, for without the demand there would be no supply.
I want to again thank the Committee Members for their leadership in recognizing the importance of a comprehensive approach to ending the sexual slavery of vulnerable people. No person should be viewed as a commodity. One study tells us that a pimp can earn between $150,000 - $200,000 for each single child sold repeatedly for sex. Sex trafficking is a highly lucrative criminal enterprise that is robbing our communities of the youth, who are our future. It is reliant upon a market demand that must be stopped. We need more resources across sectors, but particularly within law enforcement, victim services, and child protection departments – to begin to interrupt this human rights violation and ensure that all children can grow up without being sentenced to a lifetime of trauma and violence.
Thank you.
Related articles
Labels:
Alaska Native,
FBI,
human trafficking,
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Women
Exclusive Interview with award winning photographer Lisa Kristine — Music4Freedom
SOURCE: Music4Freedom
Lisa Kristine is a photographer and humanitarian whose famous works include the visual documentation of indigenous cultures in over 100 countries spanning over six continents. Lisa’s most recent work titled “Slavery” spotlights human enslavement worldwide highlighting the plight and suffering of families, and individuals; men, women and children who live and work without pay, without freedom. Lisa’s current exhibition “Enslaved” is a visual story which spotlights modern day slavery educating and inspiring those who view it.
Continue:
http://music4freedom.squarespace.com/m4fblog/2013/11/8/music4freedom-exclusive-interview-with-renowned-humanitarian-and-award-winning-photographer-lisa-kristine
Lisa Kristine is a photographer and humanitarian whose famous works include the visual documentation of indigenous cultures in over 100 countries spanning over six continents. Lisa’s most recent work titled “Slavery” spotlights human enslavement worldwide highlighting the plight and suffering of families, and individuals; men, women and children who live and work without pay, without freedom. Lisa’s current exhibition “Enslaved” is a visual story which spotlights modern day slavery educating and inspiring those who view it.
Continue:
http://music4freedom.squarespace.com/m4fblog/2013/11/8/music4freedom-exclusive-interview-with-renowned-humanitarian-and-award-winning-photographer-lisa-kristine
Labels:
India,
Labor,
Lisa Kristine,
Oppression and Intolerance,
slavery
Human trafficking crackdown praiseworthy, but more remains to be done - OP-ED - Globaltimes.cn
Source: OP-ED - Globaltimes.cn
During an interactive dialogue on human trafficking organized by the UN Office on Drugs and Crime and the Group of Friends United against Human Trafficking in 2012, the International Labor Organization estimated that at any given time, about 2.4 million people are exploited as a result of human trafficking globally.
At present, human trafficking in China is taking on new characteristics, including organized crime networks, more violent means and expansion to more areas.
Continue here:
http://www.globaltimes.cn/content/822452.shtml#.UoOcsCeKK31
During an interactive dialogue on human trafficking organized by the UN Office on Drugs and Crime and the Group of Friends United against Human Trafficking in 2012, the International Labor Organization estimated that at any given time, about 2.4 million people are exploited as a result of human trafficking globally.
At present, human trafficking in China is taking on new characteristics, including organized crime networks, more violent means and expansion to more areas.
Continue here:
http://www.globaltimes.cn/content/822452.shtml#.UoOcsCeKK31
DHS and Western Union Announce New Alliance to Combat Human Trafficking | Homeland Security
Department of Homeland Security (Photo credit: DonkeyHotey) |
Announcement Marks Latest Expansion of DHS’ Blue Campaign Awareness Efforts
WASHINGTON— The Department of Homeland Security (DHS) today announced
a new alliance between the DHS Blue Campaign— the unified voice for
DHS’ efforts to combat human trafficking— and Western Union.Continue here:
http://www.dhs.gov/news/2013/11/06/dhs-and-western-union-announce-new-alliance-combat-human-trafficking
Sunday, November 10, 2013
Forced labour: it's about politics, not crime | Global Development Professionals Network | Guardian Professional
Source: Global Development Professionals Network | Guardian Professional
For many NGOs, governments and development agencies, there are two principal causes of forced labour: poverty, which makes people vulnerable to exploitation, and criminality, in the form of employers willing to exploit the poor.
Continue reading here:
http://www.theguardian.com/global-development-professionals-network/2013/nov/07/forced-labour-slavery-crime?CMP=
For many NGOs, governments and development agencies, there are two principal causes of forced labour: poverty, which makes people vulnerable to exploitation, and criminality, in the form of employers willing to exploit the poor.
Continue reading here:
http://www.theguardian.com/global-development-professionals-network/2013/nov/07/forced-labour-slavery-crime?CMP=
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Labels:
Crime,
Guardian,
Labour,
Non-governmental organization,
Politics,
slavery,
Unfree labour
Saturday, November 9, 2013
Human trafficking: Contemporary slavery a part of every life – The Express Tribune
Source: The Express Tribune
"Screened by United Nations office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC), the documentary depicting cruel practices of human trafficking and modern slavery comes from Academy award nominated director, Robert Bilheimer. Filmed across five continents, it takes viewers into a world where millions of children are exploited everyday, for real."
Continue here:
http://tribune.com.pk/story/624939/human-trafficking-contemporary-slavery-a-part-of-every-life/
"ISLAMABAD:
Covering children suffering from malnutrition in Africa and
begging on the streets of Mumbai to Nepalese girl entrapped in a vicious
cycle of prostitution, “Not My Life” keeps its viewers engaged till the
end.
"Screened by United Nations office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC), the documentary depicting cruel practices of human trafficking and modern slavery comes from Academy award nominated director, Robert Bilheimer. Filmed across five continents, it takes viewers into a world where millions of children are exploited everyday, for real."
Continue here:
http://tribune.com.pk/story/624939/human-trafficking-contemporary-slavery-a-part-of-every-life/
Related articles
Labels:
Africa,
Contemporary slavery,
human trafficking,
Mumbai,
Nepal,
slavery
Thursday, November 7, 2013
Slavery Isn’t a Thing of the Past - NYTimes.com
Source: NYTimes.com
The movie “12 Years a Slave” is receiving rapturous reviews for depicting the antebellum South less as a gauzy land of elegant plantations than as the raw backdrop of monstrous brutality.
It’s terrific that, in the 21st century, we can squarely face 19th-century slavery. But let’s also acknowledge the modern versions of slavery in the world around us — and, yes, right here at home.
Continue with Nicholas Kristof's article here:
http://www.nytimes.com/2013/11/07/opinion/slavery-isnt-a-thing-of-the-past.html?emc=edit_tnt_20131106&tntemail0=y
It’s terrific that, in the 21st century, we can squarely face 19th-century slavery. But let’s also acknowledge the modern versions of slavery in the world around us — and, yes, right here at home.
Continue with Nicholas Kristof's article here:
http://www.nytimes.com/2013/11/07/opinion/slavery-isnt-a-thing-of-the-past.html?emc=edit_tnt_20131106&tntemail0=y
Wednesday, November 6, 2013
Labor Rights for All: The Fight Against Modern-Day Slavery | Human Rights Watch
Source: Human Rights Watch
Women from 40 countries—nannies, housecleaners, community organizers, and trade unionists—gathered in Uruguay at the end of October to establish the first global federation of domestic workers. There were few television cameras, no celebrities to give a keynote speech, no large commitments of donor aid. In fact there were none of the trappings of the numerous international conferences to fight the enormous social ills of forced labor, trafficking, and labor exploitation.
Continue here:
http://www.hrw.org/news/2013/11/06/labor-rights-all-fight-against-modern-day-slavery
Women from 40 countries—nannies, housecleaners, community organizers, and trade unionists—gathered in Uruguay at the end of October to establish the first global federation of domestic workers. There were few television cameras, no celebrities to give a keynote speech, no large commitments of donor aid. In fact there were none of the trappings of the numerous international conferences to fight the enormous social ills of forced labor, trafficking, and labor exploitation.
Continue here:
http://www.hrw.org/news/2013/11/06/labor-rights-all-fight-against-modern-day-slavery
Human trafficking: Malaysia in danger of tipping the balance - Nation | The Star Online
Source: The Star Online
MALAYSIA worked hard to step up its efforts in combating human trafficking after it dropped to Tier 3 in the Trafficking in Persons (TIP) report released by the US State Department in 2009, and managed to move up to Tier 2 in the following year. Tier 3 refers to the ranking for countries that are not fully complying or not making significant efforts to comply with the minimum standards.
Continue here:
http://www.thestar.com.my/News/Nation/2013/10/13/In-danger-of-tipping-the-balance.aspx
MALAYSIA worked hard to step up its efforts in combating human trafficking after it dropped to Tier 3 in the Trafficking in Persons (TIP) report released by the US State Department in 2009, and managed to move up to Tier 2 in the following year. Tier 3 refers to the ranking for countries that are not fully complying or not making significant efforts to comply with the minimum standards.
Continue here:
http://www.thestar.com.my/News/Nation/2013/10/13/In-danger-of-tipping-the-balance.aspx
Tuesday, November 5, 2013
Pope wants to step up fight against modern slavery - FRANCE 24
Source: FRANCE 24
AFP - Pope Francis wants action against modern forms of slavery including forced labour and prostitution, the Vatican said Monday after a meeting of experts called by the pontiff to debate the problem.
Continue here:
http://www.france24.com/en/20131104-pope-wants-step-fight-against-modern-slavery
AFP - Pope Francis wants action against modern forms of slavery including forced labour and prostitution, the Vatican said Monday after a meeting of experts called by the pontiff to debate the problem.
Continue here:
http://www.france24.com/en/20131104-pope-wants-step-fight-against-modern-slavery
Labels:
Pope Francis,
slavery,
Unfree labour,
Vatican
Pilot scheme trains airline and airport crew to better spot human trafficking
Source: the journal.ie
IRISH AIRLINE CREW, airport ground staff, port staff and other transport workers are to be offered training to spot victims of trafficking and offer them an escape from pimps and traffickers under a pilot project being developed by the Immigrant Council of Ireland (IMCI).
http://www.thejournal.ie/human-trafficking-ireland-airport-staff-training-1159710-Nov2013/
IRISH AIRLINE CREW, airport ground staff, port staff and other transport workers are to be offered training to spot victims of trafficking and offer them an escape from pimps and traffickers under a pilot project being developed by the Immigrant Council of Ireland (IMCI).
http://www.thejournal.ie/human-trafficking-ireland-airport-staff-training-1159710-Nov2013/
Sunday, November 3, 2013
Map Of Modern-Day Slavery - Business Insider
Source: Business Insider
According to the new Global Slavery Index
30 million people are subject to modern-day slavery. Saeki published this graphic.
Check out the graphic here:
http://www.businessinsider.com/map-of-modern-day-slavery-2013-10
John Saeki @JohnSaeki AFP graphics editor in Hong Kong
According to the new Global Slavery Index
30 million people are subject to modern-day slavery. Saeki published this graphic.
Check out the graphic here:
http://www.businessinsider.com/map-of-modern-day-slavery-2013-10
WASHINGTON & HANOI, Vietnam: Vietnam, Laos: Officials Involved in Abduction, Trafficking, and Sex Slavery of Women, Children | Business Wire | Rock Hill Herald Online
Source: Herald Online
WASHINGTON & HANOI, Vietnam — Ethnic Hmong, Lao and Montagnard girls, including children, are being abducted and forced into marriage and prostitution at an alarming rate by corrupt government and military officials in Vietnam and Laos according to statements issued jointly today by non-governmental organizations.
Continue here:
http://www.heraldonline.com/2013/11/02/5364656/vietnam-laos-officials-involved.html
Read more here: http://www.heraldonline.com/2013/11/02/5364656/vietnam-laos-officials-involved.html#storylink=cpy
WASHINGTON & HANOI, Vietnam — Ethnic Hmong, Lao and Montagnard girls, including children, are being abducted and forced into marriage and prostitution at an alarming rate by corrupt government and military officials in Vietnam and Laos according to statements issued jointly today by non-governmental organizations.
Continue here:
http://www.heraldonline.com/2013/11/02/5364656/vietnam-laos-officials-involved.html
Read more here: http://www.heraldonline.com/2013/11/02/5364656/vietnam-laos-officials-involved.html#storylink=cpy
Labels:
Asia,
Ethnic Hmong,
Forced marriage,
Hanoi,
Lao,
Lao and Montagnard girls,
Montagnard,
Vietnam
Child Labor: Down by a Third Since 2000 | UNICEF FieldNotes
Source: UNICEF FieldNotes
The number of child laborers worldwide has dropped significantly according to a new report released this week by the International Labor Organization (ILO), falling from 246 million in 2000 to 168 million in 2012. Child labor among girls is falling most quickly — by 40% compared to 25% for boys — and the greatest progress was made between 2008 and 2012. That’s a good sign; it shows that child labor can be reduced even during times of financial crisis.
Read more:
http://fieldnotes.unicefusa.org/2013/09/child-labor-third-since-2000.html?utm_source=enews_110313A&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=usf
The number of child laborers worldwide has dropped significantly according to a new report released this week by the International Labor Organization (ILO), falling from 246 million in 2000 to 168 million in 2012. Child labor among girls is falling most quickly — by 40% compared to 25% for boys — and the greatest progress was made between 2008 and 2012. That’s a good sign; it shows that child labor can be reduced even during times of financial crisis.
Read more:
http://fieldnotes.unicefusa.org/2013/09/child-labor-third-since-2000.html?utm_source=enews_110313A&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=usf
Labels:
Asia and Pacific,
Child labour,
Sun-Sahara Africa,
UNICEF
Friday, November 1, 2013
British couple jailed for rape, trafficking of deaf-mute Pakistani girl - Latest - New Straits Times
SOURCE: New Straits Times
LONDON: A British court jailed an elderly couple on Wednesday after a deaf and mute girl was trafficked from Pakistan to work as a servant and then repeatedly raped for nearly a decade.
Labels:
Domestic servitude,
Manchester,
North West England
The Hidden Indentured Class
Along with sex trafficking, labor trafficking is also a significant problem.
Check out this article at
http://prospect.org/article/hidden-indentured-class
It is written by Rachel Cernansky
and published in The American Prospect in October 2013.
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