Showing posts with label France. Show all posts
Showing posts with label France. Show all posts

Saturday, April 7, 2012

Women Enslaved by Spain’s Brothel Tourism Boom - NYTimes.com

Women Enslaved by Spain’s Brothel Tourism Boom - NYTimes.com

Marta Ramoneda for The New York Times

A prostitute waits for customers on a road in La Jonquera, on the border with France and Spain on December 11, 2011. More Photos »

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Thursday, April 14, 2011

France May Crack Down on Johns to Stop Sex Trafficking - Clients, not hookers, target of bill aimed at freeing trapped women

Clients, not hookers, target of bill aimed at freeing trapped women

By Mary Papenfuss, Newser Staff

Posted Apr 14, 2011 1:00 AM CDT


A prostitute stand in a Paris street earlier this year.
A prostitute stand in a Paris street earlier this year. (GettyImages)
Prostitutes hang out in front of a shop in Paris.
Prostitutes hang out in front of a shop in Paris. (Getty Images)

(Newser) – France is considering making prostitution illegal—but by cracking down on clients, not hookers. Cops may fine or jail Johns in a bid to combat human trafficking. Experts believe 80% of some 20,000 sex workers in France are foreigners forced into the work by traffickers. "There is no such thing as freely chosen and consenting prostitution," said France's social minister. "The sale of sexual acts means women's bodies are made available for men, independently of their wishes." Penalizing clients "is to make them understand that they are participating in a form of exploitation of the vulnerability of others," said a government report.

Only Sweden, Iceland, and Norway have similar laws in Europe, according to the Telegraph. Prostitution is not illegal in France, but brothels, pimping, and paying for sex with a minor are illegal. Under the new measure, expected to come before parliament next year, Johns could face fines as high as $3,800. A French group campaigning to end prostitution hailed the plan. "For once we're talking about clients," said a spokeswoman. But a French actor who boasts of frequenting prostitutes complained: "First it was immigrants, now it's prostitutes. This is disdainful of individual liberties. Client or customer, everyone does what they like with their body."


France May Crack Down on Johns to Stop Sex Trafficking - Clients, not hookers, target of bill aimed at freeing trapped women
Source: newser.com/
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Monday, August 2, 2010

French and UK police break up human trafficking ring | Law | The Guardian

Cross-Channel operation leads to arrest of 26 people suspected of attempting to smuggle hundreds of migrants to Britain

green
Damian Green, the immigration minister, said the arrests proved the value of close co-operation between the UK and France. Photograph: Dominic Lipinski/PA

French and British police say they have broken a human trafficking ring, arresting 26 people who were attempting to smuggle hundreds of migrants to the UK.

Scores of officers raided properties in Kent and France today in what is believed to be one of the biggest initiatives of its kind between forces from the two countries.

Damian Green, the immigration minister, said the arrests proved the value of close co-operation between the UK and France.

"Secure border controls are an absolute priority if we are to put an end to abuses of the system, and prevent people from coming to the UK through illegal routes," he said.

"That is why I am committed to working with my French counterpart to continue to improve security, and why we will continue with our successful summer operations against illegal immigration."

The French authorities said 18 suspected traffickers were arrested in France and eight more in Britain.

They are accused of smuggling hundreds of Albanians and Sri Lankans to the UK, charging between £1,500 and £4,000 a person.

Dozens of migrants were also detained during the operation, according to a statement from the French immigration ministry.

Last year France and the UK signed a deal aimed at tackling the growing number of migrants gathered at Calais. The agreement saw the UK allocate £15m to tighten British border controls and France promise to begin voluntary and forced repatriations.

The deal, agreed as Gordon Brown met Nicolas Sarkozy for a pre-G8 summit, was hailed as a breakthrough by the UK authorities who said it was the first time France had explicitly agreed to step up removal flights from northern France.

In September last year the French authorities closed down a makeshift camp in Calais known as "the jungle", which was home to hundreds of migrants, mostly Afghans. It signalled the start of a widespread crackdown by the French authorities that some campaign groups say has lead to the heavy-handed treatment of minority groups across the country.

The French authorities said today's arrests were part of an ongoing operation.

Green said: "This operation demonstrates how crucial it is that the UK Border Agency [UKBA], Serious Organised Crime Agency [Soca], the police, and French law enforcement work together to crack down on immigration crime, and put a stop to the trafficking that preys on the vulnerable and destroys lives."

The Home Office said the operation was co-ordinated by the Joint Intelligence Unit in Folkestone, which consists of the UKBA, Soca, Kent police, the French border police and the French anti-illegal immigration agency.

French and UK police break up human trafficking ring | Law | The Guardian
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Wednesday, July 7, 2010

European police break up Vietnamese human trafficking ring | Look At Vietnam - Vietnam news daily update

Serious Organised Crime AgencyImage via Wikipedia

June 29, 2010

LookAtVietnam - European police have broken up a network that illegally brought Vietnamese into the UK.


Over 230 human trafficking rings recorded
State-supported hotline needed to fight trafficking
Human trafficking on the rise: seminar

Coordinated by Europol, police arrested 58 people after raiding houses in France, Germany, and Hungary on June 22. Of the 34 arrested in France, 14 were involved in the network in Paris and the northwestern region, while 20 were would-be immigrants. The German police seized five suspects and the Hungarian police caught 19.


According to police, the illegal migrants arrived in France via Hungary, Poland, the Czech Republic, and Germany. They traveled to the UK by road or by boat. The British, German, Hungarian, and French police have been watching illegal trafficking gangs for Vietnamese migrants for the last 18 months through a taskforce set up by Europol called the Vietnamese Organized Immigration Crime.

“One illegal immigrant needs to pay 9,000 to 10,000 euros (11,000 to 12,300 dollars) on the way to Europe,” revealed Zoltan Boross of the Hungarian National Bureau of Investigation.

“And if they do not have enough money, then they have to go work on a cannabis plantation for repayment,” he added. ”Since March 2009 these individuals operated in a very well tuned manner for a long period of time with the intent of financial gain.”

The smugglers, themselves Vietnamese, transported their clients to Europe via Moscow, Rome or Istanbul, and housed them in their own hotels in Budapest from where they relocated them to marijuana plantations in other parts of Europe, he explained.

“These immigrants are seriously exploited through cannabis production, extortion and crime, and often when caught, they don’t even know where they are,” Andre Baker, of the British Serious Organised Crime Agency (SOCA), maintained.

“Currently the UK is the favourite destination for illegal immigrants from Vietnam smuggled through other European states,” he observed.

French Immigration Minister Eric Besson said Vietnamese migrants were smuggled into France from Hungary, the Czech Republic and Germany and hidden in special compartments in trucks and ferries en route to Britain.

Besson noted that the network was “very well-structured” with many international contacts and members with well-defined tasks such as providing shelter or handling finances. A special task force dealing with Vietnamese people smuggling was created 18 months ago after French authorities noticed a hike in arrests of migrants en route to Britain.

French border police reported a 200 percent increase in the number of would-be Vietnamese immigrants apprehended en route to Britain between 2008 and 2009.

PV


European police break up Vietnamese human trafficking ring | Look At Vietnam - Vietnam news daily update
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Monday, January 25, 2010

France24 - Child trafficking in Cambodia

Prasat Angkor Wat, the biggest tourist draw of...Image via Wikipedia

01 January 2009

[TRAFFICKING MONITOR: Be sure to view the video.]

VIDEO

Caring investigates child trafficking in Cambodia. Despite stricter legislation, the problem is still rampant. On one side are parents who want to foster a child, and on the other, Cambodian parents' poverty which pushes them to sell their own.

By FRANCE 24 (text)

Child trafficking, a loose term with negative connotations, is essentially when young offspring are given away to wealthy foreigners in exchange for money.

For lucky adopters, the actual sum is inconsequential. Exhausted after costly and upsetting attempts in their own countries, many gratefully look to smaller, developing nations in their bid to find a child, countries like Cambodia, where widespread poverty forces many locals to consider desperate ways to make ends meet.

Dazzled by the promise of a better life for their loved ones, parents and families readily relinquish control and sign away their offspring. But an increasing number of abuses of the system by rogue adoption agencies has prompted many Western governments to immediately suspend all adoptions of Cambodian children.

In France, the government has only just recently lifted the ban that had been in place for some five years, but French authorities are enforcing stringent tests and vetting on would-be parents.

In Cambodia, there are as yet few laws against the widespread corruption and not enough incentive to make parents stop this tragic practice of selling their children.
Click here to find out more!

France24 - Child trafficking in Cambodia



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