Showing posts with label Hanoi. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Hanoi. Show all posts

Sunday, March 16, 2014

A Necessary Hero | Brandeis Magazine

Source:  Brandeis Magazine

Twenty-five-year-old Chi needed a job, and jobs are hard to find in Dien Bien, the poorest province in Vietnam, located about seven hours by car to the northwest of Hanoi.

Continue here:
http://www.brandeis.edu/magazine/2014/winter/featured-stories/van_ta.html?utm_source=List%3A+Schuster+Institute+for+Investigative+Journalism+Newsletter&utm_campaign=721e692c09-Newsletter_Mar14-2014&utm_medium=email&utm_term=0_eb74928ed1-721e692c09-66827837


TRAFFICKING MONITOR: PLEASE SHARE POST. MUCH THANKS.
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Sunday, November 3, 2013

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

  — 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
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Thursday, October 10, 2013

Vietnam's Trade of Underaged Species - NYTimes.com

Source: NYTimes.com

HO CHI MINH CITY — “It’s basic police work,” said Michael Brosowskidescribing his activities with the Blue Dragon Children’s Foundation, a nongovernmental agency that rescues children working in sweatshops in Vietnam. When it learns about a case of child labor, workers for the agency scout out suspected factories, snoop around posing as, say, electricians, and keep getaway cars on hand.

Continue: 
http://latitude.blogs.nytimes.com/2013/10/01/vietnams-trade-of-underaged-species/?src=recg
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Wednesday, April 3, 2013

Four get 27 years in jail for trafficking women | Tuổi Trẻ news

http://tuoitrenews.vn/society/8048/four-get-27-years-in-jail-for-trafficking-women

Source:  Tuổi Trẻ news

03/19/2013

 Image
http://123.30.128.19/i/s500/2013/03/NXF1bzjY.jpg


A southern Tay Ninh Province court has sentenced four people for trafficking 11 young Vietnamese women to China and Malaysia as future wives for local men.

In a hearing opened on Monday, the local People’s Court sentenced Truong Bac Siu, 47, of Dong Nai Province, to 12 years in prison, while Pham Thi My Le, 43, of Tay Ninh’s Go Dau District, and Ho Ngoc Xuan, 38, also of Go Dau, were given sentences of 10 and 7 years, respectively.

The fourth defendant, Le Ngoc Lan, Xuan’s husband, was given a suspended 3-year sentence since the couple has an infant child with cerebral palsy.

All four were charged with “human trafficking” and they must submit all the money they had earned from their crime, the court said.

According to the indictment from the local prosecutor’s office, Tay Ninh police caught Siu and Le carrying out procedures at HCMC’s Tan Son Nhat Airport for three young women to leave Vietnam for China on October 20, 2012.

After being arrested, Sui and Le told police that they had successfully lured 11 other Vietnamese women and sent them to China and Malaysia illegally.

After arriving in China or Malaysia, these women were received by two Vietnamese people, named Lam and Lien, who would arrange to sell them as possible wives to local men, the traffickers said.
A similar case was also tried by the same court in July 2012, when a four-person ring was tried for luring and selling 16 Vietnamese women to China as future wives for Chinese men.

Tran Thi Lan, the ring's leader, got 14 years imprisonment, while the others were sentenced to 10 years, 7 years, and 2 years and six months in prison.
The ring members had lied to these young women that they were able to provide good jobs to any woman who agreed to go to China under their arrangement. But, in fact, they sold their victims to Chinese men.

The court ordered the four defendants to pay total damage of VND100 million (US$4,800) to their victims.

A month later, in August 2012, the provincial police cracked down on another ring, also comprising of four members, who had sold 21 Vietnamese women as wives to Chinese men.

The ring was led by a couple, Nguyen Tan Nho and his wife, Tran Le Thuy, both 48, who were arrested after police caught the couple carrying out procedures for two girls to fly from Ho Chi Minh City to Hanoi.
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Monday, April 1, 2013

Vietnamese Women Fall Prey to Sex Racket

http://www.rfa.org/english/news/vietnam/trafficking-03282013190106.html

Source: Radio Free Asia

vietanam-young-women-2012.jpg
A group of young Vietnamese women poses for a photo at a toy market in Hanoi, Sept. 25, 2012.
AFP
Updated at 11:00 a.m. EDT on 2013-03-29
Fifteen Vietnamese women have been forced into sex slavery after going to work in Russia, according to one of them who managed to escape following a one-year ordeal at a Moscow brothel but is still living in fear of her captors.

Huynh Thi Be Huong said she was among four women who initially fled the Vietnamese-run brothel in January and, through relatives back home, sought help from the Vietnamese Embassy at the Russian capital.

But possible links between an official at the embassy, who had handled their case, and the brothel owner led to their recapture by the brothel's ringleaders, she told RFA’s Vietnamese Service.

Be Huong said she and another woman finally managed to break free from the clutches of the prostitution ring but the 13 others are still trapped in the brothel.

Speaking after her return home in early March, she said the official at the embassy who is suspected of having links with the prostitution ring is a relative of the brothel’s owners.

Before letting her return to Vietnam, embassy officials and brothel owners had forced her to sign a statement saying that the brothel owners had not harmed her, Be Huong said.

Be Huong also said that she is afraid to return to her hometown, Go Quao, in southern Vietnam’s Kien Giang province, for fear of being targeted by traffickers again.

“I’m still scared but my wish is to rescue all the women left behind so I’m willing to do whatever I can,” she told RFA this month.

Interpol in Vietnam said it has alerted its Russian counterpart about the case, but it was not immediately clear whether the Russian authorities have begun investigations on the issue.

A Russian news agency reported last week that two Vietnamese women who had allegedly been exploited for sex slavery have been freed from an illegal Moscow brothel, but details on the victims were not explained.

Forced into sex slavery
Be Huong, 27, said she went to Moscow in December 2011 expecting a three-month stint at a restaurant, but instead discovered that she had been sold to work as a prostitute in the brothel.

“It is a house with three rooms, and when the clients came we laid out the mats and that was how we worked,” she said.

The brothel, which served mostly Vietnamese clients, was run by a woman in her 40s from central Vietnam’s Nghe An province.

Be Huong identified her as Thuy An, saying she beat the women working there severely and controlled the money they received from clients.

“She assigned people to guard us. She did not let newcomers go out. Everybody had to work.”

“For each customer we served, we got points, which were added up in a book. At the end of the month, the points would be divided in half: half for her, half for us.”

“If we did not obey her and work, she would punish us to the extent where we could not lift our heads,” she said.

One of those brought was as young as 16 years old when she arrived, she said.

When contacted by RFA last month, Thuy An said she was not breaking the law.

“I’m running a legal business. I have been living here for many years. I don’t want to have any bad rumors about my name,” Thuy An, who also goes by An Ot, told RFA last month.

But Be Huong said the women were forced to work as sex slaves and that Thuy An had urged her to ask her relatives back home to send ransom money to allow her to be sent home.

“For one year and two months, I could not send a single dong [a unit of Vietnamese currency] back to my family, and I still was forced to work,” Be Huong said.

Making a break for it
Then in January, Be Huong escaped from the brothel with three other women—Thu Linh, Ngan Giang, and Nguyen Pham Thai Ha—and while living in hiding from the brothel owners in Moscow contacted relatives asking for help to get back home.

“She told me to report it to the police. I reported it to the police [in Vietnam], and they contacted the Vietnamese Embassy in Russia,” said Be Huong’s mother Le Thuy, in Kieng Gang province, who had not heard from her daughter for a year until then.

Refused help from the embassy
Relatives put her in touch with the Vietnamese Embassy in Moscow who refused to help them, and shortly afterward they were recaptured by the traffickers, according to Be Huong.

“I got the number of Nguyen Dong Trieu, who is in charge of security matters at the embassy. I called him but he refused to help us,” Be Huong said.

Trieu, a consular envoy at the embassy, had told Be Huong that prostitution is not illegal in Russia so there was nothing he could do to help, according to her sister Danh Hui, who lives in Texas and contacted the U.S.-based trafficking organization Coalition to Abolish Modern-Day Slavery in Asia (CAMSA) for help with the case.

“Be Huong told me that he said in Russia, prostitution is legal, unlike the way it is in Vietnam or other countries. He said it as if he did not want to help her,” Danh Hui said.

Recaptured by brothel owners
Shortly after the women contacted Trieu, the four women were recaptured by the brothel owners in February, Be Huong said.

She later found out Trieu was a relatives of Thuy An’s, and that Thuy An often called him “brother” or “uncle,” she said.

“Two days after my talk with Trieu, Thuy An, Huy, and another man came to our hiding place,” and forced the women to go back to the brothel, Be Huong said.

“We had no choice and could not resist.”

Be Huong’s mother said no one knew how the brothel owners learned where the women were hiding, and her sister said that it was only after the women got in touch with Trieu that they were found.

“After Be Huong talked to a man at the Vietnamese Embassy, she got caught,” she said.

Trieu refused to comment when contacted by RFA last month.

Back at the brothel, Thuy An beat the women until their faces were swollen for running away, Be Huong said.
But Be Huong was not beaten because she had been in touch with embassy officials, she said.

“She thought that if she gave me any bruises then when the embassy sent for me they would see them.”

Forced to write a letter at the embassy
In March, Thuy An told Be Huong she was letting her go and brought her to the embassy in Moscow.
“She said, ‘It’s because you couldn’t do your job that I’m letting you go, not because of what your sister in the U.S. has done,” Be Huong said.

At the embassy, a staff member named Kien, who knew Thuy An, forced Be Huong to write a letter saying that what she had told her relatives about Thuy An was not true, and that Thuy An and embassy officials were helping her to return to Vietnam.

“He told me to write a letter saying, ‘Thank you for the help from Thuy An and the embassy, who got involved so that I could go back to Vietnam.’”

Be Huong wrote the letter and was put on a plane, arriving back in Vietnam on March 3.

Remaining concerns
Thuy An also told her to call her relatives and retract what she had alleged about Thuy An, she said.
But Be Huong remains concerned about the women still in Russia and is still hiding from “Thuy An’s people” in Vietnam, she said.

“I hope she will be punished by the law and my friends will be freed,” Be Huong said.

“Be Huong has to hide in Saigon [Ho Chi Minh City] and dare not go home because [Thuy An] sent people to our place,” her sister said.

In Texas, Danh Hui has raised her sister’s case with Texas lawmakers Sheila Jackson and Al Green, who has promised to “do what he can.”

Thao Vu, the sister of one of the 13 women left behind at the brothel, Pham Thi Be Trang, said she had not heard from her and was working with CAMSA to get her back home.

Through CAMSA, Thao Vu, who lives in California, has submitted information on the case to California congresswomen Zoe Lofgren.

Reported by Gwen Ha for RFA’s Vietnamese Service. Written in English by Rachel Vandenbrink.

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Friday, February 1, 2013

Luke Dale-Harris: The Ultimate Betrayal: Human Trafficking in Vietnam

Luke Dale-Harris: The Ultimate Betrayal: Human Trafficking in Vietnam


Luke Dale-Harris






Posted: 07/01/2013 15:00
Source: Huffington Post
Sunk into the mountain range that connects Vietnam to China sits the Vietnamese border town of Lao Cai. A sprawling concrete mess, the town has shot up over the last few decades in response to the increasing amount of trade between the two countries, luring in people from the surrounding mountains looking for an alternative livelihood to farming. Living in stark contrast to the farming communities they have left behind, the open market seems to have bought a better standard of life.
In a small building tucked down an alleyway, the girls at the Lao Cai shelter for Victims of Human Trafficking hold a different perspective. All recently returned from China, they wait for a position to open up in one of Vietnam's more permanent shelters. For many of them, they can't return home and, with a constant influx of new returnees, they can't stay here for long.
The statistics on the human trafficking in Vietnam vary hugely and official information is limited. The Vietnam Ministry of Public Security offer the official figure of 2,935 Vietnamese victims of human trafficking between 2004 and 2009, while Hagar International claim the considerably larger total of over 400,000 victims since 1990.
Madam Thuy, Director of the Human Trafficking department at the Centre for Women's Development, reinforces the general consensus that the phenomenon is on the rise and that it cannot simply be explained by looking to poverty.
"There are many factors that contribute to the growth in trafficking, but most common across all cases is the disintegration of the family structure" says Thuy.
The stories of the girls in the shelters reinforce her point. The vast majority of them where originally sold by either family members or close friends.
Linh is a 25 year old woman who was bought back from China last year and lives now in Hanoi's Peace House Shelter. Born into a family of eight, she grew up working the fields and looking after the chickens in a small mountain village. As she grew up her siblings were allocated different roles, her two brother sent off to university while her older sister was pulled out of school to be married.
'We lived separate lives, even when we were all living together. My brothers treated the rest of us like we were servants to them, and my father didn't care about any of us.'
The Confucian values of authority and filial loyalty hold strong in Vietnam, permeating the language, religion, culture and politics. However, it is under increasing pressure from the younger generations, influenced by western ideals and the divisive nature of incoming money. Thuy suggests it is the conflict this clash brings, between familial tradition and modernization, that is at the root of the problem.
When Linh was taken to Hekou in China by an aunt under the pretext of going on a shopping trip, she was just pleased at the gesture of generosity. 'Looking back now I don't know how I could have been so stupid. She'd never shown any interest in me before' she says.
She was left with two Chinese ladies who took her to market and explained that she was to be sold as a wife. Over the next 5 months she would be sold at 6 different markets, being picked up by 'dealers' each time before being sold on. Finally she was bought and forced into marriage with a 30 year old man.
In contrast to Vietnam, in China it is the demand for an ideal family model that fuels the industry. The one child policy results in a preference for male children and subsequently a shortage of girls available for marriage. Unlike the global trend of trafficking for prostitution and labour, from the north of Vietnam the majority of victims are sold as wives and sons.
Linh's job was to produce a baby. When she refused to sleep with her husband he beat and raped her and, when he wasn't around, his father did the same.
Determined not to become pregnant, Linh seized her chance one rainy night and escaped, running to the local police station. From there she was taken back to Lao Cai where she was given a bed in the shelter. There were fifteen other girls there with her, all with similar stories to tell.
'None of us knew what would happen to us.' Linh says. 'We didn't know whether we were guilty or innocent.'
After 5 months at the Peace House Shelter in Hanoi, Linh understands clearly that she is the victim, not the offender, in this story. Yet for her family and neighbors back home, this distinction still isn't clear and Linh remains ostracized, unable to return home. With the support of the shelter, she can start a new life in Hanoi. For many others though, such help is not available and, socially outcast, they often fall into crime, most commonly becoming traffickers.
'The industry is growing' says Thuy. 'Until the returnees are seen as victims, it's not going to stop.' 
(Linh's name has been changed.)

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Monday, May 21, 2012

Trafficking documentary focuses on victims - Life & Style - VietNam News

http://vietnamnews.vnagency.com.vn/Life-Style/224786/trafficking-documentary-focuses-on-victims.html

Source: VietNam News

May, 17 2012 09:14:00



Trafficking attack: Rock band Simple Plan will perform at a free MTV EXIT concert, along with pop star My Tam, to raise awareness about human trafficking. — File Photo
HA NOI — The launch of a half-hour documentary film revealing real-life stories of human trafficking in Viet Nam and hosted by pop star My Tam was announced on Tuesday.
The film Lam No Le (Enslaved) will premiere on Viet Nam Television and the MTV Viet Nam channel on June 2 as part of the MTV EXIT (End Exploitation and Trafficking) campaign.
The powerful documentary film will give audiences a rare glimpse into human trafficking and exploitation, telling stories of survivors and highlighting what everyone can do to help end this horrific trade.
Two friends Lin and Trong tell their account of being forced to carry out hard manual labour in a brick factory; Khanh shares her story of how she was brought to work on a chicken farm, and Thien, still a young girl, recounts how she was deceived and trafficked as a sex worker.
Tam, the newly appointed MTV EXIT Celebrity Ambassador to Viet Nam and one of the country's leading pop stars, helps connect the audience to these experiences, while demonstrating how Vietnamese can protect themselves and highlighting ways to help the cause.
Tam will also be joining the fight against human trafficking by performing at the MTV EXIT Live, a free concert at Ha Noi's My Dinh Stadium on May 26. The live concert will be headlined by international rock sensation Simple Plan. Joining the line-up are South Korean pop group Brown Eyed Girls and Australian vocal sensation Kate Miller-Heidke, who previously performed at the MTV EXIT concert in Ha Noi in 2010, as well as top local artists Karik, Buc Tuong (The Wall) band, DJ Tri Minh, and Big Toe dance crew.
MTV EXIT's 2010 concert tour in Viet Nam drew 80,000 music fans to four concerts across the country. "We are happy to come back Viet Nam to continue the anti-human trafficking campaign," said Matt Love, director of the MTV EXIT campaign.
"After the success in 2010, now we're eager to gather leading world and local artists to communicate and lure the younger generation in Viet Nam to join the fight against human trafficking," he said.
Free tickets will be available starting tomorrow at BOO Citi, 308 Ba Trieu Street, Ha Noi.
An MTV EXIT exhibition of installation art by Doan Hoang Kien and photos by Na Son will be held beginning on Sunday at Cong Nhan (Workers) Theatre, 42 Trang Tien Street, Ha Noi. Phan Y Ly will perform on stage during the opening ceremony.
The one-week exhibit will also display the winning photos from the MTV EXIT Photo Contest launched early this year.
Established in Europe in 2004 with the aim of promoting human trafficking awareness and prevention, the MTV EXIT campaign has carried out various activities in Asian countries under the auspices of USAID and AUSAID. It has also established relationships with over 100 non-governmental organisations. — VNS

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Thursday, March 8, 2012

Vietnam jails 29 for sex trafficking ring

http://www.asiaone.com/News/AsiaOne%2BNews/Crime/Story/A1Story20120308-332362.html

Source: ASIAONE.COM


HANOI - A Vietnamese court has jailed 29 people linked to a human trafficking ring that sent teenage sex slaves to China, a court official said Thursday after a week-long trial in Hanoi.
Gang ringleader Vu Van Cong, 28, was sentenced to 26 years in prison by the Hanoi People's Court in a verdict delivered on Wednesday, the official told AFP on condition of anonymity.
The 28 others were given sentences ranging from 22 years in prison to a 10-month suspended sentence handed to a relative of a gang member for failing to report them to the authorities.
Police began investigating the gang after one member was arrested in June 2010 while trying to force a 13-year-old girl to board a train heading for the Vietnamese border province of Lao Cai, the local website VNExpress reported.
The victim was going to be forced to work as a prostitute in Lao Cai before being smuggled into China to work in the sex industry, the report said.
Gang members have admitted to police that they forced at least seven women and 10 teenage girls to work as prostitutes in Vietnam and China since they started operations in February 2009, the report said.
Between 2004 and 2009, Vietnam's Ministry of Public Security reported nearly 3,000 Vietnamese victims of human trafficking, which is a criminal offence under Vietnamese law. The majority of victims were girls under 15.
Because of the clandestine nature of the crimes and the difficulties collecting data, the figures almost certainly underestimate the extent of the problem, experts say.
Victims may end up in China, other Asian countries, Western Europe or the Middle East for sexual exploitation, or be forced to work in factories, according to the UN Inter-Agency Project on Human Trafficking (UNIAP).
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Thursday, November 4, 2010

ASEANWEB - ASEAN Bulletin - November 2010

ASEAN Bulletin
November 2010

An “ASEAN Handbook on International Legal Cooperation in Trafficking in Persons Cases” to help improve cooperation between criminal justice officials who are involved in cross-border trafficking investigations, was launched in Manila recently.

The Handbook provides a step-by-step guide to pursuing transnational trafficking cases where victims, perpetrators and evidence are located in more than one country. It outlines the key forms of international cooperation, from informal police-to-police assistance to mutual legal assistance and extradition, as well as full documentation for making or responding to a request for cooperation. The standards set out in key international and regional treaties relating to transnational organised crime; corruption; and international legal cooperation are also clearly explained in the Handbook to strengthen the collaboration amongst the law enforcement, judiciary and prosecutorial officials of ASEAN.

In introducing the Handbook, the Secretary-General of ASEAN acknowledged the scale of the challenges currently facing national criminal justice agencies in dealing with this complex crime. “In every part of the world, including our own, traffickers are rarely identified, prosecuted and convicted. This is a particular problem for countries of destination, where the most serious forms of exploitation usually take place. In addition, victims of trafficking rarely receive any form of justice or redress for the harms committed against them,” said Dr Surin Pitsuwan.

The Handbook was launched at the side of the 10th Senior Officials Meeting on Transnational Crime on 27 October 2010. It was prepared by technical experts involved in the Asia Regional Trafficking in Persons Project (ARTIP), through the Australian Government Overseas Aid Program (AusAID), and funded by the Australian Government and the European Union, through the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC).

ASEANWEB - ASEAN Bulletin - November 2010



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Wednesday, July 7, 2010

Vietnamese police bust human-trafficking ring | Earth Times News

Location map of Vietnam. Equirectangular proje...Image via Wikipedia

EARTH TIMES

Posted :
Mon, 05 Jul 2010 05:49:40 GMT By : dpa

Hanoi - Police in Hanoi arrested 19 members of an alleged international human-trafficking ring and rescued nine teenage girls, an official said Monday."This is the largest human-trafficking ring ever arrested in Hanoi," said Senior Lieutenant-Colonel Nguyen Van Thanh, deputy head of Dong Da District's Police Department. Officials said a 17-year-old girl on a train from Hanoi to the northern province of Lao Cai called out to other passengers on June 19, saying she was being abducted and sold to China. Under questioning, the girl's fellow passenger admitted he was taking her to China to sell.

Police unravelled the suspected trafficker's gang over the following weeks, arresting 19 others aged between 17 and 41, and rescuing nine girls aged between 13 and 16.Three of the girls were found confined in brothels, where they were beaten and starved if they refused to serve customers.One of the chief suspects, Ngo Manh Tien, 17, was said to live in Yunnan, China, and was arrested on June 23 on his return to Vietnam. The others living in Vietnam were arrested between June 24-29.The suspects admitted to having sold 12 women and children this year for between 2 and 12 million dong each (107 and 650 dollars), police said. If convicted, they face up to 20 years in prison for trafficking people under 16 years old, considered minors by Vietnamese law.

Thanh said members of the gang would befriend victims online, then invite them to go shopping in provinces near the Chinese border such as Lang Son and Lao Cai. There, they would be abducted and sold to China, or to brothels in the tourist town of Do Son in Hai Phong province.

The traffickers would sometimes pay off teenagers' debts to internet cafe owners to win their confidence, Thanh said. "We don't know exactly how many people have been sent to China for prostitution by this ring," he said. "We need more time to investigate."Police said at least 6,684 Vietnamese women and children have been trafficked abroad by June since 2005.

Copyright DPA


http://www.earthtimes.org/articles/news/333185,police-bust-human-trafficking-ring.html




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Tuesday, October 6, 2009

USAID and The Asia Foundation Expand Counter-Trafficking Program in Vietnam's

New Project Will Reach 40,000 Students through Education and Training

HANOI, Vietnam, Oct. 5 /PRNewswire-USNewswire/ -- Today, The Asia Foundation announced a new grant of $500,000 from the United States Agency for International Development (USAID) for a two-year project to strengthen the Government of Vietnam's ongoing anti-trafficking efforts in the Mekong Delta.

Through an integrated, multi-sectoral, victim-centered approach, the USAID-supported project seeks to reduce the vulnerability of communities in the Mekong Delta to human trafficking by increasing awareness of safe migration strategies and increasing the quality of care and support available to victims of trafficking, drawing on best practices from other countries in the region.

To help prevent trafficking, The Asia Foundation and its partner, the Vietnam Institute of Educational Sciences under the Ministry of Education and Training, will build upon and further refine an earlier school-based safe migration program in An Giang and Can Tho provinces - major trafficking hotspots near the Cambodia-Vietnam border - to reach 40,000 students from at-risk communities. Trainings for teachers and school officials will focus on messages and techniques that can be replicated in other schools and communities. Outreach efforts will incorporate successful materials developed under recent pilot projects such as the Safe Migration for a Better Life handbook and guidelines on how to find a job in major urban centers.

"The Asia Foundation-led safe migration pilot program was practical and useful for students, and information provided through the activities has helped to guide them to safe migration and safe employment," said Mr. Nguyen Thanh Binh, director of the An Giang Provincial Education and Training Department.

To assist victims of trafficking, another program priority will focus on improving the rehabilitation process. Given that many victims are in a vulnerable psychological state, there is significant potential for re-traumatization after they are rescued. The Asia Foundation will work with the Ministry of Labor, Invalids, and Social Affairs (MOLISA) and service providers - including police, legal professionals, social workers, and health care workers - to draft a policy document that defines a victim's basic rights as well as outlines best practices for ensuring a minimum standard of care. The Foundation will draw on its experience working with the Cambodian government to develop the recently-released Policy and Minimum Standard for the Protection of the Rights of Victims of Human Trafficking. To draft a victim assistance manual that is appropriate in the context of Vietnam, The Asia Foundation will facilitate consultations among key stakeholders and practitioners. Once the draft is approved by MOLISA, the Foundation will conduct training workshops to implement the new policy.

Trafficking in persons is a high priority issue for the Foundation. In Vietnam, the Foundation has supported a comprehensive counter-trafficking program since 2002 to address both the underlying causes and consequences of trafficking. Programs are implemented to empower young people to better protect themselves from sexual and labor exploitation as they look for ways out of poverty by providing safe migration and legal rights information as well as with interventions to improve their economic position.

About USAID
USAID is a U.S. government agency that provides economic, development, and humanitarian assistance around the world. Through its activities in Vietnam since 2000, USAID has worked with the Government of Vietnam to help speed up the country's transition to an open, market-based economy, increase prevention and treat cases of HIV/AIDS, improve vulnerable groups' access to educational and other social services, and ensure that environmental governance progresses along with economic and social development. In total, USAID has contributed over $200 million for relief and development activities in Vietnam. Read more about USAID in Vietnam.

About The Asia Foundation
The Asia Foundation is a non-profit, non-governmental organization committed to the development of a peaceful, prosperous, just, and open Asia-Pacific region. The Foundation supports programs in Asia that help improve governance, law, and civil society; women's empowerment; economic reform and development; and international relations. Drawing on more than 50 years of experience in Asia, the Foundation collaborates with private and public partners to support leadership and institutional development, exchanges, and policy research.

With offices throughout Asia, an office in Washington, D.C., and its headquarters in San Francisco, the Foundation addresses these issues on both a country and regional level. In 2008, the Foundation provided more than $87 million in program support and distributed over one million books and educational materials valued at $41 million throughout Asia. For more information, visit www.asiafoundation.org.

SOURCE The Asia Foundation

http://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/usaid-and-the-asia-foundation-expand-counter-trafficking-program-in-vietnams-mekong-delta-63572472.html



USAID and The Asia Foundation Expand Counter-Trafficking Program in Vietnam's
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