Showing posts with label Helsinki. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Helsinki. Show all posts

Friday, January 21, 2011

BBC News - Finland convicts Latvian human traffickers


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A Finnish court has convicted four Latvians of trafficking people into Finland through the Baltic states and Russia.
The Helsinki district court said the group had smuggled or tried to smuggle 80 people from Afghanistan, Iraq and Syria between 2008 and 2009.

The three men and a woman received jail sentences ranging from 14 months to five-and-a-half years.

It is the largest human trafficking case in the Nordic country to date.

The group - who were linked to an international smuggling ring operating in Europe - were also ordered to pay fines and damages totalling some $135,000 (£85,000), the Associated Press reported.

Victims were said to have paid about $10,000 each to be smuggled into Europe.

BBC News - Finland convicts Latvian human traffickers
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Friday, October 15, 2010

Helsingin Sanomat - Victims of human trafficking often not identified in Finland

22:00 Helsinki time Friday 15.10.2010

Ombudsman for Minorities submits her first report on human trafficking
Victims of human trafficking often not identified in Finland Eva Biaudet
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Human trafficking exists everywhere, including Finland, but signs of trafficking are not always recognised, notes Ombudsman for Minorities Eva Biaudet.

So far only a few dozen victims of trafficking have been identified in Finland, which is presumably only a fraction of the actual number of victims, according to Biaudet. Five lawsuits have been filed against traffickers.

Venla Roth, Senior Officer from the Office of the Ombudsman for Minorities, says that authorities often have the wrong perception of human trafficking.

”Human trafficking is often believed to be linked with organised crime. As a matter of fact, human trafficking does not necessarily always involve illegal entry, illegal residence, or illegal employment”, Roth notes.

The victims may have been voluntarily involved in the activities concerned and have only then been subjected to control. Roth says that the perpetrator is often close to the victim or an acquaintance.

This is why authorities are not always able to identify victims at all, or they do not recognise them as victims of trafficking.

The new Ombudsman for Minorities, who was appointed last month (see article) submitted her first report on human trafficking to Parliament on Wednesday.

The report contains some 30 recommendations relating both to legislation and to official practices. For example, the system for victim assistance is too tightly connected with criminal investigations.

Over the past five years, only some 70 victims of human trafficking have been given assistance, the report argues.

”If victims are not identified, they are left without the rights to which they are entitled by law, including legal assistance”, says Roth.

Particularly in cases of prostitution, the victims of exploitation are rarely identified in Finland, the report notes.

”Foreign prostitutes in particular are eagerly deported, in which case the case may remain unclear”, notes Jaana Kauppinen, the executive manager of Pro Centre Finland, a registered non-profit organisation offering counselling for sex workers.

According to Kauppinen, such cases are more often handled as aggravated pimping rather than human trafficking.

”The aim of criminal investigators is to have the perpetrators punished, which is why the designation of the crime in question is not necessarily essential. From the victim’s perspective it may nevertheless be a crucial issue”, Kauppinen argues.

Human trafficking means the exploitation of a position of vulnerability of persons for the purposes of prostitution or forced labour, or any other form of slavery.

For example, the victims of the illegal trade in human beings may have been transported from abroad by means of coercion and deception, whereafter they have ended up working in poor conditions, being paid too low wages, having to work too many hours a day, or having their freedom to move restricted.

Previously in HS International Edition:
Eva Biaudet named Minority Ombudsman through special dispensation (7.5.2010)

Links:
Ombudsman for Minorities
Pro Centre Finland
Human Trafficking (Wikipedia)
Helsingin Sanomat - International Edition - Home

SOURCE:HELSINGIN SANOMAT INTERNATIONAL EDITION - HOME
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Tuesday, December 29, 2009

Helsinki court jails two Estonians for human trafficking

Helsinki Times
Tuesday, 29 December 2009 22:17

The Helsinki appeals court on Tuesday read unconditional 18-month prison sentences to two Estonian men for human trafficking.

The sentences marked the third human trafficking conviction in Finland.

The court heard that the men had lured a woman mired in financial difficulties to work as a prostitute in Finland last year.

The Helsinki district court had found the men guilty of procuration.

STT

http://www.helsinkitimes.fi/htimes/domestic-news/general/9332-helsinki-court-jails-two-estonians-for-human-trafficking-.html

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