Friday, February 4, 2011

Indian workers on Gulf Coast fight modern day slavery » peoplesworld

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Hundreds of workers from India who were forced into modern day slavery at Gulf Coast shipyards for more than a year after Hurricane Katrina are demanding that the federal courts certify their lawsuit as a class action against the company that hired them.

The suit was originally filed back in 2008 on behalf of seven individuals by the New Orleans Workers' Center for Racial Justice. The seven worked for Signal International, an oilrig construction company they say engaged in human trafficking.

On Feb. 1, lawyers for the workers asked U.S. District Judge Jay Zainey to certify the case as a class action suit covering 500 individuals.

The workers were lured from India to the U.S. after the 2005 hurricane. Signal promised them they would receive green cards.

The cards were never forthcoming and the workers were forced to live in crowded, prison-like barracks with unsanitary conditions.

The case is of major concern to the U.S. labor movement.

Eddie Acosta, an AFL-CIO spokesperson, said that, contrary to Signal's claim, there were hundreds of skilled American workers available throughout the Gulf region when the Indian workers were transported to the shipyards. "The American workers were available because so many with skills were out of work in the aftermath of Katrina," he said.

The Indian workers were brought from India on H-2B visas to work in Signal's Mississippi and Texas facilities.

The company got approval from the Bush administration for its claim that it needed 500 skilled welders and pipefitters from India because it could not find that many skilled U.S. workers.

"They lured them here because they were the cheaper but skilled labor they needed to rebuild after the hurricane," said Saket Soni, director of the New Orleans Workers' Center for Racial Justice.

As a result of the lawsuit, evidence surfaced more than a year ago, said Soni, that the Bush administration used two federal agencies to instruct Signal on how to harass, fire and deport the workers who are now involved in the push for the class action suit.

Lawyers for the workers have released documents showing that Immigration and Customs Enforcement and the Border Patrol directed Signal on how to repress the 500 workers who eventually began organizing to protest their working conditions.

The sworn depositions taken by the lawyers show that representatives of the Bush-controlled agencies mapped out for Signal a schedule of arbitrary firings and private deportations of workers who were leading the protests.

One of the documents shows that Signal officials actually resisted when ICE told them to fire workers who then, under the H-2B visa program, could be deported on the spot. The document shows, however, that the company resisted not out of concern for human rights but because it did not want to pay, as ICE suggested, for the plane tickets back to India.

Although Bush administration support for Signal's repression of the workers became known only a year ago, it has been known for much longer that Signal had traffickers in India who were signing up workers with false promises of permanent visas and residency.

For those crimes Signal has already been assessed $22 million in fines by a third federal agency, the Equal Employment Opportunities Commission.

Aly Raju, one of the Indian workers involved who has done everything including marching and lobbying in Washington described conditions at the shipyards. "We were held in a labor camp in the shipyard, behind barbed wire and guarded by security so no one [on the outside] knew our whereabouts. We were 24 men to a small room with no privacy and two toilets. They charged so much for the food and bunks that we couldn't send any money or repay our families for the money they spent helping us get to the U.S."

Raju said that the workers knew, almost from the beginning, that the Bush administration had been in collusion with Signal. "When we protested to our managers about the abuse," he said, "we were told by the company that it was just following orders from the U.S. Government."

Photo: New Orleans Workers' Center for Racial Justice.

Source: People's World
Indian workers on Gulf Coast fight modern day slavery » peoplesworld
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Point Person: Our Q&A with Bill Bernstein on the human trafficking problem in North Texas - The Dallas Morning News

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Human trafficking close to home - The Buffalo News


NEWS STAFF REPORTER
Published:January 30, 2011, 11:43 PM

Sheriff's deputy plays lead role as she works to help victims of all ages in local battle against atrocious crimes ranging from prostitution to slavery

Updated: January 30, 2011, 11:43 PM
When you hear the words "human trafficking," chances are good you think of underaged prostitutes in Malaysia or child laborers in Saudi Arabia or Guatemala.

Elizabeth Fildes wants you to think instead of Amherst, Lancaster and Orchard Park.

"There is no place tonight where human trafficking will not be happening," said the 29-year Erie County sheriff's deputy.

Few know that better than Fildes, a key figure in nearly every local investigation into human trafficking the past five years.

And no one has been as close to the victims.

"My youngest victim was 12," she said. "My oldest was in her late 60s."

The horror stories are many and the details so brutal, some investigators find it hard hearing them.

"She's told me there are times when her male colleagues have to walk out of the room," said her husband, Gerald Fildes. "Somehow, she's able to keep her emotions in check. Of course later, when she's home, she'll let it out."

As head of the Western New York Human Trafficking Alliance, a task force of local, state and federal law enforcement officials, Fildes has gained a reputation strong enough to land her in Guatemala last year as an envoy for the U.S. State Department. Her pioneering work and leadership have earned her numerous awards and honors and, even more important, the respect of police, prosecutors and judges.

"She's the boots on the ground, as we like to say," said Undersheriff Mark N. Wipperman. "Where Liz is at her best is in interviewing victims. They're afraid. They don't know who to trust. And somehow, Liz can walk in that room and get them talking."

For five years, Fildes has been the law enforcement official in the room, gaining the trust of victims.

She, more than anyone else, knows that without a victim's cooperation, the chances of a successful prosecution are almost nil.

"They have to trust you," Fildes said. "They have to know you're there to help them."

And there's nothing easy about that.

Whether it's a prostitute terrified of her violent pimp or a migrant worker afraid of deportation, the emotional hurdles that stand between the victims and the people trying to help them are immense.

Talk to her for any length of time about her work and you understand why the terrified and forgotten trust Fildes.

"Her compassion and sincerity are her biggest assets," said Susan Darlak, a close friend and a former special assistant in the Sheriff's Office. "No matter what time, day or night, she is always available for the victims. She has so much motivation, and it all comes from the heart."

For Fildes, it's more than just a job.

She talks passionately and, yes, endlessly, but not about herself or her accomplishments. It's always about the victims and what they endure.

She will tell you, quite bluntly, of women who are beaten and raped and forced into modern-day slavery. And she will tell you that, even now, government and society are falling short in the mission to abolish human trafficking.

And on occasion, she too breaks down.

Back in November, she appeared before the Erie County Legislature to receive a proclamation honoring her service and, while talking about the frequent late-night cell phone calls seeking help, her voice faltered.

"We still don't see them for who they are, which is victims," Fildes said last week. "I mean a 16-year-old, a 14-year-old, a 12-year-old doesn't wake up one morning and say, 'Oh, this is a career I want to be in. I want to be a prostitute.'"

Even now, five years and 30 investigations later, she can recall every single victim. Some of them she helped.

Others fell through cracks.

One of them was a 23-year-old local woman, a U.S. Army veteran with a biker-boyfriend who eventually became her pimp.

At the time of her arrest, she was turning seven or eight tricks a day, always fearful of another beating at the hands of her boyfriend-turned-pimp. Fildes got her some help, but in the end, it wasn't enough, and she returned to the tricks and beatings.

"I didn't have enough to offer her," she said. "And that was not the first time. There have been many girls who have showed up, and I haven't been able to help."

One of the biggest reasons is what Fildes and others see as one of the great outrages of her work here.

Thanks to a federal grant and the work of the International Institute of Buffalo, a wide range of programs and services are available to foreign-born victims of human trafficking.

Unfortunately, the opposite is true of victims born here.

"It makes you angry," Fildes said. "It's pretty hard when you have a victim in front of you and you want do the right thing but you can't."

Not surprisingly, Fildes is part of a group trying to fill that need. The goal? Raising money to finance and open United Hands of Hope, the region's first safe house for U.S.-born victims of human trafficking.

"You have to have someplace here for them," she said. "It's like a victim of domestic violence. Somebody's got to be there for them."

There are some happy endings, and those are the men, women and children who keep her going, who get her up for work each morning.

"It tends to be a roller coaster," said her husband, Gerald. "When things are going well, she's on a high. But there are bad times too, and I can always tell."

Ask Fildes about the victories, and she'll reel off a list of cases, some of them high-profile investigations such as the massage parlor prostitution operation run by Len Wah "Lisa" Chong.

Chong, who admitted that she recruited the prostitutes, was sentenced to six years in prison. Prosecutors said that the women made $60 for sex acts but that Chong took $50 of it off the top.

Fildes said the Chong case was satisfying because of the close working relationship she developed with the
FBI and Border Patrol agents working on the case.

It also confirmed two little-known facts about human trafficking -- women, as well as men, can be traffickers, and each culture tends to exploit their own.

"Americans traffic Americans, Chinese traffic Chinese, and Mexicans traffic Mexicans," she said.

After five years, Fildes admits there is little that shocks her anymore. One of the few exceptions was her visit to Guatemala last year as a representative of the State Department.

She went there with the intention of meeting with judges, law enforcement officials and legislators but took time out to tour some of the country's poorer regions.

"It was worse than anything I could have imagined," she said. "To actually see little kids in child labor. That was a rough day for me. To actually watch four-year olds pounding rocks into blocks. That was horrible."

In some strange way, it's those brutal images that motivate Fildes.

Even now, you can sense the anger when she talks about the people she helped put behind bars. Near the top of the list is retired State Supreme Court Justice Ronald H. Tills of West Falls.

Tills was sentenced to 18 months in prison for transporting an illegal immigrant named Coco across state lines to serve as a prostitute at a Royal Order of Jesters convention in Kentucky.

"I will never forgive myself for the possible harm I've caused to the victims in this case," Tills told a packed courtroom.

Possible harm?

For Fildes, that was a chilling reminder of Tills' lack of remorse.

"I'll never forget that," she said. "I remember sitting in the back of the courtroom, completely numb."
As she looks ahead, Fildes admits that her time as an investigator is coming to an end but that she will leave confident others are there to pick up the slack.

"On the whole, it's the most satisfying work I've ever done," she said. "And I know I've made a difference."

pfairbanks@buffnews.com

Source: The Buffalo News
Human trafficking close to home - The Buffalo News

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Former Sudanese child slave visits UCF to speak about modern day slavery - Central Florida Future

by Liset-Valle Jimenez
Contributing Writer
Published: Tuesday, February 1, 2011
Updated: Tuesday, February 1, 2011 23:02
Central Florida Future
Liset-Valle Jimenez

After 10 years of subjection and dehumanization, Francis "Piol" Bok of the Sudanese Dinka tribe finally became a free man after his relocation to North Dakota by the United Nations in 1999. On Tuesday, Bok arrived at UCF's Pegasus Ballroom to talk about the current issues facing his country and his life story as an ex-Sudanese child slave.

Mark Freeman, UCF's Global Perspectives public affairs coordinator, said the university feels passionately about human trafficking or modern day enslavement and often tries to bring speakers in to discuss the subject. Bok's last visit to UCF was on Nov. 16, 2006.

Bok, now in his early 30's, vividly remembers the Arab militia that raided his village when he was seven. After the murder of his mother, father and all but one sibling, he was forced to serve a master,Giemma Abdullah,as chattel in a blatant display of 21st century enslavement.

Bok recalls how he witnessed genocide and how it impacted him at such a young age. He compares his life to a scene in the movie "Hotel Rwanda" and his encounters with those of Holocaust survivors.

"The bodies were on top of one another as if resting and blood ran like water in a river at my feet," said Bok.

"My age didn't allow me to comprehend what was happening in front of my eyes."

However, the tone of the forum was one of jubilation as Bok rejoiced for the future of an independent South Sudan.

Bok thanked his audience for their support and with arms raised and hands open, he expressed his appreciation of all things American and encouraged his listeners to take part in the future of a free South Sudan.

"You have to talk to your community, but first it takes education," said Bok. "They will listen because you are their future leaders."

Among the audience was Michael Fitzwater's eighth grade class from South Seminole Middle School.

"In our leadership class we learn traits and apply them to global issues," said Fitzwater.

Roughly 28 students came to hear Bok speak and learn more about human trafficking, a topic they have been focusing on in class. The group also raised a few hundred dollars for the Free the Slaves foundation.

Even though Bok is grateful, he does feel that the current U.S. government has not done enough to help the conflict between North and South Sudan.

"This is not a short term relationship," said Bok. "We need each other."

He added that it is naïve to think that what happens overseas doesn't impact you here.

Mechanical engineer major Curtis Gordon, 28, said he wanted to see Bok because after reading so much about slavery while in Jamaica, he had to see for himself someone who had actually been through it all.

The Francis Bok Foundation hopes to begin its development of new South Sudanese high schools in June of this year. Donations can also be made to the American Anti-Slavery Group's website, iabolish.org.

"After I arrived in 1999 as a refugee I said to myself that I would not live my life as an individual," said Bok. "I decided to dedicate my life's story — I will not be free until all my people are free at last."

Source:  centralfloridafuture.com
Former Sudanese child slave visits UCF to speak about modern day slavery - Central Florida Future
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Will Nevada Legislature Pass Critical Anti-Trafficking Laws? | Change.org News

by Amanda Kloer · February 03, 2011

The state of Nevada is home to "Sin City" Las Vegas, several counties with the only legal brothels in the U.S., and a significant human trafficking problem. Child sex trafficking is especially high in Nevada, as Las Vegas is often a destination for pimps and teen runaways alike. But starting on February 7, the Nevada state legislature will have the chance to seriously impede the trafficking industry in the state. Will you ask them to make fighting human trafficking a state priority?

Anti-trafficking organization Polaris Project recently launched a campaign on Change.org asking the Nevada state legislature to pass four proposed anti-trafficking bills when they convene on February 7. The new bills would address everything from giving trafficking victims arrested for prostitution a chance to expunge their records to increasing penalties for existing offenses to bring them more in line with federal anti-trafficking laws.

The anti-trafficking bills up for a vote this session are AB4, which would expand the definition of involuntary servitude to include commercial sex acts; AB5, which would increase the penalties for pandering; AB6, which would create a procedure for victims of sex trafficking who had convictions for prostitution while they were a victims of trafficking to make a motion for a new trial; and AB106, which would increase penalties for living off of the earnings of a prostituted person and enhances those penalties if the person prostituted in a minor.

Together, these new laws would make Nevada a much less friendly place for those looking to exploit and profit from sex trafficking.

And the new legislation can't come soon enough. In Las Vegas alone, one investigation from Shared Hope International identified over 1,000 child victims of sex trafficking. The city as well as surrounding suburbs are considered to be one of the major U.S. destinations for child sex trafficking, and the Las Vegas Human Trafficking Task force is a busy group. But human trafficking affects all Nevadans, as children from other parts of the state are at risk for exploitation, agricultural workers in rural areas can suffer serious abuses, and domestic workers can be enslaved in the suburbs.

You can support the campaign by signing this petition to the Nevada legislature and sharing it with your friends (especially Nevadans). Stronger laws will help prevent sex trafficking in Nevada, and you can help make those laws a reality.
Photo credit: RickC
Amanda Kloer is a Change.org Editor and has been a full-time abolitionist in several capacities for seven years. Follow her on Twitter @endhumantraffic


Source: Change.Org
Will Nevada Legislature Pass Critical Anti-Trafficking Laws? | Change.org News
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Galley Gossip: Flight attendants trained to spot human traffickers at the Super Bowl | Gadling.com

flight attendants human traffickers
What do hundreds of flight attendants, thousands of under-age prostitutes and the Super Bowl all have in common? Dallas. On Sunday they're all traveling to Texas. American Airlines, American Eagle, Delta, United, and Qantas hope to help stop human traffickers from pimping out women and children by holding training sessions that will enable flight attendants volunteering their time on the ground to help spot signs of trafficking. According to Texas Attorney General Greg Abbot in an article posted by Reuters, the Super Bowl is one of the biggest human trafficking events in the United States. During the previous two Super Bowls fifty girls were rescued. This year with authorities, child welfare advocates, and the airline industry all collaborating to fight under-age sex crimes, even more lives could be saved.

How did the airlines even come to be involved in human trafficking? It all started with Sandra Fiorini, an American Airlines flight attendant based in Chicago. Because of Fiorini flight attendants now know what to look for and who to call if they see something suspicious on board a flight. This after Fiorini tried to report a situation and no one responded. It involved an eighteen year-old boy on a six-hour flight carrying a newborn infant with its umbilical cord still attached. No wife. Just one bottle of milk and two diapers stuck inside his pocket. In 2007 Fiorini met Deborah Sigmund, founder of the organization Innocents at Risk, and soon they began working together with airline employees to become the first line of defense against human trafficking.




Flight attendants aren't the only ones who can help. There are more frequent fliers now than ever before. Passengers should also be aware of what to look for while traveling.

Warning Signs

1. Someone who doesn't have control over his/her own identification

2. Someone who has few to no possessions.

3. Someone who is not allowed to speak for themselves, or is made to speak through a translator

4. Someone who isn't sure of where he or she lives or is or has no sense of time

5. Someone who avoids eye contact or appears fearful, anxious, tense, depressed, nervous, submissive.

6. Someone who rarely is allowed to come and go independently and may be accompanied by someone who controls their every movement

7. Someone who may be dressed inappropriately regardless of weather conditions.

Number to call

Human Trafficking Hot line 1-888-373-7888.

(Don't wait until it's too late. Put that number in your cell phone now!)

There are more slaves today than any other time in human history. A person can be sold several times a day for many years, opposed to drugs that can only be sold once. Because of this human trafficking is one of the fastest growing crimes in the world, only second behind drug trafficking. It generates 32 billion annually for organized crime. Each year two million women and children become victims. 300,000 children within the United States are being trafficked each year. Most are forced into a life of prostitution and pornography in large urban areas such as Washington DC, New York, Los Angeles, Las Vegas and Florida. If it can happen on my flight, it can happen on yours. Open your eyes. Get involved. Write that number down!

Photo courtesy of The Consumerist

Source: GADING.COM 
Galley Gossip: Flight attendants trained to spot human traffickers at the Super Bowl | Gadling.com
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Department of Justice Announces Launch of Human Trafficking Enhanced Enforcement Initiative

Department of Justice
Office of Public Affairs
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

Tuesday, February 1, 2011

WASHINGTON – The Departments of Justice, Homeland Security and Labor announced today the launch of a nationwide Human Trafficking Enhanced Enforcement Initiative designed to streamline federal criminal investigations and prosecutions of human trafficking offenses.


As part of the Enhanced Enforcement Initiative, specialized Anti-Trafficking Coordination Teams, known as ACTeams, will be convened in select pilot districts around the country. The ACTeams, comprised of prosecutors and agents from multiple federal enforcement agencies, will implement a strategic action plan to combat identified human trafficking threats. The ACTeams will focus on developing federal criminal human trafficking investigations and prosecutions to vindicate the rights of human trafficking victims, bring traffickers to justice and dismantle human trafficking networks.


The ACTeam structure not only enhances coordination among federal prosecutors and federal agents on the front lines of federal human trafficking investigations and prosecutions, but also enhances coordination between front-line enforcement efforts and the specialized units at the Department of Justice and federal agency headquarters. The ACTeam Initiative was developed through interagency collaboration among the Departments of Justice, Homeland Security and Labor to streamline rapidly expanding human trafficking enforcement efforts.


“This modern-day slavery is an affront to human dignity, and each and every case we prosecute should send a powerful signal that human trafficking will not be tolerated in the United States,” said Attorney General Eric Holder. “The Human Trafficking Enhanced Enforcement Initiative takes our anti-trafficking enforcement efforts to the next level by building on the most effective tool in our anti-trafficking arsenal: partnerships.”


“Working together, the entire U.S. government continues to make progress in convicting traffickers, dismantling their criminal networks and protecting their victims,” said Secretary of Homeland Security Janet Napolitano. “Combating human trafficking is a shared responsibility, and the ACTeam Initiative is a critical step in successfully leveraging all our federal, state and local resources to crack down on these criminals.”


“This pilot is a necessary tool in the federal government’s crackdown on human trafficking,” added Secretary of Labor Hilda L. Solis. “Victims of these contemptuous acts have been left in an unfamiliar land with no family, no support systems, and no way to make a life for themselves. We must do whatever we can to ensure that victims of trafficking receive full restitution, including denied wages.”


On Oct. 29, 2010, at an event commemorating the 10th anniversary of the Trafficking Victims Protection Act, the Department of Justice announced that the Interagency ACTeam Initiative would be implemented in conjunction with directives within the Department of Justice to enhance coordination among the Executive Office of U.S. Attorneys, U.S. Attorney’s Offices and the department’s subject matter experts in the Civil Rights Division’s Human Trafficking Prosecution Unit and the Criminal Division’s Child Exploitation and Obscenity Section.


The ACTeam initiative follows the July 22, 2010, launch of the Department of Homeland Security’s Blue Campaign, which includes new web-based training for law enforcement officers, enhanced resources for trafficking victims and expanded public awareness campaigns. The ACTeam Initiative also follows the Department of Labor’s March 15, 2010, announcement that it would, in coordination with other federal agencies, begin certifying U non-immigrant visas for human trafficking victims and other qualifying crime victims who are identified during the course of labor investigations and enforcement actions.


The locations of the pilot ACTeams will be announced upon completion of a competitive interagency selection process.


11-140
Attorney General

Source: Deparrment of Justice
Department of Justice Announces Launch of Human Trafficking Enhanced Enforcement Initiative
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