23 June 2009

Recession Boosts Global Human Trafficking, Report Says

WASHINGTON: CNN: 16 June 2009 - The global financial crisis has increased the worldwide trade in trafficked persons, says a State Department report released Tuesday.

The State Department's annual Trafficking in Persons Report also says trafficking has increased in Africa and slaps six African nations on a blacklist of countries not meeting the minimum standard of combating trafficking.

The report, mandated by Congress, features data and statistics from 175 countries around the world regarding the amount of human trafficking that goes on within their borders.

The report cites the International Labor Organization, which estimates that at least 12.3 million adults and children are victims of forced labor, bonded labor and sex slavery each year.

"This is modern slavery. A crime that spans the globe, providing ruthless employers with endless supply of people to abuse for financial gain," Secretary of State Hillary Clinton said as she announced the report. "With this report, we hope to shine the light brightly on the scope and scale of modern slavery, so all governments can see where progress has been made and where more is needed."

The report says the global economic crisis is boosting the demand for human trafficking because of a growing demand for cheap goods and services.

"A striking global demand for labor and a growing supply of workers willing to take ever greater risks for economic opportunities seem a recipe for increased forced labor cases of migrant workers and women in prostitution," it says.

It predicts that the economic crisis will push more businesses underground to avoid taxes and unionized labor, which will increase the use of forced, cheap and child labor by cash-strapped multinational companies.

African countries Nigeria and Mauritius are praised in the report for making strong efforts to combat trafficking.

But six African nations -- Chad, Eritrea, Mauritania, Niger, Swaziland and Zimbabwe -- were put on the report's "Tier 3" blacklist of countries whose efforts to combat trafficking are inadequate.

Most of the countries are "source" and "destination" countries, the report says, meaning trafficking victims both come from and are sent there. Most are trafficked throughout Africa, but many end up in the Middle East, it says.

Iran, Kuwait, Saudi Arabia and Syria remain on the blacklist for another year, with the report saying they often become a destination for trafficked persons who are sold into domestic servitude. Other repeat offenders on the list include North Korea, Myanmar and Fiji.

The State Department also put Malaysia in the Tier 3 list, because of its trafficking of Burmese refugees.

The report cites information that Malaysian immigration officials sold refugees to traffickers operating along its border with Thailand. When the victims were unable to pay a ransom demanded by the traffickers, the report says, they were sold for labor and commercial sex exploitation.

The blacklisted countries are subject to U.S. sanctions if they don't make greater efforts to fight trafficking.

The Philippines, Cambodia, Bangladesh and Pakistan were added to a "watch list" because of what the report calls a worsening trafficking record in those countries. The 52 countries on the watch list have failed to to meet the minimum anti-trafficking standards but are making efforts to do so.

For the first time, countries that have been on the watch list for two years -- including China, Russia, India, Sri Lanka and Egypt -- will automatically be moved to the Tier 3 blacklist next year without a presidential waiver if they fail improve their trafficking record, the State Department said.

This year, the Justice Department also put out a report on U.S. efforts to combat trafficking efforts at home. In 2008, the FBI opened 132 trafficking investigations, made 139 arrests and obtained 94 convictions.

Clinton invited to Tuesday's event members of Congress who are active on the issue, as well as global advocates for trafficking victims, in an effort to give the issue a higher profile and shine a spotlight on the need to combat it.

Calling for a renewed worldwide partnership between countries and non-governmental organizations to combat trafficking, Clinton said, "Trafficking thrives in the shadows, and it can be easy to dismiss it as something that happens to someone else, somewhere else. But that's not the case.

"Trafficking is a crime that involves every nation on Earth, and that includes our own," she said, calling trafficking a "grave problem" in the United States.

For the first time, she said, the United States next year will rank its own efforts at combating trafficking along with the rest of the world. She expressed hope that it will be on the Tier 1 list of countries that are making robust efforts.

11 June 2009

Officials Want More Pressure on Human Trafficking


The NY Times: 10 June 2009 - WASHINGTON (AP) -- The Obama administration and Sen. Chuck Schumer want to step up pressure on human-trafficking operations by taking away their safe houses.

Schumer announced plans Wednesday to propose legislation to allow federal agents to seize houses if they can prove the buildings were used by smugglers to shelter illegal immigrants temporarily.

Under current law, the home owner must be convicted of a smuggling-related offense before prosecutors can seize the safe house.

Officials say taking safe houses out of play could disrupt many smuggling operations. Federal law allows prosecutors to seize houses in drug cases, money laundering and child pornography, but not for human smuggling.

''This policy needs to be fixed right away,'' Schumer, D-N.Y., said after a meeting with Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano. ''It can put a serious dent in the operations of the Mexican cartels that deal in human trafficking.''

Richard Stana, director of Homeland Security and Justice programs at the Government Accountability Office, said he doesn't know why the administration and Congress hasn't made this a priority in the past.

Stana said that in dealing with human smuggling operations, the goal is to take away the tools used to carry out the operation -- specifically the houses where illegal immigrants are hidden by their smugglers.

In Florida, a high (-tech) eye on smugglers


Los Angeles Times: 21 May 2009 - A new computer system and camera installed in government aircraft can study a wide stretch of ocean, zoom in on a single vessel, and track courses for easy interception by the Coast Guard.


Off The Florida Coast — They can spot the smile on a suspected smuggler's face from 10,000 feet in the air, record full-color video of his run for shore and simultaneously track 5,000 ships spread over hundreds of miles of ocean.

Flying above the Atlantic about halfway between Florida and the Bahamas, the latest addition to the government's anti-smuggling arsenal can track the trajectory of a boat leaving Cuba and compare it -- in seconds -- to every filed course plan for vessels on the water. And if the boat seems suspicious, the computer will calculate course, speed and relative positions to tell the nearest Coast Guard vessel the bearings to follow to intercept it.

"With the old system, you were looking through a straw for a quarter on a card table," said Michael Ringgold, an air interdiction agent who worked with the engineers to develop the new system. "Now you're looking with your eyes open at the whole room."

Only two airplanes -- both belonging to the United States -- carry this combination of smuggler-spotting equipment and computer software. One belongs to the Miami office of U.S. Customs and Border Protection.

The new computer can identify and filter out hundreds of legitimate cargo ships or boats within minutes. With the old system, it could take up to 10 minutes for a radar operator to manually identify a single vessel. The computer also matches the outline of any unidentified craft against its database to determine what type of vessel it is -- a freighter, sailboat or yacht, for instance. The time saved allows operators to concentrate on other suspicious targets.

"In a sense, you have an air-traffic control system for the ocean," said Blake Page, a Dallas-based radar expert.

The system proved itself while it was still in development last May, flying test missions aboard a Customs twin-engine turboprop Bombardier Dash 8 while engineers worked out kinks in the computer code.

Ringgold used the system's powerful camera to spot and record a boat near Cay Sal, Bahamas, with a suspicious tarp covering the back. With three clicks of a mouse, he was able to give the crew of the U.S. Coast Guard cutter Chandeleur the coordinates to intercept the boat, which carried 20 Cubans. On April 14, a Key West federal jury convicted Ricardo Espildora on 22 counts of human smuggling charges in the case.

HUMAN TRAFFICKING - from Edges w/ Mal Fletcher

Human trafficking raids


BBC: 29 May 2009 - Six women have been rescued from human traffickers who were forcing them to work as prostitutes in brothels run by the Chinese mafia here.

Three people were arrested in the searches that took place in five different locations - Belfast, Londonderry and Newry in Northern Ireland, and Birmingham and Kidderminster in England.

Our Home Affairs Correspondent, Vincent Kearney, was there when the Belfast raids took place.

Human trafficking - Belfast raid
Twenty women have now been rescued from human traffickers here in just over a year.
In the north west, where another search took place, Women's Aid welcomed the police action and urged women who are being abused in any way to come forward.

This from our north west reporter, Keiron Tourish.

Human trafficking raid - Londonderry

10 June 2009

MPs warn of 'slave trade' in UK


BBC: 14 May 2009 - Britain is the destination for what amounts to a modern-day "slave trade", the Home Affairs committee has warned.

The cross-party group of MPs, which is tasked with scrutinising the Home Office, said there are at least 5,000 human trafficking victims in Britain.

The committee said most are women and children who are forced to work in the sex trade or as beggars.

MPs criticise a lack of safe-house places and "major gaps" in awareness at the UK Border Agency.

The committee also warned that some 60% of trafficked children held in council homes go missing and are never found.

'Enforcement patchy'

The report states that some homes are used by traffickers as "holding pens" for their victims until they are ready to pick them up.

Committee chairman Keith Vaz said there was a lack of understanding of the situation among authorities.

He said: "This is not immigration crime and cannot be dealt with as such. What we are seeing is in effect a resurgence of a type of slave trade.

"Yet we have no good information on the scale of the problem, enforcement is patchy, prosecution rates are low and there is little protection for victims."

Missing children

Mr Vaz's comments come a week after Prime Minister Gordon Brown vowed to investigate reports that trafficking gangs have targeted a children's home next to Heathrow airport.

According to the Guardian newspaper, a report from the UK Border Agency showed more than 80 Chinese children have gone missing from the home since 2006.

The report, which was marked "restricted", said the centre had become a "clearing house" for international gangs.

It says Chinese children who arrive alone at the airport are taken into local authority care, and in two thirds of cases vanish within a week.

Family jailed for sex trafficking


BBC: 4 June 2009 - Three members of a Hungarian family have been jailed for trafficking women to the UK for sexual exploitation, by an Inner London Crown Court judge.
Istvan Kalocsai, 42, and his son Istvan, 19, were jailed for six-and-a-half and five years respectively for sex trafficking offences.

Istvan's wife Istvanne, 39, got three years for controlling prostitution. All three lived in Barking in Essex.

Police said they had exploited "another human being in the most horrible way".

The family were arrested after a young Hungarian woman was found cowering in the toilets of London City Airport, the court had heard.

Tricked and beaten

They tricked her into leaving her village home and forced her into prostitution with threats and beatings.

A second son, Gabor Kalocsai, 22, is still on the run from police and believed to be in Hungary.
In May 2008 a cleaner found the young woman, who was in her early 20s, unable to speak English, with no passport or baggage, and begging to be flown back to Hungary.

Police first thought she had been robbed, but after speaking to her via a translator, it became clear she had been trafficked into the UK and forced to work as a prostitute.

She originally came from a remote village in Hungary and was told she could have an all-expenses paid trip to Britain, where she would then work legitimately to pay back the cost of her trip.

But no sooner had she been picked up by Istvan Kalocsai and his sons, than the three men began to threaten her, telling her she had been sold to them and "there is no going back now".

Terrified, she was driven through Germany and even forced into prostitution on the way to the UK, when the family sent her to have sex with lorry drivers, telling her she had to earn petrol money.

Once in the country the young woman was taken to the Kalocsai family home in Barking, Essex, where she was bought mini skirts and taught how to "walk like a working girl" by the family's mother.

The sons, Gabor and Istvan Jnr, would go out with the victim and negotiate fees with the clients before she would either take them back to a hotel address in Barking or a local park.

On several occasions she was beaten by the father and mother and was told that she had to earn £200 a day.

She believed that if she refused to work, she would be beaten until she did.

At first the young woman was not allowed out of the family's home unless it was to work or when she went shopping with the mother.

But after an incident where she was stopped by police for prostitution while she was with Gabor, the family members accompanied her less often.

After two months she finally escaped, following an incident where the mother threatened to kill one of her friends.

Det Con Mark Simpson, of the Metropolitan Police's Human Trafficking Team, said: "They sought to profit from the exploitation of another human being in the most horrible way.

"Through violence and intimidation they forced her to do things against her will and failed to honour any of her basic human rights."

At the Kalocsai's home police found that a second Hungarian woman had been living there while the family prostituted her at brothels in west London and over the internet.

The Metropolitan Police are working closely with the Hungarian human trafficking team in Budapest to find him.

09 June 2009

Hookers for Jesus founder, Christian rocker wed in Vegas


CNN: June 5, 2009 - She was a call girl working the streets of Sin City. He's a guitarist in a heavy metal band. They found commonality in their Christian faith and Friday evening, the two were married in a Las Vegas, Nevada, ceremony broadcast live via the Web.
Annie Lobért, who founded Hookers for Jesus, and musician Oz Fox of the Christian band Stryper said their "I do's" at the Church of South Las Vegas in front of an applauding crowd and an audience on the Internet. The wedding had been widely touted on several Christian Web sites.

Lobért, 41, walked up to the stage in a white strapless gown, gloves and veil. Earlier this week, she wrote on her MySpace blog: "I am getting married. It's about time."

She had worked as a prostitute for 11 years, making as much as $500 an hour. She said she hit rock bottom when she overdosed on cocaine and everything went black, according to an ABC interview posted on her Web site. She asked Jesus to help her and became what many jokingly call a "porn-again Christian."

Lobért says her mission now is to save the souls of women who sell their bodies. She often spends time at night on Las Vegas streets handing out Bibles to prostitutes and seeking to convince them there is a better way to make a living.

The Hookers for Jesus Web site describes the organization as "an international, faith-based organization that addresses the realities of human sex trafficking, sexual violence and exploitation linked to pornography and the sex industry."
Before he administered the vows, Pastor Benny Perez said Lobért was a shining example of Christ's love for everyone.

Fox, 47, is a longtime member of Stryper, which stands for Salvation Through Redemption, Yielding Peace, Encouragement and Righteousness. The band's albums include "Reborn: and "In God We Trust."

01 June 2009

Nevada Governor Signs Legislation Cracking Down on Child Sex Trafficking


Polaris Project: Carson City, NV, May 26, 2009 - Nevada Governor Jim Gibbons signed legislation into law last Friday targeting human traffickers and pimps who exploit children in prostitution – bringing Nevada law more in line with other western states.

Assemblyman John Hambrick (R, 2), a former law enforcement officer and Assemblyman Bernie Anderson (D, 31) introduced this bi-partisan legislation in response to witnessing the many children grossly exploited and subject to violence in the sex trade. In May of 2007, outreach workers identified over 400 prostituted children on the streets of Nevada alone, and while the use of children in prostitution is a severe form of human trafficking under federal law, it still remains rampant. In the U.S. uncountable child victims are trapped in pimp-controlled street prostitution or sold on the internet, with no hope of escape. Victims face a horrific life in which they are repeatedly threatened, beaten, raped, starved, or psychologically tortured. These crimes are committed for one reason: the financial profit of traffickers.

The newly enacted law improves Nevada’s response to trafficking by adding severe financial penalties - and risk - to the crime of prostituting a child, while providing a funding mechanism to prevent and prosecute the crime. "The new law targets traffickers’ greatest motivation – their profits," stated Hambrick, "and clearly demonstrates that we mean business." The new law provides for criminal fines of up to $100,000 for a person convicted of prostituting a child between the ages of 14 and 18, and fines of up to $500,000 if the child is under 14. The assets of those convicted may also be forfeited and directed to law enforcement and to organizations working to end the sex trafficking of minors. The new fines are more in line with Nevada’s neighboring state of Arizona and several other western states that have sent a strong message to traffickers that exploitation will not be tolerated.

According to Hambrick, "this new law is but a first step in cracking down on the malicious and insidiously cruel crime of human trafficking in Nevada, and I look forward to even more comprehensive reforms in the next session." Human trafficking is the modern day practice of slavery and it is the fastest growing criminal industry in the world, generating over $36 billion annually. Victims of human trafficking in the U.S. are children and adults, and both foreign nationals and U.S. citizens, who are subjected to force, fraud, and coercion for sexual or labor exploitation.

Ambassador Mark Lagon, Executive Director at Polaris Project commented, "We commend Nevada legislators, advocates, and Governor Gibbons for addressing this critical need. We look forward to Nevada authorities -- in concert with non-governmental organizations -- taking even greater steps next year to end human trafficking of both minors and adults, by implementing greater penalties against traffickers and improving protections for victims."

20 May 2009

Girls on Our Streets


NEW YORK TIMES: 6 May 2009: Jasmine Caldwell was 14 and selling sex on the streets when an opportunity arose to escape her pimp: an undercover policeman picked her up.

The cop could have rescued her from the pimp, who ran a string of 13 girls and took every cent they earned. If the cop had taken Jasmine to a shelter, she could have resumed her education and tried to put her life back in order.

Instead, the policeman showed her his handcuffs and threatened to send her to prison. Terrified, she cried and pleaded not to be jailed. Then, she said, he offered to release her in exchange for sex.

Afterward, the policeman returned her to the street. Then her pimp beat her up for failing to collect any money.

“That happens a lot,” said Jasmine, who is now 21. “The cops sometimes just want to blackmail you into having sex.”

I’ve often reported on sex trafficking in other countries, and that has made me curious about the situation here in the United States. Prostitution in America isn’t as brutal as it is in, say, India, Nepal, Pakistan, Cambodia and Malaysia (where young girls are routinely kidnapped, imprisoned and tortured by brothel owners, occasionally even killed). But the scene on American streets is still appalling — and it continues largely because neither the authorities nor society as a whole show much interest in 14-year-old girls pimped on the streets.

Americans tend to think of forced prostitution as the plight of Mexican or Asian women trafficked into the United States and locked up in brothels. Such trafficking is indeed a problem, but the far greater scandal and the worst violence involves American teenage girls.

If a middle-class white girl goes missing, radio stations broadcast amber alerts, and cable TV fills the air with “missing beauty” updates. But 13-year-old black or Latina girls from poor neighborhoods vanish all the time, and the pimps are among the few people who show any interest.

These domestic girls are often runaways or those called “throwaways” by social workers: teenagers who fight with their parents and are then kicked out of the home. These girls tend to be much younger than the women trafficked from abroad and, as best I can tell, are more likely to be controlled by force.

Pimps are not the business partners they purport to be. They typically take every penny the girls earn. They work the girls seven nights a week. They sometimes tattoo their girls the way ranchers brand their cattle, and they back up their business model with fists and threats.

“If you don’t earn enough money, you get beat,” said Jasmine, an African-American who has turned her life around with the help of Covenant House, an organization that works with children on the street. “If you say something you’re not supposed to, you get beat. If you stay too long with a customer, you get beat. And if you try to leave the pimp, you get beat.”

The business model of pimping is remarkably similar whether in Atlanta or Calcutta: take vulnerable, disposable girls whom nobody cares about, use a mix of “friendship,” humiliation, beatings, narcotics and threats to break the girls and induce 100 percent compliance, and then rent out their body parts.

It’s not solely violence that keeps the girls working for their pimps. Jasmine fled an abusive home at age 13, and she said she — like most girls — stayed with the pimp mostly because of his emotional manipulation. “I thought he loved me, so I wanted to be around him,” she said.

That’s common. Girls who are starved of self-esteem finally meet a man who showers them with gifts, drugs and dollops of affection. That, and a lack of alternatives, keeps them working for him — and if that isn’t enough, he shoves a gun in the girl’s mouth and threatens to kill her.

Solutions are complicated and involve broader efforts to overcome urban poverty, including improving schools and attempting to shore up the family structure. But a first step is to stop treating these teenagers as criminals and focusing instead on arresting the pimps and the customers — and the corrupt cops.

“The problem isn’t the girls in the streets; it’s the men in the pews,” notes Stephanie Davis, who has worked with Mayor Shirley Franklin to help coordinate a campaign to get teenage prostitutes off the streets.

Two amiable teenage prostitutes, working without a pimp for the “fast money,” told me that there will always be women and girls selling sex voluntarily. They’re probably right. But we can significantly reduce the number of 14-year-old girls who are terrorized by pimps and raped by many men seven nights a week. That’s doable, if it’s a national priority, if we’re willing to create the equivalent of a nationwide amber alert.

Torture a hallmark of Phoenix's drug kidnappings


CNN: Phoenix, AZ: Jaime Andrade had just gotten out of the shower when the men came to snatch him.

His wife, Araceli Valencia, was mopping the kitchen in their family home on a typical warm spring morning in Phoenix, Arizona, "when she suddenly felt a hard object pointed to the back of her head and a voice in Spanish tell her not to move," according to a Phoenix, Arizona, police investigative report.

"I told you not to look at me!" Valencia heard one of the kidnappers bark as he struck Andrade across the head.

Her four children bawling, Valencia was hustled into a bedroom where an armed man fondled her and threatened to rape her if she didn't tell him where Andrade hid his money, according to the report.

After beating and binding Andrade, one of the kidnappers put a gun to Valencia's head. His message: We're taking your husband and SUV. We'll be watching your house. If you call the cops, he's a dead man.

Andrade, his wife would later tell police, was a mechanic and freelance human smuggler, or coyote. Police say his 2006 kidnapping was evidence of a growing trend in Phoenix: drug and human traffickers abducting each other for ransoms or retribution.

The trend continues, as police investigated roughly a kidnapping a day in 2007 and 2008 and are on track to shatter those numbers this year. Police are stingy with details of fresh cases navigating the court system, but recently allowed CNN to review the files from Andrade's kidnapping.

For two and a half days after Andrade's abduction, the kidnappers -- including a man whom Andrade later said had been a friend -- deprived their victim of food and water. Through the door of the closet where he was held, Andrade could hear the cries of other victims being tortured in the house, the report said.

Meanwhile, Valencia had defied the kidnappers and called police, who listened to Andrade "scream and howl in pain" over the phone as the kidnappers tried to cut off his ear and a finger. The torture would continue until Valencia came up with the ransom, the kidnappers told her.

They were true to their word.

Andrade was pistol-whipped and beaten with a baseball bat and the butt of a rifle. The kidnappers tried to gouge out his eye and slashed open his left eyebrow. They burned his back as well -- presumably, police said, with a blowtorch found at the scene.

The blindfolded Andrade "could feel his pants and underwear being cut open by an unknown person," he told police. He was told to bend over and was beaten when he refused.

"Jaime felt his legs being forced apart and heard Aldo say he was going to get his money," the report said. The kidnappers then sodomized him with a broomstick, a pair of scissors and a wooden dowel used to hang clothes in a closet.

Kidnappers creative with coercion

Ferocity is often a hallmark of the abductions taking place in this south Arizona city of 1.5 million that serves as a prime transshipment point for drugs and human cargo.

Phoenix police say they have yet to witness the level of violence -- the beheadings, the bodies shoved in drums -- that their counterparts are seeing in Mexico City or the border town of Juarez.

"It gets close sometimes," said Lt. Lauri Burgett, who heads the Home Invasion and Kidnapping Enforcement squad.

Kidnappers will smash their victims' fingers with bricks, snip their backs open with wire cutters, carve them up with knives or simply shoot them.

"We've had them electrocuted. They set them in a tub with water and use kind of barbaric means and zap the tub. I think it was a battery hooked up," Burgett said.

Two kidnappings last year resulted in murders, she added, but it's not the norm.

Phoenix police formed the HIKE squad in October after two years of unprecedented kidnapping numbers -- 357 in 2007 and 368 in 2008 -- gave the city the dubious distinction of being the nation's kidnapping capital. Home invasions were not far behind: 317 in 2007 and 337 in 2008.

"It's all about the money. And there's so much money to be made in this that you can't stop it, but you can try to reveal it, and then you can try to do something about it," Burgett said.

The task force has made dozens of arrests, but as of March 31, the city had 101 reported kidnappings. If the trend continues, Phoenix will record an increase in kidnapping for a fourth straight year.

More frustrating is that the numbers represent only a third, maybe less, of the city's kidnappings, said Sgt. Tommy Thompson, a police spokesman with 16 years of drug enforcement experience. Most kidnappings aren't reported, he said, because the victims are generally smugglers, drug dealers or illegal immigrants -- or some combination of the three.
Other criminals targeted

The most common cases are criminal-on-criminal -- drug smugglers or coyotes snatching rivals or their loved ones. In some cases, a drug dealer may have lost a load or failed to make a payment, but there are also cases when kidnappers do it solely for the ransom, which can be between $30,000 and $250,000, Thompson said.

"[The victims are] wearing the doper bling-bling, and they target them," he said. "We've had several cases where the ransom amount has been $1 million that the person has asked for. In addition to that, they often ask for drugs -- 100 pounds of marijuana, perhaps a pound or two of speed, a pound or two of cocaine or several ounces of heroin."

Phoenix police have even arrested victims after rescuing them, Burgett said.

Less frequent but still accounting for 78 kidnappings last year are cases in which coyotes hold their human cargo captive or steal another coyote's patrons, known as pollos (Spanish for chickens), Burgett said.

Burgett said human trafficking is often linked to the drug trade because both industries require the same routes and subterfuge to ferry their wares into the country.

There are rarely "true victims" in Phoenix's kidnappings, the lieutenant said.

However, one criminal attorney who has represented at least 10 kidnappers in the last decade insists that the coyote business is "uglier than the drug trade" and that pollos are often killed or forced to do coyotes' bidding when they can't come up with the ransoms.

"In the drug business, the people getting killed are in the business. They are not end users, not consumers," said Antonio Bustamente. "In the coyote business, the people killed are really innocent. [First-time] illegal entry is a petty offense."

Though many might debate the innocence of victims entangled in Phoenix's border-related violence, police say there have been instances when the kidnappers snatched the wrong mark.
Girl mistakenly snatched

On the evening of March 17, 2008, a 13-year-old girl and her friend were walking out of a home in the suburb of Avondale. They were planning to play basketball. The friend, according to a police investigative report, was the niece of a man named "Chucky."

Chucky and his cohorts, witnesses told police, had earlier stolen 55 pounds of marijuana and left several men tied up in a vacant house.

Hours later, the investigative report said, armed men arrived at Chucky's sister's house in three vehicles, one a white Chevrolet Tahoe with blue-and-red strobes like the police use.

The men wanted Chucky, their drugs or $24,000. The 13-year-old said she didn't know Chucky. When she tried to walk away, "one of them grabbed her by the neck, pointed a gun at her and forced her in the vehicle," the report said.

Eventually, the men called the girl's mother to demand ransom. A police officer took the phone and informed the men they had the wrong girl. She was released relatively unharmed in the suburb of Surprise.

The case serves as a reminder that as police scramble to tamp the bloodshed before it reaches the levels proliferating south of the border, collateral damage is a reality.

The origins of the kidnappers -- 90 percent of whom hail from the Mexican state from which the notorious Sinaloa drug cartel takes its name -- also remind law enforcement that 150 miles south lies a country racked with a more extreme brand of violence.

The tortured Andrade was fortunate that police were able to find him. On Andrade's third day in captivity, an undercover officer posing as a loan shark convinced the kidnappers to lower their ransom from $50,000 to $10,000 and the title to the Ford Expedition they had stolen.

When the kidnappers arrived at the drop point, a Safeway supermarket parking lot, police swarmed on their green Chevrolet Tahoe, the report said. One of the men, Luis Alberto Castro-Vega, then 23, disclosed Andrade's whereabouts after police promised not to charge him with kidnapping.

Only Castro-Vega has been convicted of crimes associated with Andrade's kidnapping: first-degree burglary, theft by extortion, armed robbery and three counts of aggravated assault. In September 2006, a judge sentenced Castro-Vega to 54 years in prison.

Thompson said he hopes the stiff sentence sends a message that Phoenix police expect the kidnappings and violence to end, regardless of the targets and the perpetrators.

"The problems that occur when it's criminal versus criminal, that's still violence on the streets of America," he said. "If those people get in a gunbattle, those bullets have to go somewhere, and that could be a playground where kids are playing. That could be a neighbor's house where a neighbor is inside sleeping that has nothing to do whatsoever with the illegal activity, but yet they become senseless victims of the violence."

16 May 2009

Craigslist Dropping Erotic Ads


FOX: WASHINGTON, D.C. - An "internet brothel." That's how Illinois Attorney General Lisa Madigan describes the "erotic services" section of Craigslist.

Madigan helped negotiate the deal that will put an end to the section of Craigslist.

Mark Lagon runs Polaris Project. It's a non-profit devoted to fighting human sex trafficking.

"The proof of the pudding is in the tasting," Lagon told FOX 5 on Wednesday. "Whether the adult section that replaces it is in fact more benign. Will it be policed? Will it no longer have prostitution for sale?"

Just last month, Lagon sent a letter to Craigslist CEO Jim Buckmaster offering assistance and asking Buckmaster to "take responsibility."

Craigslist says the new "adult services" section will be legal business only and those adult ads will now cost money. In Craiglist's defense, CEO Buckmaster blogged Wednesday, "...the record is clear that use of Craigslist classifieds is associated with far lower rates of violent crime than print classifieds let alone rates of violent crime pertaining to American society as a whole."

But pressure on Craigslist intensified after a Boston medical student was arrested for a murdering a masseuse he met through Craigslist.

Many say they'll wait and see. That list includes Maryland Attorney General Doug Gansler.

"It is a good next step in our efforts to eliminate illegal sexual classified ads on the site," said Gansler. "We will continue to monitor the site to make sure Craigslist keeps its word."

12 May 2009

Official: More than 1M child prostitutes in India


CNN: NEW DELHI, India: Around 1.2 million children are believed to be involved in prostitution in India, the country's federal police said Monday.

Ashwani Kumar, who heads the Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI), told a seminar on human trafficking, that India occupied a "unique position" as what he called a source, transit nation and destination of this trade.

India's home secretary Madhukar Gupta remarked that at least 100 million people were involved in human trafficking in India.

"The number of trafficked persons is difficult to determine due to the secrecy and clandestine nature of the crime.

"However, studies and surveys sponsored by the ministry of women and child development estimate that there are about three million prostitutes in the country, of which an estimated 40 percent are children," a CBI statement said.

Prostitution in pilgrim towns, exploitation through sex tourism and pedophilia are some of some of the "alarming trends" that have emerged in recent years in India, it noted.

Authorities believe 90 percent of human trafficking in India is "intra-country."

This week on Marketplace Middle East

CNN: In Focus -- The Darker Side of Labor

Governments in the Middle East are moving with plans to pass legislation and adopt protocols against human trafficking and forced labor, but implementation and enforcement remain challenging.

This week MME explores how domestic workers and laborers struggle to survive, and how governments are trying to force change within their societies.

Facetime -- Roger Plant, International Labour Organisation

Over 12 million people are victims of forced labor and human trafficking, a problem that spans the globe. The Middle East relies heavily on foreign labor, which in some cases can make up 80 percent of the total population.

This week MME talks to Roger Plant from the UN's International Labour Organisation about this week's global report on forced labor and human trafficking -- and what countries can do to attack the $36 billion business of illegally trading workers.

06 May 2009

West woman wins trafficking award

BBC: A West Country woman has been recognised for her work to highlight the problem of human trafficking.

Trish, whose full identity cannot be revealed for safety reasons, won the prize at the Extraordinary Women Awards in Nottingham.

She put trafficking in the spotlight last October when she launched the Unchosen Film Festival in Bristol.

It explored all aspects of the illegal human trafficking trade, from slavery to the sex industry.
Up to 4,000 women are trafficked in to the UK each year, and many are forced in to the illegal sex trade.

Trish was nominated by the Pierian Centre in St Pauls, and came out top in the Extraordinary Personal Contribution category at the awards.

"Human trafficking is the second largest illegal business in the world," she said. "And it's with this in mind that I've been grateful and humble to receive this award.

"I intend to use the opportunity to raise even more awareness of this underground activity in order to successfully rescue some of its victims in Bristol and the surrounding villages."

FBI Initiatives

  • Participating in joint law enforcement task forces (there are up to 30 such task forces around the country right now);
  • Using intelligence to identify traffickers and gain insights into how they conduct their operations (i.e., finances, logistics);
  • Looking at possible human trafficking elements in cases initially identified as human smuggling, Internet crimes against children, and/or sex tourism matters; and
  • Perhaps most importantly, working closely with trafficking victims—many of whom don't speak English—to enlist their help in prosecuting their captors AND to make sure they get the support they need to cope with the horrors they've been through and get back on their feet.

Poor Latinos are victims of abuse nationwide, activists say


CNN: Low-income Latinos are routinely discriminated against in the South, a new report says, but the study's author and others say the problem exists nationwide, with millions of Spanish-speaking immigrants living "beyond the protection of the law."

The report, released Wednesday by the Southern Poverty Law Center, documents the experiences of 500 immigrants in the South, finding that Latinos routinely are cheated out of wages, are denied basic health protection and fall victim to racial profiling.

"Under Siege: Life for Low-Income Latinos in the South" details stories such as that of a Tennessee woman who says she was jailed at a cheese factory for asking for pay, a bean picker in Alabama who says his life savings were taken by police at a traffic stop, and a rapist in Georgia who was not arrested because the suspect's victim was an undocumented immigrant.

Forty-one percent of the people surveyed said they had experienced theft of their wages by employers. Forty-seven percent said they know someone who was treated unfairly by police. Seventy-seven percent of women surveyed said they have been sexually harassed by bosses, many saying that bosses used their immigration status as leverage.

"This report documents the human toll of failed policies that relegate millions of people to an underground economy, where they are beyond the protection of the law," said Mary Bauer, author of the report. "Workplace abuses and racial profiling are rampant in the South."

But such discrimination is also rampant nationwide, she said. The human-rights law center focused on the South because that's the area the Montgomery, Alabama-based group knows best, she said.

"This is not limited to the South," she said. "This does not stop when you get to some particular border. These same issues happen everywhere."

The problem may seem more acute in the South because Latinos are a relatively new immigrant group to the area, some observers say.

"Newcomers in any new region are always the first to be exploited. They're at the bottom of the pecking order," said Gustavo Arellano, the California-based author of the nationally syndicated "Ask a Mexican" column and a national radio commentator. "What's going on in the South now has already happened in Southern California."

Teodoro Maus, president of the Georgia Latino Alliance for Human Rights, has heard thousands of discrimination complaints from Mexican immigrants during the past two decades. "In the South, you just open the door and you find it," he said.

"It's absolutely correct that there's generalized discrimination," he told CNN. "There's a general feeling that discrimination is valid because these people are illegal, because these people have no right to be here."

But the attitude toward discrimination has changed throughout the years, said Maus, who was also the Mexican consul general in Atlanta, Georgia, from 1990 to 1994 and from 1995 to 2001.

"The big difference from previous years is that there were discriminatory acts before, but not the belief that discrimination is allowed," he said.

Bolstered by what Maus called "an ultraconservative element," some people "realized they could have open aggression against a group of people who could not defend themselves."

Arizona also has experienced widespread discrimination, Maus and others say.

Bernardo Mendez Lugo, Mexico's deputy consul in Tucson, Arizona, said he sees three main forms of discrimination: racial profiling by law enforcement officers, problems in the workplace and difficulties in the rental housing market.

"There is much abuse," he said Wednesday.

Police officers frequently stop Latin-looking drivers "for any reason" and immediately call immigration officials if the motorist does not have an Arizona driver's license or other local identification, Mendez Lugo said.

In the workplace, he said, employees often find they are passed over for promotions despite their qualifications or length of employment. The abuse, Mendez Lugo said, is generally aimed at undocumented workers.

"They are told, 'I'm going to call immigration [authorities] if you keep asking,' " Mendez Lugo said.

Federal officials say there are more than 12 million undocumented immigrants in the United States. Most of them come from Mexico and other Latin American countries.

John McManus, president of the conservative John Birch Society, doesn't see a widespread abuse problem.

"I would probably expect there would be some," he said. "There's a small number of unscrupulous people who will always take advantage of others. Generally speaking, I don't think that's the case."

Nor does McManus believe the source of the information.

"I don't put any stock at all in anything the Southern Poverty Law Center says," McManus said. "They like to distort a lot of things."

The center urged the federal government to strengthen labor laws and crack down on racial profiling.

"We're talking about a matter of basic human rights here," said Southern Poverty Law Center President Richard Cohen. "By allowing this cycle of abuse and discrimination to continue, we're creating an underclass of people who are invisible to justice and undermining our country's fundamental ideals."

04 May 2009

Rudd: Human smugglers 'scum of the earth'


CNN: Australia's prime minister Friday slammed those engaged in human trafficking after an explosion aboard a boat carrying Afghan refugees killed three people and injured more than 40 others near Ashmore Reef, off Australia's northwest coast.

"People smugglers are engaged in the world's most evil trade and they should all rot in jail because they represent the absolute scum of the earth," Prime Minister Kevin Rudd told reporters.

"We see this lowest form of human life at work in what we saw on the high seas yesterday. That's why this government maintains its hardline, tough, targeted approach to maintaining border protection for Australia. And that's why we have dedicated more resources to combat people smuggling than any other government in Australian history."

The boat was carrying 49 refugees, officials said. In addition to the three killed, two others were missing.

Rudd would not comment on the cause of the explosion, citing the ongoing investigation.
The prime minister acknowledged that human smuggling was an increasing problem exacerbated by "global factors" but defended his government's border security policies.

"Our staff, our naval staff, our coast watch staff, our aerial surveillance staff and others, our police, are doing a first class job backed up by our intelligence officers as well, also in collaboration with partners across the region," the prime minister said.

"Because it is a global phenomenon and we are finding push factors operating from around the world, our active partnership with international governments and international agencies like the UNHCR is equally critical. This is a fight on many fronts. It is a fight which we have been engaged in for some time and a fight which other governments around the world are equally engaged in with us."

Rudd said the refugees' requests for asylum "will be treated under the normal provisions of the law through the examination of each of their individual cases."

Judge: 'Gripping temptation' to let Madonna adopt


CNN: A judge who barred Madonna's second adoption from Malawi on Friday said she had "a gripping temptation" to approve the adoption, but decided doing so would open doors to child trafficking, court records show.

The American pop star had filed a petition to adopt a girl, Chifundo James, 3. The rejection was based on a residency requirement and the judge's belief that the child was in good hands at an orphanage.

"There is a gripping temptation to throw caution to the wind and grant an adoption in the hope that there will be a difference in the life of even just one child," Justice E.J. Chombo wrote in a ruling.

"But removing the very safeguard that is supposed to protect our children ... could actually facilitate trafficking of children by some unscrupulous individuals."

Chombo was referring to a residency requirement in Malawi law that requires people to live in the country for some time before adopting.

If Madonna was granted the adoption without established residency, critics argue it could open the door for others to adopt children and leave the country.

"Anyone could come to Malawi and quickly arrange for an adoption that might have grave consequences on the very children that the law seeks to protect," the judge wrote.

Court papers provided to CNN also revealed that the judge considered the petition different from that of David Banda, whom Madonna adopted from Malawi in 2006.

David "was to be returned to his biological father within a period of six months from the time that Mchinji Orphanage had admitted him," Chombo wrote.

"This is the same father that had desperately appealed for help after the death of his wife because of his incapacity to look after David and the unwillingness of wife's family to care for the child."

In the case of Chifundo, the orphanage taking care of her was able and willing, according to Chombo, who did not handle the first adoption. Court records show her 14-year-old mother died days after her birth.

The ruling followed weeks of criticism by human rights activists, who accused the mother of three of using her fame to circumvent a residency law for foreigners adopting in the country.
Save the Children UK had also urged Madonna to let the child be raised by her relatives in her home community.

The denial was applauded by a coalition of local nonprofits.

"Inter-country adoption is not the best way of providing protection to children ... supporting children from outside our country only helps five of the 1.5 million orphans we have," said Mavuto Bamusi, the national coordinator of Malawi Human Rights Consultative Committee.

Malawi government officials said Thursday that they supported Madonna's second adoption.

The recently divorced singer was married to British filmmaker Guy Ritchie. She has been involved with Malawi for several years and made a documentary, "I Am Because We Are," to highlight poverty, AIDS and other diseases devastating children in that country. She also co-founded a nonprofit group, Raising Malawi, which provides programs to help the needy.

Madonna's lawyer has filed a notice to appeal the ruling with the Supreme Court, according to Ken Manda, high court registrar.

28 April 2009

Egypt says adoptive moms were human smugglers

CAIRO, Egypt (CNN) -- Suzanne Hagelof and Iris Botros dreamed of adopting babies. Separately, they visited orphanages in Egypt. Hagelof adopted a child, and Botros was in the process of adopting twins, when they ran foul of authorities. Now they are in jail, accused of being part of a conspiracy to traffic children.

Last week, the two women were led into a Cairo courtroom in handcuffs, along with six other people. They stood in a big black cage in the courtroom, looking apprehensive amid the hubbub.

To their defenders, all they were trying to do was provide orphans with a better chance in life. To the prosecution, they were involved in forging documents to try to adopt children illegally and smuggle them out of the country.

Along with the two American women, the accused include their husbands, two doctors, a nun who ran an orphanage, and an Egyptian banker.

A year ago, Hagelof, a U.S. citizen who lives in Egypt with her husband, adopted a child from an orphanage run by the Coptic Christian Church, a religious minority in Egypt. She says no money changed hands.

Several months later, Luis Andros, a U.S. citizen who is originally from Greece, and his wife, Iris Botros, left their restaurant business in North Carolina for Egypt. Botros, who is originally from Egypt, visited another orphanage run by the church. She paid the orphanage about $4,600 for the twins -- partly for clothes and partly as a donation.

Both women wanted to take the children to the United States -- in Hagelof's case for a visit, but in Botros' case to begin a new life in Wake Forest, North Carolina. And that's where the trouble began.

To get a visa for the children, both women went to the U.S. Embassy in Cairo. According to their attorneys, the documents they presented included birth certificates and certificates signed by doctors stating they were the natural mothers.

According to defense attorneys, the two women knew they were using forged documents.
Embassy officials became suspicious of the documents -- partly because the women seemed too old to be the mothers. Both Hagelof and Botros are in their mid- to late forties.

The embassy contacted Egyptian authorities, and both Hagelof and Botros -- along with their husbands -- were arrested soon afterward, as was a nun from a Coptic orphanage and a banker who allegedly helped Botros make contact with the nun. Also arrested were two doctors who had written the certificates for the three infants, all of whom are now at an orphanage not affiliated with the church.

Neither the U.S. Embassy nor the U.S. State Department will comment on the case, citing the ongoing trial.

Botros' husband, Andros, blames the embassy for their plight. Asked through the bars of the courtroom cage what had happened, he replied, "Well, our American Embassy, instead of helping the people, they put them in jail."

His wife interjected, insisting they would not get a fair trial. A few feet away, Suzanne Hagelof called out, "We want to tell our story," while her husband, Medhat, looked on, quiet and dejected. As reporters tried to talk to the defendants, a guard intervened, shouting "Sit down, sit down."

Adoption has long been illegal under Egyptian law as well as being forbidden under sharia, Muslim religious law. Fostering is legal but uncommon.

It has become a high-profile issue since Suzanne Mubarak, wife of the president, embarked on a campaign to stamp out human trafficking. She recently told CNN that human trafficking "exists in all societies."

"I came to realize what an insidious crime this was and how it was just really built on profit. On not only low morals, on no morals at all," she said.

And that's how the prosecution seems to be framing this case, using a law passed last year that provides for tough penalties for human trafficking. Khalil Adil El Hamani, the attorney representing Hagelof, says Egyptian authorities want to prove that all the defendants are from one gang and are trafficking children, so as to make the case seem to be a giant conspiracy.

Both couples insist they had no idea what they were doing was illegal and have no link with human trafficking. The attorney representing Botros and her husband says their only crime was to dream of being parents.

"They are now are in jail because of this dream," he told CNN after the first hearing in the case a week ago. "They never thought that they will be in jail. They thought that they are going to adopt only. They didn't think they are making something against the law in Egypt."

All eight defendants remain in jail -- the men at the Tora prison in Cairo, well known for its overcrowding. The next stage of the trial takes place May 16, and proceedings could last six to eight months. If they are convicted, the accused could each face up to 10 years in prison.

23 April 2009

Western and Central Europe

  • Most of these countries and territories have legislation to prosecute human trafficking.
  • Estonia does not possess specific legislation, but can prosecute through related offenses.
  • Polish Criminal Code includes the offense of 'trafficking in person,' citing the UN's definition.
  • Legislation in this region dates back to the 1990s, with modifications made throughout the years to incorporate additional forms of human trafficking.

Eastern Europe and Central Asia



  • Turkmenistan is the only country in this region without specific anti-trafficking legislation.

  • These countries' laws criminalize commercial sexual exploitaion and forced labor, with no age restriction.

  • Members of the Commonwealth of Independent States (CIS) established a plan in 2005 to combat the trafficking of persons, human organs and tissues.

South and Sout-West Asia

  • Maldives and Afghanistan are the only countries in this region to have yet to adopt anti-trafficking legislation.
  • Five of these countries criminalize commercial sexual exploitation and forced labor, with no age restriction.
  • Bangladesh law only criminalizes commercial sexual exploitation.
  • Afghanistan's law on kidnapping is often substituted to prosecute trafficking offenders.

East Asia and the Pacific

  • Micronesia, Samoa, the Solomon Islands, and Tuvalu are the only countries in this region that have not implemented some form of anti-trafficking legislation.
  • The Republic of Korea, Singapore, and Vietnam laws only criminalized commercial sexual exploitation.
  • Most of these countries since 2006 have modified their anti-trafficking laws to incorporate all or most forms of human trafficking.


South America

  • Most of these countries have legislation specifically criminalizing human trafficking.
  • Argentina, Bolivia, Colombia, and Peru all have laws concerning mostly all forms of exploitation.
  • Brazil law only criminalizes commercial sexual exploitation, but forced labor can be prosecuted through other offenses.
  • Chile and Paraguay laws only criminalize international trafficking for commercial sexual exploitation.

21 April 2009

Central America and the Caribbean

  • Dominican Republic, El Salvador, Guatemala, and Nicaragua have at least criminalized commercial sexual exploitation and forced labor, with no age restrictions.
  • Remaining countries have no anti-trafficking legislation or only criminalized commercial sexual exploitation; but can use substituting laws to prosecute offenders.
  • Coast Rica criminalized international trafficking of women and children for commercial sexual exploitation and trafficking minors.

North America

  • United States adopted the Trafficking in Victims Protection Act in 2000.
  • Canada, after some amenmdents throug the years, now has Criminal Code covering all forms of human trafficking.
  • Mexico implemented anti-trafficking reforms, but this largely fell on comeptency of the states; 19 of the 31 states implemented anti-trafficking reforms.

20 April 2009

Southern Africa



  • Mozambique is the only country in the region with separate anti-trafficking legislation, with their Anti-Human Trafficking Act of 2008.

  • Zambian Criminal Code addresses human trafficking, but without providing any defintion.

  • South African Children's Bill only criminalizes the sexual exploitation of children.

  • Malawi has criminalized the exploitation of children, and is drafting anti-trafficking legislation.

  • While the majority of these countries lack anti-trafficking legislation, they all possess laws that can be substituted to prosecute human trafficking offenders.

18 April 2009

East Africa

  • Djibouti, Ethiopia, Eritrea, Rwanda, and Tanzania possess human trafficking legislation.
  • The remaining countries in this region are working on anti-trafficking legislation, and do possess past legislation that can be substituted to prosecute human trafficking offenders.

West and Central Africa

  • 5 Anglophone countries, Senegal, and Mauritania have criminalized at least commercial sexual exploitation and forced labor, with no age restrictions concerning the victims.
  • Benin, Burkina Faso, Gabon, Mali, and Togo have only criminalized child trafficking.
  • Chad, Cote d'Ivoire, Guinea, and Niger have no legislation addressing human trafficking, but all except Guinea are considering anti-trafficking laws.

17 April 2009

Middle East & North Africa Legislation

  • Bahrain, Israel, Oman, and the United Arab Emirates have included in their criminal laws the offense of trafficking in persons for the purposes of sexual exploitation or forced labor, with no specification as to the age of the victim.
  • Egypt criminalized child trafficking in June 2008.
  • Morocco includes human trafficking in its criminal code, but without any definition.
  • Sudan included human trafficking in its 2007 cyber crime legislation, but also without any definition.
  • Iraqi criminal codes specifies trafficking of women and children.

16 April 2009

Sex trade, forced labor top U.N. human trafficking list



CNN: UNITED NATIONS: Sexual exploitation and forced labor are the most common forms of human trafficking in the world, a new report from the U.N. Office on Drugs and Crime said.

The "Global Report on Trafficking in Persons" is based on data from 155 countries and offers a global assessment of human trafficking and efforts to fight it.

The most common form of human trafficking is sexual exploitation, at 79 percent, the report said. The victims of sexual exploitation are predominantly women and girls.

In about one-third of the countries that provided information on the gender of the traffickers, women made up the largest proportion of traffickers. In Central Asia and Eastern Europe, women make up more than 60 percent of those convicted of trafficking.

"In these regions, women trafficking women is the norm," said Antonio Maria Costa, the head of U.N. Office on Drugs and Crime. "It is shocking that former victims become traffickers. We need to understand the psychological, financial and coercive reasons why women recruit other women into slavery."

The second most common form of human trafficking is forced labor, or slavery, making up 18 percent of the total, although the writers of the report say it may be underreported.

"How many hundreds of thousands of victims are slaving away in sweat shops, fields, mines, factories, or trapped in domestic servitude?" Costa said. "Their numbers will surely swell as the economic crisis deepens the pool of potential victims and increases demand for cheap goods and services."

Regardless of the type of human trafficking, nearly one in five of its victims were children, according to the report.

"Children's nimble fingers are exploited to untangle fishing nets, sew luxury goods or pick cocoa," the report said. "Their innocence is abused for begging, or exploited for sex as prostitutes, pedophilia or child pornography. Others are sold as child brides or camel jockeys."

In a 2008 report on human trafficking, the U.S. State Department listed Kuwait, Oman, Qatar and Saudi Arabia as destination countries with widespread trafficking abuses, particularly forced laborers trafficked from Asia and Africa who are subject to restrictions on movement, withholding of passports, threats and physical and sexual abuse.

The report found those countries made feeble efforts to rescue victims and prosecute traffickers.

The department's report also says slave labor in developing countries such as Brazil, China and India was fueling part of their huge economic growth. Other countries on the blacklist were Algeria, Cuba, Fiji, Iran, Myanmar, Moldova, North Korea, Papua New Guinea, Sudan and Syria.

The U.N. Protocol Against Trafficking in Persons has been in place since 2003. The number of member states "seriously implementing" the protocol has doubled, according to the U.N. report. But it singled out Africa for lacking the necessary legal instruments and the will to crack down on human trafficking.

"There are strong international agreements to ensure that people's lives are not for sale," Costa said. "I urge governments to enforce them."

Police: Man sold teen daughter into marriage for cash, beer, meat


CNN: A California man sold his 14-year-old daughter to an 18-year-old man for cash, beer and meat -- then called police when the prospective bridegroom didn't live up to his end of the deal, authorities said Tuesday.

Marcelino de Jesus Martinez, 36, of Greenfield, California, was arrested Monday and booked into the Monterey County Jail, Greenfield police said in a statement. He faces felony charges of receiving money for causing a person to cohabitate, police said.

Martinez had arranged through a third party to have his daughter marry the older teenager, identified by authorities as Margarito de Jesus Galindo, of Gonzales, California. In exchange, Galindo was to pay Martinez $16,000 and provide him with 160 cases of beer, 100 cases of soda, 50 cases of Gatorade, two cases of wine, and six cases of meat, Greenfield Police Chief Joe Grebmeier told CNN.

All those involved in the case are from the western Mexican state of Oaxaca, the police chief said. In the Oaxacan community, such an agreement is "normal and honorable," he said. "In California, it's against the law." Watch for a list of the groceries dad reportedly wanted »

In Oaxacan culture, the food and beverages are provided by a prospective bridegroom for the wedding, Grebmeier said.

Authorities believe the young girl went with Galindo willingly, and no coercion was involved, he said. However, the girl is four years younger than California's age of consent, although the law does allow 16-year-olds to marry with parental consent.

"The 14-year-old juvenile moved in with Galindo and when payments were not received, the father, Martinez, called Greenfield PD to bring back the daughter," according to a written police statement.

The girl was reported as a runaway juvenile on December 18, Grebmeier said, and police took a missing-persons report and put out a flier.

But "as we investigated, it started to develop into something that may not have been a runaway," he said, and police began to believe Martinez wanted them to bring back his daughter, since he had received no payment.

On January 2, Galindo and the girl returned from a trip to Soledad, a town a few miles north of Greenfield, and were interviewed. Police learned the couple had never married, but had engaged in sexual relations, Grebmeier said.

Galindo and Martinez were neighbors at an apartment complex and were apparently from the same area in Mexico, the police chief said. A third party was brokering the marriage deal, he said, and is cooperating with authorities. But the young couple apparently left for Soledad before the negotiations were complete.

Martinez was arrested Sunday after undergoing additional questioning by police, Grebmeier said. He remained jailed Tuesday.

Galindo was cited for statutory rape and released, Grebmeier said. The girl was returned to her family, he said, as authorities believe she is in no danger. However, police reported the case to child protection officials.

The Greenfield area has had a large influx of Oaxacans. A presentation on understanding Oaxacan culture is posted on the Greenfield police Web site.

"Arranged marriages are common in several cultures, and this is not an issue among consenting adults over the age of 18," police said in the statement. "But California has several laws regarding minors, the age of consent and human trafficking."

Police are trying to be culturally sensitive, Grebmeier told CNN, but "when I'm in Mexico, I have to respect Mexican laws. When you're in the United States, you have to respect United States laws. That's the bottom line."

He said he wanted to send a message to immigrant communities that such behavior is unacceptable. He said his department has long heard rumors of children as young as 12 being sold or offered for sale. The Greenfield police statement said arranged marriages between young girls and older men "have become a local problem."

Greenfield is about 140 miles southeast of San Francisco.

14 April 2009

Government Fights Slave Labor in Brazil


CNN: Slavery may seem like a quaint notion in a 21st century world, but that distinction is lost on up to 40,000 Brazilians who find themselves toiling for no real wages and can't leave the distant work camps where they live.

Brazilian government officials and human rights activists call it slave labor, a condition they are aggressively trying to eradicate. A special government task force established in 1995 says it freed 4,634 workers last year in 133 raids on large farms and businesses that rely on workers driven to take these jobs by hunger and the empty promises of labor recruiters.

"Slavery is the tail end of a lot of abuse of poor people and workers in Brazil," said Peter Hakim, president of the Inter-American Dialogue, a Washington-based policy center. "Bad treatment reaches over to abusive treatment to treatment that becomes virtual slavery."

In Brazil, it often works this way: A recruiter known as a "gato," or cat, plumbs the slums and other poor areas of the vast country and gets people to agree to jobs in distant places. Once separated from home and family, workers are vulnerable to all sorts of abuses, such as being told they owe money for transportation, food, housing and other services.

"This is known as debt bondage, which also fits official definitions of slavery," says Anti-slavery International, a lobbying group based in Great Britain. "A person is in debt bondage when their labor is demanded as the means of repayment for a loan or an advance. Once in debt they lose all control over their conditions of work and what, if anything they are paid ... often making it impossible to repay and trapping them in a cycle of debt."

The United Nations International Labour Organization estimated there were between 25,000 and 40,000 Brazilians working under such conditions in 2003, the latest year for which it offered figures.

Leonardo Sakamoto, the director of the human rights group Reporter Brasil, says he's certain there are still more than 25,000 slave laborers in Brazil.

According to Anti-slavery International, the greatest number of slave laborers is employed in ranching (43 percent). That's followed by deforestation (28 percent), agriculture (24 percent), logging (4 percent) and charcoal (1 percent). Though those figures are from 2003, Sakamoto says they still apply, with cattle ranches and sugar cane plantations among the top employers.

Anti-slavery International estimates there are 12.3 million people working under such conditions worldwide.

"Forced labor exists in Sudan, Nepal, India, Mauritania as well as many wealthier countries (including the UK), where vulnerable people are trafficked into forced labor or sexual slavery," the group says. "A similar situation to the use of forced labor on estates in Brazil can be found in the Chaco region of both Paraguay and Bolivia."

But what may set Brazil apart are the government's attempts to wipe out the practice. One of Brazil's chief tools is a "Special Mobile Inspection Group" that consists of labor inspectors, federal police and attorneys from the federal labor prosecution branch. The group often raids workplaces, looking for abuses and laborers held against their will.

In 2007, the task force freed 5,999 workers, a record number. In 2003, the agency freed 5,223 laborers.

Since the group's inception in 1995, it has freed 33,000 people.

Labor Minister Carlos Lupi vowed in a recent interview with the state-run Brazilian news agency that efforts will be stepped up this year.

"The Brazilian government is to be commended for rescuing more than 4,500 people from the nightmare of slavery during the past year," Aidan McQuade, director of Anti-Slavery International, said in a statement to CNN.

"Their commitment to step up their efforts in 2009 is even more heartening. The vocal and effective leadership we are seeing from Brazil is rare. Even India, like Brazil a democracy and a G20 member, seems content to remain the country with the most slaves in the world."

Poverty fuels slave labor, experts say

But everyone agrees it's going to take more than police efforts to seriously dent the practice.
"Slave labor is not a disease," Sakamoto said. "It's like a fever. Fever is a symptom that something is wrong."

That something is widespread poverty.

Although the poverty rate dropped recently to its lowest levels in 25 years, nearly one of every four Brazilians still lives in poverty, according to a 2006 survey by the Getulio Vargas Foundation's Center for Social Policy Studies. The Web-based Index Mundi, which says it obtains its figures from the CIA World Factbook, estimates the poverty rate could be as high as one of every three Brazilians.

With a population approaching 200 million people, that means at least 49 million Brazilians live under squalid economic conditions.

"We have poverty. We have greed. And we have impunity," Sakamoto said. "We have to fight these three pieces at the same time. We have been fighting against impunity and we have been fighting against greed, but we are just starting to fight against poverty."

The situation is made worse because of Brazil's vastness -- about the size of the United States.

"Brazil is a big, huge country and there are lots of poor people," said Hakim of the Inter-American Dialogue. "The farther you get away from the populated, industrialized areas, you'll find large populations of people who do whatever they can to make a living."

And slave labor seems to be spreading.

"We are discovering new occurrences of slave labor in regions where we hadn't registered slave labor in Brazil," the Rev. Xavier Plassat of the Catholic Pastoral Land Commission told the independent Radioagencia NP.

Opposition to laws

By most accounts, the administration of President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva, who took office in 2003, has done much to reduce poverty and fight slave labor. But Brazil's agricultural, mining and manufacturing sectors are large and well-developed. And they are politically powerful.

"We have a very, very strong agribusiness sector," Sakamoto said. "It is very, very difficult to get other measures to fight against slave labor."

For example, he said, a proposed law for the government to confiscate land on which slave labor is used has languished in congress for years.

"There's a group of very strong congressmen fighting against it," said Sakamoto, who is also a member Brazil's National Commission for the Eradication of Slave Labor.

There are those who object to use of the word "slavery" or the phrase "slave labor," saying it mischaracterizes the situation.

"The word has very heavy connotations regarding 19th century slavery," said Latin America scholar Robert Pastor, a former National Security adviser to President Jimmy Carter and now a professor of international relations at American University in Washington. "Modern-day practices are quite distinct from what we normally thought of as slavery."

But Pastor agrees that no matter what you call it, what is happening in Brazil and elsewhere is "a phenomenon that is based on a simple intent to exploit individuals."

Paulo Sotero, director of the Brazil Institute at the Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars, also believes that calling the practice slavery overstates the case.

"To use the word 'slave labor' sometimes does not describe what it is," Sotero said from Washington. "It's more unfair, abusive labor conditions."

He points out that Brazil's sugar cane industry employs 900,000 people but only 4,000 Brazilians were freed last year for being held as slave laborers. Many businesses, he said, are being smeared by the bad actions of a few.

"One case of slave labor is one too many," Sotero said. "But at the same time, some of their considerations are valid. Claims of abuse tend to be exaggerated and more general than they are."

13 April 2009

Statistics

Human trafficking ranks second after drug trafficking in international crime, generating $9.5 billion annually.

  • About 600,000 - 800,000 men, women, and children are trafficked internationally each year; with about 1-2 million new victims of human trafficking annually.

  • At least 30 million victims of human trafficking today; possibly 80% of those being women and possibly 50% of slavery victims being children.

  • About 246 million children are victims of child labor annually.

  • More than 200,000 children are at high risk of commercial sexual exploitation annually in the U.S.

09 April 2009

Special Cases


Trafficking in Persons Report 2008:

The following areas are special cases for human trafficking. These governments all need to take the steps to enact anti-human trafficking legislation, enforce the statutes, and provide better protection for the victims of human trafficking.

The Bahamas may be experiencing a labor trafficking problem as there is a significant number of undocumented migrants present. It may be a transit and destination spot for men, women, and children trafficked for froced labor and commercial sexual exploitation purposes.

Barbados remains a special case for lack of data on human trafficking, though they have shown effort through prosecuting some trafficking suspects and taking preventive action. It may be a transit and destination spot for men, women, and children trafficked for forced labor and sexual commercial exploitation. A national trafficking concern is that families are facilitating the trafficking of children for what they falsely believe will be better opportunities for their children.

Botswana is also lacking reliable data. Most of this country is uneducated, and does not understand what human trafficking involves. More needs to be done here through the government and non-governmental organizations (NGOs) to raise awareness and educate the people. It may be a transit point to South Africa, as well as a source and destination for men, women, and children trafficked for forced labor and commercial sexual exploitation purposes. Impoverished families will often give their children up to what they believe are better opportunities, but the children rarely receive or are treated they way the parents were promised.

Brunei lacks relevant data, but the volume of legal migrant workers suggests a possible problem with domestic servitude. It is a destination spot for legal migrants, who may occassionally be forced into involuntary servitude, or prostitution for women.

Haiti remains in area of concern as it is the least developed country in the Western Hemisphere, still a country of political transition from the strife it has seen in this decade. It is a source, transit, and destination spot for men, women, and children being trafficked for forced labor and commerical sexual exploitation purposes. As an impoverished country, family's often sell their children to what they think will be a better life for them, but is actually a severe form of human trafficking.

Iraq has remained in political transition for six consecutive years now, and it is hoped their government's effort to combat human trafficking may be assessed in the next report. Evidence shows Iraq remains a source and destination for men and women trafficked for commerical seuxal exploitation and involuntary servitude. Children are also trafficked national and transnationally for commercial sexual exploitation.

Kiribati is lacking hard data, but information seems to suggest a small scale human trafficking problem exists in the commercial sexual exploitation of underage girls for local and foreign fishing vessels.

Kosovo is listed in this report for its lack of an effective government for most of the reporting period. It remains a source, transit, and destination spot for the trafficking of women and children nationally and transnationally for commercial sexual exploitation.

Lesotho lacks significant data, but it is believed it may be a source, and transit country to South Africa for small numbers of women and children trafficked for forced labor and commercial sexual exploitation. Children may be trafficked nationally for the purposes of cattle herding, domestic servitude, and commercial sexual exploitation.

Namibia lacks reliable data, but it is believed to be a source and destination spot for for trafficked children. Although largely traffciked for prostitution, children are trafficked nationally for domestic servitude, cattle herding, forced agriculture, and possibly vending purposes.

Palau may be a destination for small scale commercial sexual exploitation and involuntary servitude once migrants have relocated here. The magnitude is unknown due to the lack of data.

Solomon Islands may be a destination spot for Southeast Asian women trafficked for commercial sexual exploitation. Women and children may also be trafficked nationally for commercial sexual exploitation, but the data is unclear and lakcing.

Somalia lacks a central government, making it difficult to obtain reliable data. It is believed to be a source, transit, and destination point for various kinds of trafficking of men, women, and children. Nationally, certain Somalian groups viewed as inferior may be forced into involuntary servitude, women and children may be forced into commercial sexual exploitation, and children may be forced into armed militias. This country is also faced with the problem of families putting their children into the trafficking arena. Somali women are trafficked to the Middle East for forced labor and commercial sexual exploitation purposes. Somali men are often trafficked to the Gulf States for forced labor. Somali children have been trafficked to Djibouti, Malawi, and Tanzania for commercial sexual exploitation and exploitative child labor purposes. Somalia remains a transit country for women trafficked to the Middle East for forced labor and commercial sexual exploitation, and men trafficked for forced labor on fishing boats off the Somalian coast.

Swaziland lacks reliable data, and remains uneducated about the complexities and severity of human trafficking. It is a source, transit, and possible destination spot for women and children trafficked for forced labor and commercial sexual exploitation purposes. Women and girls may be trafficked to South Africa and Mozambique for domestic servitude and commercial sexual exploitation, and boys for forced agriculture and vending. Mozambican women may be victims of commercial sexual exploitation, or being trafficked to South Africa; the boys may be working low-skilled jobs, but were probably victims of trafficking.

Tonga lacks any relevant or reliable data, but some isolated reports show small scale trafficking of women and girls for commercial sexual exploitation, and some instances of forced labor.

Tunisia lacks substantial data, but it is a transit country for North and sub-Saharan Africans migrating to Europe, who may be victims of trafficking for commercial sexual exploitation or domestic servitude. It may be a source of national child trafficking for commercial sexual exploitation and domestic servitude.

Turkmenistan is not listed in the report due to insufficient data, but it is believed to be a source country for women trafficked for domestic servitude and commercial sexual exploitation, men trafficked transnationally for forced labor purposes, and women trafficked nationally for commercial sexual exploitation and involuntary servitude.

08 April 2009

Major Federal Anti-Trafficking Law Passed

December 10, 2008: Polaris Project: The Trafficking Victims Protection Act (TVPA), which first became law in 2000, represents the first major comprehensive U.S. legislative effort to address modern-day slavery. Congress recently passed new legislation with important provisions and amendments that strengthen the U.S. government's efforts to combat human trafficking in the United States and abroad. www.state.gov/documents/organization/10492.pdf for TVPA.


07 April 2009

The Destination (after China)

BBC: People travel the world looking for work. They get into debt in order to cross borders and continents in the hope of earning better money in a new country.In Florida, around the town of Immokalee, workers from Guatemala, Mexico and Haiti pick tomatoes and oranges, working for contractors who sell the produce on to the big fast food and retail companies.Having paid to cross the border, they then pay again to get a ride to Florida where the work is. Before they get to work they are already in debt.Once they arrive they live in appalling conditions. Laura Germino, who works for the Coalition of Immokalee Workers, a local grass roots union, told BBC World Service of a local labour camp, with its rows of trailers, people living 12 to 14 in a trailer."They really have nothing in them, no furniture, just a few burners and minimal bath facilities. They are so hot inside they are like a cauldron."It's a harsh life. "You pick all day long, as much as you can for 40 cents a bucket, which is the same price as they paid in 1978," Germino said. Wages are so low in Florida you have to pick two tonnes of tomatoes to earn US$50."And then you get home and have to wait in line for the burners, wait in line to eat, wait in line for a shower, and then you sleep in this hot tin box."For the trailer, the hot tin box, the workers will pay between then a rent as high as US$1,200 a month, the sort of money that would get you a decent apartment in a better area. But they have no choice about where they live - they have to be near the contractors' buses, and that means the trailer camp."These are sweatshops in the fields," Laura Germino said. "You don't have to move your factory to a third world country. The people come here to you." The reality is there is precious little left at the end of the week to send home and little to live on.Professor Peter Kwong lives and works in New York. He has studied his local immigrant Chinese community at first hand."They are getting very low wages so they have to save everything they have to pay off their debts. They live in dormitories, six, seven, eight, nine people in one room, eating the most simple meals, working 12 or 14 hours a day, seven days week throughout the year."The going rate for being smuggled into America from China is US$50,000 or more. "This very large illegal immigrant community provides a space for organised crime to survive. In other words, not only involving human smuggling, but also enforcement - making sure people pay their debts.""The tendency now is to borrow, either in the US or in mainland China at very high interest rates. US$50,000 can take four or five years to pay off, but with the very high interest rates it takes much longer."In families, both parents work very long hours and the children are often sent back to China to be brought up by their grandparents. "We are talking about very traumatic family circumstances in many of these illegal families," Professor Kwong said.Separated families, debts, violence are now the hallmarks of many communities.But though there is much concern about human smuggling and trafficking, Peter Kwong believes there is an ambivalent attitude within Government and business, certainly in the United States."The American economy is very much dependent on labour from illegal workers. Without them there is no agriculture, no garment industry or domestic service. So from the economic side, from the business community there is no incentive for the Government to restrict illegal immigration," he said."Employers like them because [they are] cheap, not just in wages, but in benefit costs and they are unprotected by labour laws. So they are very vulnerable. The employers simply exploit them."

The Route from China


BBC: On 18 June 2000 a lorry was stopped at the port of Dover, UK. When the door was opened, two men staggered out. They were the only survivors of a consignment of people from China. Fifty-four men and four women died.Earlier that day they had been packed into the container lorry, tomatoes had been piled in front to conceal their presence. The lorry driver then closed the only air vent to make sure that no noise would be heard from the lorry."The majority were young people, 19 to 29 years old," said Detective Superintendent Denis McGookin, the police officer in charge of the investigation."But some were much older. These were probably minders employed by the snakeheads to keep the others under control during the journey."The survivors were able to tell their story to the police. Each had paid £20,000 to travel to the UK. The journey was a long and tortuous one, organised by local groups known as snakeheads in China."They started off by having ordinary Chinese passports," said DS McGookin."They flew from Fujian to Beijing. They were met by other snakeheads who flew them on to Belgrade. There they were stripped of their Chinese passports and given forged South Korean ones."The journey continued by plane from Belgrade to Hungary and Paris, and then by train to Belgium, and into Holland. There they were taken to warehouses in Rotterdam, rested for a short time and then loaded into the container.It is a well travelled route. But according to Whah Piow Tan, a London solicitor who is himself a political refugee from Singapore, the idea that this is the work of highly organised criminal gangs is overstated. "Snakehead is a generic term used to describe those who lead economic migrants out of China. It is not necessarily organised crime. The organised part is arranging the false passports."He told how family members and others who have already travelled the route and have the contacts, set up travel agencies or some other shop front and organise the journey.He added that people will travel whatever the price, whatever the risk, and the only way to stamp it out is to take a more liberal attitude to allowing such workers into Europe or America."They will not stop leaving China. They have been leaving for 100 years. This tragedy did not discourage them, but it will make them more cautious in checking out which syndicate they use," he said."By the time this incident took place many thousands were already in Italy, Hungary, and Eastern Europe - waiting to come to the UK or the United States."But what about the families of the 58 who died? The police have a video following their investigation into the deaths. The scenes in the lorry are tragic, bodies tumbled about; half dressed, strewn around with boxes of red tomatoes.There is another clip, taken in China. Families have gathered to identify the dead.Some are giving blood samples for DNA testing. Others are being shown packs of photographs - the last record of their son or daughter, sister or brother - ghostly photos taken where the bodies were laid out in the Dover port customs shed. Their grief is overwhelming.For the police it was a successful investigation. The driver of the lorry, Perry Wacker, was arrested on the spot and sent to prison for 14 years for manslaughter.He claimed he only knew about a consignment of tomatoes. But the same DNA tests which helped the police identify the dead helped convict Wacker. DNA linked him to the warehouse where the Chinese immigrants were held before being loaded on to the container.