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."