Spotlight: Sex Trade/Human Trafficking
Israeli-Canadian Women
Trafficking Ring Busted. [ |
Belize
Not Doing Enough to Stop Human Trafficking. [Belize] Belize has been black listed by
the U.S. State Department as one of the countries that is not doing enough to crack down
on human trafficking. The largest Caribbean island Cuba, is among the countries along with
Venezuela, Saudi Arabia, Myanmar, Iran, Laos, North Korea, Sudan, Syria, Uzbekistan and
Zimbabwe. The piece says Cuba is a source country for women and children trafficked
for the purpose of sexual exploitation and forced child labour and the island is a major
destination for sex tourism. Speaking with the media on Wednesday Prime Minister
Said Musa questions the irony of Belize being on the list of smuggling nations along side
Venezuela when only a few weeks ago Belize received a $25M loan from the same country. The
Embassys Political Officer Brian DaRin, cautions that Belizes rank as tier 3
has absolutely nothing to do with its relationship with any other country. Its
solely about the action or in this case inaction of the government to crack down on human
trafficking. He adds, the Belize Immigration Department is tasked with releasing an
annual report on trafficking in Belize and it should have been in December however, it was
not done. |
Women's Groups Target Forced Prostitution at World Cup. [Germany] Fearing that the World Cup football would draw a lot of sex workers, women in Germany are taking a stand against forced prostitution at the tournament by setting up emergency hotlines, blowing whistles, and donning condom suits. The World Cup begins Friday and lasts one month. Women from Eastern Europe are expected to flock to Germany to provide services to the three million visitors anticipated to attend football's biggest event. It is unclear how many women from Eastern Europe are being lured into Germany with bogus promises. So far, police have no evidence that large numbers of them are being trafficked across the border. Nevertheless, citizens' initiatives, churches, politicians and footballers are all urging that prostitutes be treated properly. Some critics abroad have branded Germany as a 'cesspool of sin'. |
Protests Mount
over World Cup Sex Slaves. [Germany] The international campaign against sex-slave
trafficking in Germany at the World Cup is gaining momentum online, where one group has
generated a petition with 20,000 signatures of protesters outraged at the practice, and
other non-governmental organizations are offering aid for the exploited young women. Last
week U.S. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice described the fight against the forced sex
trade the "great moral calling of our time," as young women, kidnapped or lured
with false job offers from Ukraine, Hungary and Poland are forced to perform sex acts for
pay against their will. Rep. Chris Smith, R-N.J., long known for his pro-life stance, held
a hearing last week in which he noted that the German government facilitated the
prostitution rings, run by the criminal underworld, when it legalized the sex trade in
2002. Smith noted that at the World Cup, sex entrepreneurs have set up temporary wooden
cabins on the streets of Berlin, called "performance boxes," where the soccer
fans are cavorting with prostitutes, some as young as 14. Sites on the Internet advertise
even more elaborate brothels, including the storied four-story "Artemis,"
located near the Olympic Stadium, which Worldcupweb.com describes as "ready for the
hordes of mostly male soccer fans from around the world who are flooding the city. |
Disgrace of
the Women Trafficked into the Sex Trade. [EU] Amid the excitement of the World Cup,
spare a thought for the women trafficked into both
|
Mother
Forced to Work as Sex Slave to Pay Ransom for Son. [ |
Women 'Auctioned' at Airports. [England] Foreign women are being auctioned off for prostitution in public places in Britain such as airports, said the crown prosecution service (CPS) on Sunday. "Criminal activity at the UK's airports is on the increase," said the CPS's director in west London, Nazir Afzal. "We are now seeing slave auctions being held in public places at airports where brothel keepers are bidding for women destined for prostitution." A spokesperson for the CPS said one such auction was held recently in front of a cafe in the arrivals hall at Gatwick Airport, south of London. Other sales had taken place in the London airports of Heathrow and Stansted, and at other British airports, he said. The CPS, which hosts a conferenceon Monday on crime in airports, says the people to whom traffickers are selling the young women as they arrive in Britain, often come from eastern European countries. The most-recent government figures show that, five years ago, 1,400 women were working as prostitutes in quasi-slavery in Britain. |
Mayor Wants Brothels Kept From Cemeteries. [Australia] Brothels and cemeteries don't mix and should remain at least 660 feet apart, a local government official said Tuesday. Paul Pisasale, the mayor of Queensland state town of Ipswich, is part of a movement being led by the Urban Local Government Association to prevent brothels from being built near cemeteries. Prostitution is legal in Australia in limited circumstances. "There's a lot of families and services that are going on and the last thing you want is someone conducting a spiritual service and a cemetery reflection time for family and a brothel going on next door," he told the Australian Broadcasting Corp. radio on Tuesday. "It's totally inappropriate. There's a place for brothels and a place for cemeteries and we don't believe the two mix." |
10 Years for Enslaving Thai Women. [Australia] An Australian jury has found a 44-year-old Chinese-Australian woman, Wei Tang, guilty of possessing and using slaves at her brothel, called Club 417 in a Melbourne suburb. In the first such case in Australian history, Wei was sentenced to 10 years in jail under sexual servitude laws - in short, sex slavery. She must serve a minimum of six years. Tang had pleaded not guilty to the charges. The court heard five Thai women, who wanted to make money for a better life for themselves, were smuggled into Australia. Wei told them they had to pay off a A$45,000 (about 1.3 million baht) contract, working six days a week for no pay. They had to work a seventh day if they hoped to make pocket money. Judge Michael McInerney said the women were financially deprived and vulnerable, had no friends and feared immigration reprisals, so they stayed hidden. He said while they were not kept under lock and key, they were restrained by the insidious nature of their contract. They could not leave or run away as they had no money, no passport and limited English, Australian Associated Press reported. |
Women
Duped into Foreign Marriages. [Viet Nam] Thousands of Vietnamese women, most of them
poor and uneducated, are illegally leaving the country to marry foreigners, a senior
police official said on Saturday. Nguyen Viet Thanh, deputy head of the police under the
Ministry of Public Security, said he was not concerned with legitimate love
marriages with foreigners. But many of the so-called marriages are actually cases of human
trafficking in disguise. Those illegally leaving Vietnam and marrying foreigners
often fall prey to prostitution rings and are sometimes sold as commodities, said
Thanh who is attending a two-day meeting in Ho Chi Minh City that is looking at how to
toughen laws to prevent these marriages. There are cases in which a Vietnamese woman
has to be a wife for many members of the same family. She is treated very badly.
According to information presented at the conference that is being sponsored by the
Vietnams Womens Union, since 1998, nearly 87,000 Vietnamese women have married
foreigners. Of that number, 10,700 left the country illegally to do so. Vietnamese
nationals are free to travel abroad but if they plan to get married they must first
register. It is also illegal to leave on a tourist visa and not return. |
Treaties Urged For Women's
Rights. [Peru] Human rights activists and civic leaders in Latin America must work to
get international treaties at all levels to include protections for women's rights,
experts said Friday at a conference to promote female leaders in the region. International
treaties that guarantee these rights will help individual governments withstand pressure
from conservative forces inside their countries seeking to chip away at the gains women
have made in the past 20 years in civic life, former Mexican Foreign Minister Jorge
Castaneda told a group of more than 50 female leaders from across the hemisphere.
Castaneda, who resigned from President Vicente Fox's administration in 2003 over the
country's failure to reach a migration accord with the United States, recalled his
response to groups that sought to restrict women's rights. "I would say: 'What can I
do? I would be happy to get rid of the rights, but we already signed an international
treaty. My hands are tied,'" Castaneda said. Elaine Karp de Toledo, outgoing first
lady of Peru and an anthropologist, agreed. She said international collaboration is
especially key in the fight against human trafficking. "As the name trafficking
suggests, these people are extremely mobile, and we have to work together more," Karp
said. According to a 2006 report by the United Nations, an estimated 21 percent of human
traffickers are from Latin America. Conference participants said they were impressed by
newly elected Chilean President Michelle Bachelet's decision to make her Cabinet 50
percent female, but some voiced concern the policy could lead to a backlash. "When I
was seeing all those women, I was scared. I thought, 'They will have to succeed, otherwise
it will be very bad,'" said Danielle St. Lot, Haiti's former commerce, industry and
tourism minister. |
Female
Sex Workers Trapped in 'Abuse Cycle'. [ |
Human
Trafficking: the Modern Day Slave Trade. [World] Human trafficking is the recruitment
and transportation of people, usually to another country, by force or coercion, for the
purposes of exploitation, including forced labour and sexual exploitation. The trafficking
of women for sexual exploitation, and prostitution in particular, is a world wide problem,
sadly including the |
Trafficked
Women's Symptoms Akin to Torture Victims'. [World] Women and girls trafficked for
forced sexual or domestic work suffer post-traumatic stress on a par with torture victims,
researchers said on Wednesday. In one of the first studies of health problems of women who
have been trafficked, they found 95 percent had been physically or sexually abused and
nearly 40 percent had suicidal thoughts. "This research shows that women who have
been trafficked into sex work emerge with very severe pain and injuries and they show
psychological health problems that appear to be similar to those documented among victims
of torture," said Dr Cathy Zimmerman, the author of the report published by the |