Showing posts with label human trafficking. Show all posts
Showing posts with label human trafficking. Show all posts

Wednesday, January 13, 2010

HUMAN TRAFFICKING - THE "S" WORD

By Debbie Bulloch



This past Monday, January 11, 2010, California, along with other states in the Union, commemorated Human Trafficking Awareness Day with a Proclamation by Governor Schwarzenegger. This modern-day form of slavery forces 12.3 million adults and children each year according to the United Nations. Sadly, California is not exempt from this terrible crime.

California is a top destination for victims as they are lured to our beautiful communities with promises of good jobs, education and a fresh start. When they arrive, they instead find themselves trapped in forced labor with little or no wages or forced prostitution under threat of harm to themselves or their family members. They are also made to fear being deported or sent to prison or severe reputational and financial harm that make victims feel they have no choice but to continue in service. The recent global financial crisis has highlighted two disturbing concurrent trends: a shrinking global demand for labor and a growing supply of workers willing to take even greater risks for economic opportunities.

WHAT IS HUMAN TRAFFICKING

In a previous blog post, I wrote about human trafficking ( Human Trafficking ). To recap, human trafficking is a form of modern-day slavery. Victims of human trafficking are young children, teenagers, men and women. Victims of human trafficking are subjected to force, fraud, or coercion, for the purpose of sexual exploitation or forced labor.

After drug dealing, trafficking of humans is tied with arms dealing as the second largest criminal industry in the world, and is the fastest growing.

Many victims of human trafficking are forced to work in prostitution or the sex entertainment industry. But trafficking also occurs in forms of labor exploitation, such as domestic servitude, restaurant work, janitorial work, sweatshop factory work and migrant agricultural work.

Modern Slavery – Human Trafficking




Traffickers use various techniques to instill fear in victims and to keep them enslaved. Some traffickers keep their victims under lock and key. The more frequent practice, however, is to use less obvious techniques including:

• Debt bondage - financial obligations, honor-bound to satisfy debt.

• Isolation from the public - limiting contact with outsiders and making sure that any contact is monitored or superficial in nature.

• Isolation from family members and members of their ethnic and religious community.

• Confiscation of passports, visas and/or identification documents.

• Use or threat of violence toward victims and/or families of victims.

• The threat of shaming victims by exposing circumstances to family.

• Telling victims they will be imprisoned or deported for immigration violations if they contact authorities.

• Control of the victims' money, e.g., holding their money for "safe-keeping."

If victims attempt to seek help, they often don’t know where to turn. Fortunately, there are organizations that can help such as the Bilateral Safety Corridor Coalition (www.bsccoalition.org), the National Human Trafficking Resource Center (www.acf.hhs.gov/trafficking) and the U.S. Department of Justice Trafficking Information and Referral Hotline (888-373-7888).

Ten Facts About The “S” Word



Here are some additional facts about human trafficking that may surprise you:

THINGS TO KNOW ABOUT HUMAN TRAFFICKING

1. The average cost of a slave around the world is $90.

2. Trafficking primarily involves exploitation, which comes in many forms, including:

• Forcing victims into prostitution
• Subjecting victims to slavery or involuntary servitude
• Compelling victims to commit sex acts for the purpose of creating pornography
• Misleading victims into debt bondage

3. According to some estimates, approximately 80% of trafficking involves sexual exploitation, and 19% involves labor exploitation.

4. It is estimated that there are approximately 27 million slaves around the world.

5. Between 2001 and 2005, 140 defendants have been convicted of human trafficking in the U.S. which is a 109% increase from 1996-2000.

6. Around half of trafficking victims in the world are under the age of 18.

7. More than 2/3 of sex trafficked children suffer additional abuse at the hands of their traffickers.

8. Trafficked children are significantly more likely to develop mental health problems, abuse substances, engage in prostitution as adults, and either commit or be victimized by violent crimes later in life.

9. Women who have been trafficked for the purpose of sexual exploitation experience a significantly higher rate of HIV and other STDs, tuberculosis, and permanent damage to their reproductive systems.

10. There is only one shelter in the U.S. designed specifically to meet the needs of trafficking victims, and it currently only houses a total of seven to nine victims.

11. Trafficking victims normally don't get help because they think that they or their families will be hurt by their traffickers, or that they will be deported.

WHERE WE STAND

At Between Home, we condemn the ugly and inhumane practice of human trafficking. We pledge ourselves to do all we can to prevent it. Raising awareness is the first step; there is, however, much more work to be done.

THINGS WE CAN DO

For more information on what you can to do to help prevent, and eventually eradicate, human trafficking, please click on the following links.

In Second Life, please go to the excellent exhibit put on by Abbey Zenith and Rolig Loon at Info Land.

Human Trafficking Exhibit & Experience Info Island

Opening January 11th at 6 PM SLT (Second Life Time)

Human Trafficking Exhibit and Experience

This multi-media exhibit will allow visitors to learn about the dark underworld where people are bought and sold, living lives as abused and dehumanized slaves. The United Nations Inter-Agency Project on Human Trafficking reports that this criminal activity is second only to drug trafficking. No region of the world, no race, no gender, no age group is beyond the reach of traffickers. This exhibit serves to provide information about human trafficking, but also places the visitor inside this world to experience a small sampling of the hardships faced by victims.

Outside SL, please check these links:

Human Trafficking

Not For Sale

End Human Trafficking

Together, we can work to make the world a safer, healthier and saner world for the million of men, women and children who still suffer under the yoke of slavery.

Peace!

Wednesday, September 30, 2009

HUMAN TRAFFICKING

By Debbie Bulloch




If you do a search in Second Life (SL) search using terms such as “slave,” “master,” “slavery,” “kidnapping,” or “force” you will probably get hundreds, if not thousands of hits. In your search results you will find SL sites catering to all sorts of slave-master roleplaying sims, you will find stores selling slave-master paraphernalia as well as “auction houses” where avatars are freely bought, exchanged, rented or sold.

The ready-availability of slave-master activities in SL parallels similar availability in Real Life (RL). If you do a Google search using the terms described above you will find thousands of websites catering to the fans of slave-master/BDSM. Some of the activity depicted on these sites is clearly consensual and it involves nothing more than people exploring a side of their personalities. Others, however, are far more sinister and do not appear to be of a consensual nature.

The recent case of Jaycee Lee Dugar the California girl who was kidnapped at age 11and then forced to spend the next 18 years of her life as the sex slave of convicted sex offender Phil Garrido, has sparked renewed focus on the subject of sexual slavery and human trafficking. Although Jaycee was abused “only” by her kidnapper (and “only” in this context is a very relative term), thousand of other girls face a far worse fate as modern-day victims of human trafficking.

The United Nations defines human trafficking as the recruitment, transportation, transfer, harboring, or receipt of persons by improper means (such as force, abduction, fraud, or coercion) for an improper purpose including forced labor or sexual exploitation.

The U.S. Government defines human trafficking as:

• Sex trafficking in which a commercial sex act is induced by force, fraud, or coercion, or in which the person induced to perform such act has not attained 18 years of age.

• The recruitment, harboring, transportation, provision, or obtaining of a person for labor or services, through the use of force, fraud, or coercion for the purpose of subjection to involuntary servitude, peonage, debt bondage, or slavery.

This modern slave trade is a threat to all nations. A grave human rights abuse, it promotes breakdown of families and communities, fuels organized crime, deprives countries of human capital, undermines public health, creates opportunities for extortion and subversion among government officials, and imposes large economic costs.

Human trafficking is a largely hidden crime that has only recently gained the attention of law enforcement, human rights advocates, and policymakers.

Research conducted by United States Department of Justice has uncovered several key findings:

• Source countries for human trafficking often have poor economies; women are often unemployed and victims are easy to recruit.

• Most traffickers are the same nationality as their victims and usually have no criminal records.

• Trafficking victims are most likely to be young and reasonably healthy people from poor, but not necessarily the poorest, backgrounds.

• Recruitment is particularly effective when traffickers rely on victims whom they have turned into loyal enforcers or recruiters. Recruitment is also effective when the potential victim's family members are involved.

• In the United States, law enforcement agencies reported encountering more female (81 percent) than male (18 percent) victims. When victims were asked what type of trafficking was represented in their cases, the majority indicated forced prostitution, followed by domestic servitude, and agricultural labor. Whether this is the result of trafficking trends or training is not yet clear.

At Between Homes (BH) we are firmly opposed to any and all forms of human trafficking and slavery. This includes any form of real or imagined slavery or human trafficking in RL or SL. We are morally and philosophically against any kind of activity where humans (or their avatars) are abused, mistreated, humiliated or treated as chattels.

All humans (and by extension their SL avatars) are created equal and are each endowed with a soul. Slavery is the very antithesis of equality; it has a corrosive effect on the soul of the slave as well as the soul of the so-called master. Humans are not chattel, to be bought and sold at auctions; humans are not mindless automatons to be kept down on bent knees; and humans are definitely not put on this world (SL or RL) to be beaten and abused. This is as true in a virtual environment such as SL as it is in RL.

We understand that many treat SL as a game, where people can play out fantasy scenarios (I leave it up to each of you to decide for yourselves whether fantasizing about enslaving other humans is right or wrong). Some, however, have a difficult time establishing the line of demarcation between reality and fantasy. I know, from talking to many of you, that there are individuals who are liable to take SL fantasies a tad too far, thus blurring the lines between what is real and what is not. When this happens, people are bound to get hurt – what may start out as a “walk on the wild side” can end up having disastrous effects on the physical, mental and spiritual well being of individuals.

At BH we stand for the proposition that slavery, real or virtual, is wrong. Accordingly, from this moment on, any sort of activities, simulated or otherwise, that may be directly or indirectly related to human trafficking or slavery will no longer be permitted at BH. Anyone caught participating in these types of activities while on BH property will be summarily evicted and permanently banned from the group.

There are plenty of sites in SL where these activities are not only tolerated but are actually actively encouraged. We cannot control what the rest of SL does; we can, however, control what happens within the limits of our small community.

Our aim is not offend those who may find pleasure in these types of activities. I know many persons, and their SL avatars, who engage in the consensual exploration of slave-master and BDSM scenarios. We do not wish to interfere with the right of adults who engage in consensual activity – we do not aspire to becoming the thought police. Too many of our sisters, however, are the real victims of real human trafficking. We cannot stand silently by while our sisters (and brothers) suffer unspeakable abuse. It is in solidarity with their RL plight that we have made the decision to ban all slave-master/BDSM activity from Between Homes.

Thank you for your understanding and cooperation.