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US-Sponsored Conference
Seeks to End Human Trafficking
Sabina
Castelfranco
Rome
23 Jun 2004, 15:49 UTC
Trafficking
people across international frontiers is a growing problem.
Experts say the practice is motivated by two factors: demands
for exploitable labor and a predatory global sex industry.
Experts on human trafficking say no country is immune to the
problem, and some of them do too little to combat it. Younger
women and children are in growing demand by the sex industry,
and people are crossing from one continent to the next to fill
poorly paid jobs.
The co-executive director of the Coalition Against Trafficking
in Women, Dorchen Leidholdt, says human trafficking is driven
by the huge demand of the sex industry, and curbing the demand
is key to reducing the supply.
"Demand is the weak link in the sex industry chain,”
Ms. Leidholdt said. “There is no question about that.
Unlike the women and girls in prostitution, the men and boys
who buy women and girls in prostitution have choices to make.
They very often have standing in their communities, they have
families, they are very responsive to that bright light exposing
their activities, to stigma and shame, and if they are subjected
to criminal sanctions, we are going to see demand dropping and
that is going to make a big difference. It means that fewer
women and girls are going to be subjected to this horrible form
of slavery."
Ms. Leidholdt spoke at a recent conference at Rome's Gregorian
University organized by the U.S. Embassy to the Vatican.
She says pornography and the promotion of the sex industry have
increased with advances in technology and the Internet, which
makes information readily available to consumers and permits
instant and nearly undetectable transactions.
The chair of Women's Studies at the University of Rhode Island,
Donna Hughes, says more than half the victims trafficked internationally
fall prey to the commercial sex trade. She, too, agrees enforcement
must concentrate on the demand side of the human-market equation.
"The most effective way to combat the problem is to criminalize
the demand, that is to make buying a sex act a crime, that is
to criminalize pimping of women, it means criminalizing brothel-keeping,
criminalizing trafficking of women, the recruiting of them and
bringing them into countries for prostitution. All of those
activities have to be criminalized," Ms. Hughes explained.
Ms. Hughes says trafficking occurs because criminals take advantage
of poverty, unemployment and a desire for better opportunities.
She says the trade is flourishing because the criminal organizations
are getting away with it and making a lot of money.
She told the conference human trafficking could not take place
without the complicity of corrupt governments.
"Corruption of government officials and police is necessary
for trafficking and exploitation of large numbers of women and
children,” Ms. Hughes. “In sending countries large-scale
operations require collaboration of officials to obtain travel
documents and facilitate the exit of women. In destination countries,
corruption is an enabler for prostitution and trafficking."
Ms. Hughes says some governments' indifference to the problem
contributes to the growth of demand for child pornography and
prostitution.
The United States keeps track of countries that do too little
to combat human trafficking. Among the 10 worst countries are
Equatorial Guinea, Sierra Leone, Sudan, Bangladesh, Burma, Ecuador,
and Venezuela.
In its most recent report on the subject, the State Department
said several European and former Soviet republics have stepped
up their efforts to curb the illicit human trade. They include
Bosnia-Herzegovina, Georgia, Kazakhstan, Turkey, and Uzbekistan.
Ms. Leidholdt says the underground nature of human trafficking
makes it very difficult to get accurate numbers about just how
many people are involved.
"In terms of numbers of victims, the United Nations says
four million people are trafficked annually. Interpol has estimated
that traffickers reap $19 billion a year. The numbers are huge
and the numbers are growing," Ms. Leidholdt added.
Ms. Leidholdt says one country that must be held up as an example
of how trafficking should be combated is Sweden, where in the
mid-1990s officials recognized that the way to cut down on the
lucrative human-trafficking activity is to reduce the demand.
The Swedish government eliminated criminal penalties against
women and girls in prostitution and improved services for their
rehabilitation, while at same time imposing severe penalties
on traffickers and buyers. It also carried out an intense public
education campaign to inform the public about the dangers of
human trafficking.
Ms Leidholdt says the result was a dramatic drop in prostitution
and a significant decline in sex trafficking. She says other
countries should do the same.
The United Nations says human trafficking is the third-largest
criminal enterprise worldwide, and urges governments to intensify
their efforts to put traffickers of human beings out of business.
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