my care2
make a difference

community & fun

groups

get together & make a difference

 
 
This thread is displayed with the most recent posts first.
 April 26, 2009 8:31 PM

UNICEF LAUDS FIRST-EVER CHILDREN’S RIGHTS LAW IN SOUTHERN SUDAN

New York, Apr 9 2009 1:10PM
The United Nations Children’s Fund (<"http://www.unicef.org/index.php">UNICEF) has hailed the first-ever law recognizing children’s rights launched today in Southern Sudan, extolling the Government for its efforts to create a society in which children can grow and develop to their full potential.

The Child Act, inaugurated today by President Salva Kiir of Southern Sudan, defines a child as any person under the age of 18 and requires the Government to recognize, respect and ensure the rights of children enshrined in the UN Convention on the Rights of the Child.

“This legislation is a major milestone in creating a protective environment in which children can enjoy their rights to health, education and other basic services, to access information, to express their views, and to be protected from abuse, neglect, exploitation and harm,” <"http://www.unicef.org/media/media_49248.html">said Peter Crowley, Director of Operations for UNICEF’s Southern Sudan Area Programme.

Under the new law, any community member who suspects that a child’s rights have been violated or are at risk must report the case to local authorities.

Additionally, parents must register their children’s births; protect them from neglect, discrimination, violence and abuse; provide them with good care and guidance; and ensure they receive a full-time education.

The Act explicitly bans acts such as the recruitment and use of children by armed forces and groups, torture and cruel treatment, including the use of corporal punishment in schools, jails and public institutions. It also criminalizes early marriage and the use of children for prostitution and pornography.

No child under the age of 12 can be held accountable for criminal acts and further cannot be arrested and imprisoned, states the new law, which sets up a restorative justice system for children above age 12 accused of crimes.

Discrimination against children on the basis of gender, race, age, religion, language, opinion, disability and HIV or other health status, among others, is outlawed by the Act.

For children living without their parents – either temporarily or permanently – it requires that they are provided with alternative family care in their community.

The new legislation also establishes an independent Children’s Commission, which must investigate reported violations and make recommendations on how to promote children’s rights.

 [ send green star]
 
 April 25, 2009 7:15 PM

BAN CALLS FOR GREATER EFFORTS TO PROTECT CHILDREN IN ARMED CONFLICT IN LATEST REPORT

New York, Apr 22 2009 7:10PM
Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon today called on the Security Council and judicial systems to step up action in the fight to end abuse of children in conflict zones around the world.

In his latest <"http://www.un.org/Docs/journal/asp/ws.asp?m=s/2009/158">report on the issue, the Secretary-General encourages national and international justice systems to take strong action ending impunity for crimes against children committed within their jurisdictions.

Among other recommendations aimed at halting violations committed against the young caught up in war zones and bolstering their protection, the Secretary-General urged the Security Council to put measures into place against repeat offenders.

“Accountability for perpetrators will create a sense of justice for the victims and it will also have a deterrence effect,” noted Radhika Coomaraswamy, Special Representative of the Secretary-General on Children and Armed Conflict.

“Persistent violators have to realize that their crimes will not remain unpunished,” she added.

The Secretary-General’s annual report to the Security Council explicitly lists in its annexes 56 parties, both State and non-State, who have committed grave violations against children, including 19 persistent violators who have been listed for more than 4 years.

The report covers compliance and progress in ending six grave violations against children caught up in armed conflict: the recruitment and use of children, killing and maiming of children, rape and other grave sexual violence, abductions, attacks on schools and hospitals, and denial of humanitarian access to children.

Noting that while progress has been made through plans to release child soldiers in several countries, such as in Burundi, the Central African Republic (CAR), Côte d’Ivoire, the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC) and Uganda, children continue to suffer in many conflicts.

The report also documents grave violations against children in 20 countries: Afghanistan, Burundi, CAR, Chad, Colombia, Côte d’Ivoire, DRC, Georgia, Haiti, Iraq, Lebanon, Myanmar, Nepal, Occupied Palestinian Territory and Israel, the Philippines, Somalia, Sri Lanka, Sudan, Thailand and Uganda.

Ms. Coomaraswamy stressed that the child protection community was waiting for a strong signal from the Security Council on its commitment to tackle the protection of children during armed conflict when it discusses the report on 29 April.

 [ send green star]
 
 November 09, 2008 9:58 PM

LEBANON NEEDS STRONGER LAWS AGAINST HUMAN TRAFFICKING, REVEALS UN REPORT

New York, Oct 20 2008 10:10AM
A new report commissioned by the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC) calls for strengthening laws and criminal justice mechanisms to combat human trafficking in Lebanon, a destination country for victims smuggled from Eastern European countries such as Moldova.

Only 60 cases involving victims of human trafficking are officially identified every year in Lebanon, according the report, which is the result of research conducted between 2005 and 2007 by Statistics Lebanon, a Beirut-based organization, in cooperation with the UN Children’s Fund (UNICEF).

These include cases that are either processed through the courts or through the national Complaints Office.

“There could be more, but we cannot responsibly estimate unknown numbers,” <"http://www.unodc.org/unodc/en/frontpage/lebanon-unodc-launches-report-on-trafficking.html">says Cindy Smith from the University of Baltimore, who assisted with the report.

A major difficulty in identifying victims is the lack of any law in the Lebanese penal code concerning human trafficking.

Of the 30 cases processed through the courts under existing crime legislation, such as kidnapping, offenders received a $350 fine and a jail sentence of less than six months.

Victims are also afraid to speak out, dreading retribution or stigmatization, and many just do not know their rights.

Following the release of the report, UNODC is working to help Lebanon and Moldova tackle the issue, including by jointly developing materials to assist victims, governments and non-governmental organization (NGO) workers.

Efforts also include informing Lebanese migration authorities on the rights of trafficked victims from Moldova, and providing potential victims with information on support and protection services they can access upon their return to Moldova.

At the same time, UNODC is working with the Lebanese Ministry of Justice to introduce human trafficking as a crime in the country’s penal code. “We expect to produce draft legislation by the end of the year before it is eventually submitted to Parliament,” says Renee Sabbagh, UNODC National Coordinator in Beirut.

 [ send green star]
 
 October 13, 2008 7:17 PM

From: Childlabour
To: ICFTU Child Labour Announcements
Sent: Friday, October 03, 2008 7:55 AM
Subject: Forced Labour video on youtube

Dear all,

You will find below the new ITUC video on Forced labour posted on the ITUC Youtube Channel. Please forward this to as many contacts as you have in your network. Thanks!

Normal quality English http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hzpsVLYmVds
High quality English
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hzpsVLYmVds&fmt=18

Normal quality French http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=R2Y-fhY5t-I
High quality French
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=R2Y-fhY5t-I&fmt=18

Normal quality Spanish http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3B7S7Pv8xIg
High quality Spanish
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3B7S7Pv8xIg&fmt=18

 [ send green star]
 
 August 23, 2008 10:29 PM

EFFORTS TO CURB CHILD EXPLOITATION MUST BE STEPPED UP, SAYS UN-BACKED GROUP

New York, Aug 20 2008 2:11PM
Further measures are necessary to curb child exploitation across East Asia and the Pacific, despite the recent positive steps taken to tackle the issue in the region, a United Nations-backed gathering said today.

“The region’s governments need to take their anti-exploitation efforts to another level and push through much tougher anti-child sex measures,” said Anupama Rao Singh, Regional Director for East Asia and the Pacific of the UN Children’s Fund (<"http://www.unicef.org/">UNICEF).

Hundreds of experts, government officials and activists from the region attended a two-day meeting in Bangkok organized by UNICEF, the UN Economic and Social Commission for Asia and the Pacific (<"http://www.unescap.org/unis/press/2008/aug/g36.asp">ESCAP) and the non-governmental organization (NGO) ECPAT International.

“While acts of commercial sexual exploitation are acts of violence as well as violations of human rights, they are not always treated as crimes,” said Shigeru Mochida, ESCAP’s Deputy Executive Secretary.

Participants conferred on setting goals to address child prostitution, trafficking, cyber crimes, and abuse in travel and tourism. Targets discussed included setting up child sex offender registries in every country to make sure abusers are monitored and prevented from travelling abroad, and stepping up Internet protections through such means as having more specific laws to criminalize all forms of child pornography.

The Bangkok gathering, which wrapped up yesterday, will be followed by the World Congress III against Sexual Exploitation of Children and Adolescents which will be held in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, in November. The three-day event is expected to draw over 3,000 people.

 [ send green star]
 
 July 23, 2008 5:50 PM

BAN CALLS PROTECTING CHILDREN IN ARMED CONFLICT A ‘MORAL CALL’

New York, Jul 17 2008 4:00PM
Protecting children in armed conflict is a moral issue, Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon stressed today, calling for increased action to safeguard young people caught up in violence.

“The protection of children in armed conflict is a litmus test for the United Nations and the Organization’s Member States,” Mr. Ban <"http://www.un.org/apps/sg/sgstats.asp?nid=3301">said told the Security Council in an open debate. “It is a moral call, and deserves to be placed above politics. It requires innovative, fearless engagement by all stakeholders.”

He noted that in the 12 years since the release of the landmark study on the impact of armed conflict on children by Graça Machel, international legal standards on the issue have been established.

The Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court (ICC) classifies recruiting children into fighting forces as both a war crime and a crime against humanity, while the UN International Labour Organization (ILO) has a convention calling child soldiering one of the worst forms of child labour.

The Secretary-General lauded the work of the Security Council to protect children, with resolutions having been adopted on six grave violations: abduction; sexual violence; child soldiers; killing and maiming; attacks on schools and hospitals; and denial of humanitarian access.

“Yet we have only begun to scratch the surface,” he said, voicing hope that the 15-member body would take further measures to address the problem.

In her address to the debate, which heard from dozens of speakers, Radhika Coomaraswamy, the Special Representative for Children and Armed Conflict, said that her recent visits to Iraq and Afghanistan have convinced her of the changing nature of warfare.

“The time has come for us to re-double our efforts in these regions, to renew our commitment to ensure that children will not be recruited or used as suicide bombers, that they will not be detained in military detention without due process which protects their vulnerability as minors, that their schools will not be attacked, that they or their families will not be collateral damage and that girl children will not be the targets of sexual violence or denied access to schools,” she said.

Over the past year, Ms. Coomaraswamy said, Member States have expressed their opinions that her Office should more closely assess the root causes of serious offenses against children, in particular the problem of children associated with armed groups.

Although in agreement with the need to understand the basis of conflict, she underlined that the Council should not be steered “away from its task of ensuring accountability for and fighting impunity of persistent and grave violators of children’s rights in situations of armed conflict, a task in which it has a supreme advantage over other organs of the United Nations, including the possibility of imposing targeted measures,” she said.

Also speaking at today’s debate was Assistant Secretary-General Edmond Mulet, who briefed the Council on measures that the Department of Peacekeeping Operations (DPKO) has taken on child protection.

Currently, the Department hosts more than 60 Child Protection Officers in seven missions around the world, with the provision of training on children’s rights being a top priority.

“We must strive to ensure an environment in which children’s rights are fully respected and their welfare is protected: a peaceful and just environment in which they can flourish and meaningfully contribute to their communities,” Mr. Mulet said.

“DPKO is contributing to these efforts through the very nature of its operations, which is to help societies begin to rise from the ashes of conflict and instability.”

 [ send green star]
 
ARTICLE ON CHILD LABOUR June 21, 2008 1:20 AM

The report cites UNESCO (Note 2) statistics showing that some 75 million children of primary school age were out of school in 2006, a reduction from 103 million in 1999. The report also acknowledges that the number of children involved in economic activities has been falling. In 2004 it was estimated there were some 20 million fewer economically active children aged 5-14 than there had been four years earlier. However there remained 191 million children aged 5-14 engaged in some kind of economic activity. Of this number 165 million were involved in child labour.

By examining how child labour affects main schooling indicators, the new ILO findings also strengthen the case for tackling child labour as a means of achieving education targets set in the UN Millennium Development Goals. The report notes that:

  • Child labour leads to reduced primary school enrolment and negatively affects literacy rates among youth.

  • There is strong evidence that when children combine school and work, as the number of hours in work increases, school attendance falls.

  • High levels of child labour are associated with lower performance on an Education Development Index, which measures a country’s performance on universal primary education, adult literacy, quality of education and gender parity.

  • There is a significant correlation between the levels of children’s economic activity and primary school repetition rates. Grade repetition often leads to children dropping out of school.

  • Rural working children and girls tend to be among the most disadvantaged. Girls often carry a double burden of work inside and outside the home, putting their schooling at risk.

    IPEC also said that at the level of secondary school, average attendance is just 46 per cent for boys and 43 per cent for girls, and in sub-Saharan Africa only one child in five attends secondary school.

    “On this World Day Against Child Labour the focus is on: Education - the right response to child labour”, Mr. Somavia said. “For too many children, particularly children of poor families across the world, the right to education remains an abstract concept, far from the reality of daily life. More than 70 million primary school aged children are not enrolled in school. Many of these and other out of school children start working at an early age, often well below the minimum age of employment. And when a family has to make a choice between sending either a boy or girl to school, it is often the girl who loses out.”

    Mr. Somavia called for an “educational dimension” in the struggle against child labour, saying “let us pledge to work together for education for all children at least to the minimum age of employment, education policies that reach out to child labourers and other excluded groups, properly resourced quality education and skills training and education for all children, and decent work for adults. I urge you to lend your voice and action to the worldwide movement against child labour”.

    As part of its efforts to strengthen action to tackle child labour by boosting access to education, the ILO is coordinating the work of an inter-agency partnership, the Global Task Force on Child Labour and Education for All, which brings together UN agencies, teachers, and civil society representatives, to strengthen measures to help child labourers. In addition, 12 UN agencies through the UN Inter-Agency Coordinating Committee on Human Rights Education (UNIACC) have issued a joint Statement for World Day which can be found at: http://www2.ohchr.org/english/issues/education.

    The ILO’s International Programme on the Elimination of Child Labour (IPEC) has activities in almost 90 countries worldwide. It works at the policy level, supporting development of legislative and policy frameworks to tackle child labour, as well as through programmes aimed at preventing and withdrawing children from child labour, and has developed a Global Action Plan to eliminate its worst forms – including hazardous work, commercial sexual exploitation, trafficking and all forms of slavery – by 2016.

    For more information on the campaign, see: http://www.ilo.org/childlabour08. Media can contact the ILO Department of Communication at +4122/799-7912. communication@ilo.org

  •  [ send green star]
     
     June 15, 2008 5:24 PM

    GREATER ACCESS TO EDUCATION KEY TO COMBATING CHILD LABOUR – UN

    New York, Jun 12 2008 10:00AM
    The United Nations is urging improved access to education as the right response to address the plight of the estimated 165 million children between the ages of 5 and 14 worldwide who are involved in child labour.

    “Despite global progress in many areas, it is unacceptable that so many children must still work for their survival and that of their families,” Juan Somavia, Director-General of the UN International Labour Organization (ILO), said today on the occasion of the World Day Against Child Labour.

    The ILO’s International Programme on the Elimination of Child Labour (IPEC) says that of some 218 million child labourers around the world, millions are either denied educational opportunities that would give them a better future or must balance work with education.

    “For too many children, particularly children of poor families across the world, the right to education remains an abstract concept, far from the reality of daily life,” Mr. Somavia stated.

    He noted that more than 70 million primary school-aged children are not enrolled in school. Many of these and other out-of-school children start working at an early age, often well below the minimum age of employment. And when a family has to make a choice between sending either a boy or girl to school, it is often the girl who loses out.

    “Our challenge is to offer hope to the child labourers of the world by making their right a reality, ensuring that they have quality education and training which can lead them towards a future of decent work,” he said.

    “This is essential to break the cycle of child labour and poverty. And it is a sound investment for individuals and society.”

    To tackle child labour, ILO is urging governments to provide education for all children at least to the minimum age of employment, as well as education policies that reach out to child labourers and other excluded groups.

    In addition, the agency is calling for properly resourced quality education and skills training, and education for all children and decent work for adults.

    The annual World Day is being marked in some 60 countries with events ranging from awareness-raising campaigns and artistic performances to competitions and photo exhibitions on child labour.

     [ send green star]
     
     June 08, 2008 12:54 AM

     

    World Day against Child Labour, 12 June 2008

     

    Education: the right response to child labour

     

    "Every child counts.Over the last year, we have rescued more than 5,000 children from the streets of Hyderabad to enable them to regain their lost childhood", says Leyla Tegmo-Reddy, ILO Director in New Delhi, India. The ILO's International Programme on the Elimination of Child Labour (IPEC) has been striving to rescue and rehabilitate migrant working children in the age group of 5 to 14 years, saving them from being trafficked or from getting involved in drugs and crime. ILO Online spoke with the ILO Director in New Delhi and Rani Kumudini who is the Project Manager in Hyderabad.

    Click here

     
       [ send green star]
     
     April 20, 2008 5:23 PM

    Slavery thrives in Canada, says Canadian Member of Parliament April 12, 2008 8:12 PM

    Teenage girls from so-called "good" families in wealthy Canadian neighbourhoods lured to Europe on a promise of a modelling career that turns out to be forced prostitution.

    Human trafficking, says Winnipeg Tory MP Joy Smith, isn't just happening somewhere else.

    "Human trafficking is alive and well in Canada," said Smith. "The way it can stop is for the public to be aware."

    Smith never intended to make human trafficking a centre-point of her political career. But then she heard the stories her police-officer son told about his work with the integrated child exploitation unit in Manitoba. And the 61-year-old mother of six felt compelled to do something.

    "I've been quietly working on the issue," said Smith. "It's become my life's passion."

    She has introduced several motions in Parliament, and despite being turned down the first time, eventually convinced the Status of Women committee in Parliament to study the issue in depth. "I shamed them into doing it," said Smith.

    She has become an internationally recognized advocate on the issue, speaking at conferences all over the world, including this week as keynote speaker at a conference in Montreal.

    That same conference -- the third annual hosted by the Temple Emanu-El-Beth Sholom in Montreal -- honoured her with an award recognizing her efforts.

    Why she's speaking out, says Smith, is easy.

    "Our greatest weapon here is awareness," she said.

    In Canada, most of the victims come from broken homes and a disproportionate number are aboriginal. Vulnerable young girls, either on reserve or off, are targeted by adults who see the sex trade as a way to make an easy buck.

    Smith said she has worked with a young girl from Winnipeg who thought she had won a beauty pageant. But when she went to Milan to claim her modelling prize, her passport was seized and she was forced to work as a prostitute to pay off a "debt" to get them back.

    She eventually got out and came back to Canada, said Smith.

    But often these kids aren't being hidden in cages and ferried secretly across borders. They are being sold right on the streets of our own cities, and most people dismiss them as kids who made some bad choices in life.

    "The public still thinks people choose to get into prostitution," said Diana Bussey, of the Salvation Army in Winnipeg who heads up the organization's anti-trafficking initiatives.

    Bussey is part of a growing sector of non-governmental organizations who want to get people to think of domestic prostitution as human trafficking, because most people abhor the latter but seem to tolerate the former without much thought.

    With the poverty and addictions which run rampant on many First Nations, and in inner cities across Canada, traffickers looking for vulnerable kids don't have to go abroad to find their targets, said Benjamin Perrin, a law professor at the University of British Columbia who has launched a three-year research project on the domestic side of human trafficking.

    "Unfortunately because of the situation on many First Nations reserves we know there have been serious concerns about women who have gone missing.

    It's just not clear what has happened to them and one of the concerns that is being looked into is that these women have been forced into prostitution." Perrin said people think if girls are on the streets on their own, and aren't being kept in locked rooms, then they must be choosing to be there, but that's seldom the case.

    "Traffickers are able to keep people compliant without physically restraining them," said Perrin.

    A young girl from a First Nation will be threatened that her community will be told what she has done if she doesn't comply, said Perrin. They are beaten and drugged and abused until they don't even remember how they got there in the first place.

    Smith said she is starting to see signs of action.

    A report generated by the Status of Women was accepted by Parliament and is being used to tailor new legislation to target the industry.

    "It's a shocking thing in Canada that the slave trade is alive and well," she said. "But human trafficking has been under the public radar screen for too long."

    mia.rabson@freepress.mb.ca

     [ send green star]
     
     April 03, 2008 4:46 AM

    Thank you Philip--SIGNED...these abuses are sickening..we are blessed to have a place to gather, write petitions, click -and make a difference...and thank you Philip-for all your dedication and hard work..the world is a better place because of you...  ((( )))

    love n bless Esha

     [ send green star]
     
     April 02, 2008 7:43 PM

    Tell Congress to stop US military support to countries using child soldiers.





    This post was modified from its original form on 02 Apr, 19:44  [ send green star]
     
     March 29, 2008 10:18 PM

    PAST INJUSTICES SHOULD SPUR BATTLE AGAINST MODERN FORMS OF SLAVERY – BAN KI-MOON


    New York, Mar 25 2008  5:00PM
    As the United Nations honoured the memory of the victims of the transatlantic slave trade, Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon expressed the hope today that the struggle against “one of the greatest atrocities in history” will inspire the world in the battle against modern forms of slavery such as forced labour and human trafficking.

    “Even as we mourn the atrocities committed against the countless victims, we take heart from the courage of slaves who rose up to overcome the system which oppressed them,” Mr. Ban said at a special ceremony at UN Headquarters marking the first International Day of Remembrance of the Victims of Slavery and the Transatlantic Slave Trade.

    “These brave individuals, and the abolitionist movements they inspired, should serve as an example to us all as we continue to battle the contemporary forms of slavery that stain our world today,” the Secretary-General <"http://www.un.org/apps/sg/sgstats.asp?nid=3061">told those gathered at the event, which included performances by African drummers, dancers and poets and a steel pan troupe from the Caribbean.

    Mr. Ban noted that even today, millions around the world, including children, are suffering under the yoke of racism, forced labour, sexual exploitation and human trafficking.

    Not only is the world shamed by these horrible crimes but it is also challenged to respond, he said.  “Let us honour the victims of the slave trade by remembering their struggle. Let us carry it forward until no person is deprived of liberty, dignity and human rights.”

    In his <"http://www.un.org/ga/president/62/statements/IntlDayVictimsSlavery250308.shtml">message marking the Day of Remembrance, General Assembly President Srgjan Kerim noted that it provides an opportunity to acknowledge a “rofoundly shameful” period in history and to remember the millions who suffered.  “It also gives us the opportunity to pay tribute to the courage and moral conviction of all those who campaigned for abolition,” he added.

    It was the Assembly that, in December 2007, adopted a resolution designating 25 March as an annual day of Remembrance of the Victims of Slavery and the Transatlantic Slave Trade. It also decided to erect a permanent memorial at the UN to acknowledge the tragedy and consider the legacy of slavery.

    Echoing the Secretary-General, Mr. Kerim emphasized that, while coming to terms with past injustices, it is also important to recognise the “unspeakable cruelty” that persists today in the various modern forms of slavery such as bonded labour and slavery by descent, forced recruitment of child labour and child soldiers, human trafficking and the illegal sex trade.

    “If we sincerely want to honour the suffering that slaves experienced and died under in the past, we must do much more to protect and promote the human rights, freedom and dignity of all people, in particularly, those who continue to suffer under modern forms of slavery,” the President stated.

    To address the serious threat posed by human trafficking, Mr. Kerim said he intends to convene a special meeting of the Assembly on the issue on 3 June.

    Among those participating at the commemoration was the artist and human rights activist Harry Belafonte, who stated that “slavery is still with us and it has been codified and it has been driven underground because the symbols that once identified slavery have long since gone.

    “But although slavery still exists, it now comes under new codifications,” Mr. Belafonte said at a press briefing on the issue, citing practices such as child prostitution and recruitment of children for armed conflict, as well as the economic exploitation of millions of the world’s poor.

    “There are all sorts of names for it. And people in their indifference, or in their participation in the process, has continued to cause great harm to the human family,” he added.

    In addition to today’s ceremony, the UN is hosting a series of events to mark the Day of Remembrance, including an exhibit entitled “The Middle Passage: White Ships/Black Cargo” and a student videoconference on 28 March with students in Sierra Leone, Norway, St. Lucia, Canada, Cape Verde, United Kingdom and UN Headquarters in New York.

     [ send green star]
     
    dear phillip February 19, 2008 7:28 AM

    dearest phillip,

    i find this topic sooo heartbreaking. my prayers are with those unfortunate victims. thank you.

    peace and love from ildi p

     [ send green star]  [ accepted]
     
     February 16, 2008 10:37 PM

    AT UN ANTI-TRAFFICKING FORUM, PARTICIPANTS RAISE AWARENESS OF TAINTED GOODS

    New York, Feb 14 2008  5:00PM
    As couples celebrated Valentine’s Day around the world with gifts of chocolate and cut flowers, participants at a United Nations forum in Vienna on human trafficking today worked to raise awareness of how the problem is tied to these commodities.

    Behind the romantic gestures of roses and chocolate “is often a chain of trafficked human beings delivering disposable commodities to affluent consumers. Many are children toiling in inhumane conditions or women trapped in near-slavery,” the UN Office on Drugs and Crime (<"http://www.unodc.org/unodc/en/frontpage/upset-hearts.html">UNODC) said in a news release issued in conjunction with the Vienna Forum to Fight Human Trafficking.

    Conference participants wore upturned heart lapel badges called the “upset heart” as a sign of solidarity with the victims. Their aim was to raise consciousness and affect the buying decisions of consumers just as the “blood diamond” and Fair Trade certifications have fostered ethical choices on diamonds. The campaign was also the subject of a press conference at UN Headquarters in New York this week.

    “Take exploitation out of your bottom line,” said UNODC Antonio Maria Costa in his opening speech to the Vienna Forum yesterday. “Make sure that the supply chain is not tainted by blood, sweat and tears of modern slaves.”

    “On this Valentine’s Day, spare a thought for those whose lives have been turned upside down by human trafficking,” he said.

     [ send green star]
     
     February 16, 2008 9:56 PM

    UN FORUM HEARS CALLS FOR MEASURES TO COMBAT HUMAN TRAFFICKING

    New York, Feb 13 2008  6:00PM
    Policy makers and celebrities today joined their voices in calling for action against human trafficking, as the first-ever global United Nations forum on the problem opened in Vienna.

    Antonio Maria Costa, the Executive Director of the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (<"http://www.unodc.org/unodc/en/frontpage/this-is-not-a-journey-that-anyone-should-take.html">UNODC), and the pop star Ricky Martin received a petition from the group “Stop the Traffik” signed by 1.5 million persons calling for action on the issue.

    Mr. Costa <"http://www.unodc.org/unodc/en/frontpage/tracking-a-monster.html">accused law enforcement authorities around the world of demonstrating “benign neglect” and appealed for coordinated action to fight the “monster” of human trafficking.

    He said efforts to carry out the provisions of the UN Protocol to Prevent, Suppress and Punish Trafficking in Persons have been disjointed, with “victims often prosecuted for their illegal status; interdiction operations limited; few arrests, with inadequate retribution.”

    He said the Global Initiative to Fight Human Trafficking (UN.GIFT), launched to facilitate implementation of the Protocol, has begun a process of collecting scientific evidence about the extent of this crime while building up profiles of traffickers and their networks. It is also working on enhancing witness protection. In addition, measures are being taken to examine the causes of victims' vulnerability and to strengthen prevention.

    Mr. Costa described some “uncomfortable truths” about the problem, which can involve children in conflicts, girls sold by their family into brothels, women enslaved into sex parlours, men in bondage “in southern plantations or northern sweat shops” and kids enslaved to beg in Europe and North America. Children are also sometimes forced to use “their nimble fingers to produce luxury goods.”

    He urged all segments of society to join forces against the scourge, while calling for contributions to the UN account to fight human trafficking.

    But Mr. Costa cautioned that “money and goodwill are not enough; we need concrete actions that will reduce vulnerability and make this crime a riskier business.” Toward that end, he said the Forum must adopt practical measures that will stop traffickers and help victims.

    A chorus of voices joined Mr. Costa in decrying the problem.  “Human trafficking is a vicious violation of human rights; it has no place in our world and I beg you to act now,” said the Grammy Award-winning Mr. Martin.

    Suzanne Mubarak, the First Lady of Egypt and President of her eponymous International Peace Movement, also decried the problem, calling human trafficking “a pervasive cancer.”

    “We simply cannot tolerate human beings being bought, sold and hired like commodities,” Ursula Plassnik, Minister for European and International Affairs of the Republic of Austria. “Each and every one of us is being called upon to act.”

    Emma Thompson, Oscar-winning actress and Chair of the Helen Bamber Foundation, who yesterday opened an art installation in Vienna mapping the journey of a trafficking victim, told the Forum the harrowing story of a Moldovan woman who was trafficked to the United Kingdom and forced to work as a prostitute.

    The Vienna Forum to Fight Human Trafficking is bringing together 1,200 experts, legislators, law enforcement teams, business leaders, NGO representatives and trafficking victims from 116 countries.

    In a related development, UNODC today launched a manual aimed at helping countries develop comprehensive programmes for the protection of victims and witnesses of crime.
    Witness protection programmes are considered a key tool in the dismantling of human trafficking networks as well as combating other forms of organized crime.

    The manual, <i>Good Practices in the Protection of Witnesses in Criminal Proceedings Involving Organized Crime</i>, calls for early identification of vulnerable and intimidated witnesses; management of witnesses by the police; protection of witness identity during court testimony; and, if necessary, permanent relocation and re-identification.

     [ send green star]
     
     February 16, 2008 8:52 PM

    UN TO LAUNCH DRIVE AGAINST HUMAN TRAFFICKING AT UPCOMING GLOBAL FORUM

    New York, Feb 12 2008  5:00PM
    The United Nations this week will convene the first global forum against human trafficking in Vienna, where some 1,200 experts, legislators, law enforcement teams, business leaders, non-governmental organization (NGO) representatives and trafficking victims are expected to launch an international campaign to combat the crime.

    “The blood, sweat and tears of trafficking victims are on the hands of consumers all over the world,” said the Executive Director of the UN Office on Drugs and Crime (<"http://www.unodc.org/unodc/en/frontpage/un.gift-and-unodc-host-first-global-forum-on-human-trafficking.html">UNODC), Antonio Maria Costa, ahead of the 13-15 February forum, explaining that the problem is so widespread within the global economic system that all share complicity.

    Because of the lack of information about human trafficking, Mr. Costa called it “a monster whose shape, size and ferocity we can only guess.”

    But experts agree that the scourge accompanies other unlawful activities, like illegal migration, forced labour, paedophilia, child exploitation, civil conflicts and organized prostitution.

    “It’s time for the world to open its eyes to this form of modern slavery,” the UNODC chief declared.

    However, he cautioned against empty platitudes. “Moral outrage is not going to stop the traffickers; we need high impact law enforcement measures to make human trafficking a riskier business.”

    Forum participants will discuss practical measures to increase the effectiveness of preventing human trafficking and bringing the perpetrators to justice. Measures under consideration include tracking and blocking Internet payments for human trafficking transactions; innovative technology to pinpoint frequently used trafficking routes; help-lines to report suspected child prostitution or sex slavery; codes of conduct to curb sex tourism; improved controls on supply chain management; and efforts to stop the forced removal and trade of human organs.

    Mr. Costa pointed out that global campaigns have been waged against the trade in blood diamonds, fur, and illegal timber, while efforts to stop the trade in people “lag behind.”

    In addition to experts and other officials, the forum has attracted the participation of celebrities and public figures, including Suzanne Mubarak, the First Lady of Egypt; Emma Thompson, the Oscar-winning British actress; and Ricky Martin, the Grammy Award-winning Puerto Rican pop star.

     [ send green star]
     
     February 16, 2008 7:39 PM

    TIME TO PUNISH PARTIES WHO USE OR ABUSE CHILDREN IN ARMED CONFLICTS – UN ENVOY

    New York, Feb 12 2008  8:00PM
    The Security Council must “take concrete and targeted measures” against those parties that persistently use or abuse children during armed conflicts around the world, the United Nations envoy on the issue said today, urging that well-meaning words be transformed into effective actions.

    Addressing the Council during a day-long <"http://www.un.org/News/Press/docs//2008/sc9246.doc.htm">open debate, the Secretary-General’s Special Representative for Children and Armed Conflict Radhika Coomaraswamy noted the ongoing impunity for those persistent violators that use or abuse children during wars.

    From the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC) to Myanmar and from Sri Lanka to Uganda, parties to armed conflicts kill, maim, abduct or sexually assault children; deny humanitarian access to children in need; and recruit and use child soldiers. In total, at least 58 parties are known to be offenders.

    Ms. Coomaraswamy called for the establishment of a mechanism by the 15-member Council to review and oversee targeted measures against violators to end their impunity.

    “It is most important that the Council make good on its promise in order to ensure the credibility of this exercise,” she said. “The targeted measures could include the imposition of travel restrictions on leaders and their exclusion from any governance structures and amnesty provisions, the imposition of arms embargoes, a ban on military assistance, and restriction on the flow of financial resources to the parties concerned.”

    While acknowledging that some parties have made important commitments in peace accords and action plans to stop recruiting child soldiers, the Special Representative warned that in some regional conflicts – such as those in the Great Lakes and Horn regions of Africa – cross-border recruitment from refugee camps is surging.

    The detention of children for alleged association with armed groups is also worrying and a violation of international standards, she said, noting that many detained children face ill-treatment, torture, interrogations and food deprivation.

    In addition, systematic and deliberate attacks against schoolchildren are escalating in numerous conflicts, particularly Afghanistan, while in the DRC and Burundi “appalling levels of sexual and gender-based violence” are occurring.

    UN Children’s Fund (<"http://www.unicef.org/">UNICEF) Executive Director Ann M. Veneman told the Council debate that it was possible to reintegrate children used by armed forces and groups, especially once they are given the necessary skills and assistance to become productive members of their communities.

    “Yet reintegration is a difficult and long-term process requiring patience and long-term commitment,” Ms. Veneman said, adding that UNICEF is already working in several countries – notably the Central African Republic (CAR), Côte d’Ivoire and Sudan – to reintegrate children.

    She also highlighted the particular vulnerability of girls and women during armed conflicts because of sexual violence.

    “Allow me to share with you one story as told by a 14-year-old girl in Liberia. She said: ‘The attackers tied me up and raped me because I was fighting. About five of them did the same thing to me until one of their commanders who knew my father came and stopped them, but also took me to make me his wife. I just accepted him because of fear.’ We need to put an end to the abuse, the rapes and the sexual violence.”

    Representatives of dozens of countries then addressed the Council during today’s debate, which follows the recent release of a UN report stating that children are still recruited and used in armed conflicts in at least 13 nations worldwide. They are Afghanistan, Burundi, Chad, the CAR, Colombia, the DRC, Myanmar, Nepal, the Philippines, Somalia, Sudan, Sri Lanka and Uganda.

     [ send green star]
     
     February 16, 2008 5:26 PM

    TOP UN OFFICIAL CALLS FOR GREATER EFFORTS TO FIGHT HUMAN TRAFFICKING

    New York, Feb 16 2008  1:00PM
    The head of the United Nations anti-crime agency has urged governments, businesses and civil society to boost their efforts to combat human trafficking, including by increasing awareness of the problem and providing greater resources to tackle it. "Let us build on the momentum generated here to ensure that people's lives will not be for sale," Antonio Maria Costa, Executive Director of the UN Office on Drugs and Crime (< http://www.unodc.org/>UNODC), said yesterday at the end of the Vienna Forum to Fight Human Trafficking. The three-day gathering brought together 1,400 experts, legislators, law enforcement teams, business leaders, non-governmental organization (NGO) representatives and trafficking victims from 116 countries. The conference also drew the participation of celebrities and public figures such as Egypt's First Lady Suzanne Mubarak, Academy Award-winning British actress Emma Thompson, and international pop star Ricky Martin, who joined the outcry against the global scourge. Calling the Forum "just the beginning of a process," Mr. Costa called for practical measures to prevent trafficking, such as self-certification by businesses to take slave-made products off the shelves and developing new technology to monitor human trafficking routes. He also proposed the tracking and blocking of credit card payments for internet human trafficking transactions and codes of conduct to curb sex tourism. Stressing the need to strengthen partnerships among governments, businesses and civil society in the fight against trafficking, the Executive Director hailed the launch during the Forum of the Women Leaders' Council.  The group brings together political figures, diplomats, trade union representatives, business leaders and entertainers from around the world to work together to tackle the problem and help the victims. The Forum was convened by the UN Global Initiative to Fight Human Trafficking (UN.GIFT), an initiative launched by UNODC and several UN partners last year to bring governments, the private sector, academia, civil society and the media together to combat a practice that is viewed as modern-day slavery.

     [ send green star]
     
     February 08, 2008 9:44 PM

    here is a great website on Children in armed Conflicts, child Soldiers.

    www.watchlist.org.

     [ send green star]
     
     February 06, 2008 8:21 PM

    UN-BACKED CONTAINER EXHIBIT SPOTLIGHTS PLIGHT OF SEX TRAFFICKING VICTIMS

    New York, Feb  6 2008  2:00PM
    A new exhibit using transport containers to illustrate the brutal experiences of women sold into the sex trade will be featured next week at a United Nations forum focusing on the global billion-dollar human trafficking industry.

    According to UN estimates, about 2.5 million people from 127 countries have been trafficked to 137 countries for purposes such as forced labour, sexual exploitation, the removal of organs and body parts, forced marriages, child adoption and begging.

    "The Journey against Sex Trafficking" is an interactive exhibit based on the experiences of young women who leave their homes in search of a better life only to find themselves tricked or forced by traffickers to work in the sex industry.

    "The aim of Journey is to show visitors the reality of human trafficking - a crime that happens every day, all around the world - and to encourage the public, politicians and especially consumers to take action," the UN Office on Drugs and Crime (<"http://www.unodc.org/unodc/en/human-trafficking/index.html">UNODC) said in a news release.

    The brainchild of Academy Award-winning British actress Emma Thompson, the exhibit features seven containers, individually designed by leading artists, showing a different stage in the trafficking process.

    The exhibit will be on display at the 13 to 15 February Vienna Forum to Fight Human Trafficking - part of the UN Global Initiative to Fight Human Trafficking (UN.GIFT) - which will bring together more than 1,000 participants from international and non-governmental organizations (NGOs), governments, academia, the private sector and the entertainment industry to raise awareness about human trafficking and spur further action to combat the crime.

     [ send green star]
     
     February 02, 2008 10:36 PM

    UP TO 300,000 CHILDREN WORLDWIDE RECRUITED TO FIGHT IN WARS – UN OFFICIAL

    New York, Jan 30 2008  4:00PM
    While precise estimates are difficult to come by, some 250,000 to 300,000 children globally are being recruited to fight in armed conflicts in violation of international law, a United Nations official said today, reporting mixed progress in efforts to tackle the problem.

    Briefing reporters in New York on Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon’s latest <"report" target="new894425637">http://www.un.org/Docs/journal/asp/ws.asp?m=s/2007/757">report on children and armed conflict, his Special Representative on the issue, Radhika Coomaraswamy, voiced hope that the Security Council would take decisive action in response to its findings.

    Children are being recruited by groups in Afghanistan, Burundi, Chad, the Central African Republic, Colombia, the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC), Myanmar, Nepal, the Philippines, Somalia, Sudan, Sri Lanka and Uganda, according to the report.

    But there have been no recent cases of child recruitment in Côte d’Ivoire, where the parties are taking measures to identify and release affected children for rehabilitation. Sierra Leone and Liberia, which used to have a prevalence of child soldiers, are also no longer contained in the report’s annexes, which Ms. Coomaraswamy said collectively amount to a “list of shame.”

    The report draws attention to disturbing trends exacerbating the problem of child conscription, including a close link between camps for internally displaced persons (IDPs) and the recruitment of children. “Research shows recruitment goes down if the camps have good security,” the Special Representative said.

    She also voiced concern about cross-border movements with regard to child recruitment in places such as Sudan and Chad, as well as the detention of children in Burundi, Iraq and Afghanistan. In addition, she called attacks on schools, buildings and teachers a “serious new phenomenon” affecting Afghanistan, Iraq and Thailand.

    The Special Rapporteur welcomed legal precedents for ending impunity, including the issue of arrest warrants by the International Criminal Court (ICC) for five senior members of the Lord’s Resistance Army (LRA) operating in Uganda. The rebel group is notorious for recruiting and otherwise exploiting children.

    Ms. Coomaraswamy said she will push for action in the Security Council, which is expected to discuss the report on children and armed conflict on 12 February. She said the Council should adopt “either a resolution or presidential statement” on the issue. Among other measures, she called for expanding the “list of shame” to include groups responsible for all manner of violations against children, or at least sexual violence.

     [ send green star]
     
     February 02, 2008 10:15 PM

    Child recruitment continues in over one dozen countries, reports Ban Ki-moon – (29 January 2008)

    The recruitment and use of children in armed conflict is taking place in more than one dozen countries around the world, Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon states in a new report, calling for further measures to combat the scourge.

    The practice continues in Afghanistan, Burundi, Chad, the Central African Republic (CAR), Colombia, the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC), Myanmar, Nepal, the Philippines, Somalia, Sudan, Sri Lanka and Uganda, Mr. Ban notes in his latest report on children and armed conflict, covering the period from October 2006 to August 2007.

    On the positive side, he reports that no new cases of child recruitment have been recorded during that period in Côte d’Ivoire. The parties to the conflict there have not only ceased recruitment but have taken measures to identify and release children associated with them for rehabilitation, Mr. Ban writes.

    Regarding specific issues of concern, the Secretary-General points to the close link between child recruitment and internal displacement, noting that the lack of security around refugee and internally displaced person (IDP) camps and the “convenient concentration of vulnerable children” make these camps “prime recruiting grounds.”

    There have been reports that the Karuna faction have abducted and recruited children from IDP camps in Sri Lanka, while in the DRC, children have been recruited from camps in North Kivu Province by forces loyal to rebel leader Laurent Nkunda.

    In addition, the Secretary-General notes that girls, and sometimes boys, are targeted with various forms of sexual and gender-based violence, including rape, during armed conflicts. For example, 60 per cent of cases of sexual and gender-based violence recorded in Kisangani, in northern DRC, involved victims between the ages of 11 and 17.

    “It is imperative that perpetrators of acts of rape and other sexual violence which leave a long-term, devastating impact on the victims are prosecuted in accordance with the gravity of such crimes,” Mr. Ban writes.

    The report also sounds the alarm about armed groups moving across borders to recruit children from refugee camps, especially along the Sudan-Chad border. Both Sudanese and Chadian armed groups are recruiting children from Sudanese refugee camps in eastern Chad, while Chadian refugee children are being recruited by Sudanese rebel groups in Darfur.

    Another concern is the escalation in “systematic and deliberate attacks on schoolchildren, teachers and school buildings” in certain conflict situations, including Afghanistan and Iraq, which warrants increased attention and action by the global community, the Secretary-General states.

    Mr. Ban says the Security Council should consider a range of measures, including bans on military aid and travel restrictions on leaders, targeting parties to armed conflict who continue to systematically commit grave violations against children.

    He also encourages the Council to refer violations against children in armed conflict to the International Criminal Court (ICC). In this regard, he points to “important precedents” set to end impunity for crimes against children. The Court has issued arrest warrants for five senior members of the Lord’s Resistance Army (LRA), including its leader, Joseph Kony, who faces charges including the forcible enlistment and use of children in hostilities.

    The Secretary-General says the sentencing by the Special Court for Sierra Leone of three men and the conviction of a fourth for the recruitment and use of child soldiers “send an important message that such crimes against children will not be tolerated and that those who engage in the practice will be brought to justice.”

     [ send green star]
     
     January 17, 2008 9:16 PM

     [ send green star]
     
    condensed links-sites January 11, 2008 9:25 PM

    info@antislavery.org
     
     
     
     
     

    You can help to eliminate the worst forms of child labour

     
     
     
     January 05, 2008 7:21 PM

    Child Labour--Short slide show, very educational.-click on link. 


    Of all the children in the world today 200 million are child labourers, of
    those more than 100 million are trapped in the worst forms of child labour.

    While there are signs of hope - a recent report by the International Labour
    Organization showed that there are now 28 million fewer child labourers than
    four years ago - there are millions that still need help to live as children
    again.

    The ILO is committed to helping countries lift all children out of child
    labour in its worst forms by 2016.

    Please take the time to click on this link to see why millions of children
    need your help and ours.
    http://www.ilo.org/public/english/bureau/inf/wdacl/index.htm
     [ send green star]
     
     January 02, 2008 8:54 PM

    Interpoll website on Human Trafficking 

    http://www.interpol.int/Public/THB/default.asp  

     [ send green star]
     
     January 02, 2008 8:50 PM

    Great website on Human Trafficking 

    http://www.humantraffickingsearch.net/  [ send green star]
     
     January 02, 2008 8:41 PM

    Combatting Human Trafficking, which is a form of modern day slavery--link. 

    http://www.polarisproject.org/polarisproject/  [ send green star]
     
     January 02, 2008 8:29 PM

    Child labour

    Recent figures from the International Labour Organisation (ILO) show that:

    • Globally, 1 in 6 children work
    • 218 million children aged 5 - 17 are involved in child labour world wide
    • 126 million children work in hazardous conditions
    • The highest numbers of child labourers are in the Asia/Pacific region, where there are 122 million working children
    • The highest proportion of child labourers is in Sub Saharan Africa, where 26% of children (49 million) are involved in work.

    There has often been a tendency to focus on the visible forms of work, such as children who work in hazardous conditions, but this can obscure the many other ways in which children work. Rural working children, for example, are mainly engaged in agricultural activities and collecting water, fuel and fodder. In many countries, poor girls work as domestic servants for richer families. Almost everywhere, children, especially girls, perform unpaid work for their families. That work is done in the home or in family enterprises does not necessarily make it easier or more acceptable.

     [ send green star]
     
     January 02, 2008 8:26 PM


    ILO website
     [ send green star]

     
     January 01, 2008 6:41 PM

    Enslaved in America: Sex Trafficking in the United States

    When we hear the words "Sex Trafficking," as Americans we immediately think of women and children overseas who are being forced into the sex trade or who are brought into the United States for the purpose of sexual exploitation. We don't usually think closer to home - Americans trafficked by Americans. But I want you to think about young women and even girls that you have seen late at night when you come home from work or a social event. Maybe you have seen them in the streets in short dresses and spike heels. You turn your heads to look away. We do not look at the faces of these young women and girls who are forced to be out in the street. Maybe we think this is what they want to do or they wouldn't be out there. Maybe it is easier to believe that it is an empowering choice they have than face the harsh reality of child sexual abuse, physical and mental abuse, and the pimps that prey on the young women and girls.

    To understand all aspects of sex trafficking in the United States, you have to open your mind and let go of what you have seen or heard on television. You need to let go of the media's portrayal of the "joys" of street prostitution, and open your eyes to the violence and control the pimps and sex traffickers exercise over their victims, who are mostly girls and young women.

    ECPAT USA (End Child Prostitution, Child Pornography and Trafficking of Children for Sexual Purposes)', an Anti-Trafficking agency, states that the average age of entry into street prostitution is between 12 and 14 years old, though there have been cases of girls as young as 9 years old.

    I was 14 years old when I was forced into prostitution. Like many teens at that age, finding my own identity and defying my parents were top on my list. So when a man came into my life and showered me with attention and listened to me when I complained about my parents, I did not think twice that he was ten years my senior. After all, he said I was mature for my age and told me I understood him better than anyone his own age. Little did I know, he was laying down the seeds of manipulation. It did not matter what my parents said, to me they did not understand me and he was the only one that "got me". After six months, I thought I loved him, at least that is what he told me, so I did what I thought my heart was telling me and ran away to be with him. We ended up in Cleveland, Ohio. He told me we were going to meet the rest of the family.

    I had no idea the "family" meant myself and three other girls. After I was introduced to the "family," I was told what my role would be. I would go out to "work" that night and bring him back the money. How else would we build our dream home? He assured me he would always love me no matter what, but he needed to know how much I loved him by making sure I would do anything for him.

    Later that evening, his friends came by the motel. At first, he told me to have sex with someone. I did not want to so his friends raped me. Afterwards, he said "that wouldn't have happened if I would have just listened to him at first." I blamed myself instead of being angry at him for being raped. I was angry at myself for not listening to him in the first place. After that, he picked my clothes out, told me what to wear, what to say, how to walk, what to say to "Johns" and how much money I was to bring back to him. He then forced me to go out into the streets.

    When I first went out into the streets, when I met my first John, I felt like this was something I did not want to do. I walked around the streets back and forth for hours. Finally, I got into a car because we were always being watched and I knew I had to get into a car sooner or later. Our quota was $500 and I had only made $50 that night to give back to the pimp. As a result, he beat me in front of the other girls to make an example out of me and then he made me go back out until I had made the money. This is the same man that took me out to eat, listened to me when I wanted to complain about my parents, gave me words of advice. I was now seeing a side of him that I never saw before - a brutal side where he repeatedly hit me in front of the other girls to teach us all a lesson.

    Not only was I shocked, I was scared. What would happen to me if I did try to leave and who would believe me if I told them what was going on? I worked from 6 until 10PM the next night without eating or sleeping. I came back with the $500, but in his mind I still had not learned my lesson. He sent me back outside until 5AM the next morning. After the second day, he finally bought me something to eat, but as a punishment to learn never to defy him again, he locked me in the closet. Since that night, I was locked in the closet on numerous occasions and had my finger broken which never set right. None of us were ever allowed to see a doctor so we endured our pain by pushing it deep down inside and trying to forget it ever happened.

    I can't count the number of times people have asked me "why didn't you just leave?" "Couldn't you escape?" To that, I simply say "do you ask a child that is kidnapped why they didn't try to leave?" No, we automatically say they are a victim; it wasn't their fault. Now I know it was not my fault that a pimp manipulated a child. Under federal law, a child under 18 years who is commercially sexually abused is a victim of trafficking. However under local law a child is charged with child prostitution.

     [ send green star]
     
     January 01, 2008 6:37 PM

    Child Slavery Now -- an international conference is to be held on all aspects of child slavery at the Wilberforce Institute for the study of Slavery and Emancipation (WISE), University of Hull, UK in association with Anti-Slavery International, Gilda Lehrman Center, Yale University and Free the Slaves on November 27-28 2008. Recent Anti-Slavery International publications on child labour


    You can help to eliminate the worst forms of child labour

    For further information, contact Anti-Slavery International on info@antislavery.org

     [ send green star]
     
     January 01, 2008 6:35 PM

    Trafficking 

    Collateral Damage: The impact of anti-trafficking measures on human rights around the world GAATW's 2007 report

  • Protocol for Identification and Assistance of Trafficked Persons and Training Kit Anti-Slavery International's 2005 report available as a PDF download in English and Italian
  • Trafficking laws need a human rights focus
  • The Migration-Trafficking Nexus: Combating trafficking through the protection of migrants' human rights
    Anti-Slavery International's 2003 report available
    to buy or as a PDF download in English and French
  • Human Traffic, Human Rights: Redefining victim protection Anti-Slavery International's 2002 report is available in English and French, and an executive summary in English, French, Portuguese, Russian & Spanish

  •  [ send green star]
     
     January 01, 2008 6:31 PM

    Great Info on the History of Slavery from the beginning to Today. December 21, 2007 8:30 PM

    Educational resources 

    Anti-Slavery International's education programme promotes human rights in schools and youth clubs throughout the United Kingdom.

    The overall aim of our work is to help individuals understand the role of human rights in today's world, as well as the underlying attitudes which lead to the respect or violation of them. Our work focuses particularly on examples of contemporary and historical slavery and the international instruments used to protect human rights.

    On this page you will find:

     [ send green star]
     
     January 01, 2008 6:29 PM

    Corporate accountability
    Let's Clean up Fashion - Update

    Textile workers

    War on Want's new report with Labour Behind the Label, Let's Clean Up Fashion 2007, highlights the appalling conditions and stark injustices within the high street fashion industry. UK high street retailers do not pay developing country garment workers a living wage, whilst reaping vast profits and paying spokesmodels and CEOs millions of pounds.

    A living wage is one that enables workers and their dependents to meet their needs for nutritious food and clean water, shelter, clothes, education, health care and transport, as well as allowing for a discretionary income. Without a living wage, workers remained mired in a poverty trap that prevents them from fulfilling basic dreams such as raising a family, and condemns future generations to a similar fate.

    The report highlights the hypocrisy of UK retailers, including Sir Philip Green’s Arcadia group, Tesco and Marks and Spencer for giving huge rewards to their chiefs and models compared to poverty wages for employees who produce their clothes and contribute to their huge and growing profits:

    • Topshop owner Green’s £1.2 billion dividend was enough to double the salaries of Cambodian’s whole garment workforce for eight years.
    • A worker making clothes for Green’s Arcadia group in Mauritius would need to toil for almost 4,000 years to gain the £3 million model Kate Moss earned for her Topshop clothing range.
    • The £4.6 million in salary and bonuses for Tesco’s chief executive Sir Terry Leahy could pay the annual wages of more than 25,000 Bangladeshi garment employees who supply its stores, based on average wages of about £15 a month.
    • Coleen McLoughlin, the fiancée of footballer Wayne Rooney, collected a reported £1.5 million as a spokesmodel for George at Asda - clothes made in Bangladesh for five pence an hour. Coleen’s £3000 Hermes Birkin handbag cost more than a Bangladeshi garment employee could earn in 16 years.
    • The £2.3 million in salary and bonuses for M&S chief executive Stuart Rose would pay the annual wages of almost 12,000 Sri Lankan garment workers.

    The systemic problems within the worldwide garment industry and the failure of the voluntary approach to improve conditions for exploited workers highlight the need for government legislation to prevent UK companies from abusing workers' rights overseas. War on Want calls on the UK government to implement legislation that guarantees fair and decent treatment of overseas workers.

    Click here to read profiles of UK high street retailers and Labour Behind the Label's 2006 Let's Clean up Fashion report.





    Download the Let's Clean up Fashion updateDownload Let's Clean up Fashion[pdf]:
    Find out more about the injustice and exploitation in the high street fashion industry.

    Join the fight against global povertyJoin the fight against global poverty:
    Be a part of the solution. We need your help and support to continue our work campaigning and supporting overseas projects.

    Call on the government to regulate companiesCall on the government to regulate companies:
    Email John Hutton urging for legislation so that companies and their suppliers cannot abuse workers where they operate in the world, and if they do then they can seek redress.

    Corporate Accountability Homepage:
    Find out more about our Corporate Accountability campaign to ensure corporations are accountable for their activities by putting in place effective regulations.


     [ send green star]
     
    Human Trafficking, Slavery, Child Labour and Sweatshops Articles and Links January 01, 2008 6:26 PM

    Hi group members, feel free to post any articles, link on Human Trafficking, child Labour, sweatshops here.  [ send green star]
     
      New Topic              Back To Topics Read Code of Conduct

     

    This group:
    Click to Donate Daily on Care2, Benefits and Questions
    2259 Members

    View All Topics
    New Topic

    Track Topic
    Mail Preferences


    Copyright © 2009 Care2.com, inc. and its licensors. All rights reserved