According to the Victims of Trafficking and Violence Protection Act, "severe forms of trafficking in persons" is defined as:
1] Sex trafficking in which a commercial sex act is induced by force, coercion or in which the person induced to perform such an act is under 18.
2] The recruitment, transportation, harboring, provision, or obtaining of a person for labor or services, through the use of force, fraud or coercion, for the purpose of subjecting that person to involuntary servitude, peonage, debt bondage or slavery.
Victims of trafficking have rights.
No one can legally force a person to work against his or her will. Victims of trafficking in the US are entitled to protection and assistance, including:
Access to translation/interpretation
Information about their rights
Free or low-cost legal services
Federal and state benefits
Washington Anti-Trafficking Response Network {WARN} is a coalition of Washington State organizations that provide assistance to pre-certified victims of trafficking with:
Immediate access to food and stable housing
Physical and mental health treatment
Immigration advocacy and legal assistance
Interpretation services
Education and job readiness training
SMUGGLING of migrants: VSTRAFFICKING of victims
Smuggling is the movement of consenting people across an international border for a fee. The migrant's relationship with the smuggler ends upon arrival at the migrant's destination.
Trafficking is ongoing exploitation. Travel is not always involved. In general, victims have either never consented to their conditions, or their initial consent is rendered meaningless by the victim's age or by coercive, deceptive or abusive actions on the part of the traffickers.
IMPORTANT QUESTIONSto ask if you suspect that a person is a victim of trafficking:
How did the person migrate?
How did the person find out about the job?
What happened when they arrived in the destination country?
What was it like when they started to work?
Was the person paid? How much? How often?
Did the person try to leave the job? What happened?
Is the person afraid of his or her employer? Why?
IMPORTANT PHONE NUMBERS:
To report a human trafficking situation to federal law enforcement, or to obtain information about services for trafficked persons, call one of these numbers:
The Trafficking in Persons and Worker Exploitation Task Force: 1-888-428-7581
Trafficking Information and Referral Hotline: 1-888-373-7888
In Seattle: Monthly Vigils to Raise Awareness and Pray for an End to Human Trafficking. 1st Sunday of each month: 1:30 to 2:00 PM {note: 1/2 hour only}. Westlake Park, Seattle, 4th & Pine. All are welcome to join us! Organized by: Intercommunity Peace & Justice Center; Adrian Dominican Sisters; Sisters of the Holy Names; Sisters of Providence; Sisters of St. Joseph of Carondolet; Sisters of St. Joseph of Peace
[I promised the nuns I would post their flyers on the Internet!]
=============================
Children whose lives are stolen: How you can help
The following leaflet was handed out at the Monthly Vigil in Seattle, WA, held the First Sunday of each month, at Westlake Park, from 1:30 to 2 PM; it is intended mainly for those whose work brings them in contact with children; but it is useful for us all to be aware of what is going on around us.
LOOK BENEATH THE SURFACE. Can you recognize child victims of human trafficking among the people you help everyday? As a law enforcement officer, a health care professional or a social service provider, you can help rescue and restore the future for victims of human trafficking.
Human Trafficking is Modern-Day Slavery
Human trafficking is a modern-day form of slavery. Victims of human trafficking are subjected to force, fraud, or coercion for the purpose of sexual exploitation or forced labor. Victims are young children, teenagers, men and women.
Approximately 600,000 to 800,000 victims annually are trafficked across international borders worldwide according to U.S. government estimates. More than half of these victims worldwide are children, according to the U.S. Department of State.
Child victims of trafficking are often exploited for sexual purposes, including prostitution, pornography and sex tourism. They are also exploited for forced labor, including domestic servitude, sweatshop factory work and migrant farming.
Child victims of trafficking can be found in:
Commercial sex
Domestic servitude {servants}
Sweatshop factories
Construction
Farming or landscaping
Fisheries
Hotel or tourist industries
Panhandling
Janitorial services
Restaurant services
Identifying Child Victims of Human Trafficking
Children who are victims of human trafficking may be mistaken for prostitutes, runaway youth, migrant farm workers or domestic servants. By looking beneath the surface, picking up on the right clues and asking the right questions, you may uncover children who are being exploited.
Children exploited for labor are often hungry or malnourished to the extent they may never reach their full height or they may have poorly formed or rotting teeth.
Children exploited for sexual purposes may show evidence of untreated sexually transmitted diseases, including HIV/AIDS, urinary tract infections, and kidney problems.
Children who are victims of trafficking can also be identified by environmental factors, including whether the child is living at the workplace or with an employer, living with multiple people in a cramped space, or not in school, attends school sporadically or has a signficant gap of schooling in the U.S.
Forced labor may expose children to physical abuse or leave signs such as scars, headaches, hearing loss, cardiovascular/respiratory problems and limb amputation. They may also develop chronic back, visual and respiratory problems from working in agriculture, construction or manufacturing.
The psychological effects of exploitation include helplessness, shame and humiliation, shock, denial and disbelief, disorientation and confusion, and anxiety disorders including post traumatic stress disorder, phobias, panic attacks and depression.
Communicating with Child Victims of Human Trafficking
When communicating with childrenwho have been exploited, it is important to remember child victims have special needs and may assume what has happened to them is thier own fault. Often, child victims of trafficking may not establish trust easily due to their experiences. They may have been coached to answer your questions in a certain way. With the guidance and involvement of a child welfare expert, asking some of the following questions may help you determine if you are dealing with child victims of trafficking:
Why did you come to the U.S.? What did you expect when you came? Were you scared?
Do you have any papers? Who has them?
Are you in school? Are you working? Can you leave if you want?
Where do you live? Who else lives there? Are you scared to leave?
has anybody ever threatened you to keep you from running away?
Did anyone ever touch you or hurt you?
While these questions provide a beginning to a challenging dialogue, it is vital to remember that the child should be approached in a manner that reflects his or her age, development, culture, language and what is known about the nature of his or her experience.
If you go to the "Browse Petitions" site, as I did, and you type in "Human Trafficking" in the space given, there will be other Petitions to sign, as well as Discussions, Groups, Shares, Photos, Causes, and other things on the subject, posted by Care2 members.
Also keep your eyes and mind open, you may not be aware until you open your eyes, that this is going on all around us every day! Modern-day SLAVERY is a DIRECT CONSEQUENCE of GLOBALIZATION. And of Failed Economies worldwide.
A Domestic Servant of some middle-class neighbors, who seems never to leave the house and grounds and to have no social contacts at all; an entire family of farm laborers who live in abominable conditions; a child excessively thin, timid and unkempt, not in school; they may be people from a third-world country who are not living as they live, voluntarily. Often, it is sad to say, {tho not always}, it is their "employers" or "owners" rather, who are themselves from third-world countries {speaking the same language as their laborers, but keeping THEM from knowing any English}. Such a situation with a family of "enslaved" farm laborers, from India I believe, happened close to our "progressive, cool" City of Seattle just a few years ago. Similar outrages are reported from time-to-time in other parts of the U.S. No telling how many REMAIN UN-REPORTED TILL NOW.
Often, as in the above instance of the enslaved laborers from India, it will be ALERT NEIGHBORS who spot "something funny going on; something not right" about a situation they observed.
Monday November 2, 2009, 5:38 pm
More Petitions on Ending Human Trafficking to be found by clicking in "Human Trafficking" at the Care2 Browse Petitions site.
End Human Trafficking in the U.S. - The Petition Site: 11700+ petition signatures: Pledge to help end human trafficking in the US by learning to identify victims and report incidents.
U.S.: Army Sends Infant
to Protective Services,
Mom to Afghanistan
US Politics &
Gov't (tags: )
AniTa - ipsnews.net
U.S. Army Specialist
Alexis Hutchinson, a
single mother, is being
threatened with a
military court-martial if
sh...
New Petition to Legalize
[typo] in Florida! Please
sign in spite of
typo!
legalize mariguana now
how can the laws
prohibiting the use of
marijuana be allowed???
they go against the
My comment: [and please
sign...
From Reuters Alertnet 16
Oct 2009Written by:
Kathleen Mogelgaard
Much of the focus leading
up to the U.N. Climate
Change Conference in
Copenhagen in December is
on reducing the
greenhouse gas emissions
that cause climate
change: who should...
Dahr Jamail, Truthout:
"Chuck Luther, who served
12 years in the military,
is a veteran of two
deployments to Iraq,
where he was a
reconnaissance scout in
the 1st Cavalry Division.
The former sergeant was
based at Fort Hood,
Texas, where he lives
toda...
"Payne Creek Village is
like many subdivisions -
speed-bump-quietened
roads with names such as
Quail Run, Fawn Lane and
Mallard Drive. A brick
entrance monument greets
visitors adjacent to the
management office.
By the numbers
Cost Comparis...
"As the residential
market continues to
grapple with the current
recession, the
manufactured housing
market seems to be going
through a cycle all its
own – a cycle that
experts say is
outperforming its site
built home sibling....."
Source an...
Berlin.
Ãhnlich wie
im brandenburgischen
Königs-Wuste
rhausen, wo vor etwa 9
Jahren das damalige
Arbeitsamt die ersten
erwerbslosen
"Fahrrad-Bewacher" an
S-Bahnhöfe
versandte, sollen nun
auch in Berlin-Spandau
Har...
Alert: Buy Nothing Day by Linda S.
(0 comments
|
discussions
)
— While shoppers rush for
bargains and specials on
Black Friday (Nov. 26
this year), many of us
will observe the annual
Buy Nothing Day instead
as a way of protesting
thoughtless consumerism.
Do we really need more
stuff? more
Alert: Animal Abuse by Sandy a.
(0 comments
|
discussions
)
— Pictures like this
encourage animal
abuse.Please join with me
and refuse to post
pictures that are
questionable as to how
the animal came to be in
such a position. Also
leave comments stating
your distaste for such
images. Contact website
owners, etc.... more
Alert: IMMEDIATE ACTION NEEDED- Save Coal River Mountain by Cari M.
(0 comments
|
discussions
)
— Please help stop the
irreversible destruction
of Coal River Mountain in
Coal River Valley, West
Virginia. As I type
it is being irreparably
damaged by mountain top
removal blasting. It is
part of the Appalachian
mountain range which is
the 2nd mo... more
Alert: US Army Sends Infant to Protective Services, Mom to Afghanistan by BMutiny T.
(0 comments
|
0 discussions
)
—
U.S.: Army Sends Infant
to Protective Services,
Mom to Afghanistan
US Politics &
Gov't (tags: )
AniTa - ipsnews.net
U.S. Army Specialist
Alexis Hutchinson, a
single mother, is being
threatened with a
military court-martial if
sh... more
Content and comments expressed here are the opinions of Care2 users and not necessarily that of Care2.com or its affiliates.