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Sex Tourism: Addressing the Demand for Trafficking
House Committee on Financial Services ^ | 2000-2005 | EQUALITY

Posted on 08/28/2005 10:07:12 PM PDT by Calpernia

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To: Calpernia

http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/news/1677479/posts
Prostitution ring run by illegals, for illegals Feds say brothels in Texas, Oklahoma ....


61 posted on 08/03/2006 8:24:32 PM PDT by Calpernia (Breederville.com)
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http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/news/1678451/posts
Terrorism and Human Smuggling Rings in South and Central America


62 posted on 08/05/2006 2:45:55 PM PDT by Calpernia (Breederville.com)
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http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/news/1797973/posts
Women for sale in the Gatwick (England) slave auctions


63 posted on 03/09/2007 6:03:47 AM PST by Calpernia (Breederville.com)
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http://www.guardian.co.uk/crime/article/0,,1790389,00.html
'Slave auctions' targeted in crackdown on airport crime

Jacqueline Maley
Monday June 5, 2006
The Guardian

Women are being sold off in "slave auctions" in the arrivals lounges of British airports, according to authorities desperate to crack down on the burgeoning trade in trafficking humans.

The Crown Prosecution Service said foreign women were being sold as sex workers as soon as they arrived, and police have been appealing to men who frequent brothels to contact them in confidence if they believe the prostitutes may be there against their will.

(snip)

A Home Office report released five years ago estimated the number of victims of human trafficking in the UK at 1,400. But the current figure could be double that, according to Gloucestershire chief constable Tim Brain, the head of Operation Pentameter, a multi-agency taskforce launched in February to combat trafficking. The CPS conference coincides with criticisms levelled at the government by children's charities, who believe its response to the trafficking of children is "completely inadequate".

(snip)


64 posted on 03/09/2007 6:06:33 AM PST by Calpernia (Breederville.com)
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http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/news/1850454/posts
Mom accused of prostituting her 2 daughters [Hondurans in Houston, Texas]

>>>Children of the Night, a California-based advocacy group for abused teenagers, estimates that 300,000 juveniles are working as prostitutes in the United States. The ages typically range from 11 to 17, the group reports.<<<<


65 posted on 06/14/2007 6:32:05 PM PDT by Calpernia (Breederville.com)
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http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/1859097/posts
British authorities rescue ‘slave labourers’


66 posted on 07/01/2007 5:23:29 AM PDT by Calpernia (Breederville.com)
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http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/1866321/posts
N.J. Businessman Will Be Tried In Sex Tourism Case


67 posted on 07/15/2007 2:32:16 PM PDT by Calpernia (Breederville.com)
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To: Calpernia
It is sad that the focus of funding seems to be entirely on girls and women. Young boys are also abused and there seems to be little effort to do anything about it. I have been living in Moldova for the last three years working with a privately funded NGO that helps orphans in transition to society. I know of cases where normally “straight” boys have sold themselves to older men in order to survive. Prior to coming here I was in private business and had little experience or knowledge about government funded aid programs. If the average American taxpayer knew how little aid money actually does any real good to anyone but a bunch of greedy fat cats inside the beltway and is spent on the most ridiculous, idiotic programs you can imagine, they would just demand that congress stop all of it. Basically from what I have seen, all the money goes to people sitting in offices..reaping big salaries, and doing nothing...on both sides of the pond.
68 posted on 07/15/2007 6:09:11 PM PDT by flash2368 (Emphasis on women and girls...)
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To: Frank_Lee_Speaking
It's much sadder in Thailand where young girls as young as 4 month's old are sold into sex slavery in whorehouses in Bangkock.

ROTFLMAO! Do you make this up by yourself?

69 posted on 07/16/2007 5:11:08 AM PDT by killjoy (Life sucks, wear a helmet.)
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http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/news/1913761/posts
Prostitution: Legal Work or Slavery?


70 posted on 10/19/2007 7:28:40 PM PDT by Calpernia (Hunters Rangers - Raising the Bar of Integrity http://www.barofintegrity.us)
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http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/news/1917711/posts
Houston major hub for human trafficking


71 posted on 10/28/2007 7:07:28 PM PDT by Calpernia (Hunters Rangers - Raising the Bar of Integrity http://www.barofintegrity.us)
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To: LauraleeBraswell; cyborg; Calpernia; JRios1968

Bingo! Bad Thailand ping!


72 posted on 11/01/2007 8:51:29 AM PDT by Froufrou
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To: Calpernia

Cross reference thread:

http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/1941047/posts
Omnibus Bill Includes Border Fence-Gutting Amendment (This is outrageous!!!)

Tidbits on DynCorp

UN Condones Dyncorp Sex Crimes & Sex Slavery
by DOMINIC HIPKINS

A senior United Nations official is demanding that her colleagues involved in the sex trade in Bosnia should be stripped of their immunity and prosecuted.

Madeleine Rees, the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights in Bosnia, has broken ranks to demand that UN officials, international peacekeepers and police who are involved in sex crimes be brought to justice in their home countries.

Speaking exclusively to Scotland on Sunday, the British lawyer has also launched an outspoken attack on her former boss. She accuses Jacques Paul Klein, the former head of the UN Mission in Bosnia, of not taking UN complicity in the country’s burgeoning sex trade seriously enough.

In recent years there has been a massive increase in the trafficking of women in Bosnia, including girls as young as 12. The women are taken from their homes in eastern Europe by organised criminal gangs and brought to Bosnia, where they are forced into prostitution.

The trade in these so-called ‘sex slaves’ hardly existed until the mid-1990s.


73 posted on 12/18/2007 12:50:21 PM PST by Calpernia (Hunters Rangers - Raising the Bar of Integrity http://www.barofintegrity.us)
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http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/1322431/posts
Human Trafficking as 21st Century Form of Slavery


74 posted on 03/12/2008 9:35:59 AM PDT by Calpernia (Hunters Rangers - Raising the Bar of Integrity http://www.barofintegrity.us)
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To: Frank_Lee_Speaking
"It's much sadder in Thailand where young girls as young as 4 month's old are sold into sex slavery in whorehouses in Bangkock."

What??!!

An American Expat in Southeast Asia

75 posted on 03/12/2008 9:41:31 AM PDT by expatguy ("An American Expat in Southeast Asia" - New & Improved - Now with Search)
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http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/2155323/posts
Child maids now being exported to US


76 posted on 01/14/2009 3:14:21 PM PST by Calpernia (Hunters Rangers - Raising the Bar of Integrity http://www.barofintegrity.us)
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To: Calpernia; Fred Nerks; null and void; pissant; george76; PhilDragoo; Candor7; MeekOneGOP; ...

Here’s Calpernia’s old thread with updates, and totally off topic. Maybe skip #75; it’s too sick for words.


77 posted on 01/29/2009 8:21:52 PM PST by LucyT
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To: LucyT

Kill the traffickers and kill the customers. Now.


78 posted on 01/29/2009 8:36:16 PM PST by little jeremiah (Leave illusion, come to the truth. Leave the darkness, come to the light.)
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To: Calpernia
Are they paid less than their male counterparts?

The Lily Ledbetter law for Fair Play signed today ought to give sex slaves standing in the courts.
79 posted on 01/29/2009 8:38:12 PM PST by BIGLOOK (Keelhaul Congress! It's the sensible solution to restore Command to the People.)
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Sex-Slave Trade Is Thriving

Foreign Affairs News Keywords: INTERPOL, CHRISTINE DOLAN , EUROPE,

http://www.freerepublic.com/perl/latest?t=8

Posted on 07/21/2001 07:49:04 PDT by Stand Watch Listen

The Bush administration, working with Congress and the State and Justice departments, is organizing a war against violent international sex-trafficking and slavery rings.

Movement of women and children from one country to another, or within national borders, for sexual exploitation or forced labor is called trafficking. For the first seven months of the Bush administration its abolition has had a high priority. According to Interpol, profits from this trade top $19 billion annually. Congressional sources estimate that 50,000 persons are trafficked into the United States annually and 2 million worldwide. The United Nations puts the number worldwide at 4 million.

Investigative journalist Christine Dolan recently spent several months in Europe looking into this human trafficking for the International Center for Missing and Exploited Children. She found that not only are women and children being trafficked for sexual purposes, but also infants and toddlers. In her report, A Shattered Innocence: The Millennium Holocaust, she calls for a declaration of war on the mobsters, pimps and other criminals who are responsible.

Dolan applauds the U.S. government for what is being done to resist this exploitation but insists the problem is at the local level where law enforcement is badly in need of training. “They know the local mob, they know their neighborhood, but they don’t have the specialized training to outwit these international criminals,” Dolan says.

The U.S. State Department released its first Annual Trafficking in Persons Report in mid-July, as mandated by Congress last year in the Victims of Violence and Trafficking Protection Act of 2000. This law requires the State Department to expand the annual human-rights reports to cover severe forms of trafficking in persons and to create an interagency task force to coordinate efforts nationally and internationally to stop it.

Curiously, in this first report the State Department claims that only 700,000 people a year are being trafficked as sex slaves or as sweatshop workers, much lower than any other estimate. It does, however, confirm Insight’s reports that many of these victims, whatever their number, are lured by promises of gainful employment in the United States, such as waitress jobs or jobs as dancers or models, only to find themselves kidnapped, raped and sold into prostitution once they arrive (see “Sex-Slave Trade Enters the U.S.,” Nov. 27, 2000).

Last year’s legislation was the first passed in recent years to combat human trafficking. Previously the Department of Justice (DOJ) prosecuted traffickers under the old antislavery and peonage laws. The annual report it requires, say Capitol Hill sources, is supposed to monitor the problem while alerting the American people. “This report is one volley in that global fight for freedom of countless people,” says Sen. Sam Brownback, R-Kan., one of the bill’s sponsors.

“International sex trafficking is the new slavery,” Brownback says. “It includes the classic and awful elements associated with historic slavery, such as abduction from family and home, use of false promises, transport to a strange country, loss of freedom and personal dignity, extreme abuse and depravation.”

Attorney General John Ashcroft told reporters in February that fighting sex trafficking would be a priority of the DOJ during his tenure. Only 16 cases have been prosecuted in the United States since 1999, and in mid-July the attorney general issued regulations to provide assistance and protection to victims of human trafficking while their cases are investigated and prosecuted. The new rules not only enable federal law-enforcement personnel and immigration officials to protect victims, but they require and outline related training for DOJ and State Department personnel and mandate interdepartmental cooperation.

“The cooperative efforts of federal agencies and law-enforcement officials will help provide victims the tools and services needed to punish traffickers to the fullest extent of the law,” Ashcroft told reporters.

Two cases so far have been prosecuted under the new law and regulations. In March a man named Kill Soo Lee was arrested in American Samoa on a two-count federal complaint charging violations of slavery statutes. Lee held mostly female workers from Vietnam in involuntary servitude at his garment factory. That same month a landlord in Berkeley, Calif., pleaded guilty to trafficking women into the United States and placing them in sexual servitude. In February, Michael Allen Lee was charged with having forced homeless African-American men to work in his Florida fields. That same month José Tekum of Florida was sentenced to nine years in prison for felony counts that included kidnapping, slavery and immigration violations and forcing a Guatemalan women to engage in sex acts and manual labor against her will.

Because the new law requires that official assistance be given to victims on U.S. soil and directs the Justice Department among other agencies to administer this, the DOJ has set up a telephone help-line. Callers may report cases of trafficking or slavery to the National Worker Exploitation Task Force by calling (888) 428-7581 weekdays, 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. EST.

Secretary of State Colin Powell will chair a Cabinet-level interagency task force on trafficking. A State Department spokesman tells Insight that there will be an office to act as the working group for the task force. The task force has not met yet, but State already is pursuing countertrafficking measures, the spokesman says.

As many as 5,000 aliens trafficked into the United States by organized-crime syndicates will be permitted to remain on a new nonimmigrant visa, provided they assist in the investigation of their perpetrators, are younger than age 15 or can demonstrate that they would suffer severe harm if returned to their country of origin. The Office of Victims of Crime at DOJ is funding a pilot project headed by the Coalition to Abolish Slavery and Trafficking, a private organization offering assistance to victims of trafficking in Los Angeles.

Meanwhile, President George W. Bush can impose nontrade, nonhumanitarian sanctions against countries that do not comply with minimum standards to eliminate trafficking. The countries that currently have no laws against forced labor and prostitution have four years to enact such laws before being vulnerable to application of sanctions, but the president can waive such sanctions at any time.

The State Department’s annual report on this problem not only includes trafficking data gathered by the State Department from the 185 diplomatic posts worldwide, but updates Congress on progress being made by each country to combat trafficking. It also lists antitrafficking groups that have received federal funds to carry out their work.

The State Department compiled three lists of countries. Tier 1 countries are those that fully comply with minimum standards, as described in the U.S. law, that successfully prosecute trafficking and that provide assistance to victims. These include Austria, Canada, Taiwan and the United Kingdom. Tier 2 countries are those that do not fully comply with the minimum standards but are taking steps to bring themselves into compliance. State claims these include Angola, Bangladesh, China, India, Morocco, Thailand and Vietnam. Tier 3 countries do not comply with the minimum standards and are making no effort to do so. They include Albania, Bosnia, Burma, Indonesia, Pakistan, Qatar, Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates. A full listing is available from the State Department at www.state.gov.

Brownback tells Insight that he will use the information about the trafficking practices of each country to press the issue with their governments and recommend its use to the attorney general as guidance in training U.S law enforcement about the global magnitude of the problem. “The biggest problem we face is to convince people that this is actually taking place,” Brownback says. “So I applaud the attorney general for making it a top priority when he has hundreds of things to work on.”

As a result of her investigation, Dolan recently launched a group called the International Humanitarian Campaign Against the Exploitation of Children, which may be contacted on the Internet at www.helpsavekids.org. It will raise money for training local law enforcement about the problem, get rape counselors for safe houses to counsel trafficked children and raise awareness globally. “This is a transcontinental and transcriminal problem,” says Dolan. “These are criminals with no compassion, no respect for human life.”

How bad are these people? Dolan interviewed a trafficker in Albania named Alberto who said he trafficked for the quick money. He had been doing it for two years and moved his “stock” between Antwerp, Brussels and Belgium. Alberto said young girls bring very high prices. When asked how young, all he would say was, “Very young, very young.”

“People are not like tobacco and drugs, which once sold are used and literally go up in smoke,” says Dolan. “As long as human beings are alive they can be used and abused at every step of the trafficking game, being sold and resold.”


http://www.state.gov/g/inl/rls/tiprpt/2001/index.cfm?docid=3937

From Trafficing In Persons Report (2001-07):

Tier 3
Albania
Bahrain
Belarus
Bosnia-Herzegovina
Burma
Democratic Republic of Congo
Gabon
Greece
Indonesia
Israel
Kazakhstan
Lebanon
Malaysia
Pakistan
Qatar
Romania
Russia
Saudi Arabia
South Korea
Sudan Turkey
United Arab Emirates
Federal Republic of Yugoslavia


80 posted on 01/30/2009 9:26:08 AM PST by Calpernia (Hunters Rangers - Raising the Bar of Integrity http://www.barofintegrity.us)
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