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Ranked
by governments as the third most serious
illegal trade after drugs and
weapons,
trafficking is a multibillion-dollar industry
Moi,
a 16-year-old girl from a rural province in Cambodia, was approached by a
neighbour with the prospect of a job in the capital, Phnom Penh.
Instead, the neighbour sold Moi to a brothel for the equivalent of
$150; after five days she was sold to a second brothel.
By the end of two months, she had been sold to five different
brothels, bringing to $750 the money exchanged for her.
Moi, who was forced to have sex with as many as 10 men every day,
received nothing.
Moi's mother, meanwhile, alarmed by her daughter's disappearance,
had persuaded a policeman she knew to trace Moi, who was rescued and
puncture marks at the base of her skull, indicating she may have been
injected with valium to subdue her.
Moi also was found to have a vaginal infection.
She has so far tested negative for HIV.
The
details differ, but the outlines of Moi's story are recognisable to the
more than 1 million girls and women world-wide who are trafficked and sold
into prostitution each year.
Of these, an estimated 35 per cent are children under 18.
Trafficking
or the illegal moving and selling of human beings across countries and
continents in exchange for financial or other compensation, has long been
outlawed by most national legislation and international human rights
conventions.
Ranked
by governments as the third most serious illegal trade after drugs and
weapons, trafficking of children is a multibillion-dollar industry. This
modern form of slavery continues in its most virulent form: in the
trafficking of girls and women, and increasingly, a growing number of boys
for sexual purposes.
Such trafficking takes place between villages and cities, across
countries and continents.
Because
trafficking is an illegal and underground operation, and because it
usually involves more than one national jurisdiction, data is difficult to
obtain.
Most of the existing data is focused on Asia, where researchers and
NGOs have been working on the problem for a longer time than in other
regions.
However, trafficking occurs everywhere and is constantly shifting
and expanding its frontiers and opening new markets.
The
complex network of operations moves children from small rural communities
in Asia to cities such as Bangkok, Bombay and Phnom Penh; from urban slums
in Rio or Recife to mining camps in remote frontier areas of Brazil; from
Mozambique to South Africa, Mexico to the United States, the Russian
Federation and Poland to Western Europe, Romania to Italy, Turkey and
Cyprus.
Trafficking routes also run from Africa to Europe, Asia to
Australia, New Zealand and Europe.
Trafficking
can be small-scale and informal or large-scale and organised. At
national and international levels, it is often governed by syndicates that
have the resources, contacts and expertise to co-ordinate the movement of
human beings illegally and clandestinely across borders.
Bribery and abduction, false identification and documentation, sham
marriages and adoptions, violence and bonded labour are all involved.
Armies in certain countries, with access to technology, clearances,
means of transport and resources, have also been implicated in the
trafficking of children for sexual purposes.
Border police often enable these practices.
The
trafficking of children results from a broad range of factors.
The effects of poverty and social and economic crises in the last
two decades in a number of countries and areas have destabilized
communities and increased income disparities.
Globalization,
with the lifting of import restrictions and the injection of greater
amounts of foreign investment in many countries, has triggered an influx
of money and goods, further aggravating disparities and promoting new
levels of consumerism.
In
families beleaguered by changes and losing ground in efforts to make ends
meet, girls
-already often devalued - are especially at risk.
They may be sold by their families to traffickers or put in
vulnerable positions when sent as domestic workers to large urban centres.
Coming from poor or ethnic minority communities, they may be seen
objects of exploitation.
Impact
on children
The
children who are trafficked into prostitution face dangers beyond the
injuries, disease and trauma associated with multiple sexual encounters.
Betrayed by those they trust, forcibly separated from their
families by long distances and even across borders, where they are
isolated by a foreign language and culture, these children may become
dependent and dangerously attached to pimps and brothel operators.
Their illegal status makes it hard for them to seek help, and they
live in fear of arrest and prosecution for prostitution, illegal
immigration and false documentation.
Often drugs are used to subdue the children, not only endangering
their health but imposing dependency upon them, which makes escape and
rehabilitation even more difficult.
Children
who manage to escape face difficulties in explaining who they are and
where they come from because of language barriers and lack of documents.
Police arrest them on prostitution charges, and courts may deport
them. Even
when they do succeed in returning home, they may be rejected by their
families and communities.
Often lacking employment skills and with physical and psychological
problems from their experience, these children may return to prostitution
as their only means of survival.
Preventative
measures
A
broad range of interrelated measures must be effected to curb the
trafficking of children into prostitution.
These efforts include legislation, rehabilitation and reintegration
programmes for children who have escaped or been rescued from
prostitution, and steps to educate and raise awareness among families and
communities about the dangers involved.
Training of police and the judiciary is also essential.
NGOs
have been especially effective in monitoring the problem and compiling
much of the data and evidence to prosecute child traffickers, and some
countries have improved legislation.
In the Philippines, for example, the Republic Act 7610 offers
guidelines controlling foreign travel by children as well as the adoption
of children, making any trading or dealing in children in return for
financial considerations illegal.
In Thailand, proposed amendments to the penal code will punish
guardians who sell children in their care.
The selling, buying and transporting of children under 18 for
unlawful sexual gratification will be criminalized by an update to the
Trafficking of Women and Girls Act, even if the young person has
consented.
This Act recognises that children are not the offenders and that no
prostitution charges should be lodged against them.
In Sri Lanka, recent amendments to the penal code make trafficking
an offence in terms similar to those of the Philippines legislation.
In
the industrialised countries, trafficking is addressed often in the
context of immigration.
The Council of Europe has suggested that activities of artistic,
marriage and adoption agencies be supervised, that travel abroad by
children be subject to surveillance by immigration authorities, and that
young victims of trafficking be helped and protected.
In response, the European Union has expanded the mandate of its
Drug Unit to enable it to monitor traffic in human beings. Much of the
proposed legislation targets inter-country adoptions and marriages that
are often a cover for child trafficking.
An international consensus and close collaboration are vitally
important in this issue.
The
problem's dimensions are becoming clear, as are the steps needed.
So too is the life of the trafficked child, an unforgettable spur
to the political will of the world.
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