By: DONNA BRYSON
Associated Press
04/17/10 10:45 AM EDT
ERMELO, SOUTH AFRICA — Police in this small town in eastern South Africa thought they had a problem with prostitutes they could solve in the usual way — arrest the women and get them off the streets.
Then Warrant Officer Magda Scholtz found herself doing something unusual. She talked to the women, curious about what had brought them to Ermelo. She found the problem was human traffickers.
At a heavily guarded hearing Friday, seven suspects waived their right to bail in a case in which they are accused of recruiting women and at least one 16-year-old from across South Africa and bringing them to Ermelo, where they were treated like slaves and forced into prostitution.
Two other suspects asked for more time to appeal for a bail, and a new hearing was set for month's end.
The case comes as South Africa prepares to enact tough new legislation against human traffickers. The World Cup that opens in June also has focused attention on the crime, with questions about whether trafficking might increase because of the influx of partying fans.
The women in the case before the court Friday spoke of being locked in their rooms when they weren't working and of being beaten by the suspects. Their identity documents were taken from them and they were forced to take drugs. All their earnings were taken from them, and they were given little to eat beyond rice and cheap meat.
"One girl was raped ... because she refused to work," Scholtz said.
Four women who have agreed to testify against the suspects are in a witness protection program. Scholtz said even she does not know where they are, but is confident they will appear when the time comes during trial.
Other women were afraid to testify, and the fear increased when a prostitute was found dead near the apartment complex where the women had been living. Scholtz said the dead woman, who had been strangled, had said she would testify but refused to enter the protection program.
Vanessa Barolsky, a sociologist at South Africa's Human Sciences Research Council, said police too often fail to listen to the women, children and migrants, who are the most common victims of traffickers.
"Often what happens is that people are just investigated for prostitution without anybody investigating further," she said. "There are a lot of cases that are probably lost."
Barolsky's government-supported think tank released a report in March that explored trafficking in South Africa. The report said victims included children brought from elsewhere in Africa or the South African countryside to work as street vendors, baby sitters and maids in South Africa's cities. Some work in conditions very close to slavery, and those who leave at times fall into sex work out of desperation.
Women from Asia have been recruited to South Africa with promises of greater earnings here. Some come knowing the jobs are as prostitutes, while others fall for false promises of other work.
Trafficking is not specifically a crime, making statistics hard to compile. The Ermelo case is typical — the suspects are charged under provisions of the country's sexual offenses law.
A proposed South African law that has been years in the making creates a trafficking offense, punishable by life in prison. That's comparable to the possible sentencing under the racketeering and sex crimes laws that have been used in the past to prosecute traffickers.
In addition, the proposed law criminalizes, under certain circumstances, using the services of a trafficked person, providing premises for traffickers, transporting victims, and failing to report suspected cases.
Provisions to guard against deporting victims, provide them shelter and other aid and help them get compensation from traffickers also are laid out.
Malebo Khotu-Rammopo, the point person on human trafficking for South Africa's National Prosecuting Authority, said lawmakers, prosecutors and others were still discussing how to implement the proposals, and the new law may not go into effect until late this year or early 2011.
In Ermelo, police spokesman Captain Leonard Hlathi said the young women had been promised "decent jobs" in Mpumalanga, a province whose roads include trucking routes from the neighboring countries of Swaziland and Mozambique.
"When they got to Mpumalanga, it was a different story," Hlathi said. "They were forced to work as prostitutes."
Hlathi said the lesson was clear: However desperate for work, don't set out with people making promises too good to be true. "You might not come home."
Wednesday, April 28, 2010
Sunday, April 18, 2010
Slavery is alive and well
In our quest to fight Human Trafficking I thought I would start with the explanation of what human trafficking is Article 3, paragraph (a) of the Protocol to Prevent, Suppress and Punish Trafficking in Persons defines Trafficking in Persons as the recruitment, transportation, transfer, harbouring or receipt of persons, by means of the threat or use of force or other forms of coercion, of abduction, of fraud, of deception, of the abuse of power or of a position of vulnerability or of the giving or receiving of payments or benefits to achieve the consent of a person having control over another person, for the purpose of exploitation. Exploitation shall include, at a minimum, the exploitation of the prostitution of others or other forms of sexual exploitation, forced labour or services, slavery or practices similar to slavery, servitude or the removal of organs
It is estimated that there is
27 million people in modern-day slavery across the world
800,000 people trafficked across international borders every year.
1 million children exploited by the global commercial sex trade, every year.
50% transnational victims who are children.
80% transnational victims who are women and girls.
161 Countries are identified as affected by human trafficking
32 billion in yearly profits are generated by the human trafficking industry.
$15.5 billion is made in industrialized countries.
$9.7 billion in Asia
$13,000 per year generated on average by each “forced laborer.” This number can be as high as $67,200 per victim per year.
There are between 14,500 - 17,500 people who are trafficked in the United states yearly.
Edmund Burke once said “Evil flourishes when good men do nothing” that has never been more true, people have sat back and did nothing for too long Christians have sat back and did nothing for to long. People have ignored the many verse in the word of God that state that we are to take care of the poor an needy (Exodus 22:22, Deuteronomy 10:18, Deuteronomy 15:4, Deuteronomy 15:7, Deuteronomy 24:14, Proverbs 19:17, 1 John 3:17-18, James 1:27 to name a few) It is time that the Christians in this world stand up and doing something. It is time that we stand up and fight slavery once and for all !
It is estimated that there is
27 million people in modern-day slavery across the world
800,000 people trafficked across international borders every year.
1 million children exploited by the global commercial sex trade, every year.
50% transnational victims who are children.
80% transnational victims who are women and girls.
161 Countries are identified as affected by human trafficking
32 billion in yearly profits are generated by the human trafficking industry.
$15.5 billion is made in industrialized countries.
$9.7 billion in Asia
$13,000 per year generated on average by each “forced laborer.” This number can be as high as $67,200 per victim per year.
There are between 14,500 - 17,500 people who are trafficked in the United states yearly.
Edmund Burke once said “Evil flourishes when good men do nothing” that has never been more true, people have sat back and did nothing for too long Christians have sat back and did nothing for to long. People have ignored the many verse in the word of God that state that we are to take care of the poor an needy (Exodus 22:22, Deuteronomy 10:18, Deuteronomy 15:4, Deuteronomy 15:7, Deuteronomy 24:14, Proverbs 19:17, 1 John 3:17-18, James 1:27 to name a few) It is time that the Christians in this world stand up and doing something. It is time that we stand up and fight slavery once and for all !
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