Women Trafficking
Hello
and welcome back to another new blog. Here I'm with another topic to discuss
which is most important to discuss now a days.
As we all know that Women are usually trafficked for the purpose of sexual and economic exploitation, particularly prostitution and pornography, forced labor, including for work in commercial agriculture and domestic work, arranged marriages or to be 'sold' as brides, recruitment for participation in hostilities and etc.
WOMEN TRAFFICKING
Women’s and girls’ experience of trafficking is different to
that of men and boys. Women and girls tend to suffer a disproportionately heavy
impact, whereas trafficked men find it difficult to access
existing program for victim assistance. This requires the inclusion
of gender equality principles in the formulation and implementation of
legislation and program aiming at the prevention of trafficking in human
beings.
Risk
Factors for Vulnerability to Trafficking
- Factors that undermine the ability
to protect oneself or that disrupt connections to social and family
support increase susceptibility to coercion.
- Variable that contribute to a
person’s vulnerability to being trafficked include: membership in a
marginalized group; prior victimization and trauma; disabilities;
immigrant or refugee status; and family disruption. These may be magnified
by globalization, poverty, political instability and war.
Trafficking
Leaves Both Visible and Invisible Scars
- Trafficked women and girls encounter
high rates of physical and sexual violence, including homicide and
torture, psychological abuse, horrific work and living conditions, and
extreme deprivation while in transit.
- Serious mental health problems
result from trafficking, including anxiety, depression, self-injurious
behavior, suicidal ideation and suicide, drug and alcohol addiction,
post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), dissociative disorders and complex
PTSD.
- Physical symptoms among trafficking
victims include neurological issues, gastrointestinal disturbances,
respiratory distress, chronic pain, sexually transmitted diseases
(including HIV), uro-genital problems, dental problems, fractures and
traumatic brain injuries.
- Trafficked women come from less
wealthy countries in Asia, Africa, Eastern Europe, the
former Soviet Union, Latin America, the Middle East, and
the Caribbean. In some of those areas, such as the Philippines and
Thailand, the sex tourism industry has increased demand for women and thus
the amount of trafficking to meet the needs of men who travel from
Europe, North America, and Australia. In the United
States an estimated 50,000 women are trafficked in each year, coming
mostly from the former Soviet Union and southeast Asia. Many
women leave the Ukraine because of difficult socioeconomic conditions that
predominantly affect women, who constitute 75 percent of the unemployed
there. In Asia, Japan is the largest market for trafficked women. In China
the one-child rule and a preference for male children have resulted in an
imbalanced ratio of males to females. As of 2000 males outnumbered females
born between 1980 and 2000 by 8.5 million. Those men create a demand for
wives and sex industry workers that often is filled by national and
international trafficking of women from nearby countries such as Vietnam.
- MOTIVATIONS
AND RECRUITMENT OF TRAFFICKED WOMEN
Women are lured from countries that are impoverished,
war-torn, strongly patriarchal, or lacking in adequate police forces. Most are
disadvantaged in their home countries, where women face severe social and
economic disadvantages. If they can find work in struggling economies, they
often are paid much less than are men and are easily lured by promises of
high-paying jobs in other countries. For instance, in Russia women's earnings
are only 50 percent of men. Because many societies still value sons more highly
than daughters, some families sell their daughters to brothels or traffickers
to get quick money and eliminate the need to pay a daughter's marriage dowry.
Dowries are especially problematic in India, where campaigns were begun in the
1990s to inform citizens of the many problems, including trafficking, that can
result from the tradition of dowry giving.
- In light of the desperation many
impoverished women feel, they can be swayed easily to leave their home
countries with promises of better lives. Some women believe they are
hiring an agency to provide them with passports and other paperwork and
help them across international borders in the face of increasingly
restrictive immigration policies. Once they are in the new country, all
documentation is taken from them and they are put to work, often forced to
repay the high costs of transportation in addition to lodging and other
expenses. Other women are recruited in bars, cafés, or clubs, where men
offer them seemingly legitimate jobs in other countries.
Women who actively seek employment in foreign
countries may answer false job advertisements in magazines or newspapers for
positions such as nannies or factory workers. They also may visit an agency
where recruiters may marry or become engaged to them in a chivalrous gesture of
protection in order to transport them out of the country more easily. Some
women are sold by friends, family, or acquaintances, and others may be
kidnapped. Still others may be refugees and victims of wartime violence and
abduction by soldiers. In countries in Africa and in Mexico women recruiters
negotiate with lower-class families to provide jobs and education for their
daughters, later transporting those these girls for forced labor outside their
native country.
The business of mail-order brides moves both willing
and unwilling women and girls to foreign countries, where they may be forced
into unpaid domestic labor, prostitution, pornography, or other work by their
husbands. Many of those brides come from countries such as the Philippines,
Africa, China, Russia, the Ukraine, and Latvia. Websites advertising those
women emphasize that unlike Western women, they are not difficult to please and
will occupy a subservient position in the household. As of 1999 approximately
six thousand mail-order brides arrived in the United States each
year, coming predominantly from the Philippines and Russia.
LAW GOVERNING TRAFFICKING OF WOMEN
- Because trafficking of women is an international business, individual countries are challenged to create legislation to deter and punish that trade. In 2000 the United States passed the Victims of Trafficking and Violence Protection Act, which specified actions to punish traffickers and assist victims within the United States and to urge foreign countries to eliminate trafficking, address the economic conditions that lead to trafficking, and assist victims who are repatriated. The United Nations (UN) has several protocols aimed at halting human trafficking. The UN Convention on the Rights of the Child from 1989 focuses particularly on guaranteeing human rights to children, and the UN Protocol to Prevent, Suppress, and Punish Trafficking in Persons from 2000 defines trafficking, outlines punishments for traffickers, and requires states that ratify it to protect and assist trafficked persons. In 2002 the United States implemented a special "T" visa that allows victims to remain in the country if they testify against their traffickers and face likely danger in their home countries.
- Many countries have no laws against
trafficking; one is South Africa, a popular source and destination
for trafficked persons from at least ten other countries, including
Mozambique, Thailand, and China. In addition to legal action some
governments and nongovernmental organizations have launched educational
campaigns both to inform women from popular source countries about the
dangers of trafficking and to encourage citizens of destination countries
to be watchful for immigrants who may be victims of that industry.
Therefore,
I can conclude that WOMEN TRAFFICKING has to be stopped.
“Human trafficking is an open wound
on the body of contemporary society, a scourge upon the body of Christ. It is a
crime against humanity.”
Thank you
Blog By: Divij
Jangid
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