Cheri Fleming, Governor

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Cheri Fleming, Governor

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Loss of free will. 17. HUMAN TRAFFICKING. Slavery Today Life is Cheap ... these issues as embedded in the internet, television, music, movies and print media. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Cheri Fleming, Governor


1
Camino Real Region
  • Cheri Fleming, Governor
  • Julie Mairs, Chair
  • Soroptimists STOP Trafficking
  • 2008-2010
  • October 13, 2008
  • Slide will change after 30 seconds

2
  •  It is the mission of Camino Real Region to bring
    together women from all walks of life and to
    enable them, through the development of their
    leadership skills, to truly make a difference in
    their communities and throughout the world.     

3
Camino Real Region
  • Organizing theory of our opposition to
    trafficking and the enslavement of women and
    girls in this country and world-wide.
  • Neither slavery nor involuntary servitude,
    except as a punishment for crime whereof the
    party shall have been duly convicted, shall exist
    within the United States, or any place subject to
    their jurisdiction. US Constitution Amendment
    XIII Slavery Abolished (1865)

4
Someones daughter is on the Road, as traffic,
against her will
5
Someones daughter is on the Road, as traffic,
against her will
  • Young women used in forced labor and prostitution
    face routine violence from employers, pimps and
    customers
  • Most of these daughters will not ever be able to
    return home out of shame or because of the stain
    on their families honor even if they sold her.

6
Someones daughter is on the Road, as traffic,
against her will
  • Every 60 seconds a woman is trafficked somewhere
    in the world
  • Every 10 to 30 minutes
  • someone is trafficked into
  • the USA, or about 18,000
  • to 52,00 persons a year

7
Someone's daughter is on the Road, as traffic,
against her will
  • Young women used in forced labor and prostitution
    face a wide range of diseases and adverse effects
    like
  • HIV-AIDS and other sexually-transmitted diseases,
  • Early and forced marriage,
  • tuberculosis,
  • rape and unwanted pregnancies leading to
    abortions,
  • beatings, post-traumatic stress disorder,
    suicide, and
  • death by murder.

8
Someones child is on a Road, as traffic,
against her will
  • The little brick-maker consent is irrelevant

9
HUMAN TRAFFICKING
10
HUMAN TRAFFICKING
  • Human trafficking is currently tied with arms
    dealing as the second largest criminal industry
    in the world, right after drug dealing which is
    the largest criminal industry in the world.

11
HUMAN TRAFFICKING
  • Human trafficking is is the fastest growing
    criminal enterprise delivering 15,000 to 50,000
    persons for sale into the USA each year.
  • 80 percent of human trafficking cases in
    California occur in Los Angeles, San Diego, or
    San Francisco.

12
Where does the Traffic come from?
  • Traffic Map

13
Where does the Traffic go to?
14
HUMAN TRAFFICKINGDefined - USA The elements of
the crime of Human Trafficking include
If one condition from each category is met, the
result is trafficking. For adults, victim
consent is irrelevant if one of the Means is
employed. For children consent is irrelevant
with or without the Means category.
15
HUMAN TRAFFICKINGDefined - USA
  • Trafficking in Persons is
  • The recruitment, harboring, transportation,
    provision, or obtaining of a person for labor or
    services,
  • through the use of force, fraud, or coercion
  • for the purpose of subjection to involuntary
    servitude, peonage, debt bondage, or slavery." -
    United States

16
HUMAN TRAFFICKINGSlavery
17
HUMAN TRAFFICKINGSlavery Today Defined
  • Slavery today is similar to forms of slavery that
    have existed for centuries in that these
    characteristics are found
  • Control through violence or threat of violence
  • Exploitation for profit
  • Loss of free will

18
HUMAN TRAFFICKINGSlavery Today Life is Cheap
  • Modern forms of slavery however, are much
    different in several important ways
  • No longer a need for legal ownership
  • People caught up in slavery today can be
    purchased and sold for as little as 100
    (compared to 10 times that much in the 1850s). As
    a result, people become "disposable" i.e.,
    easily replaceable.
  • Slavery cuts across nationality, race, ethnicity,
    gender, age, class, education-level, and other
    demographic features.

19
HUMAN TRAFFICKINGSlave Labor - USA
  • Contemporary slavery/human trafficking remains a
    reality for many victims in the United States,
    where both American citizens and foreign
    nationals are trafficked into and within the
    United States for forced labor.
  • Hearing-impaired Mexican men, women and children
    were forced to peddle items on the streets of New
    York to earn money for their traffickers

20
HUMAN TRAFFICKINGSlave Labor - USA
  • South Asian women forced to work in a textile
    factory without pay and with constant physical
    and sexual violence against them
  • Young American girls forced to prostitute
    themselves on the streets of Los Angeles (and
    dozens of other cities) while under constant
    physical and sexual violence from pimps and those
    purchasing the sex

21
HUMAN TRAFFICKINGSlave Labor USA
Maria Suarez Maria was sold into slavery at the
age of 15 in a suburb of Los Angeles. Her owner
was an elderly man with a wife. Police would
later report that the man was 'an old lecher' and
'brujo' or sorcerer, who bought young girls from
Mexico and trading them in when they turned 20
years of age.                
22
Girls Exploited, Trafficked and Enslaved
23
Girls Exploited, Trafficked and Enslaved
  • The US Department of State estimates that each
    year, more than two million children, mostly
    girls, are exploited in the global commercial sex
    trafficking trade, many of them trapped in
    prostitution..1

24
Girls Exploited, Trafficked and Enslaved
  • Child Sex Tourism engages tourists, mostly men,
    in sex trafficking by purposely traveling to
    known sex destinations, seeking anonymity in
    pornography or prostitution, or engaging in
    pederasty with young children and homosexuality
    with young and older adults.

                                               
                                   
25
HUMAN TRAFFICKINGSlavery Victims
26
Victims Adolescent GirlsCustomers/exploiters
come from all over the world. The PROTECT Act
makes it illegal for an American to sexually
abuse a minor in another country.
Perpetrators can receive up to 30 years in jail.
27
Victims Women and girls, hidden in the shadows
and out in the open for all to see
  • The U.S. Department of State estimates between
    600,000 and 800,000 people are trafficked across
    international borders each year.
  • Millions more are enslaved within national
    borders.

28
Victims Mother
  • This desperate mother traveled from her village
    in Nepal to Mumbai, India, to find and rescue her
    teenage daughter who was trafficked into an
    Indian brothel. Nepalese girls are prized for
    their fair skin and are lured with promises of a
    "good"
  • job and the chance to improve
  • their lives.
  • "I will stay in Mumbai, until I find my
  • daughter or die. I am not leaving
  • here without her."

29
Victims Girl Child
  • Street kids, runaways, or children living in
    poverty can fall under the control of traffickers
    who force them into begging rings. Victims of
    organized begging rings are often beaten or
    injured if they don't bring in enough money. They
    are also vulnerable to sexual abuse.
  • Children are sometimes
  • intentionally disfigured
  • to attract more money
  • from passersby.

30
Victims Defenseless
  • Young girls are prized in the carpet industry for
    their small, fast fingers.
  • Defenseless, they do what they're told, toiling
    in cramped, dark, airless village huts from
    sunrise until well into
  • the
  • night.

31
Corruption The Root Cause of Exploitation,
Trafficking and Slavery
32
  • Corruption Defined
  • Is behavior in any organized, inter-dependent
    system in which part or all of the system is
    either
  • not performing duties it was originally intended
    to,
  • or is performing them in an improper way, to the
    detriment of the system's original purpose.
  • This behavior has connotations of evil,
    malignance, sickness, and loss of innocence or
    purity.

33
  • Corruption Effects
  • Threatens security and damages trust in systems
    which affect peoples daily lives.
  • Is a particular concern for the worlds police
    and judicial systems, as corruption in one
    country can compromise an entire international
    investigation.
  • Does not itself produce poverty, but does have a
    direct and immediate impact on economic growth
    and good governance, which in turn raises poverty
    levels

34
  • Corruption Makes crime safe for criminals
  • Is a manifestation of public and private
    institutional weakness, poor ethical standards,
    skewed incentives and insufficient enforcement.
  • Terrorists, traffickers and other organized
    criminals rely on the complicity of corrupt
    public and private leaders to carry out their
    illegal activities.

35
  • Political/Public Corruption Defined
  • The dysfunction of a political system or public
    institution in which government officials,
    political officials or employees seek
    illegitimate personal gain through actions such
    as bribery, extortion, cronyism, nepotism,
    patronage, graft, and embezzlement.
  • Reflects the impairment of integrity, virtue, or
    moral principles and inducements to do wrong by
    improper or unlawful means.

36
  • Political/Public Corruption Effects
  • Access to politics and political will are
  • organized with limited transparency, limited
    competition and
  • directed towards promoting narrow interests that
    impose barriers to equity, mobility and basic
    freedoms.

37
  • Public and Private Corruption Makes crime safe
    for criminals
  • Fuels trans-national crime like
  • Human trafficking,
  • Forced and coerced labor
  • Slavery, and
  • Sex trafficking and prostitution.

38
  • Political and Private Corruption Makes sex
    trafficking and prostitution possible
  • Prostitution, legal or not, is inherently
    harmful and dehumanizing, and fuels trafficking
    in persons, a form of modern-day slavery.
  • Few activities are as brutal and damaging to
    people as prostitution.

39
  • Political and Private Corruption Makes sex
    trafficking and prostitution possible
  • Legalized prostitution expands the market for
  • commercial sex,
  • opening markets for criminal enterprises, and
  • creating a safe haven for criminals who traffic
    people into prostitution.

40
  • Institutional Strength - Prosecution Works
  • Swedish aggressive prosecution of customers,
    pimps, and brothel owners began in 1999 and in
    two years resulted in

41
  • Institutional Strength - Prosecution Works
  • a 50 percent decrease in women prostituting,
  • a 75 percent decrease in men buying sex, and

42
  • Institutional Strength - Prosecution Works
  • A reduction of trafficking for the purposes of
    sexual exploitation.

43
What can we do as Women?Report Trafficking
  • Clues
  • Accompanied by a controlling person or boss not
    speaking on own behalf
  • Lack of control over personal schedule, money,
    I.D., travel documents
  • Transported to or from work lives and works in
    the same place
  • Debt owed to employer/crew leader inability to
    leave job
  • Bruises, depression, fear, overly submissive.

44
What can we do as Women? Report Trafficking
  • CALL THE COPS!
  • National Human Trafficking Resource Center at
    1-888-373-7888 attended 24/7
  • Your local police department
  • For more information on human trafficking, visit
    www.acf.hhs.gov/trafficking.

45
Institutional StrengthsWhat Works- Especially
in the USA
  • Civic Involvement Works
  • Awareness, Advocacy, Action
  • Public Awareness of the crime
  • Public Demand for action on the crime
  • Political Will to combat the crime
  • Resource Allocation to prevent and intervene
  • Law Enforcement that knows what to do
  • Criminal and Civil Prosecution
  • Victim Protection
  • Determined Women

46
Civic Institutional Strengths USA
Soroptimist
47
Who Are We To Organize Against Trafficking?
  •    WE ARE SOROPTIMISTS
  • We are part of a network of Soroptimist clubs all
    over the world.
  • Our purpose is to do work that makes a
    difference to improve the status and transform
    the lives of women and girls, in local
    communities and throughout the world.

48
What can Clubs do about Trafficking?

Soroptimists STOP Trafficking (SSTR)
49
What are Clubs encouraged to do locally? SSTR

Objective More than 90 of clubs will support at
least one SI Project.
50
What can Clubs do locally? SSTR
  • AWARENESS

51
What can Clubs do locally? SSTR
  • Educate members about what trafficking and sexual
    slavery are, the root causes of this activity,
    costs to communities and warning signs that it
    may be happening in your community.
  • Bring more educated eyes and ears to bear on this
    matter.

52
What can Clubs do locally? SSTR
  • Educate interested community social and economic
    groups on this matter, the warning signs and the
    costs to the community.
  • Get this matter on the agenda of government,
    social and economic action groups in your
    community.
  • Raise awareness and demand for action on this
    matter in your community.

53
What can Clubs do locally? SSTR
  • ADVOCACY

54
What can Clubs do locally?SSTR
  • Build demand for a gender analysis of local
    budgets
  • Identify resources intended to prevent, intervene
    and prosecute trafficking and sexual slavery
    crimes.
  • Build demand for transparency in the actions of
    local government to address this matter for the
    benefit of the community and the victims.
  • Assure that resources intended for the abatement
    of trafficking are appropriately and
    efficaciously targeted and effectively applied in
    service to victims and the community

55
What can Clubs do locally?SSTR
  • Map and publicize the gaps between the location
    of trafficking services and the known locations
    from which or to which victims are trafficked.
  • Map the Gaps http//www.endviolenceagainstwomen.or
    g.uk/data/files/map_of_gaps.pdf
  • Sex in the City http//www.eaves4women.co.uk/POPPY
    _Project/Documents/Recent_Reports/Sex20in20the2
    0City.pdf

56
What can Clubs do locally?SSTR
  • ACTION

57
What can Clubs do locally? SSTR
  • Support the installation of valid programs in the
    primary and secondary grades to teach and foster
    respect between boys and girls.
  • Increase the potential for girls to have the
    confidence to resist situations of exploitation.
  • Increase the possibility that boys will reject
    the mistreatment of girls as being compatible
    with notions of manhood.

58
What can Clubs do locally? SSTR
  • Support Awareness-Building Projects with money,
    memberships or hands on support
  • Bring more educated eyes and ears to bear on this
    matter.
  • Get this matter on the agenda of government,
    social and economic action groups in your
    community.
  • Raise awareness and demand for action on this
    matter in your community

59
What can Clubs do locally? SSTR
  • 7. Support Social Reintegration Projects with
    money, memberships or hands on support
  • 8. Support Protection Projects with money,
    memberships or hands on support
  • 9. Support Rehabilitation Projects with money,
    memberships or hands on support

60
What can Clubs do locally? SSTR
  • Support Training for Journalists in Human
    Trafficking
  • Address how the media positively and/or
    negatively affects and drives community attitudes
    toward corruption, use and exploitation of and
    lack of respect for women and girls as reflected
    particularly in the realm of gender relations.

61
What can Clubs do locally? SSTR
  • Support Training for Journalists in Human
    Trafficking
  • Address these issues as embedded in the internet,
    television, music, movies and print media.

62
What can Clubs do locally? SSTR
  • Recruit a Local High Profile Spokesperson
  • Partner with local nonprofit organizations
    engaged in the struggle against trafficking and
    slavery.
  • Encourage a focus on the "volunteers" in these
    partner organizations who provide programmatic
    collaboration.

63
What can Clubs do locally? SSTR
  • 12. Provide Information on this crime to 1,000
    persons.
  • Involve victim survivors in this public effort.
  • Get this matter on the agendas of persons in
    positions of power and influence in your
    community or area.
  • Mobilize political will needed to bring policy
    and procedure changes that will benefit victims
    and survivors of this crime.

64
What can Clubs do locally? SSTR
  • 13. Organize a trafficking protest at a local
    transportation hub.
  • Get this matter on the agendas of persons in
    positions of power and influence in your
    community or area.
  • Mobilize political will needed to bring policy
    and procedure changes that will benefit victims
    and survivors of this crime.
  • Empower local children and their parents in this
    matter.

65
What can Clubs do locally? SSTR
  • 14. Provide financial support and assistance
    with permits and other needs for a Region-level,
    30 day, public information campaign to place bus
    and train cards with anti-trafficking messages on
    trains and busses.
  • The card could give a number for persons at risk
    to call for help.
  • The card would also refer the viewer to a contact
    path to learn about a Soroptimist club in their
    community.

66
What can Clubs and Girls do?
  • LIL SSTR

67
What can Clubs and Girls do? Lil SSTR
  • Help to provide Information on this crime to
    1,000 persons.
  • Be involved through their groups (scouts, sports
    teams, youth clubs, and S clubs) and their
    parents in this effort as well.

68
What can Clubs and Girls do? Lil SSTR
  • Help to provide Information on this crime to
    1,000 persons.
  • Girls can put on art shows, readings, plays or
    other communication-related activities on this
    matter ands how it affects children.

69
What can Clubs and Girls do? Lil SSTR
  • Organize a trafficking protest at a local
    transportation hub.
  • Girls can march in protests against trafficking,
    engage in discussions of their perception of
    trafficking, learn self-protective mechanisms,
    and participate in public speaking.

70
Why let girls do? Lil SSTR
  • Cut the
  • Power of
  • Risk
  • Grow the
  • Power of
  • Resilience

71
What did one woman do for 2,500 children during
the holocaust?
Irena
Sendler, credited with saving 2,500 children from
the Warsaw Ghetto, died in May, 2008 at age 98. A
social worker, she organized about 20 people to
help smuggle children out of the ghetto. She was
caught and tortured by Nazis, but never gave up
information on the rescue effort. Source AP 
Photo Alik Keplicz, AP
72
Thank you for your attention!
With love, Lil SSTR
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