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Explosive growth internationally in trafficking of women and
children for sex trade
By Julie Hyland
8 June 2000
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Economic and social breakdown has fuelled an explosion in the
trafficking of women and children internationally for the sex
trade, according to recently published reports.
Last month the International Organisation for Migration (IOM)
reported that sex trafficking in Kosovo had mushroomed since the
end of NATO's bombing of Serbia and accused the UN and other agencies
of fuelling a trade in forced prostitution. The IOM complain that
UN and international aid agency staff are frequent visitors to
the province's burgeoning brothel trade, disguised as bars and
nightclubs. Many of the women have been press-ganged into sex
work. Pasquale Lupoli, IOM's head in Kosovo, said the organisation
had rescued more than 50 women in the province since last October,
but that figure was just "the tip of the iceberg".
According to the IOM, more than 50 percent of the women forced
to work as prostitutes in Kosovo are from the former Soviet republic
of Moldova and more than two-thirds have never worked in prostitution
before. Nearly all had been promised decent employment in the
West, but once they left home their passports were taken from
them and they were sold to pimps for between $500 and $1,500.
Lupoli said that such trafficking is increasing internationally.
The IOM estimates that up to 500,000 women a year are brought
into Western Europe and forced into the sex industry. Other estimates
place the figure as high as one million. Increasingly restrictive
immigration laws in the West have helped to the fuel the trade,
Lupoli continued, as people desperate to leave conditions of poverty
and deprivation resort to illegal means and criminal gangs.
Those traded come from some of the poorest regions in the world.
In the US, for example, an estimated 50,000 women are trafficked
every year from "feeder" points in the Ukraine, Albania,
the Philippines, Thailand, Mexico and Nigeria. The problem is
growing in scope as the number of countries facing similar catastrophic
declines in living standards rises.
At the centre of the recent growth in trafficking has been
the collapse of the Soviet Union and Eastern European regimes.
The reality of capitalist restoration in these countries is illustrated
by the fact that women from the former Stalinist-ruled countries
form a large proportion of those being trafficked to the West.
A survey on forced prostitution in Britain found that many of
the women involved were originally from the Ukraine. An estimated
half a million women have left the former Soviet republic, which
has a 70 percent unemployment rate, since 1991.
Research by the University of North London's Child and Women
Abuse Studies Unit surveyed immigration officers, customs officials
and three-quarters of the police forces in England and Wales.
It found that up to 1,400 women were being forcibly trafficked
in England's sex trade. In London's back street brothels, six
out of ten women are trafficked. They are deprived of their passports
and must work for up to 17 hours a day. They often end up earning
little or nothing, as they are told they must repay thousands
of pounds in accommodation, food and travel costs to the gangs
that brought them into the country and the brothel keepersa
modern day variant of debt bondage. Violence and intimidation
prevent them from absconding.
Trafficking is more extensive in mainland Europe, particularly
in Germany's major cities, which have become the centre of the
continent's highly profitable sex industry. Again, Russian women
are a major component of the country's "new form of white
slavery", according to one BBC report.
See Also:
Slavery in the modern
era
Disposable People: New Slavery in the Global Economy, by
Kevin Bales
[9 September 1999]
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