From the President
Slavery Persists in Modern Day
By Elvira Craig de Silva, DSW, ACSW
It
is difficult to accept that modern-day slavery and human trafficking
are so prevalent in the world today. And yet documented cases
tell us that:
A man abducted and sold his 9-year-old stepson to strangers in
Nigeria.
A young Russian girl was promised a nanny job in France and became
a brothel worker.
A young Mexican man was captured and forced to work on a Florida
fruit farm.
A woman was promised restaurant work, but was sent to Turkey
via Ukraine for prostitution.
Two Indonesian women worked without pay as domestics in Long
Island for five years.
Human trafficking, the modern-day slave trade, is big business
in the world — and in the United States. This $44.5 billion business
is defined by the United Nations as the "illegal trade of
human beings, through abduction, the use of threat of force, deception,
fraud, or sale for the purposes of sexual exploitation or forced
labor." Not only is it the second most lucrative illicit
enterprise in the world after drug trafficking; it is also the
fastest growing, according to the U.S. Department of Health and
Human Services.
According to NASW member Elizabeth Pathy Salett, the author of
a recent NASW Practice Update on Human Rights and International
Affairs, "extreme poverty produces a steady supply of trafficking
victims; the demand for commercial sex as well as cheap goods
and labor creates the market for victims worldwide." Salett
is collaborating with social worker Marc Levin from Free the Slaves
to propose a new policy statement on slavery and human trafficking
for the 2008 Delegate Assembly.
Part of our role as social workers is to be aware of the conditions
and systems in which our clients and patients live and to be alert
to symptoms and clues that may point to situations of abuse and
may have originated in human trafficking. Under desperate conditions,
people take unimaginable risks and make extreme decisions. People
fleeing their countries due to dire lack of financial resources,
war, genocide or political persecution are vulnerable and find
themselves with no options. Many times they end up as victims
of human trafficking — trading one type of slavery for another
even within countries that are considered democratic, progressive
and defenders of human rights.
Slavery is, as slavery has always been, a commoditization of
human beings. To the slave trafficker, people in all countries
are goods to be bought, sold, used, shipped and traded for money.
Anti-trafficking advocates say that advances in Internet and communication
technology have now created an electronic slave auction, with
fast, anonymous information that's easily accessible to predators
and traffickers worldwide.
Victims are most highly concentrated in agriculture, mining,
commercial sex, domestic work, construction and small-scale industrial
manufacturing. Traffickers may be neighbors, friends, family members
of returnees, agricultural operators, owners of small businesses
and even diplomats. Increasingly, traffickers are organized crime
syndicates, often working in collaboration with corrupt law enforcement
entities, government officials or employers, who use elaborate
transportation and intermediary networks to ensure delivery of
their human "products."
A simple "human trafficking" search on the expanding
Social Work Portal (www.SocialWorkPortal.org) provides
a wealth of resources from different sectors of the social work
community. In addition, the U.S. Department of Health and Human
Services, the U.S. Department of Justice and the U.S. Department
of State all have current materials and data to help citizens
and policymakers understand and fight this problem.
I have conflicting feelings about the depth of information available
on the growing human trafficking problem in the United States.
On one hand, I am grateful for the significant number of organizations
working to end this scourge and find the variety of government
reports reassuring. It means that people in high places are paying
attention and acting.
On the other hand, the sheer volume of information and resources
suggests that this is a bigger problem than most of us would like
to believe and that the situation is not getting better. Some
data suggest that as demand for cheap labor and commercial sex
skyrockets, the problem is actually getting worse.
Human trafficking is a pervasive global crime, with nearly one
million people trafficked across international borders every year.
Roughly 80 percent of them are women and children, and up to 50
percent are minors, according to the U.S. State Department. Conservative
estimates show that approximately 15,000 victims of human trafficking
are brought into the United States every year. There are as many
as 200,000 people in this country who have been trafficked, according
to the U.S. Department of Justice.
But there is hope. On June 22, the U.S. Senate approved a resolution
sponsored by Sens. Dianne Feinstein (D-Calif.), John Cornyn (R-Texas),
Barack Obama (D-Ill.) and Dick Lugar (R-Ind.) to create a National
Day of Human Trafficking Awareness to be observed on Jan. 11 of
every year. While multiple states have already passed laws to
assist the federal government in the investigation and prosecution
of human trafficking, this national observance seeks to raise
greater awareness about modern slavery among the people most likely
to come into contact with the victims.
On June 27, Sen. Dick Durbin (D-Ill.), chairman of the Senate
Subcommittee on Human Rights and the Law and Sen. Tom Coburn (R-Okla.),
who serves as ranking member of the subcommittee, introduced legislation
that will close a legal loophole that prevents the U.S. Justice
Department from prosecuting people in the United States who have
committed the crime of human trafficking in other countries. This
law would allow federal prosecutors to prosecute anyone who engages
in human trafficking when they are found on U.S. soil, as well
as U.S. citizens who commit the crime abroad.
As of September last year, legislatures in Alaska, Colorado,
Connecticut, Georgia, Iowa, Idaho, Indiana, Michigan, Mississippi,
Nebraska, North Carolina and South Carolina had joined Arizona,
Arkansas, California, Florida, Illinois, Kansas, Louisiana, Minnesota,
Missouri, New Jersey, Texas and Washington in enacting laws making
trafficking a state felony offense. New
York state enacted legislation this year that included stronger
criminal penalties for those who use the sexual services of victims.
As efforts in the U.S. to combat trafficking have improved, the
U.S. State Department's annual Trafficking in Persons Report showed
that for the third year in a row, the number of countries who
are not doing enough to combat human trafficking has increased
to 48.
Fortunately, international companies are beginning to assist
anti-trafficking campaigns. Some hoteliers are creating training
programs for their managers to recognize and prevent child exploitation.
Airlines are working on public service announcements to show on
flights. Entertainment networks are producing videos to warn young
people against becoming ensnared by traffickers. Computer companies
are training law enforcement personnel in different countries
to use technology that assists investigations for human trafficking
cases.
While many people may be shocked that slavery still exists in
the new millennium, social workers across the globe are likely
to encounter trafficking victims throughout their careers. As
the U.S. is both a source and a destination for thousands of victims
of slavery, NASW will continue to be an active voice in promoting
public awareness and advocating legislative and administrative
changes to end human trafficking.
It is crucial that in this time and age we defend those victimized
by slavery; to do so we must be well informed on this issue and
aware of local and national resources available to assist those
in need. As social workers, we must stay informed, remain alert,
assist victims and become advocates for eliminating a practice
that undermines society in the most fundamental way.
To comment to Elvira Craig de Silva: president@naswdc.org
From October 2007 NASW News. © 2007 National
Association of Social Workers. All Rights Reserved. NASW News
articles may be copied for personal use, but proper notice of
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