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ICYO
YOUTH INFORMATION
No: 2007/24 (APRIL)
(E-Newsletter
from network of youth organizations in India)
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ICYO - Platform of 356 Youth Organizations in India.
ICYO - India’s largest network of urban and rural
youth.
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Global Initiative to Fight Human Trafficking
On
26 March, the UN Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC), together with other United
Nations agencies, governments and NGOs, announced in London the launch of The Global Initiative to Fight Human Trafficking.
The
launch, hosted by Baroness Mary Goudie, Member of the British House of Lords
and Board Member of Vital Voices Global Partnership, coincided with both the
two hundredth anniversary
of
the abolition of the trans-Atlantic slave trade and the bicentennial of the
abolition of the slave trade in the British Empire.
A
series of events throughout the world will culminate in Vienna, Austria, with
an International Conference against Human Trafficking from 27 to 29 November
2007.
Some
2.5 million people throughout the world are at any given time recruited,
entrapped, transported and exploited -- a process called human trafficking --
according to estimates of international experts.
Trafficking
in persons, whether for sexual exploitation or forced labour, affects virtually
every region of the world. UNODC reports that persons from 127 countries become
exploited in 137 nations.
"Slavery
is a booming international trade, less obvious than 200 years ago for sure, but
all around us," said UNODC Executive Director Antonio Maria Costa.
"Perhaps we simply prefer to close our eyes to it, as many law-abiding
citizens buy the products and the services produced on the cheap by
slaves."
Because
human trafficking is an underground crime, with many undiscovered and
unidentified victims, the true numbers are not known. The United States
Government estimates that between 600,000 to 800,000 people are trafficked
across international borders each year.
Human trafficking has become big business. The UN and other experts estimate the total market value of illicit human trafficking at $32 billion -- about $10 billion is derived from the initial "sale" of individuals, with the remainder representing the estimated profits from the activities or goods produced by the victims of this barbaric crime.
A
Global Epidemic
Human
trafficking is a global problem, which UNODC believes has reached epidemic
proportions over the past decade. No country is immune, whether as a source, a
destination or a transit point for victims of human trafficking.
Most
victims of this modern-day slavery are women and young girls, many of whom are
forced into prostitution or otherwise exploited sexually. Trafficked men are
found in fields, mines and quarries, or in other dirty and dangerous working
conditions. Boys and girl sare trafficked into conditions of child labour,
within a diverse group of industries, such as textiles, fishing or agriculture.
A recent
UNODC report Trafficking
in Persons: Global Patterns identifies Albania, Bulgaria,
Belarus, China, Republic of Moldova, Nigeria, Thailand and Ukraine among the
countries that are the greatest sources of trafficked persons. Belgium,
Germany, Israel, Italy, Japan, the Netherlands, Thailand, Turkey and the United
States are cited as the most common destinations.
Distinct
from the concept of forced labour, the act of human trafficking involves
additional elements, for example the act of recruitment (often by deceitful
promises); transportation; and the receipt and exploitation of the victim.
Difficult conditions such as poverty, lack of opportunities, including
unemployment, and displacement make people especially vulnerable.
Trafficking
victims are held in bondage through physical and/or psychological force; they
are not free to walk away. Even if they had the ability to escape from their
enslavement, typically they have nowhere to go -- they often lack identity
papers and have little or no money. Traffickers also threaten to harm the
victims' families as an additional deterrent against trying to flee. Many are
ill: HIV/AIDS and other sexually transmitted diseases are common among women
and girls forced into prostitution.
Human
trafficking is a crime
The
UN Protocol Against Trafficking in Persons, in effect since December 2003,
makes human trafficking a crime. The Protocol has been signed and ratified by
more than 110 countries, yet the participating governments and their criminal
justice systems have not effectively curbed the practice. Few criminals are
convicted, and most victims never receive help -- on the contrary, many victims
themselves are convicted of offences such as illegal entry or unlawful
residence.
Among
its goals, the Global Initiative aims to raise public awareness throughout the
world as part of a larger strategy to eliminate human trafficking. This
increased attention will enable effective prevention efforts, such as raising
awareness among potential victims about the dangers of trafficking, reducing
demand for services and products that rely on slave labour, protecting victims
and improving law enforcement methods.
"Governments,
businesses, NGOs and citizens everywhere have a responsibility to work together
to address this modern-day slavery," says Melanne Verveer, Co-Founder and
Chair of Vital Voices Global Partnership. "The new Initiative will be
critical to progress in combating this global challenge. We urge everyone to
join the 21st century anti-trafficking movement."
Lured
by the promise of a better life, victims often are misled or deceived by
traffickers. They may initially consent to the recruitment as a means to escape
from extreme poverty and miserable living conditions. Women who were promised
domestic work or an education instead find themselves forced into prostitution
or uncompensated
labour. Parents are lured by the promise of good jobs and education for their
children, who are then held as slaves.
"Trafficking
in persons involves recruitment, transportation or the receiving of a
person," says Kristiina Kangaspunta, Chief of UNODC's Anti-Human
Trafficking Unit. "It involves abuse of power, violence, deceit and abuse
of vulnerability for the purpose of ongoing exploitation that generates illicit
income for the traffickers."
No Accurate Count
Because
human trafficking is a crime, and therefore clandestine, accurate numbers are
not available. Many experts believe 2.5 million represents the tip of a much
greater iceberg. The International Labour Organization (ILO) calculates the
minimum number of people in forced labour at 12.3 million, while research by
Free the Slaves, an NGO based in the United States, estimates 27 million people
in slavery.
German
authorities place the number of victims trafficked into that country at between
2,000 and 20,000 each year, but in 2004 only 972 victims were registered.
The
wide range of estimates highlights the need for better reporting. "We need
accurate numbers," says Ms. Kangaspunta, "but all our numbers are
based on second-hand information. How do you count something that is all
underground? We can't go to official statistics because nobody knows about
these crimes."
A Complicated Issue
The
issue of human trafficking is immensely complex. Trafficking takes many forms.
International groups draw distinctions between victims of human trafficking,
migratory labourers and forced labour in one location, such as factory work in
a village or agricultural work in local fields.
"It
is all slavery," says Kevin Bales, President of Free the Slaves. "The
difference is in the way people are taken into slavery." Some people are
born into slavery. Though a common perception is that slavery has ended, it
still persists. "Slavery is basically the same as it always has
been," says Mr. Bales. "Slavery has always been about one person
controlling another, often using violence, to make a profit."
Throughout
history, slaves have been a capital investment for owners, costing as much as
the equivalent of $80,000 apiece. The unfortunate difference in the 21st
century is that modern slaves are inexpensive. With a swelling global
population and immense poverty in much of the world, the price has dropped to
about $100 a person, Bales reports. "That means they are disposable.
People enslaved today are less likely to receive medical care if they need it,
or decent food to keep them alive because they are so inexpensive."
Sexual Exploitation Common
Data
collected by UNODC show that about 80 per cent of the victims of human
trafficking, most of them women and young girls, are forced into prostitution.
The remaining 20 per cent, usually the
men and boys, face forced labour. About
half are under the age of 18.
Those
percentages may be misleading, says Ms. Kangaspunta. Most groups concerned with
human trafficking focus on women and sexual exploitation and do not see the
males in the fields, mines and construction jobs or even the women and children
in sweatshops and domestic servitude.
The
issue is politically sensitive because many countries and corporations have
benefited from this kind of enforced, cheap labour.
Human
trafficking has become big business, both for criminals engaged in trafficking
and for those who profit from the free labour. "The economy of human
trafficking is significant," said Executive Director Costa. " Since
the world woke up to this terrible reality, the mass of people trafficked and
exploited would populate a state like Kansas, producing an income equivalent
also to that of Kansas, or Montana."
(UNews/April 2007,Vol62 No4)
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Youth Information is published by
Indian
Committee of Youth Organizations (ICYO)
194-A, Arjun Nagar, Safdarjang Enclave
New Delhi 110029, India
Phone: 91 9811729093 / 91 11 26183978 Fax 91 11
26198423
Email: icyoindia@... / icyo@...
Web: www.icyo.in
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Indian
Committee of Youth Organizations (ICYO) is a registered non-profit,
non-governmental network organization, committed in developing areas of mutual
cooperation and understanding among different youth voluntary agencies, youth
groups, clubs and individuals working in the field of youth welfare in
India.
ICYO
functions as an umbrella organization of youth NGOs in India. It's family
consists of
over 356 organizations spread in 122 districts of 22 states from different
corners of India.
Our goal:
To improve and extend the youth work and services through
Youth Organizations;
To enhance and demonstrate youth work in the society;
To promote effective youth programmmes;
To organize network of civil society organizations working towards the
development of youth work;
To organize seminars, conferences, workshops, trainings;
To maintain international relation with organizations promoting young people in
their programmes and activities
Affiliation:
Consultative (Roster) Status with ECOSOC, United Nations;
Consultative Status with Commission on Sustainable Development;
Full Member of World Assembly of Youth (WAY); Asian Youth Council (AYC);
Youth for Habitat International Network (YFHIN); CRIN, South Asia Youth
Environment Network (SAYEN), Affiliate group of ECPAT International, Thailand;
ATSECE-DELHI, Indian Partner of AIDS Care Watch Campaign;
Steering Committee member of World Bank's
YDP Network;
Working relation with Indian Association of Parliamentarians (IAPPD);
International Medical Parliamentarians Organizations (IMPO);
Asian Forum of Parliamentarians on Population and Development (AFPPD);
World Youth Foundation, Malaysia