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Juridical Aspects
A.1.International Covenant on Civil & Political Rights
   2.Conventions Related to Slavery
B.1.CEDAW
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Factual Aspects
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E.Right to Dignity
  1.Prostitution & Slavery
  2.Rape & Sexual Abuse
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Read on for interview with Lisa I. Thompson, " Liaison for the Abolition of Sexual Trafficking" at the Salvation Army's national headquarters in Arlington, Virginia.
 
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The Salvation Army Response to Trafficking





The Salvation Army’s Response to Human Trafficking

Table of Contents

Introduction

International Commitment

U.S. Anti-Trafficking Initiative

Legislative & Public Policy Advocacy

Awareness Raising, Coalition Building and Partnerships

Trafficking Survivor Services

PROMISE Initiative

International Efforts

Conclusion


Introduction

The Salvation Army (TSA) has been and continues to be a leader on the issue of human trafficking. Examples of its efforts to eradicate trafficking go back to the early chapters of the organization’s history and include The Salvation Army’s successful legal reform campaign to help prevent the trafficking of young girls during the 1880’s in the United Kingdom. Moreover, upon seeing the desperate needs of women and children caught up in organized commercial sexual exploitation, The Salvation Army responded by opening homes for women and girls and developing intensive “Rescue Work.” Within thirty years Salvation Army rescue homes grew from one to 117. For more historical perspective - click here.

Now, more than a century later, The Salvation Army in the United States and abroad is part of a reviving movement for the abolition of trafficking. Based on its history in combating the problem, some still consider The Salvation Army (TSA) to be a pioneer in the war against human trafficking. As a Faith-based social service agency, The Salvation Army (TSA) is committed to meeting the needs of human trafficking survivors, regardless of their country of origin, ethnicity, sexual orientation or age. Trafficking survivor services is a relatively new field in the U.S., and as such, the Army's involvement is fairly recent but developing quickly. This page provides an overview of TSA service related activities and will be updated periodically as these efforts unfold. For the most complete and recent information, please contact the National Consultant for Trafficking Survivor Services at 703.684.5150.


International Commitment

In May 2004, a presentation on human trafficking was made to The Salvation Army’s International Leader's Conference. This body, comprised of TSA’s top leaders from around the world, adopted a declaration which included a commitment to combat human trafficking. (In January of 2005, a similar presentation was made to TSA’s U.S. National Leaders Conference.) This commitment symbolically unifies The Salvation Army International in opposing the tragedy of human trafficking and supporting the development of anti-trafficking programs. For more information on The Salvation Army's International commitment to fight trafficking, click here.

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U.S. Anti-Trafficking Initiative

A revival of The Salvation Army’s previous anti-trafficking movement has been developing since the late 1990s and has recently begun to pick up steam. A Strategic Plan has been developed to coordinate and guide these efforts. This plan charts a course for future action and elicits buy-in on all levels of the organization. It is intended to pave the way for all current and future TSA anti-trafficking efforts across the nation.

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Legislative and Public Policy Advocacy

The Salvation Army (TSA) endorsed the Trafficking Victims Protection Act, a law which passed the U.S. Congress in October of 2000. TSA was among a coalition of faith-based and other organizations which worked zealously to obtain its passage. TSA's role in the effort to pass TVPA has been highlighted in the book Freeing God's Children by Dr. Allen Hertzke.

The Salvation Army has also taken a strong, leadership position, along with other allied groups and individuals, in efforts to shift U.S. policy on sexual trafficking. This includes:

  • maintaining the link between sexual trafficking and prostitution;
  • emphasizing strategies that reduce demand;
  • emphasizing the link between sexual trafficking and HIV/AIDS;
  • opposing efforts to legalize prostitution in the U.S. and abroad;
  • affirming a "report and rescue" strategy in humanitarian efforts to assist women and children in brothels;
  • support for the End Demand for Sex Trafficking Act of 2005;
  • support for a sufficiently strong Reauthorization of the Trafficking Victims Protection Act in 2005.

In regard to these issues, TSA has participated in and initiated letters to prominent political and faith leaders outlining numerous policy concerns and appealing for their help. These efforts are meeting with success, as illustrated by a National Security Presidential Directive linking sexual trafficking and prostitution issued by President George W. Bush, a new policy announced by the U.S. Agency for International Development which rules that nongovernmental organizations that support legalized prostitution are not eligible for federal anti-trafficking funds, as well as increased attention to human trafficking pledged by Russian President Vladimir Putin. Work is also underway on an internal Salvation Army position statement on human trafficking.

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Awareness Raising, Coalition Building and Partnerships

The Salvation Army-USA has been a member of the Initiative Against Sexual Trafficking, a partnership of faith-based, human rights, child and women's advocacy organizations, united in seeking the abolition of sexual trafficking since 2000. In 2001, TSA assumed leadership of IAST and under its direction IAST now spearheads many activities. Such activities include a booth display on sexual trafficking which is used at numerous conferences and conventions in an effort to educate the public about sexual trafficking and to engage them in the abolitionist fight. IAST also coordinates and hosts forums on the issue of sexual trafficking such as the two forums held at the National Liberty Museum in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, entitled "Opposing the Sexual Gulag." These events featured nationally and internationally renowned leaders on the issue. IAST publishes a newsletter, and also maintains a website and email list-serve which distributes news and information concerning sexual trafficking and commercial sexual exploitation to a wide range of subscribers.

To advance its anti-trafficking efforts in the areas of awareness, policy, and programs TSA created the position of "Liaison for the Abolition of Sexual Trafficking" at its National Headquarters. In this position, The Liaison develops and coordinates the strategies for TSA to create recovery services for survivors of sexual trafficking in the U.S. and abroad, and addresses public policy issues related to sexual trafficking and commercial sexual exploitation. The Liaison frequently speaks at Salvation Army and other organizations’ events both in the U.S. and internationally.

Through its efforts, TSA has had unique opportunities to partner with federal agencies, such as with the U.S. Department of State and three other NGOs (Shared Hope International, the Protection Project, and the International Justice Mission), which together hosted “Pathbreaking Strategies in the War Against Trafficking,” an international conference held in February 2003. Due to The Salvation Army’s involvement, many Christian representatives from other faith-based NGOs were invited to participate in the conference. The Salvation Army has also enjoyed working closely with the Department of Health and Human Services’ "Rescue and Restore" public-awareness campaign which is being launched across the country.

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Trafficking Survivor Services

Capacity Building
The Salvation Army’s ultimate goals are to end the crime of human trafficking while helping survivors establish or restore healthy and productive lives. This requires that in addition to advocacy, TSA must increase its capacity to respond to the problem, which in turn requires raising awareness internally, the training of personnel and the acquisition and/or identification of resources.

In 2003, The Salvation Army entered into a cooperative agreement with U.S. Department of Justice to support these capacity-building efforts. This award has 3 major goals: increased awareness, increased coordination and increased ability to serve victims. The National Consultant for Trafficking Survivor Services was hired at the National Headquarters to coordinate this program and begin to move TSA into the field of trafficking victim services. More specifically, the National Consultant oversees the management of the grant, is responsible for project design and implementation, and develops protocols for trafficking survivor services.

The primary steering body of this new movement is the U.S. National Anti-Trafficking Council, with representatives from each of the 4 U.S. territories of TSA and Mexico. The Council convenes monthly and is moderated by the National Consultant. The purpose of the Council is “to promote and support the work of The Salvation Army USA in preventing human trafficking and in achieving the freedom, health and well-being of survivors.”

Additionally, The Salvation Army National Social Services Department has provided speakers and training at its 2002-04 National Social Services Conferences. Speakers such as Dr. Laura Lederer, Special Advisor on Trafficking to Under Secretary for Global Affairs at the U.S. Department of State, Dr. Donna Hughes, professor of women studies at the University of Rhode Island, and Rachel Lloyd, founder of Girls Education and Mentoring Services, have provided training. Additional training and awareness raising activities are being planned across the country.

Direct Service Programs in the U.S.
In 1993, TSA Omaha assumed operation of the Wellspring Prostitution Rehabilitation Program to restore domestic sex trafficking victims. It continues to serve today.

Since 2003, The Salvation Army has partnered with the International Rescue Committee to provide shelter services to trafficking victims identified in or near Arizona at sites in Phoenix and Tucson. The Salvation Army also is poised to provide survivor services on a case-by-case basis as shelter space allows in others parts of the U.S.

In January 2005, the U.S. Department of Justice, Office for Victims of Crime awarded an 18-month $500,000 cooperative agreement to the Western Territory of The Salvation Army to provide direct services to victims of trafficking. This award established the Western Region of The Network of Emergency Trafficking Services (NETS), through which TSA will assume the lead role in responding to victim referrals in 10 Western states − AK, ID, MT, WY, UT, CO, NV, NM, East Texas and parts of CA. Additionally, four comprehensive service sites are being established.

The NETS counterpart in the Southern states is directed by World Relief Corporation (WRC). WRC will serve as the primary referral agency for trafficking victims in 13 Southern states: OK, TX (central), AR, LA (except southwest), MS, KY, TN, AL, WV, VA (except northern), NC, SC, and FL (except southern). WRC serves the primary role in finding appropriate services for victims found in those areas. WRC will also establish several comprehensive sites to proactively prepare customized services for trafficking victims, increase public awareness, increase victim identification and prosecute traffickers.

NETS utilizes the expertise of large service organizations to provide emergency response to victims across a broad geographic area as an intermediate measure as it establishes strong, comprehensive programs on the local level.

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PROMISE Initiative

The Salvation Army is exploring ways to combat the trafficking of U.S. citizens as well. In particular, the PROMISE Initiative (Partnership to Rescue Our Minors from Sexual Exploitation) is a comprehensive program designed to attack the problem of child sex trafficking in a comprehensive and holistic manner. This program is based on the premise that child sex trafficking is a systemic and predictable problem that results directly from faulty societal safety nets. This comprehensive approach seeks to fix the holes in the system that these children fall through, correct public misperception of the problem, meet the needs of survivors and prevent new victimization. A pilot program was enthusiastically launched in Chicago on Jan 21, 2005, with great participation from local governmental and non-governmental organizations.

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International Efforts

Around the world The Salvation Army is mobilizing to respond to the needs of trafficking survivors, and to implement prevention strategies. To illustrate, following the model of the U.S. Council, The Salvation Army's International Headquarters has formed an International Anti-Trafficking Task Force with members from TSA around the world. The Salvation Army Canada and Mexico have formed similar groups to address human trafficking in their countries. In countries such as France, Spain, Zambia, Ghana, Papua New Guinea, and India awareness raising activities have been undertaken or are ongoing. TSA has provided shelter and care to Chinese children who were rescued from traffickers in Sri Lanka. Additionally, The Salvation Army World Service Office (SAWSO) has received funding to develop anti-trafficking programs in Ecuador and the People's Republic of China. SAWSO also participates in the F.A.I.T.H. Consortium – a partnership of faith-based agencies working to combat sexual trafficking. TSA has existing anti-trafficking related programs in Bangladesh and Tanzania and is launching new initiatives such as those outlined below. For more information on TSA's International efforts to combat trafficking, click here.

Philippines
“Human Trafficking for Sexual Exploitation Community Care and Education Program”
Among the program’s many activities, The Salvation Army will:
§ utilize its corps (church) to raise awareness through campaigns and workshops with mothers;
§ create education materials;
§ develop creative activities such as musical and drama presentations and song-writing competitions;
§ create partnerships with schools, churches, NGOs, government agencies and other institutions;
§ conduct research; and,
§ facilitate peer counseling among vulnerable groups.

India
“Jeevan Asha Project: Drop-in Center for Women and Children in Prostitution”
In response to the massive problem of women and children being exploited in the sex trade, The Salvation Army of India and Australia are partnering on a pilot project in Mumbai, India. The Kamathipura Red Light Area is the biggest sex trade area in Mumbia. It is there that TSA has opened a drop-in center for women in prostitution, most of whom are victims of devadasi (temple) prostitution and cast-based prostitution. The center will offer counseling, vocational training, literacy programs, women’s meetings, spiritual meetings integrated with other activities, and activities for the children of the women.

Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC)
“Kinshasa, Fight against Sex Trafficking”
War, poverty, and a food crisis have created terrible conditions in the DRC − conditions under which sex trafficking thrives. To help prevent trafficking and to assist victims, The Salvation Army is launching a project in the Tshiangu district of Kinshasa, capital of the DRC. Plans include a media campaign, and micro-credit loans to assist 100 sex slaves to escape bondage, as well as provision of counseling and social services.


Conclusion

Through the activities outlined above, The Salvation Army has established relationships with many advocates and service providers both in the U.S. and around the world. Our vision for a global network of organizations working to eradicate human trafficking is steadily becoming a reality. Additionally, these activities demonstrate the strength of our commitment to abolish trafficking, and show that The Salvation Army is translating that commitment into solid action.

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Sexual Gulags
Facing and fighting sex trafficking.
Q&A with Lisa Thompson by Kathryn Jean Lopez
January 26, 2006, 8:27 a.m.


Earlier this month, in preparation for a syndicated column I was about to work on the worldwide sex-trade, I e-mailed Lisa I. Thompson, " Liaison for the Abolition of Sexual Trafficking" at the Salvation Army's national headquarters in Arlington, Virginia, posing a few questions to her about her work and the battle she's fighting for innocent victims of our modern-day slavery. She came back with detailed answers packed with information about the Salvation Army ­ including its 19th century fight against sex trafficking ­ and this modern-day fight. I had to share what she had to say; my correspondence with Thompson follows. ­ Kathryn Jean Lopez

Lopez: Why is the Salvation Army in this fight against the sex trade?

Lisa I. Thompson: To understand why the Salvation Army is so deeply committed to the modern-day fight against sexual trafficking, it's necessary to understand our organization's roots and early history. The Salvation Army was founded in London, England, in 1865 by William and Catherine Booth, revolutionaries in their time. They went against every Victorian convention and took their ministry to the dirty and dangerous streets of London's east side where they reached out to the destitute and desperate.

To some people it will likely be surprising to learn that in the late 1800s there was considerable sexual trafficking of women and girls in the U.K. (as well as Europe). Under the leadership of Josephine Butler, an evangelical Christian, a movement on behalf of these women and girls took shape. Following on the heels of the successful movement for the abolition of the African slave trade in the British empire, Butler ignited another abolitionist campaign: This one for the repeal of the Contagious Diseases Acts, legislation which had legalized prostitution in several garrison towns of England in the 1860s. Her campaign to end the commercial sexual exploitation of women and girls eventually spread throughout Europe, where several countries had adopted various forms of regulated prostitution, and where traffic in women and girls flourished.

Like the Booth's, Butler was also a revolutionary. She upset the social norms of her time when she dared to speak publicly before men, which simply was not done in her day, and then added insult to injury, when she spoke on the scandalous subject of prostitution. It was 1886 before she saw the Contagious Disease Acts repealed, and there were many more years of struggle ahead on behalf of women in Europe and India.

It was during the 1880s that the Salvation Army joined Butler in her movement to rescue and restore "fallen women" ­ the Victorian-era euphemism for women in prostitution (who were more often pushed over the precipice of virtue rather than fallen!). The efforts began in 1881 with the opening of a home for women seeking to escape street life. A similar home soon followed.

However, the Salvation Army's efforts to help women and girls in prostitution did not stop there. In one of the most fascinating chapters its history, the Salvation Army participated in the execution of an undercover investigation into the trafficking of young girls for prostitution ­ a detailed account of which was published in July 1885 by the Pall Mall Gazette in a series of articles called, "The Maiden Tribute of Modern Babylon." At the heart of the series was the report of how W. T. Stead, Pall Mall Gazette editor, arranged for the purchase of a young girl, Elizabeth Armstrong, from her mother, with the mother's knowledge that the girl would ostensibly meet with an illicit and immoral fate. To say that the series created a national sensation is an understatement. The circulation of the Pall Mall Gazette rose from twelve thousand to over a million and there was near rioting in the streets as people fought to obtain copies of the paper.

In the months that followed, the fervor created by "The Maiden Tribute" series helped foment public opinion in support of the Criminal Law Amendment Act, a measure which when passed in August 1885, raised the age of consent from 13 to 16 (although reformers sought 18). The Salvation Army's advocacy efforts were a major catalyst in the bill's passage. In addition, to speaking to large crowds of people on the topic of protection of young girls, Catherine and William Booth, wrote a petition to the House of Commons in support of the Criminal Law Amendment Act, which in the course of 17 days received 393,000 signatures!

On the heels of this great victory, the crusaders received a blow, when in September 1885, many of those involved in the "purchase" of Elizabeth Armstrong, including W. T. Stead, Bramwell Booth (one of the Booth's adult children), and Rebecca Jarrett (a Salvation Army convert who procured the girl), were pressed with criminal charges irrespective of their motives in the case. William Booth expressed his consternation this way: ". . . it seems to me more like complaining of the dogs that bark in order to show the enemy is there rather than of the wolves that bite!" Bramwell was acquitted, while Stead received a three month sentence and Jarrett a six month term.

Nevertheless, the Salvation Army's efforts on behalf of those caught up in prostitution expanded. William Booth conceived of a "New National Scheme for the Deliverance of Unprotected Girls and the Rescue of the Fallen." Of his scheme he held high hopes, saying, "If it can be matured and got into operation on the scale here described, I believe it will constitute one of the most effective onslaughts on one of the blackest strongholds of the devil, and be a means of rescuing tens of thousands of the most despairing and wretched victims of his fiendish designs."

Among the plan's elements were:

[]  The establishment of a central office of help and inquiry in London, which was to be a place of refuge and escape to the vulnerable and the exploited alike, and to which parents and others could make inquiries regarding those feared "gone astray."

[]  The immediate and extensive establishment of homes of refuge for those "actually fallen."

The Salvation Army also formed Midnight Rescue Brigades for "Cellar, Gutter, and Garret" work, sending its "brigades" at night to the back allies and attics in which they might find women and girls longing for another life. Commenting on this work, Catherine Booth said, "I felt as though I must go and walk the streets and besiege the dens where these hellish iniquities are going on. To keep quiet seemed like being a traitor to humanity." And besiege they did. In 30 years time, the number of the Salvation Army rescue homes grew from one in Whitechapel to 117 homes in Great Britain and around the world.

In the 21st century, the Salvation Army finds history repeating itself. Once again we are fully engaged in the fight against sexual trafficking. To do anything less we risk becoming traitors to humanity and of our heritage.

Lopez: What is the most significant challenge facing the U.S. in 2006 on this front?

Thompson: Two months ago I would have said that passing legislation with measures to provide assistance to U.S. citizen victims of intra-country sexual trafficking, as well as to combat U.S. demand for commercial sex were our biggest challenges. The good news is that the Title II provisions of the Trafficking Victims Protection Act of 2005 (TVPRA 05), which the president signed into law earlier this month, enact measures designed to address both these issues. Specifically, the law allows the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services to develop and expand social-service programs to assist U.S. citizen victims (as well as alien victims) of sexual trafficking that occurs, in whole or in part, within the territorial jurisdiction of the U.S. Additionally, TVPRA 05 will allow the U.S. Department of Justice to make grants to states and local law-enforcement agencies to establish, develop, or expand programs that investigate and prosecute persons who engage in the purchase of commercial sex acts, and to educate persons charged with, or convicted of, purchasing or attempting to purchase commercial sex acts.

With these aspects of the new law in place we have taken new ground in the fight for the abolition of sexual trafficking. Why? First, because U.S. citizen victims of intra-country sex trafficking were the orphans of the original Trafficking Victims Protection Act of 2000 (TVPA 00), and second, because curbing demand for commercial sex is essential to ending sexual trafficking.

The social-service programs that were developed to provide assistance to victims of sexual trafficking (as well as labor trafficking) following passage of the 2000 Trafficking Victims Protection Act have emphasized aid to foreign nationals rather than U.S. citizen victims. Aid to U.S. citizen victims was not explicitly prohibited, but the argument was that U.S. citizen victims should be able to access assistance through existing social service providers. If only this were true. Yes, there are a few social-service providers that do heroic work with U.S. citizen victims, but generally such services are provided on an ad hoc and piecemeal basis with little to no federal funding, and the number of organizations providing such services is small contrasted with the need across the entire country.

Compounding the problem, U.S. citizen victims generally weren't viewed as victims. Sure, with a little training the average law-enforcement official or prosecutor will begin to realize that foreign women in prostitution could very likely be trafficking victims, but it takes a lot more training and understanding for most law enforcement officials, city officials, prosecutors, and the general public to recognize that U.S. citizens in prostitution can be, and frequently are, victims of sexual trafficking.

Some readers may think that prostitution is irrelevant to the issue of sexual trafficking out of the perception that sexual trafficking and prostitution are two separate things. But keep in mind that all prostitution of persons under the age 18 is ipso facto sexual trafficking, and that the vast majority of adult women in prostitution in any given country experience levels of physical and psychological coercion, abuse, and torture that plainly classify them as victims of sexual trafficking. The problem for most people is that they fail to recognize signs of coercion and abuse, and fail to take into consideration factors such as traumatic bonding, the survival strategies employed by persons abused in prostitution, as well as the fact that many children abused in prostitution eventually age to become adults in prostitution.

Indeed prostitution and sexual trafficking are symbiotically related. If a person is sexually trafficked they are exploited in one or more forms of commercial sexual exploitation such as prostitution, pornography, and nude dancing. The fact people are trafficked for use in a particular industry clearly links the phenomenon with that industry, which in this case, is the "sex industry." So then, the degree to which prostitution as an institution is accepted, normalized, and allowed to flourish in a community, is the degree to which sexual trafficking will also thrive.

Lopez: Prostitution I've seen across from National Review's offices here in Manhattan, we all know it exists and that it's not exactly Julie Roberts falling for Richard Gere at the Regent Beverly Wilshire. But is there really a big market out there to sustain this awful, widespread trafficking?

Thompson: [You ask about] demand. Most efforts to combat sexual trafficking in the U.S. and abroad have applied "supply-side" approaches. In other words, their emphasis has been on reaching those who have been, or who are at-risk of, being sexually trafficked ­ especially those living in source countries for trafficked persons. Such efforts have included much-needed activities such as awareness raising campaigns among populations of vulnerable women and girls; anti-poverty, literacy, and micro-finance programs conducted in source countries; identification and rescue of trafficked women and girls from places such as brothels; legislative initiatives that provide protections, like special visas, for those rescued from sexual trafficking; as well as, the development of social services to help survivors of sexual trafficking restore their lives. Such approaches are essential and important. Yet there has been a conspicuous absence of initiatives or programs which address the other side of the equation ­ demand for commercial sex.

Those who demand bodies to consume in commercial sex fuel the need for a supply of those bodies. Traffickers are simply supplying women and children through acts like recruiting, procuring, transporting, and the selling of persons to meet that demand. Fortunately for the sex trafficker, there is a global marketplace made up of hundreds of thousands, if not millions, of brothels, bars, strip clubs, massage parlors, escort services, and street corners where men purchase people for use in sex acts. This is the demand. Most people casually refer to this marketplace, its consumers, "business owners," "employees," and "suppliers," in total as the commercial-sex industry. I call it the Sexual Gulag.

Here are a just few Sexual Gulag highlights:

[]  In Japan, where prostitution is not legal, but widely tolerated, the sex industry is estimated to make [the equivalent of $83 billion in U.S. dollars]. There are an estimated 150,000 foreign women in the sex industry. Many of them are known to be trafficked from the Philippines, Thailand, Korea, Russia, and Latin America each year.

[]  Prostitution in the Philippines is a de facto legal industry that is now the fourth-largest source of gross national product (GNP) for the country. Estimates vary but the likelihood is that there are nearly half a million persons in prostitution in the country and an estimated 100,000 of them are children. Three hundred thousand sex tourists from Japan alone are believed to visit the Philippines every year.

[]  More than 2.3 million girls and women are believed to make up India's sex industry. The U.N. reports that an estimated 40 percent are below 18 years of age. In 2004, it was reported that transactions in prostitution are worth [the equivalent of $4.1 million in U.S. dollars) a day; [$8.5 billion in U.S. dollars] per year.

[]  A 1998 study by the International Labor Organization on the sex industries of four Asian countries, reported that Indonesia's sex industry was as much as 2.4 percent (US $3.3 billion) of the gross domestic product and as much as 14 percent (US $27 billion) of Thailand's gross domestic product. The report stated, "The stark reality is that the sex sector is a big business that is well entrenched in the national economies and the international economy,' with highly organized structures and linkages to other types of legitimate economic activity."

Considering that all those billions of dollars ultimately represent untold numbers of discreet sex acts bought and paid for by purchasers, it is obvious that even the most unskilled and inept of sex traffickers will have little difficulty selling his "product" in light of such overwhelming global demand for human flesh (and so many venues for its sale).

Lopez: But what about the demand here at home?

Thompson: At present there is precious little statistical information about the scale of America's commercial-sex industry. What we do know from survivor stories, the work of advocacy groups across the country, and the growing number of federal investigations into organized sex rings, suggests that prostitution is rampant. Anyone not persuaded about seriousness of the problem in the U.S. need only read the recent series of articles from the Toledo Blade. Reportedly, just last month federal investigators charged 31 men and women with transporting girls across state lines as sex slaves as part of a sex ring that rotated Toledo teens through truck stops and rest areas in Pennsylvania, California, Michigan, Indiana, Georgia, Maryland, Tennessee, California, Florida, Louisiana, and other states. Some federal investigators purportedly consider Toledo, Ohio, as the U.S.'s number one center for the recruitment and grooming of girls for prostitution. And while Toledo may be the recruitment hot spot, Harrisburg, Pennsylvania, functioned as the ring's distribution center. The city, where five major highways meet, delivered an unending supply of paying customers. Last fall U.S. News and World Report also carried a story exposing the dark and brutal reality of life as a prostituted youth. Additionally, the story reported on the Innocence Lost" initiative, a campaign launched by the FBI dedicating 40 agents to task forces in 14 cities with the highest incidence of prostituted youth. Since the campaign's inception, almost 40 federal indictments against accused sex traffickers and pimps have been obtained. This is excellent. Still I can't help but marvel at all the emphasis on the "suppliers" versus the "paying customers" who clearly make organized commercial sex so profitable for the pimps. Surely johns are also culpable. But so far there are few major law enforcement initiatives aimed at targeting demand (albeit some communities are beginning to take this approach such as Oakland, Ca.).

The recent passage of the Title II provisions of TVPRA 05 at last provides the necessary catalyst to spur the development and expansion of programs to investigate, prosecute and educate persons charged with, or convicted of, purchasing or attempting to purchase commercial sex acts.

Lopez: What's next on your action-item list for D.C.?

Thompson: Now our biggest challenge is to see that Congress appropriates the necessary funds to carry out the activities outlined in Title II. This will require a Herculean effort on the part of advocates, concerned citizens, and members of Congress dedicated to fighting sexual trafficking. The TVPRA 05 passed so late in the year that the Title II provisions were not incorporated in the federal government's budget for 2006, and we are against a tight timeline for incorporating Title II funding into the federal budget for 2007. Concerned readers should call their U.S. representatives and senators asking them to vigorously seek and support federal appropriations for Title II of the Trafficking Victims Protection Act of 2005.




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