There was a girl named Jasmine, she was only 13 years old when she was taken at a bus stop from a man. She grew up in an impoverished family and was sexually abused at home. When this man took her, he promised luxury, beautiful clothes and a bright future. But she did not get what that man promised her, she got cycles of violence and exploitation which she could not escape for it. From that she was 14 and when she was 17 years old, her pimp had her on a prostitution circuit that moved from Las Vegas, San Diego, Portland, and Seattle. As human trafficking grows around the nation, North Carolina is ranked top 10 nationally associated with human trafficking. In 2016, there have been 181 reports involving human trafficking (Janicello). The definition of human trafficking states “the illegal trade of humans for purposes of reproductive slavery, sexual exploitation, forced labor or modern-day slavery” (Campbell).Human trafficking is a growing problem that happens around the world, and many people do not realize it …show more content…
People of different ages and races are being offered a home or a job for a better life but are actually being sold to people for different kinds of reasons. A statistic shows that 55% are women and girls and 26% are children. Tammy Grubbs from Chapel Hill News says, “Boys usually enter sex slavery at 11-13 years old; for girls, its 12-14.” People do not realize that this is a worldwide issue and can happen anywhere. Every day, people around the world are able to find solutions to some of their problems and it is time to find solutions for human trafficking. Some solutions to decrease and maybe stop human trafficking would be, having a code or symbol, enforcing highway patrol on big interstates, training teachers, social workers, church youth leader, emergency services and other jobs similar to these to know and to be able to spot a victim and getting the youth involved to help stop human
So what exactly is the problem? Well according to the US department of health and human services, human trafficking is second largest criminal industry making $12 billion per year off of a staggering 1.2 million child victims, all from the ages 5 to 17. Unlike other criminal industries children can be sold over and over again. The profits from one girl alone can range to as much as 250,000 dollars. This is not just distant problem but LA which hits close to home for me is the second larges trafficking city in the United States. I am going to share with your the one statistic that lead me to write this speech. (CAS Research and Education) fewer than 1% of all children in California are in the foster care system (SCEC 2012 study) and yet they make of 60% to 80% of all commercially sexually exploited children in California. This is as much as 8 out of every 10 kids. That is a problem. Not only that but the average lifespan for a trafficked child decreases to just seven more years. Subjecting these children to a horrible death of disease, drugs, murder, or suicide.
Human trafficking has been around for many years, from Greeks to the Roman to medieval times, and even until to today. It is a worldwide issue. People have been exposed to many forms of oppression. The Richmond Justice Initiative told the Holly Austin Smith story. “When Holly Austin Smith was Fourteen years old, she ran away from home with a man. Holly often suffered from depression, but still had dreams of being a singer. Holly exchanged numbers with a man. Then, the man had called her. He asked her questions like, what were her dream? He also got to know her. What she thought was freedom turned into out to be an inexorable clutches of sex trafficking” (“Survival Story”). Trafficking is a dangerous act that can get young people
Americans are in turmoil and while they persist in fighting over petty differences, they continue to turn a blind eye to the war on humanity: men, women, and children whose lives are being stolen from them and sold to someone else. These thieves are committing crimes so deplorable that they defy comprehension. Acts so depraved that the person initiating them must be the devil himself. Human trafficking is a growing epidemic that can no longer be ignored. These horrendous crimes need to have dire consequences for the perpetrators. “Each year, an estimated 700,000 to 4 million women and children are trafficked” (Davidson). These victims are someone’s friend, someone’s family, someone’s child and they simply disappear. Although much of the world continues to turn a blind eye to human trafficking, the current laws have to be strengthened and changed to where the risk out way the reward, the countries that are not in compliance be sanctioned by the U.N, and there needs to be a zero-tolerance policy while still protecting the innocent and educating people on
Ss the great Ben Franklin said “Justice will not be served until those who are unaffected are as outraged as those who are” until everyone takes an active step to ending human trafficking, it won't happen. But many individuals have stepped up to take a role fighting human trafficking. Such as Nobel Peace Prize winner Kailash Satyarthi who has fought to protect the rights of 83000 children, often putting himself in harm’s way to do so. Once, just as Kailash once heard of a man who sold his 15 year old daughter to a brick maker. Right away Kailash tried to get in but was repelled by the armed guards and the mass amount of people. He then convinced a judge to send him with a police force to the place, and managed to save the 15 year old girl and many others. once said “ Child slavery is a crime against humanity. Humanity itself is at stake here.” Which is true, as if humanity doesn't defend it's morals, humanity is at stake, and humanity itself is a far time away from getting rid of human
Human trafficking is one of the most pervasive crimes on earth, existing in every single country. As much as it is a problem internationally, human trafficking also accounts for seventy-nine percent of prostitution around the country with North Carolina ranking eighth in states in highest rates of sex trafficking. According to the N.C. Administrative Office of the Courts, an average of twenty-two human trafficking chargers were processed each year between the years 2008 and 2012. Experts say North Carolina is a prominent place for human trafficking because
“The terms human trafficking and sex slavery usually conjure up images of young girls beaten and abused in faraway places, like Eastern Europe, Asia, or Africa. Actually, human sex trafficking and sex slavery happen locally in cities and towns, both large and small, throughout the United States, right in citizens’ backyards. Appreciating the magnitude of the problem requires first understanding what the issue is and what it is not. Additionally, people must be able to identify the victim in common trafficking situations” (Walker-Rodriguez & Hill 2011). Otherwise, what you assume to be a dad carrying away a toddler throwing a temper tantrum, could really be a trafficker, kidnapping a new victim. Or that girl you spot down, who looks not much older than 15, following the man in a smart business suit could be silently begging for help, because she desperately doesn’t want to do this again.
Did you know that 100,000 kids a year are taken and forced into human trafficking? What about smuggling? That families would pay $10,000 dollars just to be taken over the border. Human trafficking has become the world’s largest crime and has affected many lives. Kids everyday are being taken away, some from as close as their own drive way. They are forced to have intercourse, which will ruin the lives of many such as a girl named Debbie who was taken from her drive way at the age of 9. People in today’s world need to be more knowledgeable about human trafficking and smuggling, not many know that it could be as close to their home town. These things affect many lives in today’s society and ruin some.
Hello I am a 9th grade student at Carolina High School in Greenville Sc studying human trafficking. We just read a book about human trafficking called “Sold.” We’ve made posters up around the school so some kids will hopefully want to take action in human trafficking. We also did the red sand project where we put red sand in the cracks of streets, sidewalks, and parking lots.After reading articles about human trafficking and reading the book I learned that human trafficking happens to most girls at a very young age. Some of these girls are drugged just to have sex with their “customers” and if they refuse they’re beaten. These girls are told that they have to pay off their debt in order to leave but they don’t know that the money they make is going to person's incharge. Some people are even sometimes born into human trafficking.
Though America is often seen as the land of opportunity, there are those who are willing to risk their lives to obtain that which we often take for granted. People searching for better lives resort to human trafficking as a result. It is a worldwide issue that can be defined as the trading of humans, most commonly by force, sexual slavery, or commercial. It is one of the top leading crimes in the world today that puts men, women, and children in harm’s way. Human trafficking is a worldwide issue that has been going on for ages, and all the issues of the trafficking would make one wonder, how can it be stopped? Human trafficking has become a modern-day version of slavery, it can be associated with sex and drugs, and it is happening with a lot of women for reasons such as technology.
Like Mona’s story, women often are blackmailed into human trafficking. Taking a trafficker’s child is one tactic they use to gain control over their lives. A mother will do anything to ensure her child’s survival. Fortunately, trafficking organizations are working diligently to restore trafficker families.
If we could point to an example and definitively declare that abolishment would end all human trafficking (related to sex) it might matter less than deciding on the righteousness of the anti-prostitution rhetoric. However, comparing different countries with different policies shows that criminalized or otherwise, prostitution, as a focus doesn’t address every part of human trafficking. The US has legal prostitution in the state of Nevada only. In Europe, Germany has legal prostitution and in Sweden, the law focuses on punishing the procurer of a prostitute. Each of these countries has a different approach to address prostitution and each country still has problems with human trafficking. In an article published on February 5, 2017 titled “Human Trafficking Increased in 2016, Organization Reports,” 1,300 out of 7,500 cases reported to the National Human Trafficking Hotline were reported by the state of California (Ali 2017). This was the overwhelming front-runner state to report cases of human trafficking at nearly double the number of any other state (Ali 2017). Texas and Florida were the next two largest reporting states and despite the fact that 76% of reports involved some kind of sex trade, Ohio, New York and Georgia were the following largest reporting states (Ali 2017). Nevada, where prostitution is legal, didn’t even make it in the top 6 states, of reported human trafficking calls. Furthermore, the article reports that the majority of victims were “trafficked through
For many people, slavery system has been an outdated word that only seems to exist in the history book. However, it is redefined in the modern society and replaced by a new term “human trafficking”, which is a serious challenge to the human rights, involving almost every country in the world. Besides, it is considered as the most evil and shameful crime in the human history. Every year, more than millions of innocent kids, men, women are kidnapped and sold to the other countries, forced to do prostitution, child soldiers or labors. However, limiting demand of this trafficked human market can be an effective solution by raising awareness and establishing mature employment standards.
As children, Americans learn about the eradication of government-sanctioned slavery in the United States during the Civil War era by Abraham Lincoln: champion of slaves everywhere. It is an unfortunate side effect of this instruction to believe that slavery was completely eliminated in America and is now an institution of the past – and it is Western arrogance that causes us to forget that, even though the majority of Western society does not condone slavery, it can and will still occur. Just as laws and attitudes evolve, so do criminals and methods of breaking the law. In our current age of globalization, human trafficking is the new form of slavery. Most people have at least a superficial understanding of human trafficking – if not through academics, then through the popular Liam Neeson movie Taken (Hoarau & Morel, 2008). Human trafficking involves “recruiting, harboring, or moving people both for sexual exploitation and for labor, […] through force, fraud, and coercion” (Feal, 2016), and many people emerge from such enslavement alone and afraid. One public concern of reintegrating these survivors into society is whether or not they will slip back into a life of crime. There is not enough research to definitively claim that survivors of human trafficking return to a life of crime after their release; however, they are predisposed to crime due to several factors such as previous interactions with law enforcement, a high prevalence of severe mental disorders, social
What action will transpire to address human trafficking? Human traffickers can be any gender, race, or immigration status; they live in cities, suburbs, and rural areas. Thus human traffickers often fall underneath the radar. Therefore, this summer homeland security will launch a Blue campaign to raise awareness in human trafficking.
Human trafficking occurs when thousands of women, men and children are forcibly transported from their country to another country illegally. Their traffickers may abduct or decept them in means to use them as sexual exploitation or forced labour to get goods and money in return. This is a common issue all over the world, in countries like Africa, Asia, the United States and many more. According to the data provided from the National Human Hotline, In 2016 the percentage of human trafficking in the United States rose to 35.7. Even though that was last year, it still continues to drastically increase this year based on the 26,727 human trafficking calls and 7,572 cases being reported. Clearly, the issue has not disappeared and has not improved. Human Trafficking has been defined as Modern Day Slavery for many years, but the real concerns about the issue should be why it’s happening in the first place, who is responsible for it and what to do to alter it.