Sex trafficking is a huge problem within the world today. According to Equality Now, which is an organization that helps to advocate for trafficking, estimates about 20.9 million adults and children are bought and sold worldwide (Global Sex Trafficking). One particular country where this is a problem is Cambodia. Cambodia native Somaly Mam founded Agir Pour les Femmes en Situation Precaire (AFESIP) and cofounded the Somaly Mam Foundation. AFESIP helps sex trafficking victims escape trafficking and emotionally and economically heal while the Somaly Mam Foundation works on a three-step approach: action, advocacy, and awareness (Finley). Together with these two organizations Somaly Mam was able to fight back sex trafficking and help thousands …show more content…
Along with women and children from Vietnam and China, Cambodia also suffers from internal trafficking of woman and children from rural to urban areas for sexual exploitation (Cambodia). It is estimated that 1 in 40 girls is sold into sexual slavery (Interview). It is said that some large entertainment establishments in Cambodia exploit between 100-200 women and children, on the establishments premises, on a given night (Cambodia Tier 2). Since this is considered to be prostitution which is illegal, these establishments have stopped offering sex on their premises. Instead, they are having customers pay to take the women and children off their premises to have sex with them. Another way that these establishments are evading what is considered prostitution, is to have underage girls remain available upon request by customers at brothels and guesthouses, but do not keep the underage girls on site at the establishment (Cambodia Tier 2). Another serious problem in Cambodia is the sale of virgin girls. Lots of Cambodian and foreign men pay hundreds to thousands of dollars to have sex with virgins (Global Sex …show more content…
Their mission statement is: The Somaly Mam Foundation is dedicated to eradicating the trafficking and sexual exploitation of women and girls in Southeast Asia, and empowering survivors as part of the solution and their vision is a world where women and girls are safe from trafficking and sexual exploitation (Somaly). The foundation operates on a three-step approach: Action, Advocacy, and Awareness (Finley). This foundation works closely with AFESIP since that organization is located in Cambodia and does most of the actual rescues and reintegration processes for the women and
Human trafficking is one of the many faces of organized crime. Human trafficking is a broad term which contains trafficking for the purpose of sex along with the exploitation of labor. Currently, there are 20.9 million victims of sex slavery (Stacy.j.cecchet 2014 482) whom have or are suffering suffer inhumane circumstances and consequences. Sex trafficking is one of the largest criminal activities in the world (Stacy 249). Vulnerable women and children are taken advantage of and thrown into sex slavery, yet there is no explanation available as to how women and children are taken and thrown into the industry within countries such as Canada and the United States of America (482 Stacy j Cecchet 2014), which have human rights protection. Sex slavery leaves everlasting mental and physical effects on the abused women and children being trafficked. Even though sex trafficking is a crime it is also, for a lack of better words, an industry which would cease to exist if it was not for the supply and demand for women and children.
She has rescued thousands of females from sex trafficking. Mam is the president and co-founder of AFESIP Cambodia. AFESIP Cambodia is an organization that cares for and supports the rights of women and girls who are victims of sex trafficking. AFESIP works to assist survivors in their rehabilitation by giving them special health services and psychological care. They look up to Mam as their mother, because she is their support system after enduring such cruelty. While AFESIP and Mam are remarkable advocates for victims of sex trafficking, the issue needs to be taken more into account and be broadcasted globally to annihilate such forms of
Governments are aware of trafficking, however there isn’t prevention of it. In Children for Sale, it highlights poverty in Cambodia and how it led to girls being tricked into trafficking with the promise of money (Doc C). These girls are placed into situations, where they’re willing to do anything in order to put food on the
Biljana Meshkovska, Melissa Siegel, Sarah E. Stutterheim & Arjan E. R. Bos (2015) Female Sex Trafficking: Conceptual Issues, Current Debates, and Future Directions, The Journal of Sex Research, 52:4, 380-395, DOI: 10.1080/00224499.2014.1002126
Throughout this research into human sex trafficking, there will be a thorough review of the history of human trafficking. There will be an analysis of the victims and perpetrators. There will be a study of the risk, preventative, and resilience factors of the victims. This research will also scrutinize what the successive and unsuccessive factors.
Anti-Slavery International's Trafficking Programme comprises three elements: campaigning to end human trafficking, lobbying for victim protection, and research on measures governments take to protect victims of trafficking, especially those who act as witnesses. The web site provides information about both current and historical slavery operations.
Are cyber-attacks on national institutions a threat to our country? Yes, While I believe it is important, it does not even begin to register on the same scale as cyber-crime directed against individuals. Human trafficking is modern day slavery, and all too often directed toward luring children who will later be sold for sex. These children are our family; nieces and nephews, sons and daughters, the people we hold near and dear to our hearts. Protecting specifically the innocence of children should be of the utmost concern of our country, and the United States is not doing enough in the fight against cyber-crimes.
Around the world children are being exploited daily through a variety of disturbing practices. The United States of America is the land of the free, the home of the brave, and the number one producer of Child Pornography in the world. (1 Kutcher) It is a frightening statistic. Child sex trafficking is the second most lucrative crime business around the world. It is second only to the business of narcotics trafficking. (3 The CNN Freedom Project) Education on the topic is crucial in order to develop a local, as well as a global, solution in the fight to save children from this heinous act upon their innocence. It is necessary to understand how children get introduced and pulled into this way of life, ways the children are exploited, and what's being done to stop these horrific crimes against the children.
The human trafficking industry with a net worth of approximately a $150 billion dollar revenue. Two thirds of that profit— $100 billion—comes from commercial sex trafficking (ILO). Up to 50% of those that are trafficked are minors and most humans trafficked are women and girls. It is often intertwined with transnational crime organizations that have connections to certain companies (UNDOC). Many Americans are unaware of that this is happening in their town and often deny it is happening. In 2016, over 4,000 cases of human trafficking was reported in the U.S. and many more were not reported (15). However, international organizations such as the United Nations Drug and Crime division provide hope for victims from their outreach
The documentary Not For Sale had a slightly hopeful tone as it dealt with various organizations that seek to help victims of human trafficking. It laid the foundation of the problem by discussing how human trafficking is a multi-billion dollar and rapidly growing industry, and how half of its victims are children. Despite the sheer scale of this problem, many organizations worldwide work hard to fight trafficking and help victims in various ways. For example, Night Light helps victims of sex trafficking in Thailand and other regions by teaching them to make jewelry and helping them sell it. The Polaris Project in the US influences laws to motivate legal and governmental efforts to counter trafficking. Regina Pacis in Italy provides shelter and
A young girl from Nepal, filled with hopes and dreams, moves to America. She, like anyone who moves to the United States, wishes to get a job and start earning money. (Transition) A family friend provides her the transportation she needs to get to America and sets her up with a job in the new country. She arrives in America and meets her employer. Unknowingly, the young girl has been sold into slavery by her family friend in America. In that moment, her whole life turned upside down and her heart filled with fear. Everyday thousands of women, men, and children are sold into the sex industry and feel the same way as the young girl. (Transition)(explain the way she feels) The effects of sex trafficking are psychological
Imagine a four year old girl growing up in contemporary Cambodia. Each morning she wakes up miles from home, homesick and scared. She is forced to beg for money for the brothel that she belongs to, and all of her earnings go straight to her master. Then, that night, about seven men come to the brothel. These men, some as old as fifty, often pay as little as two dollars to partake in sexual intercourse with these school-aged children. The toddlers enslaved in the horrific sex trade are forever stripped of their purity, making human trafficking a major issue in present day Cambodia. Over 30,000 children are sexually exploited annually (“Children for Sale”), and millions have been forced into human trafficking
“The global market of child trafficking is at over $12 billion a year with over 2 million child victims” (“Stop Child Trafficking Now” 1). This statement from the article “Stop Child Trafficking Now” describes how serious this crisis is nationwide. Child labor, illegal adoptions and child prostitution are the three forms child trafficking typically exists as (“Riverkids Project” 1). There has been a rising number of Cambodian children being trafficked for sexual exploitation and forced labor because of poverty, unemployment and lack of education; however organizations such as the Coordinated Mekong Ministerial Initiative Against Trafficking (COMMIT) are trying to raise awareness of this crisis.
The enormously high poverty rate, coupled with the crackdown on pedophilia in the western world makes Cambodia particularly vulnerable and child sex trafficking has become a lucrative way to exploit the country’s natural resources. One of the young girls featured in the film, Da-Lin, tells her story - “I sold my virginity to an old man for $500, I did it to help my family, my parents were sick and my brothers and sisters are young and had to go to school, my virginity was the only thing of value we had” (2:15). Another young girl explains how she suffered a stroke due to the abuse she endured. The stories go on and on, young children sold as child sex workers by their husbands, boyfriends, friends and family members. They cannot seek help from the authorities for fear of imprisonment, and they face exile from their villages due to shame.
The trafficking of women and girls for the purpose of prostitution is big business. It has been and still is one of the biggest industries worldwide. These unfortunate women and girls do not lead normal lives, but rather they are bought and sold as commodities. They also usually have no control over their lives and live in conditions of extreme poverty and abuse. Trafficking, debt bondage, forced labor, and other abuse is suffered by women all over the world and it is a violation of human rights. The problem is one of international proportion. United States feminists as well as many nongovernmental organizations acknowledge that this is a huge problem that needs to be tackled with greater proportions. We