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Child Slavery: Nightline Reporter Purchases a Child Slave in 10 Hours

By: Kevin Schield | Other Posts by Kevin Schield
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On July 8th, ABC’s Nightline aired an incredible story about child slavery in Haiti. Reporter Dan Harris began his “unsettling experiment” one morning in Manhattan and within 10 hours, he had purchased a 10 year old girl in Haiti for $150. You can read or watch the rest of the report online. Also, Dateline NBC did some undercover investigations a few years ago about child sex slaves in Cambodia (watch report online).

Unfortunately child slavery, isn’t isolated to a few countries like Haiti and Camboida, but is instead a problem worldwide (UNICEF). There are numerous organizations trying to improve the lives of these children and to help prevent human trafficking in general. This global tragedy will take a global effort to try and prevent it. Below is information about current U.S. laws and policy regarding this issue:

“The Office of the Under Secretary for Democracy and Global Affairs, headed by Dr. Paula J. Dobriansky, coordinates U.S. foreign relations on a variety of global issues.” One of the offices she coordinates is the Office to Monitor and Combat Trafficking in Persons (G/TIP), headed by Amb. Mark Lagon. That office “provides the tools to combat trafficking in persons and assists in the coordination of anti-trafficking efforts both worldwide and domestically.”

There’s a lot of information on G/TIP’s website about United States policies and efforts in this area. Here are a few excerpts.

In 2003, the United States strengthened its ability to fight child sex tourism by passing the Prosecutorial Remedies and other Tools to end the Exploitation of Children Today (PROTECT) Act and the Trafficking Victim’s Protection Reauthorization Act. These laws increase penalties to a maximum of 30 years in prison for engaging in CST. Since the passage of the PROTECT Act, there have been over 20 indictments and over a dozen convictions of child sex tourists. The Department of Homeland Security has also developed the “Operation Predator” initiative to combat child exploitation, child pornography, and child sex tourism. The United States is also funding the NGO World Vision to conduct major public awareness and deterrence campaigns overseas that include public service announcements, internet messaging, brochures, posters, and billboards.

Facts About Child Sex Tourism

In addition to enforcing these laws, the United States also issues a report each year in which it ranks countries into 3 tiers. The tiers represent how well the country is combating human trafficking.

The Tiers

TIER 1
Countries whose governments fully comply with the Trafficking Victims Protection Act’s (TVPA) minimum standards

TIER 2
Countries whose governments do not fully comply with the TVPA’s minimum standards, but are making significant efforts to bring themselves into compliance with those standards

TIER 2 WATCH LIST
Countries whose governments do not fully comply with the TVPA’s minimum standards, but are making significant efforts to bring themselves into compliance with those standards
AND:
a) The absolute number of victims of severe forms of trafficking is very significant or is significantly increasing; or
b) There is a failure to provide evidence of increasing efforts to combat severe forms of trafficking in persons from the previous year; or
c) The determination that a country is making significant efforts to bring themselves into compliance with minimum standards was based on commitments by the country to take additional future steps over the next year

TIER 3
Countries whose governments do not fully comply with the minimum standards and are not making significant efforts to do so

Countries in Tier 3 can be subject to certain sanctions by the US.

The annual Trafficking in Persons Report serves as the primary diplomatic tool through which the U.S. Government encourages partnership and increased determination in the fight against forced labor, sexual exploitation, and modern-day slavery.

This problem is global and children in the United States are at risk as well.

Trafficking Victims Protection Reauthorization Act of 2005, Title III. Sect. 2(5)

5) No known studies exist that quantify the problem of trafficking in children for the purpose of commercial sexual exploitation in the United States. According to a report issued by researchers at the University of Pennsylvania in 2001, as many as 300,000 children in the United States are at risk for commercial sexual exploitation, including trafficking, at any given time.

Global Law Enforcement Data

The Trafficking Victims Reauthorization Act (TVPRA) of 2003 added to the original law a new requirement that foreign governments provide the Department of State with data on trafficking investigations, prosecutions, convictions, and sentences in order to be considered in full compliance with the TVPA’s minimum standards for the elimination of trafficking (Tier 1). The 2004 TIP Report collected this data for the first time. The 2007 TIP Report data shows for the first time, a breakout of the number of total prosecutions and convictions that related to labor trafficking, placed in parentheses.

Year

Prosecutions

Convictions

New or Amended Legislation

2003 7,992 2,815 24
2004 6,885 3,025 39
2005 6,178 4,379 40
2006 5,808 3,160 21
2007 5,682 (490) 3,427 (326) 28

The numbers in parentheses are those of labor trafficking prosecutions and convictions.

An excerpt from an “Interview of Secretary of State Colin L. Powell” by Chris Hansen of Dateline, Dec. 11, 2003, Washington, D.C.

MR. HANSEN: Why should Americans be concerned about the sex trade in Cambodia?

SECRETARY POWELL: How can we turn away? If we want to have friends in the world, if we want to have better relations with the countries of the world, we have to help them with this kind of problem.

You know, can you imagine the spread of disease that is taking place with this kind of activity? Can you imagine what will happen to these girls when they’re 15 or 20?  What will become of them?  They’ll have no education. They will be — they will have been used and tossed away and ruined.

And that affects not just these girls, it affects that country.  It affects the family life in that country, it affects society development, it affects income, and, therefore, it affects foreign policy.

So, as the Secretary of State, why is the Secretary of State worried about trafficking in persons?  Because it deals with foreign policy.  It deals with economic and social development within a country.  And a country that does not treasure its youth and protect its youth is not going to be moving in the right direction in the 21st century.

And a nation such as ours, which says we are a moral nation, and that we have a value system, that we would allow our citizens to go over and fuel that trade, by their presence and by their money and by their rotten exploitation of these children, we wouldn’t be living up to our values if we didn’t do something about it.

MR. HANSEN:  What can you do to crack down on the countries involved?  What kind of sanctions would you levy?

SECRETARY POWELL:  Well, there’s a lot of things we can do.  We can withhold foreign assistance money, we can make them not eligible for certain programs that we have, and the law requires us to look at these kinds of remedies.  And what we have found with this Tier 1, 2, 3 system, as time comes every year for the report to be written, a lot of countries want to know, what Tier are we in?  We’re not going to be in Tier 3, are we?  It’s a heck of a stigma to suddenly show up in Tier 3.

Now, we also recognize that there’s trafficking in the United States.  There is exploitation taking place in our own country.  So we’re not totally clean on this and we make that clear.  And the kind of exploitation that you’re talking about in this piece that deals with the sexual exploitation of children, there’s lots of other exploitation that we’re worried about, a lot of other tracking in persons:  for sweatshops, to go in the mines, young people who are not getting an education but are being exploited for their manual capacity as young people, and they’re being ruined just as well as these young people in the sex trade in Cambodia or elsewhere in the world.

The newest Trafficking in Persons Report released in June 2008 has detailed descriptions of what countries around the world are doing to help stop human trafficking. Here is an excerpt from Cambodia’s section of the report:

The Royal Government of Cambodia does not fully comply with the minimum standards for the elimination of trafficking; however, it is making significant efforts to do so. Cambodia is placed on Tier 2 for the first time since 2004 due to the government’s increased engagement in combating trafficking in persons over the previous year. The government created a national anti-trafficking task force to improve the interagency response to trafficking and coordination with civil society, increased law enforcement action against traffickers and complicit officials, and undertook prevention activities. In February 2008, Cambodia’s new Law on the Suppression of Human Trafficking and Commercial Sexual Exploitation was promulgated and went into effect immediately. This legislation provides law enforcement authorities the power to investigate all forms of trafficking and is a powerful tool in efforts to prosecute and convict traffickers and have them face stringent punishments. High-level government officials have spoken publicly about a “zero-tolerance” policy for officials profiting from or colluding in trafficking in persons.

This is a major global problem. How would you rate the actions of the U.S. so far in addressing it? The State Department website leaves me with the impression that the U.S. is taking significant action to help these children, however, the Nightline, Dateline, and other (here, here, and here) reports make me wonder if U.S. and other nations’ policies have had much effect at all. How effective do you think these policies are and what more should American and other countries be doing to help put an end to this tragedy?

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