skipy
27/09/2006, 22:54
////////////// الروابط الي بيحطوها الأعضاء بيقدر فقط الأعضاء يشوفوها ، اذا مصرّ تشوف الرابط بك تسجل يعني تصير عضو بأخوية سوريا بالأول -/////////////// Domingos
Some people would have been better off if they had never been born. So it seems, if this life is all they have.
Take Dara (not her real name). Born in Cambodia, she became an orphan early in life. Her sister looked after her well. But one day she made a terrible mistake in marrying her off, when only 17. Thinking she was ensuring Dara a good future, she had unwittingly doomed her to a short and brutish life. For, just three months later, her ‘husband’ took her to a fishing village. He rented a room in what Dara took to be a guesthouse and disappeared. Next morning to her horror she found out that he had sold her for $300. The guesthouse was a brothel. She survived multiple rapes daily for five years. When she contracted AIDS the brothel owner threw her out. She made her way to a local shelter, and died aged 23.
Dara is just one of countless examples of selling and buying human beings. According to John Miller, director of the US State Department’s Office to Monitor and Combat Trafficking in Persons, some 800,000 people cross international borders each year, victims of this vile trade. Of these 80% are women and girls and up to 50% are minors – all for the buying, as sex slaves. Sex tourism, according to Miller, is the driving force behind this ‘commerce’.
Ethnic Vietnamese sex workers wait for clients in a Phnom Penh red light district. In 2001 Cambodia's Minister of Women's Affairs, Mu Sochua, launched an anti-human trafficking campaign saying the city's booming sex industry was proof that human trafficking was thriving and that women and children were being lured by traffickers with the promise of good jobs which later turn out to be prostitution, organised begging rings and illegal labouring jobs. REUTERS/Chor Sokunthea
Many other victims end up in forced labour on farms or in factories. Human trafficking – the world’s third biggest crime after illicit arms and drugs deals – is big business, he acknowledges, because many countries tolerate it. Generating up to $10 billion annually for criminal gangs, trafficking, in turn, fuels other criminal activities such as money laundering, drug trafficking, document forgery. However, there are millions more victims trafficked within their own national borders. This form of human trafficking is difficult to monitor. Often it involves individuals who enslave a domestic servant or factory bosses who won’t pay their forced-labour workers.
While most countries have criminalized forced labour, it is also true that they seldom prosecute offenders, partly because police lack awareness of forced labour issues.
But human trafficking is not just a matter of issues or numbers. It is about human beings – including minors – being subjected to unspeakable perversions daily. Victims of trafficking suffer physical, sexual, and psychological trauma. Frequently they contract sexually transmitted diseases, pelvic inflammatory disease, hepatitis, tuberculosis and other contagious diseases. It results in unwanted pregnancy and forced abortions. Add to this: rape, physical assault, nightmares, insomnia, and suicidal tendencies; substance abuse; even suicide and murder. But the health risks apply more widely than to immediate victims. Sex trafficking can affect the general public because those who go to brothels can become carriers of serious diseases.
////////////// الروابط الي بيحطوها الأعضاء بيقدر فقط الأعضاء يشوفوها ، اذا مصرّ تشوف الرابط بك تسجل يعني تصير عضو بأخوية سوريا بالأول -/////////////// South Korean ‘comfort woman’ Kang Il-chul, 73, who was forced into sexual slavery for Japanese soldiers during World War II, demanding an official apology from the Japanese government. REUTERS/Cho Yong-soo
To effectively combat human trafficking authorities need constantly to improve their knowledge of just what is going on, where it’s going on and how it’s going on. Also, religious institutions, Non-Governmental Organizations (NGOs), schools, community groups, and individuals with influence within their communities need to cooperate in any effort to eliminate trafficking. Victims and their families are important players in this struggle too.
In keeping with this approach, the Church is playing her part. Last June the first International Meeting of Pastoral Care for the Liberation of Women of the Street was held in the Vatican on June 20-21, at the initiative of the Pontifical Council for Migrants and Travellers. Officials from the Pontifical Council, and from five Vatican departments attended, as did two bishops, a number of priests, religious and laypeople. There were delegates from 19 European nations – including Ireland – and from other continents. Various international organizations were represented also.
Some of the Conference’s conclusions were as follows:
Prostitution, a form of modern-day slavery: Prostitution and trafficking of human beings are a form of violence against women and seriously violate basic human rights. However, clearly not every victim of trafficking ends up in prostitution and not all prostitutes have been trafficked. For example, estimates from the International Labour Organization (ILO) indicate that of the 12.3 million people trapped in forced labour about 2.4 million of them are victims of trafficking.
Migration, human rights, trafficking linked: Links between migration, human rights and trafficking are becoming clearer. Both the UN Protocol on trafficking and the Council of Europe’s Convention on Action Against Trafficking concur that trafficking is a gross violation of human rights and an offence against the dignity of the human person.
Some people would have been better off if they had never been born. So it seems, if this life is all they have.
Take Dara (not her real name). Born in Cambodia, she became an orphan early in life. Her sister looked after her well. But one day she made a terrible mistake in marrying her off, when only 17. Thinking she was ensuring Dara a good future, she had unwittingly doomed her to a short and brutish life. For, just three months later, her ‘husband’ took her to a fishing village. He rented a room in what Dara took to be a guesthouse and disappeared. Next morning to her horror she found out that he had sold her for $300. The guesthouse was a brothel. She survived multiple rapes daily for five years. When she contracted AIDS the brothel owner threw her out. She made her way to a local shelter, and died aged 23.
Dara is just one of countless examples of selling and buying human beings. According to John Miller, director of the US State Department’s Office to Monitor and Combat Trafficking in Persons, some 800,000 people cross international borders each year, victims of this vile trade. Of these 80% are women and girls and up to 50% are minors – all for the buying, as sex slaves. Sex tourism, according to Miller, is the driving force behind this ‘commerce’.
Ethnic Vietnamese sex workers wait for clients in a Phnom Penh red light district. In 2001 Cambodia's Minister of Women's Affairs, Mu Sochua, launched an anti-human trafficking campaign saying the city's booming sex industry was proof that human trafficking was thriving and that women and children were being lured by traffickers with the promise of good jobs which later turn out to be prostitution, organised begging rings and illegal labouring jobs. REUTERS/Chor Sokunthea
Many other victims end up in forced labour on farms or in factories. Human trafficking – the world’s third biggest crime after illicit arms and drugs deals – is big business, he acknowledges, because many countries tolerate it. Generating up to $10 billion annually for criminal gangs, trafficking, in turn, fuels other criminal activities such as money laundering, drug trafficking, document forgery. However, there are millions more victims trafficked within their own national borders. This form of human trafficking is difficult to monitor. Often it involves individuals who enslave a domestic servant or factory bosses who won’t pay their forced-labour workers.
While most countries have criminalized forced labour, it is also true that they seldom prosecute offenders, partly because police lack awareness of forced labour issues.
But human trafficking is not just a matter of issues or numbers. It is about human beings – including minors – being subjected to unspeakable perversions daily. Victims of trafficking suffer physical, sexual, and psychological trauma. Frequently they contract sexually transmitted diseases, pelvic inflammatory disease, hepatitis, tuberculosis and other contagious diseases. It results in unwanted pregnancy and forced abortions. Add to this: rape, physical assault, nightmares, insomnia, and suicidal tendencies; substance abuse; even suicide and murder. But the health risks apply more widely than to immediate victims. Sex trafficking can affect the general public because those who go to brothels can become carriers of serious diseases.
////////////// الروابط الي بيحطوها الأعضاء بيقدر فقط الأعضاء يشوفوها ، اذا مصرّ تشوف الرابط بك تسجل يعني تصير عضو بأخوية سوريا بالأول -/////////////// South Korean ‘comfort woman’ Kang Il-chul, 73, who was forced into sexual slavery for Japanese soldiers during World War II, demanding an official apology from the Japanese government. REUTERS/Cho Yong-soo
To effectively combat human trafficking authorities need constantly to improve their knowledge of just what is going on, where it’s going on and how it’s going on. Also, religious institutions, Non-Governmental Organizations (NGOs), schools, community groups, and individuals with influence within their communities need to cooperate in any effort to eliminate trafficking. Victims and their families are important players in this struggle too.
In keeping with this approach, the Church is playing her part. Last June the first International Meeting of Pastoral Care for the Liberation of Women of the Street was held in the Vatican on June 20-21, at the initiative of the Pontifical Council for Migrants and Travellers. Officials from the Pontifical Council, and from five Vatican departments attended, as did two bishops, a number of priests, religious and laypeople. There were delegates from 19 European nations – including Ireland – and from other continents. Various international organizations were represented also.
Some of the Conference’s conclusions were as follows:
Prostitution, a form of modern-day slavery: Prostitution and trafficking of human beings are a form of violence against women and seriously violate basic human rights. However, clearly not every victim of trafficking ends up in prostitution and not all prostitutes have been trafficked. For example, estimates from the International Labour Organization (ILO) indicate that of the 12.3 million people trapped in forced labour about 2.4 million of them are victims of trafficking.
Migration, human rights, trafficking linked: Links between migration, human rights and trafficking are becoming clearer. Both the UN Protocol on trafficking and the Council of Europe’s Convention on Action Against Trafficking concur that trafficking is a gross violation of human rights and an offence against the dignity of the human person.