By Father John Flynn, LC
ROME, JUNE 28, 2009 (Zenit.org).-
The Vatican and groups of women religious have long been actively
working to stop the trafficking of persons, and a recent message of
support sent by Benedict XVI to a meeting on the issue held in Rome
this month reiterated that this is a Church priority.
The
Pontiff said it is important to bring about "a renewed awareness of the
inestimable value of life and an ever more courageous commitment to the
defense of human rights and the overcoming of every type of abuse."
By Father John Flynn, LC
ROME, JUNE 28, 2009 (Zenit.org).-
The Vatican and groups of women religious have long been actively
working to stop the trafficking of persons, and a recent message of
support sent by Benedict XVI to a meeting on the issue held in Rome
this month reiterated that this is a Church priority.
The
Pontiff said it is important to bring about "a renewed awareness of the
inestimable value of life and an ever more courageous commitment to the
defense of human rights and the overcoming of every type of abuse."
The
issue is also being debated in England. A June briefing published by
the Christian Institute explained that the government’s Policing and
Crime Bill includes significant changes to the law regarding
prostitution in England and Wales. The changes are designed to deal
particularly with the problem of sex trafficking.
The proposals,
still to be voted on by Parliament, contemplate that a purchaser of
sexual services would be committing an offence if sex was purchased
from a prostitute who had been subjected to force, deception or
threats, according to the briefing.
The concept of force would
include coercion by psychological means, including exploiting someone's
vulnerability. The Christian Institute said that this would be a strict
liability offence, meaning that the buyer could be guilty regardless of
whether they knew the prostitute was subjected to force or whether they
made attempts to find out.
The institute noted that it is
impossible to know exactly how many prostitutes are working in the
United Kingdom; however, many have put the figure at around 80,000.
Among the estimates, one from 2008 suggested that up to 18,000 females,
including girls as young as 14, have been trafficked into U.K. brothels.
Global problem
On
June 16 the United States State Department published its annual
"Trafficking in Persons Report" for 2009. It said that sex trafficking
comprises a significant portion of overall human trafficking.
There
are a variety of ways in which women are forced into the sex trade, the
report noted. It can come about through coercion, deception, or debt
bondage. Quite often women and girls are forced to continue in
prostitution through the use of a supposed "debt," purportedly incurred
through their transportation to a Western country.
The report
cited data from UNICEF, according to which as many as two million
children are subjected to prostitution in the global commercial sex
trade.
The State Department observed that sex trafficking has
devastating consequences for minors, including long-lasting physical
and psychological trauma and disease. Infections by sexual diseases,
drug addiction, and social ostracism are also common.
Heinous crime
A
recent book, published earlier this year, examined the subject of
trafficking from an economic point of view. The book is "Sex
Trafficking: Inside the Business of Modern Slavery" (Columbia
University Press), by Siddharth Kara.
Kara was an investment banker before putting aside his corporate career to become involved in efforts to abolish human slavery.
While
dispassionate in his economic analysis of the people trade, Kara is
clear in his ethical judgment on the issue: "Sex trafficking is a
heinous crime against humanity," he declared at the start of his book.
Kara
described how the acquisition of sex slaves comes about through a
variety of ways. Some are deceived by false promises, others are sold
by their parents. Seduction is another method, and some are recruited
by former slaves.
In some countries, false marriage offers are
a common way to lure young females who look for a way to gain legal
rights and social acceptance. Traffickers also take advantage of the
multitudes who are confined in refugee camps, to whom any offer of
escape provides an attractive alternative.
Kara provided
testimonies, often graphic, of how the process of converting women into
sexual slaves involved methods such as rape, torture, humiliation and
the use of drugs. The intention is to make the women completely
submissive, and therefore attractive to potential buyers.
The
sex trafficking industry, Kara concludes, involves the systematic rape,
torture, enslavement, and murder of millions of women and children,
whether it be through homicide, sexually transmitted diseases or drugs.
Economic analysis
Kara calculated that the total annual
number of individuals trafficked for commercial sexual exploitation is
between 500,000-600,000. The exact numbers, he admits, are difficult to
establish. The U.S. State Department estimates the overall number of
internationally trafficked persons is between 600,000-800,000. This
number doesn't include the millions who are trafficked internally.
Regarding
the profits made from the overall form of human slavery, not only
sexual, Kara cites the U.S. State Department figure of $9.5 billion per
year. The International Labor Organization estimates it to be closer to
$31.7 billion.
Kara breaks down some of the statistics, and he
calculated that in 2007 the sale of trafficked sex slaves to brothel
owners and pimps generated revenues of around $1 billion, which
represents approximately $1,895 per slave. After costs, these sales
generated approximately $600 million in profits, he calculated.
On
a global basis he estimated that in 2007, the total revenue generated
by all forms of human trafficking reached no less than $152 billion,
with profits of $91 billion. The most profitable form of trafficking
was that related to the sex industry. While they accounted for only
4.2% of the world’s slaves, they generated 39% of slaveholder’s
profits, according to Kara.
The profits to be made from such an
activity has attracted criminal groups from the local level to
international syndicates, he explained. The international mafias
operating in Africa, Asia, and Eastern Europe cooperate with the local
national criminal organizations to lease territories for the
exploitation of victims.
How can we explain such a trade in
human lives, Kara asks. On the supply side we can look at factors that
range from poverty, lawlessness, military conflict and economic
breakdown. As well, the post-1989 transitions and the extension of
global integration also played a part in facilitating the trade in
human persons.
On the demand side, Kara pointed out that the
majority of males do not condone the vulgarities associated with the
sex trade. But the lowering of prices for commercial sex due to a
greater supply has increased revenues: "Sex slavery is the
profit-maximizing version of prostitution," he argued.
Neighbors
The
Second Vatican Council document "Gaudium et Spes" mentioned the problem
of human trafficking. The council fathers invoked our obligation to be
the neighbor of every person and urge all to help those who are
abandoned or suffering.
Abuses such as those of human slavery
and prostitution were described as a violation of the human person.
Treating humans as "mere tools for profit, rather than as free and
responsible persons," is an infamy, they declared, and it poisons human
society (No. 28).
More recently, Archbishop Agostino Marchetto,
secretary of the Pontifical Council for the Pastoral Care of Migrants
and Travelers, spoke at a forum held in Vienna in February 2008 on the
theme of human trafficking.
Easy solutions do not exist, he
admitted. Dealing with these abuses of human rights requires an
approach that not only takes into account the best interests of the
victim, but also the just punishment of those who benefit from it.
He
also recommended the introduction of preventive measures such as
raising public awareness of the problem. As well, it is necessary to
deal with the root causes of the phenomenon, including the economic
factors involved, he concluded. Not easy matters, indeed, but the right
answers could positively affect millions of lives that are currently
hanging in the balance.