Edmonton Journal

Woman held, tortured, forced to work as an escort

- KELLY GERALDINE MALONE

A woman was held captive, tortured and forced to work as an escort in a case Winnipeg police say shows the damaging effects of human traffickin­g.

“She was locked in a full-sized freezer a number of times, lost consciousn­ess when she was in there a number of times due to lack of air, she doesn’t know if anyone is ever coming back,” Const. Rob Carver said Thursday.

“It is, from my view, a true example of torture.”

Police say the woman was forced to travel to Winnipeg from southern Ontario. Over the next four months, she was tormented physically and psychologi­cally.

On top of being locked in a freezer, police said the woman was also assaulted with electric shocks.

She was finally able to escape to a police station and get help.

Police arrested a Winnipeg man Sunday. Andres Michael Pavao, 29, faces a dozen charges including traffickin­g, assault, forcible confinemen­t, overcome resistance by attempting to choke or suffocate and assault with a weapon.

Carver said the severity of the case is uncommon, but people are being exploited.

“The johns float through life, often without feeling the effects of the torture this woman endured,” he said. “But I think as a city, certainly as a community, we can’t bury our heads in the sand and think this only occurs somewhere else.”

Joy Smith, the founder of the Joy Smith Foundation, which raises awareness about human traffickin­g, said sexual exploitati­on is alive and well in Canada. She became aware of the issue from her son, who was working as a police officer in the Integrated Child Exploitati­on Unit.

“It happens everywhere. It happens every single day and it’s brutal. It’s horrible,” said the former Winnipeg MP. “This happens a kilometre from where you are sitting right now, from where I am sitting right now. It is so prevalent.”

A Statistics Canada report released in June said the number and rate of human traffickin­g incidents in Canada have steadily increased since 2010, but it remains underrepor­ted. Victims are usually in a physically or socially vulnerable position and often trafficker­s will implicate them in illegal activities to keep them from going to police, the report said.

Smith said perpetrato­rs target young women by offering them gifts. Eventually the women are separated from family, friends, school and sports teams before the situation usually turns violent.

“It’s very fortunate that this young woman survived. You know the trafficker­s brainwash them. They say if you tell anybody, the police will arrest you,” Smith said.

Along with life-altering physical effects, Carver said the woman who escaped in Winnipeg will likely have psychologi­cal and emotional wounds that will last a lifetime.

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