OCSW launches anti-human trafficking series
Each year, an estimated 4,000 Oklahomans seek help from human trafficking situations. The Oklahoma Commission on the Status of Women will launch two anti-human trafficking educational efforts -- series of Community Conversations to Stop Human Trafficking at schools and a Not Me initiative.
“Human trafficking is modern-day slavery,” said Commission State Chair Brenda Jones Barwick. “It’s a $150 billion a year industry and Oklahoma is not immune to it. Most human trafficking in Oklahoma is not happening by people passing through on highways, but by Oklahomans who are family members, friends or acquaintances entrapping Oklahomans into involuntary servitude through labor, sex or drugs.”
The series of Community Conversations to Stop Human Trafficking will be held at high schools, colleges and universities statewide to educate Oklahoma teens, young adults, teachers and parents on how to recognize early signs of a person being targeted for human trafficking servitude. The first Community Conversation will be held at Seminole State College on Thursday, Jan. 12, at Noon in the Jeff Johnstone Fine Arts Center ballroom with community leaders, following a 9:30 am panel discussion with students and faculty.
Community Conversations will feature a panel of Oklahoma professionals and experts on several aspects of human trafficking to provide a full spectrum of the issue in Oklahoma. Panelists will include non-profits that are providing healing and recovery services and resources to people entrapped into human trafficking situations; tribal and ethnic groups whose populations have experienced a high level of people forced into involuntary slavery; and law enforcement and drug interdiction officers who have been trained to recognize the signs of a bondage situation.
Labor trafficking is the most prevalent type of human trafficking. Its recruitment, harboring and transportation by force, fraud or coercion is most found in industries, such as agriculture, including marijuana farms, domestic workers in homes or hotels, and manufacturing or restaurant workers in inhumane environments with low wages.
The second educational effort is a statewide Not Me initiative, also launched on Thursday at Seminole State College, to stop human trafficking and to raise awareness in recognizing early signs of human trafficking. The Not Me initiative will promote resources to seek help, such as hotlines, text number, a website, and several Oklahoma non-profit groups that are providing services to those who have been forced into a human trafficking situation.
For the first time, the Commission is focusing on prevention of human trafficking. Barwick stated, “The focus has been on dealing with human trafficking after the crime has occurred. Many are unaware they are being trafficked because it is typically a slow, methodical recruitment process by a trusted relationship. We will educate Oklahomans to recognize the first, second and third typical approach by traffickers and empower Oklahomans to stand strong and say ‘Not Me’ to the trafficker.”