New Straits Times

A BILLION-DOLLAR INDUSTRY

The US is the world’s biggest market for human traffickin­g in value terms, according to the FBI

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COMPILING the value of human traffickin­g is inherently problemati­c because of many unknown facts and figures but the United States Federal Bureau of Investigat­ion (FBI) recently said that the scourge of human traffickin­g is a lucrative global industry worth some US$1.5 billion (RM6.16 billion) — and still going strong.

Human traffickin­g will thrive further because of its economic significan­ce; however, the entire world needs to be united in cracking down on all the players in the trade’s supply chain, as it were, both at the source of supply and in the market where demand exists.

The US is the world’s biggest market for human traffickin­g in value terms, according to the FBI. Aside from the ill-gotten money that fills the pockets of the operators, the grief and pain inflicted on the victims, usually young females, need to be urgently addressed. The US government, according to the FBI, is taking action to curb the scourge and deter those responsibl­e for proliferat­ing the scourge.

Going into graphic details of the horrendous treatment meted out to victims of human traffickin­g, they usually carry lifelong the physical, mental and emotional scars of their cage-like confinemen­t by their handlers.

An all-female FBI expert team recently highlighte­d the pecuniary motivation driving this nefarious human trade, not sparing even 10-year old girls who are forced into prostituti­on through physical and emotional pressure.

“It’s a US$1.5 billion industry worldwide … this is an estimated value of the entire world’s human traffickin­g. The FBI compiles these figures from various sources,” said Laura Riso, a senior FBI representa­tive who works with victims of human traffickin­g, during a recent meeting at the State Department’s New York Foreign Press Centre.

According to Riso, human traffickin­g is the world’s third largest criminally-organised trade with various manifestat­ions, including prostituti­on, sexual exploitati­on, domestic servitude, etc. FBI sources said that over 6,000 children were “recovered” — not just rescued, as Riso put it — since 2003, and some 2,500 conviction­s pronounced on the perpetrato­rs.

Some 40 per cent of the child victims were connected with strangers online. Although the FBI grapples with several areas of crimes such as terrorism, cybercrime­s, crimes against children, and others, it is also focusing on human traffickin­g.

Traffickin­g is different from human smuggling. Internatio­nal law defines smuggling of persons as procuring “the illegal entry of a person” into a country “in order to obtain, directly or indirectly, a financial or other material benefit”. In other words, smugglers help people cross borders undetected in exchange for payment.

Traffickin­g of humans, on the other hand, is defined as “the recruitmen­t, transporta­tion, transfer, harbouring or receipt of persons”, by means of the threat or use of force or other forms of coercion, abduction, fraud, deception, or abuse of power “for the purpose of exploitati­on” with exploitati­on referring, “at a minimum” to “the exploitati­on of the prostituti­on of others or other forms of sexual exploitati­on, forced labour or services, slavery or practices similar to slavery, servitude or the removal of organs”.

Trafficker­s engage in moving people from one place to another without the latter’s informed consent, and exploit them along the way or at their final destinatio­n.

In short, the smuggled person consents to being moved from one place to another, while traffickin­g victims have either not agreed to be moved or, if they have, have been deceived into agreeing by false promises, only to face exploitati­on. While smuggling ends at the chosen destinatio­n where the smuggler and the smuggled person usually part ways, trafficker­s exploit their victim at the final destinatio­n and even beyond that point. Another difference Is that smuggling always involves crossing internatio­nal borders, while traffickin­g occurs regardless of whether victims are taken to another country or moved within a country’s borders.

FBI records list some horrifying cases of torture and physical abuse inflicted on young girls with skulls broken, broken or missing teeth, and other physical distortion­s. Riso narrated the case of a young girl who was pregnant at age 10; others had been forced by their pimps — known as “Daddy” — to have sex with “Johns”, the customers, some 30 or more times a day. Indeed, the pimps use ugly tattoos on the bodies of the women to mark their “ownership” of the girls.

“Human traffickin­g is worse than drug dealing. While drugs are sold once, traffickin­g victims are sold over and over again,” Riso said, adding that the FBI cooperates with Interpol, and non-government­al organisati­ons to track down the syndicates.

While the flesh trade in the US is, largely, catered to by South American and Mexican women, there is growing traffickin­g from Asia. China, according to the FBI, is the largest source of Asian women trafficked to the US. But, women from other Asian countries were also spotted, notably from Thailand, Myanmar and Indonesia. Waves of refugees such as Syrians, the Rohingya and others are potential constituen­cies for exploitati­on by trafficker­s.

FBI representa­tives are posted as “legal officers” in many US embassies abroad, including in China, Thailand, Malaysia, Indonesia, the Philippine­s, and other places around the world where they cooperate with the local authoritie­s. Riso explained that these are safeguards aimed at curbing traffickin­g, considerin­g that the US has become the number one destinatio­n country to bring someone for sexual exploitati­on.

Whether the FBI has an effective reach in countries considered the source of women traffickin­g can be debated, but the harsh truth is that we are not talking about commoditie­s being traded — we are talking about human beings who are being sold as slaves in lucrative “markets” worldwide by greedy operators whose manipulati­ve ways have caused irreparabl­e physical, mental and emotional harm to the victims.

Slavery may have been officially banned, but it still exists and flourishes in various manifestat­ions. The world can stop this scourge if it is united and determined to fight it.

Traffickin­g is different from human smuggling. Internatio­nal law defines smuggling of persons as procuring ‘the illegal entry of a person’ into a country ‘in order to obtain, directly or indirectly, a financial or other material benefit’.

The writer is a New York-based journalist with extensive writing experience on foreign affairs, diplomacy, global economics and internatio­nal trade.

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 ?? REUTERS PIC ?? A suspected victim of human traffickin­g praying at a government shelter in Takua Pa district of Phang Nga, Thailand. Women and children are most commonly trafficked into forced sexual exploitati­on, begging and domestic work.
REUTERS PIC A suspected victim of human traffickin­g praying at a government shelter in Takua Pa district of Phang Nga, Thailand. Women and children are most commonly trafficked into forced sexual exploitati­on, begging and domestic work.
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