Guymon Daily Herald

OCSW launches anti-human traffickin­g series

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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.”

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