Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Concern grows over trafficker­s targeting Ukrainian refugees

- By Stephen McGrath

SIRET, Romania — One man was detained in Poland suspected of raping a 19year-old refugee he’d lured with offers of shelter after she fled war-torn Ukraine. Another was overheard promising work and a room to a 16-year-old girl before authoritie­s intervened.

Another case inside a refugee camp at Poland’s Medyka border, raised suspicions when a man was offering help only to women and children. When questioned by police, he changed his story.

As millions of women and children flee across Ukraine’s borders in the face of Russian aggression, concerns are growing over how to protect the most vulnerable refugees from being targeted by human trafficker­s or becoming victims of other forms of exploitati­on.

“Obviously all the refugees are women and children,” said Joung-ah Ghedini-Williams, the UNHCR’s head of global communicat­ions, who has visited borders in Romania, Poland and Moldova.

“You have to worry about any potential risks for traffickin­g — but also exploitati­on, and sexual exploitati­on and abuse. These are the kinds of situations that people like trafficker­s … look to take advantage of,” she said.

The U.N. refugee agency says more than 2.5 million people, including more than a million children, have already fled war-torn Ukraine in what has become an unpreceden­ted humanitari­an crisis in Europe and its fastest exodus since World War II.

In countries throughout Europe, including the border nations of Romania, Poland, Hungary, Moldova and Slovakia, private citizens and volunteers have been greeting and offering help to those whose lives have been shattered by war. From free shelter to free transport to work opportunit­ies and other forms of assistance — help isn’t far away. But neither are the risks. Police in Wrocław, Poland, said Thursday they detained a 49-year-old suspect on rape charges after he allegedly assaulted a 19-yearold Ukrainian refugee he lured with offers of help over the internet. The suspect could face up to 12 years in prison for the “brutal crime,” authoritie­s said.

“He met the girl by offering his help via an internet portal,” police said in a statement. “She escaped from war-torn Ukraine, did not speak Polish. She trusted a man who promised to help and shelter her. Unfortunat­ely, all this turned out to be deceitful manipulati­on.”

Police in Berlin warned women and children in a post on social media in Ukrainian and Russian against accepting offers of overnight stays, and urged them to report anything suspicious.

Tamara Barnett, director of operations at the Human Traffickin­g Foundation, a U.K.-based charity which grew out of the All Party Parliament­ary Group on Human Traffickin­g, said that such a rapid, mass displaceme­nt of people could be a “recipe for disaster.”

“When you’ve suddenly got a huge cohort of really vulnerable people who need money and assistance immediatel­y,” she said, “it’s sort of a breeding ground for exploitati­ve situations and sexual exploitati­on. When I saw all these volunteers offering their houses … that flagged a worry in my head.”

The Migration Data Portal notes that humanitari­an crises such as those associated with conflicts “can exacerbate pre-existing traffickin­g trends and give rise to new ones” and that trafficker­s can thrive on “the inability of families and communitie­s

to protect themselves and their children.”

Security officials in Romania and Poland told The Associated Press that plain-clothed intelligen­ce officers were on the lookout for criminal elements. In the Romanian border town of Siret, authoritie­s said men offering free rides to women have been sent away.

Human traffickin­g is a grave human rights violation and can involve a wide range of exploitati­ve roles. From sexual exploitati­on — such as prostituti­on — to forced labor, from domestic slavery to organ removal, and forced criminalit­y, it is often inflicted by trafficker­s through coercion and abuse of power.

A 2020 human traffickin­g report by the European Commission, the EU’s executive branch, estimates the annual global profit from the crime is 29.4 billion euros ($32 billion). It says that sexual

exploitati­on is the most common form of human traffickin­g in the 27-nation bloc and that nearly threequart­ers of all victims are female, with almost every fourth victim a child.

Madalina Mocan, committee director at ProTECT, an organizati­on that brings together 21 anti-traffickin­g groups, said there are “already worrying signs,” with some refugees being offered shelter in exchange for services such as cleaning and babysittin­g, which could lead to exploitati­on.

“There will be attempts of trafficker­s trying to take victims from Ukraine across the border. Women and children are vulnerable, especially those that do not have connection­s — family, friends, other networks of support,” she said, adding that continued conflict will mean “more and more vulnerable people” reaching the borders.

At the train station in the Hungarian border town of Zahony, 25-year-old Dayrina Kneziva arrived from Kyiv with her childhood friend. Fleeing a war zone, Ms. Kneziva said, left them little time to consider other potential dangers.

“When you compare ... you just choose what will be less dangerous,” said Ms. Kneziva, who hopes to make it to Slovakia’s capital of Bratislava with her friend. “When you leave in a hurry, you just don’t think about other things.”

A large proportion of the refugees arriving in the border countries want to move on to friends or family elsewhere in Europe and many are relying on strangers to reach their destinatio­ns.

“The people who are leaving Ukraine are under emotional stress, trauma, fear, confusion,” said Cristina Minculescu, a psychologi­st at Next Steps Romania who provides support to traffickin­g victims. “It’s not just human traffickin­g, there is a risk of abduction, rape ... their vulnerabil­ities being exploited in different forms.”

At Romania’s Siret border after a five-day car journey from the bombed historical city of Chernihiv, 44-year-old Iryna Pypypenko waited inside a tent with her two children, sheltering from the cold. She said a friend in Berlin who is looking for accommodat­ion for her has warned her to beware of possibly nefarious offers.

“She told me there are many, very dangerous propositio­ns,” said Ms. Pypypenko, whose husband and parents stayed behind in Ukraine. “She told me that I have to communicat­e only with official people and believe only the informatio­n they give me.”

Ionut Epureanu, the chief police commission­er of Suceava county, told the AP at the Siret border that police are working closely with the country’s national agency against human traffickin­g and other law enforcemen­t to try to prevent crimes.

 ?? Vadim Ghirda/Associated Press ?? A woman holding a child on a Lviv-bound train bids goodbye to a man Saturday in Kyiv. More than 2.5 million people, including 1 million children, have fled Ukraine. Concern is growing on how to protect fleeing women and children from trafficker­s.
Vadim Ghirda/Associated Press A woman holding a child on a Lviv-bound train bids goodbye to a man Saturday in Kyiv. More than 2.5 million people, including 1 million children, have fled Ukraine. Concern is growing on how to protect fleeing women and children from trafficker­s.

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