Selling children to the sex trade

Published by rudy Date posted on April 28, 2019

BY FR. SHAY CULLEN, SSC, Apr 28, 2019

Human trafficking is the most widespread crime against persons and is the third biggest earning business in the world after drug trafficking and arms smuggling. The earnings are estimated to be $32 billion a year, according to a United Nations report.

Human trafficking is, according to the UN, the “recruitment, transportation, transfer, harboring, or receipt of persons, by means of threat or use of force or coercion … for the purpose of exploitation.”

So bringing anyone to a place where they are exploited by being made to work for very low wages under the control of their boss is human trafficking. Having brought a child who is not your kin from one place to a secluded place and being alone with that child is a crime under the Philippine child protection law, otherwise known as Republic Act 7610.

The trafficker and the receiver of the person being exploited are guilty of violating the law in that case. An estimated 1.4 million persons in India are victims of human trafficking and forced labor. They are trapped in bonded labor, usually to pay off a debt. The very poor have to borrow to buy food to live and survive for just a few more days, and worse, they can’t find work afterward and are forced to pay off the debt by working for no wages.

In other developing countries, young women are lured and trafficked into the sex industry after they or their parents have accumulated debts. At times, the money is given by the traffickers to the parents of these young women, who are promised that their salary would be sent home to their families. But most of it never gets there. It is stolen, leading the children and parents to be in a perennial position of debt. The powerful debt bondage destroys lives and turns the poor into the slaves of the capitalist trafficker, or the owners of the hotel or sex bar where they are sold to work and earn for the owner.

This is the debt trap, a way to get control, power and ascendancy over another person or even a nation. The serious social inequality and the absence of social justice in many nations is the root of poverty and the cause of why so many people are falling victim to human traffickers. The economies are in the hands of just 1 percent of the population. In the Philippines, it could be 0.0001 percent of the population that owns 70 percent of the wealth and the means of production and distribution.

In France, the billionaires have donated hundreds of millions of their currency overnight to the rebuilding of Notre-Dame Cathedral, evidence that they have the money and will get big tax relief for their so-called “donations.” The poor are critical of that system where so much is given to a rebuilding fund, when thousands live in poverty in a broken, corrupt French society.

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The poor are gullible, unreflecting, and they react to the latest exciting news, be it fake or otherwise. They believe it and act on it in an emotional response. Not a reflective one. Then there are these criminals that stalk the land, preying on the vulnerable and the needy. The promises sound so plausible, and the poor fall for the lies and deceitful sales talk. They unknowingly sign up to a nonexisting job and end up in the human slave market of an insidious dark, secret world, where the tyrants are gangmasters. It’s like falling into a deep well with no way out.

In the Philippines 60,000 women and minors are estimated by UNICEF to be victims of human trafficking into sex trade. Other sources say as many as 100,000 are victims, if not many more. Worldwide, as many as 42 million people are victims of human trafficking and most of them are women and 33 percent are children. It is a dark secret business run by criminals, and so true statistics are hard to come by. Accurate government figures are rare and Philippine police numbers are very low since few investigations are carried out. The rate of convictions is minimal and so the victims, many of them children, go unnoticed or even ignored. International figures are just as elusive.

The traffickers are men and women who can recruit minors, even children, into begging syndicates or cybersex operations with ease, or bring them to sex tourists to be abused. Then it’s all about money, power, domination and control by the male sex-starved tourist. The cybersex customer is elsewhere in another country watching a child being abused online, and that client pays by courier.

It is a horrible crime. Both traffickers and the child sex customers are without moral values or conscience, and the traffickers and recruiters make a lot of money by tricking, cheating and luring these young people away from their homes, or wherever they live, into situations where they are trapped, abused and exploited.

The human traffickers are sometimes members of a national or an international syndicate or network. The leaders order the trafficking of vulnerable, desperate people for cheap or slave labor, and then smuggle them across borders into other countries where they work in slave-like conditions. That is the plight of those in refugee camps and who cannot find work to earn and pay back the debt. Debt is a crushing force that squeezes the life out of millions of people in an unjust and unequal world dominated by criminals in government and outside of it. Many officials are in collusion with the human traffickers and people smugglers. The people have nothing to sell but their bodies and the bodies of their children. The dirty business becomes sex trafficking and slavery.

So long as there is man-made poverty, injustice, oppression and corruption, there will be human traffickers and people traders. Many people cry for justice, reform, positive change on a variety of important issues, but slavery and human trafficking have to be the top priority. When we do all we can to advocate and act to protect the children and the poor, we become more human, people of principles and values and we can bring freedom and justice for many victims.

www.preda.org

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