Monday, May 4, 2015

Blog series about human trafficking

Human trafficking awareness
            A young girl serves drinks at a bar in the Philippians until she’s “rented” by a customer to be exploited. Six of the young girls at the bar in the Philippians were rescued. However, not all victims are rescued.
Human trafficking is the recruitment, transporting, and harboring of people against their will by using force to make them modern day slaves. According to the International Labour Organization, human trafficking is the third largest crime bringing in about $150 billion and the fastest growing in the world with 35.8 million men, women and children trapped as labor slaves, unwilling organ donors, and sex slaves. Different sources report numbers of slaves vary from 21 million to 35 million because of its vastness.
            The United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime says that the most common form of human trafficking is sex trafficking, the coercion or force of a commercial sex act such as prostitution, pornography, mail-order brides, and much more. It brings in over $99 billion of the $150 billion of the human trafficking profits, according to the International Labour Organization.

            The following five articles explore the specifics of sex trafficking and what people can do to end human trafficking. 
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Why do people become prostitutes?
One of the first questions that many people ask about prostitution is, “Why would you want to be a prostitute?” The answer to this varies because circumstances vary. The statistics of sex trafficking seem to indicate that not many people enter prostitution willingly. In many third world countries, destitute women are often tricked into prostitution by being offered a job and a better life. A lot of prostitution is generational because if a child is born into that situation they often won’t be able to escape to a better life.
The situation of poor women or children born into that life makes sense. Then, the question is, “What about those who choose prostitution?” Most likely, they have suffered from some kind of abuse in their past.
“Research on severe bullying notes that victims often suffer from low self-esteem, poor physical and mental health, reduced abilities in forming relationships, and difficulties gaining and/or keeping a job,” said Jane Whitaker, psychology professor at University of the Cumberlands in Williamsburg, Kentucky. “These conditions may make them more vulnerable to becoming victims in other areas of life including prostitution.”
           Photo from National Center for
Missing and Exploited Children

                Infographic about child sex trafficking.
The National Center for Missing and Exploited children says that one in 6 children who have run away from home are caught up in sex trafficking. Perhaps not all who are bullied end up in prostitution, but a lot of the time people in prostitution are usually bullied by their pimp, the person in control of them that sells them to buyers.
“There doesn’t appear to be any research on a direct relationship between bullying and the sex trade industry,” said Whitaker. “However, there are some shared variables between these two concerning situations. Victims of bullying who find themselves not functioning well in other avenues of life, may turn to desperate means of relief and income, including drugs and sex.”
Another study, “Rationalizing predictors of child sexual exploitation and sex trading,” lists four variables that have a significant impact: running away, poverty, drug and/or alcohol abuse, and family involved in prostitution.
Instead of shaming those who end up in prostitution, we need to listen to their stories to understand them and their situation. Prostitutes need support and strength to overcome their situation, as Whitaker said about bullied people needing support and strength.

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Awareness turns into action with the End It movement
The End It movement is “shining a light on slavery” by working with partners to raise awareness about human trafficking, prevent it and rescue and restore those involved in slavery.
February 27 (because of the 27 million slaves caught up in human trafficking) is the specific day that End It has chosen to raise awareness on social media about modern day slavery. The coalition asks people to raise awareness on February 27 by drawing a red “X” on their hand and posting pictures with the hashtag “EndItMovement.”
                      Photo provided by University of the Cumberlands
Alisha Brown among other students at UC that gathered
in Gatliff Chapel to raise awareness February 27, 2014.
“I think a big thing to End It is to raise awareness because a lot of people don’t realize that slavery is still out there,” said Alisha Brown, a junior at University of the Cumberlands. “Drawing an “X” on our hands might not seem like a lot, but it’s something.”

For those who can afford to do more than just raise awareness, people can give money which goes to partners of End It such as the Salvation Army, Polaris and International Justice Mission to name a few. Not only does End It just have donors give money, but they get more people involved by having donors build teams of “Freedom Fighters” this encourages 27 of their friends to give $7. Team leaders range from Christian writer, Bob Goff, to singer, Carrie Underwood. Hayley Davis, senior at UC, decided to start her own team of 27.
“It is imperative that we do something about this attack on our own humanity,” said Hayley Davis, senior at UC. “These people are living in hell on earth. The End It movement is an organization that has thankfully come together to fight human trafficking and sex slavery around the world. Once I found out about it, I had to do something.”
All of the publicity of the End It movement has gotten the attention of the government. According to End It, the End Slavery Initiative has started and “U.S. Senator Bob Corker (R-Tenn.) and chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee has created a crucial piece of bipartisan legislation that will establish a $1.5 billion global fund to fight slavery around the world, aim for a measurable 50% reduction in slavery over 7-year period, create a non-profit foundation to award grants and assist victims.”
“I've met women who have escaped and survived,” said Davis. “I praise God that they've physically escaped, though their mental escape hasn't yet come. My heart aches for the millions that are still being held captive. The cycle of abuse, of maltreatment, of trafficking can end if we decide ourselves, each one of us, to get in the way and interrupt injustice.”
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Sex trafficking in the United States
Cities that are highly populated, travel hubs and that host major events like concerts or sporting events attract a lot of people and are major places for sex trafficking to take place.
Commercial front brothels, internet ads (venues unknown), and hotels and motels are the top three places that sex trafficking occurs according to Polaris statistics.
“It’s more of a hidden and silent kind of danger, but it’s prevalent,” said Gina Bowlin, the director of curriculum and dual credit programs for the School of Lifelong Learning at University of the Cumberlands in Williamsburg, Kentucky and assistant professor in the human services department at UC. “It’s out there and I don’t think your average person is aware of how much it’s going on out there.”
The stereotype of the sex industry is that it happens in foreign countries, but it definitely happens in the United States. A study done by the University of Pennsylvania says that between 245,000 and 325,000 American youth are at risk for sexual exploitation and trafficking.
Bowlin said that some of the signs that a child is being controlled by a pimp is if they suddenly have two cellphones or expensive gifts and if they’re extremely secretive.
“We in America walk around oblivious to suffering,” said Bowlin. “We don’t like to look at things that are uncomfortable for us.”
The fact is that the Universal Declaration of Human Rights clearly states that human trafficking is unacceptable and should be put to a stop. Within the 30 articles of the document, the first article says, “All human beings are born free and equal in dignity and rights. They are endowed with reason and conscience and should act towards one another in a spirit of brotherhood.”
The third and fourth articles say, “Everyone has the right to life, liberty and security of person,” and, “No one shall be held in slavery or servitude; slavery and the slave trade shall be prohibited in all their forms.”

“If someone’s being trafficked, they certainly don’t have security,” said Bowlin. “No one should be held in slavery or servitude. Twenty-seven million slave world-wide in a world where slavery is illegal. It’s still a huge problem.”

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“Bring Back Our Girls” saying still necessary
Sex traffickers don’t only prey on runaways; they also kidnap children to be sex slaves and child brides. A recent example of a high profile case was the 270+ girls that were kidnapped from a school in Nigeria.
According to the Bring Back Our Girls website, “On April 14th, 270+ School girls were kidnapped from the Chibok Government Secondary School by Boko Haram Terrorists in Nigeria. Approximately 230 are still missing.”
                      Photo from The New Yorker by Haruna Umar/AP
Four students walk in Chibok following their escape
from Boko Haram.
Bring Back Our Girls focuses on raising awareness and activating governments to do something about this kidnapping. Even though this was a high profile case, it seems that very little has been heard on the news since then. However, some of the girls’ stories are being told such as in “The New Yorker” which shared an account of one of the escaped girl’s stories.
“They were kidnapped because they went to school and that was their crime,” said Dr. Ela MolinaMorelock, associate Spanish professor at University of the Cumberlands in Williamsburg, Kentucky. “Most of the people on this planet don’t have this privilege to be in school, be educated and live a nice life. All of these things that we take for granted. We need to give back a little bit.” 
Bring Back Our Girls website states that only 5% of Nigerian girls make it past secondary school. The girls that were kidnapped were ready to become lawyers and doctors. The Malala Fund states that, “Every three seconds a girl becomes a child bride. Four out of five victims of human trafficking are girls.” Bring Back Our Girls quotes the Malala Fund which says, “There are 600 million adolescent girls in the developing world. They are an undeniable force for social and economic impact. But only if given the opportunity. Around the world, girls are denied a formal education because of social, economic, legal and political factors. And in being denied an education, society loses one of its greatest and most powerful resources. Education empowers girls to raise their voices, to unlock their potential, and to demand change.”
On April 14, 2015, during the first anniversary of the kidnapping of the girls, Amnesty International published an article about the 270+ girls that were kidnapped among more than 2,000 women and girls kidnapped by Boko Haram in 2014.
In Abuja, the capital of Nigeria, a march was held on April 14, 2015, to remember the girls that are still missing and to raise awareness to “Bring Back Our Girls.”
“I believe incidents like this one (the abduction of these young girls) rank right up there with 9/11 and other terrible incidents of terrorism,” said Dr. Fred Cummings, assistant professor of religion at UC. “I think we as a nation should expend the same kind of energy and resources to end this terrible practice. We should unilaterally take whatever action is necessary to bring these girls home and see that incidents like these never occur on planet earth.”
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Refuge for Women helps women get out of unsafe situations
            Refuge for Women in Lexington, Kentucky, is a faith-based, one year program to help women get out of the sex industry or abusive pasts.
“Their mission is important because it is very hard to deal with everything that these women go through,” said Sarah Beth Hunt, sophomore human services major at University of the Cumberlands in Williamsburg, Kentucky, who’s volunteered at Refuge for Women. “Getting them on the right track is important. [Refuge for Women] stresses the importance that women are worth something and worth so much more than to be in this kind of industry.”
            Refuge for Women has three different phases that the women have to go through during the year long program.
The first phase lasts for four months and is about helping the women heal from their past. They have counseling sessions, classes, and a safe house to live in. The second phase lasts for three months and is about job training. During this phase, they practice interviewing, write resumes, and are given appropriate clothes for interviews. The third phase lasts for five months and is about them starting the new life that they’ve been preparing for. They live in a transition house which is mostly on their own, but they still have a curfew and classes to attend as they get used to their new job, life and freedom.  
People can get involved to help the women along the three phases. They have people who talk to women involved in prostitution to tell them about a way out through Refuge for Women. Churches are also involved to refer women to the refuge.
The Refuge for women website states, “We believe that every woman matters – that each woman should have the means and the resources to pursue the dreams they’ve had since they were little girls. We believe that these women need honest hope and honest love to be restored and redeemed. We believe that each woman deserves to walk without their past defining their future. We believe that women can walk free, stepping out of the chains that have bound them for so long. We believe in women.”
The need for women to escape from sex trafficking is evident in the statistics of the sex industry in the United States. About 4,000 reported cases of sex trafficking happened in the United States in 2014.
                                                     Photo provided by Kayla Smith
UC's Baptist Campus Ministries spring break mission trip team
that ministered to women at Refuge for Women.
Top to bottom and left to right: Tanner Williams, Dayna Grant,
Kendra Carr, Shantel Buchner, Hayley Davis, Sarah Beth Hunt,
Kayla Smith, Bernice Uwase, and Magan Atwood. 
“I used to think that sex trafficking only happened in other countries, but I was so wrong,” said Hunt. “I went to this place over spring break and realized the truth [that it happens in America too]. It is so important to get involved so you can see what is really going on and to encourage these women that the Lord loves them and he has much bigger plans for them in the future. It’s also important to make relationships with these women so that they know that they are loved and cared for and that they always have someone they can go to.”
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