Menschenhandel vs. Migration

Beiträge betreffend SW im Hinblick auf Gesellschaft bzw. politische Reaktionen
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Marc of Frankfurt
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Verkauf, Kauf und Profiteure

Beitrag von Marc of Frankfurt »

Exotik und Erotik, Schönheit und Scham

Zur ältesten deutschen und jetzt prächtig neuaufgelegten literarischen Reisebeschreibung vom Freidenker, Flüchtenden in Forschungsweltreisen, Revolutionär, als Vaterlandsverräter Verachteten und Begründer der modernen Etnologie in Deutschland:

Georg Forster (1754-1794):

Was den Pazifik so faszinierend für Europa und insbesondere für die politischen Aufklärer gemacht hatte, das war deren Vorstellung, dass die Polynesier ein Beweis dafür sein könnten, dass der Mensch an sich von Natur aus gut und deswegen ohne Scham sei.

Georg Forster geißelte diese Schamlosigkeit allerdings als eine Form der Prostitution, denn er beobachtete, dass die polynesischen Männer ihre Frauen wie Zuhälter verkauften. Gleichzeitig war Forster ein scharfer Kritiker jeglicher europäischer Überheblichkeit, denn die Nutznießer dieser Prostitution waren die Europäer.

Quelle



Georg Forster: "Reise um die Welt" jetzt neu aufgelegt vom Eichborn Verlag, Frankfurt 2007, 648 Seiten, 80 Euro.

bei Amazon

http://www.georg-forster-gesellschaft.de

http://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Georg_Forster





Hundert Jahre später gemalte Südseeträume

Bild

Paul Gauguin: Deux Tahitiennes (1899)





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Agustin über Migrantensexgeschäfte

Beitrag von Marc of Frankfurt »

Über den Sex bei 'Menschenhandel und Zwangsprostitution'

Warum wir glauben daß Migranten-Sexarbeiter gerettet werden müssen.



The Sex in ‘Sex Trafficking’

Why do we think migrant sex workers need rescuing?

By Laura Agustín


Deutsche Version via Google

The title of this publication notwithstanding, I don’t believe there are national sexualities. But our language reflects vague impressions of how people in other cultures do sex - a tongue-kiss, “French”; anal penetration, “Greek”; penis-between-the-breasts, “Cuban”. They are stereotypes most of us don’t take seriously, and the national tags vary according to what country we’re standing in. But everywhere we have notions that out there somewhere are strange, wonderful, and exotic kinds of sex waiting for us to try.

But what about “sex trafficking”, denounced in the media as a rampant crime linked to global gangs and insecurity at borders? The U.S. government, claiming to be the world’s moral arbiter, spends millions issuing an annual report card rating other countries’ efforts to combat this crime and trying to rescue victims around the world. The implication is clear: “American” ideas about sex and morality are the right ones for the planet. In other words, if the ideal of “American” sexual relationships is accepted everywhere, the enslavement of women and children will end.

In the West, in the present, many people believe that sex should express love. This “good” sex is also said to provide a key way to discover personal identity—who we really are, our innermost selves. It is assumed that feelings of love increase pleasure (quantitatively) and intensify it (qualitatively), resulting in meaningful passion that is expressed through long term, emotionally committed relationships. Other sexual relations then seem wrong, among them anonymous, public, and “promiscuous” sex. Above all, “real” love and sex are said to be incompatible with rationality and work—at least that is the way many wish it to be.

At the same time, people wonder: Is there a boom underway in the buying and selling of sex, part of a general sexualization of contemporary culture? Since objective data is impossible to gather when businesses operate outside the law, we cannot know whether sex-and-money transactions are going on more than ever, but we certainly know we see and hear about them more. So although we tell a powerful story about sex and love belonging together, we also understand that people want other kinds of sex. We hear about people who buy and sell sex from our friends, acquaintances, the media, and sometimes through reporting on migration—which is where “sex trafficking” comes in.

In a context of increasing hostility toward migrants, it grates on people’s nerves to think that many might prefer to use sex to earn money instead of washing dishes, babysitting, working in a sweatshop, or picking fruit—for much less money. But migrants—who come in all sizes, shapes and colors, and from infinitely varying backgrounds—are just trying to get by as best they can on what can be a very rocky path. Migrants who cross borders to work need to be flexible and adaptable to succeed. They often do not know beforehand how they will be living, and they may not know the language. They may not find the food, music, or films they like, or the mosque, temple, or church. Everything looks different; they feel lonely. They may feel enormous pressure to pay back debts contracted to undertake their journey, and they may fear being picked up by the police. But they have arrived with a plan, some names and addresses, and some amount of money.

When migration policy is tightened at the same time that low-status jobs are abundantly available, a market opens up to help migrants cross borders. Some of this looks just like legal travel, but much of it involves bigger risks and higher costs, and some entails egregious exploitation — whether migrants are destined to work in mines, private homes, sweatshops, agriculture, or the sex industry.

Some migrants prefer to do anything rather than sell sex — for instance, “mules” who take on the job of carrying drugs inside their bodies. Once across a border, past work experience and diplomas, whether white-collar or blue, are usually not recognized. Migrant schoolteachers, engineers, nurses, hairdressers and a range of others find only low-status, low-paying jobs open to them. Many of them, from everywhere on the social spectrum, would rather work in the sex industry—in one or the other of a huge variety of jobs.

Bars, restaurants, cabarets, private clubs, brothels, discotheques, saunas, massage parlors, sex shops, peep shows, hotel rooms, homes, bookshops, strip and lap-dance venues, dungeons, Internet sites, beauty parlors, clubhouses, cinemas, public toilets, phone lines, shipboard festivities, as well as modelling, swinging, stag and fetish parties—sex is sold practically everywhere. Where these are businesses operating without licences, undocumented workers can easily be employed: the paradox of prohibition. For migrants who are already working without official permission, these jobs may well seem no riskier than any other.

To understand why headlines insist that all migrant women who sell sex are “trafficked”, we need to go back to the popular idea that the proper place of sex is at home, between “committed” lovers and family. When only this kind of relationship is imagined to be equitable and valid, it becomes easier to think that women from other cultures are poor, backward, vulnerable objects passively waiting for exploitation by rapacious men. With these notions, from the point of view of the comfortably sheltered, no one would opt to sell sex and migrants must be forced to do it.

What can we know about the actual sex involved in this moral conflict? We know all “sex acts” are not the same in the context of loving relationships, and they are not all the same just because money is exchanged for them. Migrant workers sell millions of sexual experiences every day around the world to customers from different cultures, learning and teaching through experience how physicality mixes with skill, sophistication, hostility, tenderness, insecurity, respect.

When we have sex with others we influence each other, and although a single interaction may not have a lasting impact, many sexual agreements are complex or often repeated. Occasionally, a single experience can change the course of a life. In a commercial relationship, on one side are people flexible about how they make money, on the other are people wanting to fulfill a desire or experiment. These relationships take place in actual social contexts—indeed, sex itself is often subsidiary to the conspicuous consumption of alcohol or entertainment, to cruising or just to men “being men” together. Since everywhere men are granted more permission to experiment with sex and have more money to spend, their tastes help determine what’s offered and with whom, whether they be women, men, or transsexuals.

These millions of relationships, which take place every day, cannot be reduced to undifferentiated “sex acts” or eliminated from cultural consideration just because they entail money. Both client and sex worker may be acting seduction, flirtation, and affection when they are together, but camaraderie, friendship, love, and marriage also occur. And both sides are fascinated by sexual differences, imagined to be “national”, exotic, and real.

How we perform sex, what we feel when we do particular things, depends on our cultural (not national) contexts: how we were taught to do them and by whom, what we were permitted to try out, whether we talked to others about what we were doing and what we wanted. When we engage sexually with others, we learn and teach, we influence each other and change how we do things — often without knowing it. Because people are poor, or have left their countries to work abroad, or take money in exchange for sex does not change their humanity, their capacity to feel, respond, learn, or teach, whether sex is at issue or not.

“Sex trafficking” headlines claim that all migrant women who sell sex are invariably being abused, without regard to their diverse backgrounds and without asking them how they feel. But many reject being defined as sexually vulnerable and in need of “rescuing” and protection. Everyone does not feel the same way about sex—in rich countries like the United States, or in any other country. Nationality is a poor way to understand human beings and their sexualities.




Laura Agustín has been studying migration’s links with the sex industry since 1994. Her new book is Sex at the Margins: Migration, Labour Markets and the Rescue Industry (Zed Books) and other publications are available on her website.

Original
http://nsrc.sfsu.edu/MagArticle.cfm?Article=794

Ihr Fachbuch (siehe auch ganz oben in diesem Thema)
http://www.amazon.com/Sex-Margins-Migra ... ef=ed_oe_p

Meine Buchrezension
http://sexworker.at/phpBB2/viewtopic.php?t=2178

Ihre Homepage
http://www.nodo50.org/conexiones/Laura_Agustin/





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Zuletzt geändert von Marc of Frankfurt am 11.12.2007, 01:26, insgesamt 1-mal geändert.

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Beitrag von sheila »

Super Bericht!
BRAVO MARC!!!!
"Liebe: ein Handel, wo beide Parteien gewinnen." G. C. Lichtenberg

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Anti-Zwangsprostitutions-Kampf statt Prostitutionsdiskurs

Beitrag von Marc of Frankfurt »

Podiumsdiskussion von amnesty international in Frankfurt - leider ohne wirkliche Diskussion.



Menschenhandel: amnesty lässt sich vereinnahmen

Ein Abgesang auf die Freiheitsrechte


Am 10.12. ist der Tag der Menschenrechte. Die Frankfurter Sektion von amnesty international lud aus diesem Grund zu einer Podiumsdiskussion zum Thema Menschenhandel und Zwangsprostitution. Die Veranstaltung entwickelte sich zu einer geistigen Bankrotterklärung und lieferte einen Vorgeschmack darauf, was auf Sexarbeiterinnen und ihre Kunden in der unmittelbaren Zukunft zukommt – alles unter dem Deckmäntelchen des Opferschutzes versteht sich.


Auf dem Podium im Haus der Begegnung saßen zwei Vertreter von amnesty international, Regine Noll vom katholischen Verein Solwodi, Polizeiobermeister Stefan Schmidt von der Frankfurter Polizei, Elvira Niesner vom evangelischen Verein FIM sowie Judith Pauly-Bender, MdL SPD im Hessischen Landtag. Alle diskutierten eifrig vor sich hin und waren sich im wesentlichen einig: Frauen in der Prostitution sind Opfer – mal mehr, mal weniger.


Es ging wieder mal um Zahlen, es ging wieder mal um hohe Zahlen, um die hohe Dunkelziffer und die vielen betroffenen Frauen. Es ging ganz zentral um Spekulation, denn belegt werden konnte nichts. Das war auch gar nicht wichtig.


Die faktische Zahl der mutmaßlichen Opfer von Menschenhandel ist zwar gering, doch davon lassen sich die moralischen Instanzen wenig beeindrucken.


Die Tendenz der Diskussion jedenfalls war eindeutig: Einige wenige Gewaltopfer werden mit dem Ziel instrumentalisiert, das Strafrecht zu verschärfen, Freiheiten einzuschränken und Repression auszuweiten – amnesty international, die Menschenrechtsorganisation, lässt sich zu diesem Zweck vereinnahmen.


Um dieses Ziel der Strafrechtsverschärfung zu erreichen, ist jedes Mittel recht. Insbesondere die klerikalen Vertreter schrecken auch vor der Unwahrheit nicht zurück. So behauptete Elvira Niesner, die Polizei habe seit dem Prostitutionsgesetz (ProstG) keinen Zutritt mehr zu Bordellen und bordellartigen Betrieben. Dass dies nicht wahr ist, weiß jeder, der mit der Materie zu tun hat. Es kann auch Frau Niesner, die sich ausführlich mit dem Thema Prostitution beschäftigt, unterstellt werden, dies zu wissen. Die Strafverfolgungsbehören können jederzeit und völlig unangekündigt Einlass in Bordelle und bordellartige Betriebe verlangen. Erstaunen muss in diesem Zusammenhang, dass der Vertreter der Polizei hier nicht widersprochen hat. Ein Verdacht liegt nahe: Man kennt sich, man schätzt sich und man kommt sich gegenseitig nicht in die Quere. Auch wenn es nicht der Wahrheitsfindung dient.
Diese kleine Manipulation der Fakten ist für die Diskussion sehr wichtig, denn sie ist das zentrale Moment in einer Argumentation, die eine Verschärfung des Strafrechts fordert, mit der das Prostitutionsgesetz rückgängig gemacht werden soll.


An diesem Abend wurde vor allem über die Begriffe Menschenhandel und Zwangsprostitution argumentiert. Erstaunlich ist, dass Elvira Niesner zwischen ‚Menschenhandel’, so wie er im Paragraphen 232 StGB gefasst ist, und dem richtigen Menschenhandel unterscheidet. Richtige Fälle von Menschenhandel sind diejenigen Fälle, die von ihr als Menschenhandel empfunden, die aber vom Paragraphen 232 nicht abgedeckt werden. Und dann gibt es darüber hinaus noch Zwangsprostituierte. Was das genau sein soll, kann eh niemand sagen, es klingt aber extrem brutal und nach wirklich richtigen Opfern. Erkennbar bei dieser Argumentationsstruktur ist jedoch eines: Die Opferzahlen müssen mittels unscharfer Begrifflichkeit in die Höhe getrieben werden, um massive Eingriffe ins Strafrecht legitimieren zu können.


So kann man es nur immer wiederholen: Zwangsprostitution ist kein juristischer Begriff, sondern der mediale Kampfbegriff der klerikalen Rechten und konservativ-ideologischer Feministinnen.


Der Begriff Zwangsprostitution diskriminiert Prostitution, denn er behauptet, dass es bestimmte Delikte im Zusammenhang mit Prostitution gibt, die dann anders zu gewichten sind als außerhalb der Prostitution. Es gibt zum Beispiel schon den Straftatbestand der Freiheitsberaubung. Freiheitsberaubung ist immer strafbar. Es gibt schon den Straftatbestand der sexuellen Nötigung. Auch für alle anderen Phänomene, die mit dem Begriff der Zwangsprostitution assoziiert werden, gibt es einzelne Straftatbestände. Das heißt, man braucht den Begriff der Zwangsprostitution nicht. Es sei denn, man möchte markieren, dass bestimmte Straftatbestände im Zusammenhang mit Prostitution anders zu werten und in einer anderen Weise moralisch verwerflich sind. Dieses rhetorische Verfahren sollte allerdings Verdacht erregen, denn hinter ihm verbirgt sich eine merkwürdige Rechtsauffassung. Freiheitsberaubung wäre dann unterschiedlich zu gewichten, je nachdem ob es sich bei dem Opfer um eine Prostituierte, eine Frau außerhalb der Prostitution oder einen Mann handelt. Ein völlig absurdes Unterfangen, das gegen den Gleichheitsgrundsatz verstößt. Dennoch: Wohin man hört, taucht das Unwort Zwangsprostitution auf. Es wird so getan, als würde mit dem Begriff ein Faktum beschrieben, dabei ist es eine Schimäre, mit der ausschließlich politische Ziele verfolgt werden.

Bild

Es muss einfach deutlich gesagt werden, dass der Begriff der Zwangsprostitution genauso unscharf ist wie der Begriff Terrorismus. Instrumentalisiert werden beide auf analoge Weise, denn mit beiden werden massive Eingriffe in Freiheits- und Bürgerrechte legitimiert. Prostituierte und ihre Kunden müssen beständig mit Kontrollen rechnen, der Schutz der Privatsphäre zählt hier nicht, denn „Opfer“ müssen geschützt werden. Hierzu wird seitens Solwodi und FIM immer wieder angeführt, Menschenhandel sei ein Kontrolldelikt, würde also überwiegend über Razzien ermittelt. Auch diese Behauptung wird durch beständige Wiederholung nicht wahrer. Es stimmt einfach nicht. Lediglich 2 % der Ermittlungsfälle zum Menschenhandel gehen auf Razzien zurück. Der größte Teil wurde von den mutmaßlichen Opfern selbst angestrengt.


Die Antwort auf die Frage, wie man mit dem Strafrecht Opfer schützen kann, bleiben die Vertreter der Forderung natürlich schuldig. Dass man über arbeitsrechtliche Regelungen einen viel besseren und nachhaltigeren Schutz erreichen könnte als durch strafrechtliche Maßnahmen, will den klerikalen und konservativen Feministinnen nicht ins Hirn, obwohl es offensichtlich ist. Verschärft man das Strafrecht, schafft man einen größeren Bereich der Illegalität, der Sexarbeiterinnen die Existenz schwer macht. Denn in der Illegalität sind die Sitten nun mal rauer und die Bedingungen schlechter. Das ist zwingend logisch. Die Kriminalität wird hierüber nicht sinken. Das Gegenteil wird der Fall sein, wie das Beispiel der Prohibition in den USA lehrt.


Damit liegt der Verdacht nahe, dass es diesen selbsternannten Opferschützern gar nicht um Opferschutz geht, sondern dieser für lediglich ideologische Zwecke instrumentalisiert wird.
Erstaunlicherweise erkennt amnesty international verquere Argumentationen in Bezug auf den Begriff des Terrorismus, in Bezug auf Zwangsprostitution ist die Organisation merkwürdig betriebsblind und lässt sich instrumentalisieren. Denn statt um Fakten bemüht zu sein, wurden alle Wortmeldungen zum Thema seitens Juanita Henning von der Hurenorganisation Dona Carmen, die eine Relativierung angemahnt hat, in ganz undemokratischer Weise mit autoritärem Gestus von einem Vertreter der Menschenrechtsorganisation abgewürgt. Ein unglaublich peinliches Verfahren.


Amnesty gab sogar zu, die Auswahl der Podiumsvertreter bewusst einseitig getroffen zu haben. Man habe sich die Webseite von Dona Carmen angesehen und beschlossen, eine Organisation, die das Phänomen Menschenhandel relativiere, nicht auf dem Podium haben zu wollen. So viel zur Diskussionskultur der Frankfurter Sektion von amnesty international.
Und was macht die Vertreterin der SPD? Sie knickt ein. Das können SPD'ler erwiesenermaßen gut. Denn während die SPD noch maßgeblichen Anteil am ProstG hatte, erkennt Pauly-Bender nun massiven Korrekturbedarf. Man sei über das Ziel hinausgeschossen und müsse das Gesetz auf den Prüfstand stellen. Als Gewährsfrau für diesen Schritt, jetzt darf man mal lachen, führte Pauly-Bender Alice Schwarzer an, die sie in dieser Sache für kompetent hält. So funktioniert Politik: Wer am lautesten schreit, wird gehört. Auf den Inhalt des Geplärrten und seinen Wahrheitsgehalt kommt es dabei gar nicht an.


Mit anderen Worten: Wir bewegen uns rückwärts und das mit zunehmender Geschwindigkeit.
Insgesamt passt das Vorhaben einer Strafrechtsverschärfung nämlich in das gesamte Ensemble staatlicher Maßnahmen wie Vorratsdatenspeicherung, heimlicher Online-Durchsuchungen, Nutzung von Maut-Daten zur Verbrechensbekämpfung, Schleierfahndung mittels massenweise fotografierter Kfz-Kennzeichen, Verschärfung des Sexualstrafrechts, der Änderung des Grundgesetzes, um weitere Sicherheitsgesetze durchsetzen zu können, und, und, und ...


Wir sind auf dem Weg in den Überwachungsstaat und die Kirchen machen munter mit. Sie fördern, ganz Antiaufklärung, den Kontroll- und Bestrafungswahn. Mittels Scheinargumenten und Halbwahrheiten auf zur göttlichen Ordnung und Moral. Denn jetzt ist Schluss mit Lustig! Freilich alles im Namen der Opfer, über deren Zahl man sich in absichtsvoller Weise ausschweigt. Und amnesty international macht mit.

Quelle:
kollegin.de/magazin/meldung.asp?AID=1689750

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Westlicher Konsum + östliche Armut => Sklaverei ?

Beitrag von Marc of Frankfurt »

Kinder-Sklaven-Arbeit

Unicef Foto des Jahres 2007: die Kinderbraut

Bild

Vergleiche auch:
http://de.youtube.com/watch?v=fZ56ycUr_Jo





Kinder besticken in Indien für westliche Marken wie GAP oder Levi's modische Jeans oder Kinderkleider mit Perlen

Bild





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Zuletzt geändert von Marc of Frankfurt am 16.01.2008, 09:36, insgesamt 1-mal geändert.

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Pressekonferenz

Beitrag von Marc of Frankfurt »

Press Conference-Sex Worker Activists Protest 'Accidental' Anti-Prostitution Rally

Date: Friday, January 11
Time: 6:45 PM
Location: Steps of City Hall, San Francisco
Contacts: SWOP-USA (NORCAL) www.swop-usa.org;

Trafficking Policy Research Project
www.bayswan.org/traffick
Carol Leigh-415-751-1659;
SWOP-USA-1-877-776-2004





Shame On You: San Francisco Women 'Accidentally' Sponsor Anti-Prostitution Campaign

Sex Workers Respond: "Support Sex Workers Rights-Stop The Deportation"


"Oops! We didn't know that our little vigil to stop sex trafficking might wind up hurting sex workers more than helping them! Of course we thought that those nice cops and ICE agents could just go in there and help them out."
--A misguided, concerned person*





On January 11th, SWOP-USA (NORCAL) will hold a press conference to address an 'accidental' anti-prostitution rally billed as "a vigil to promote awareness of sex trafficking."

"Campaigns against sex trafficking have historically been used against sex workers themselves and voluntary commercial sex.

These campaigns historically promote a repressive agenda fueled by moral panics and the public's fear and fascination with sex and sexual abuse, " says Carol Leigh, long time sex worker activist and former member of the Board of Supervisors' Task Force on Prostitution. "Repressive solutions are harmful and ineffective. Sex workers must be part of the solutions, but are excluded as a result of anti-trafficking policies."

Bild

"SWOP-USA and other sex work positive organizations are vehemently opposed to ANY and ALL kinds of forced or coerced work whether it's sex work, domestic workers kept against their will, or forced laborers on farms and factories growing our food and making our shoes," adds SWOP-USA member, S. Bacchus.

"It is clear to [the] trafficked woman that if she identifies herself as a
'victim of trafficking', she will eventually be sent home to be reunited
with her misery once again. So she chooses not to identify herself as a
'victim of trafficking' - in order not to become a victim of
anti-trafficking".

--'Collateral Damage: The Impact of Anti-Trafficking Measures on
Human Rights around the World', a recent report from The Global Alliance
Against Traffic in Women (GAATW).


"Under the guise of combating forced prostitution, immigrants who work voluntarily are arrested and deported. There is never a mention of these issues in the context of anti-sex trafficking campaigns. Of course, forced prostitution and abuses in the sex industry should be of concern and should be addressed. Empowerment and support for the rights of workers and migrants is central to the solution, not jail and deportation" said Robyn Few, founder of SWOP-USA.

"Are these women concerned about the rapist that recently got off, charged in Philadelphia with 'theft of services' rather than being charged with rape with a deadly weapon, because the woman was a sex worker? This kind of sexual assault is much more prevalent." says Mariko Passion of SWOP-LA. "A rally like this takes the focus away from sexual assault and abuses in our industry in general, and expresses interest only in 'sex slaves.' They turn a blind eye when a voluntary sex worker is assaulted. Do we have to be tied up in a dark room and duped and tricked to be of concern? Look at these sexploitative images of trafficking in the media and how this rally supports that false dichotomy of good whore vs. bad whore. They have adopted a patriarchal construction that they don't realize is a patriarchal construction."

Carol Leigh adds, "When I said to Lori Blair of Soroptimist, the organization sponsoring this campaign, that the definition of 'sex trafficking' in the U.S. Trafficking Victims Protection Act includes all voluntary commercial sex, so that a campaign against 'sex trafficking' is a campaign against all commercial sex, Blair explained that her organization doesn't take a stand on legal prostitution. 'Well, you just did,' I said."

Adds San Francisco sex worker and activist Starchild, "There is a deliberate blurring of the line between voluntary and involuntary actions. When someone makes a choice to do something, she or he has every right to do it so long as it does not involve initiating force against others."

"Some people want to stop certain free choices because they find them 'exploitative' to one person or another, but that is not their decision to make," says Starchild. If a person says she is not being forced to work at a trade but freely chooses it, then absent any proof of foul play we must take her at her word -- no matter whether the work involves selling sex or making tennis shoes. Or whether the worker is a she or a he. Sex negative groups like Soroptimist pretend there are only female sex workers because the sexist stereotypes of men as evil exploiters and women as helpless victims are easier to sell. They don't want to acknowledge the realities of male sex workers or gay, bisexual and female clients, all of whom have equal rights."

In fact, local service organization, SAGE, the featured presenter at this rally, was part of an amicus brief in support the Bush administration and in opposition to Soros' Open Society. Soros was suing sued the administration to challenge a gag order that prevented health service organizations from supporting sex worker empowerment strategies and sex worker rights. In May of 2005, 200 human rights groups protested this policy including Human Rights Watch, Amnesty International and the Global Fund for Women. Local, well-funded San Francisco group, SAGE, defended the Bush administration's discrimination as part of an amicus brief (Amici Curiae) along with Melissa Farley's project, Prostitution Research and Education.
http://www.bayswan.org/traffick/Amicus_v_Soros.pdf

"Obviously most progressive people attending this rally are concerned and well-intentioned, but they know very little about the intricacies and specifics of issues relating to trafficking and sex worker rights. They see the stories on the news, and, although they would tend to question mainstream media portrayals of the issues of war and or economics, somehow, when it comes to U.S. policies on trafficking, they stop questioning. They don't seem to seek out alternative perspectives, or even critiques of U.S. policy. It makes no sense. I just don't get it. On the other hand, individual writers and reporters are beginning to ask questions," says Carol Leigh.

Our own San Francisco Mayor Gavin Newsom recently jumped on the bandwagon. At a pinnacle of hypocrisy, Newsom, freshly recuperated from his own adultery scandal with a staffer in which he admitted having an affair with the wife of his (former) friend and re-election campaign manager (who quit in protest). Next we see Newsom featured as an anti-trafficking zealot in an MSNBC documentary describing his part in the trafficking raids:

"A young girl is throwing off this guy as we raided the place, and this guy has a wedding ring on. This is real. It's a disgrace. The idea it's happening in San Francisco, is equally disgraceful. And I'm just humiliated as a guy who lives here, not just its mayor." http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/22056066/page/5/

Although some in the U.S. don't look deeper than the current framework of this issue, around the world human rights activists have begun to document the adverse effects of the anti-trafficking policies and framework. There is a growing awareness that the discourse about trafficking is superficial and xenophobic and that current solutions to slavery and trafficking are ineffective or harmful and discriminatory.

The December 2007 report issued by the California Alliance to Combat Trafficking and Slavery, a government task force, acknowledges the negative impact of anti-trafficking policies on sex workers:

"While many federal sweeps result in providing assistance to victims, others can lead to deportation or punishment. Many victims become scapegoats, while employers receive minor rebukes. Sex workers suffer even worse sanctions because they are often designated as criminals (prostitutes), which make it more difficult for them to re-enter the country once they are deported."

Additional information about adverse effects of anti-trafficking policies and frameworks is available: Collateral Damage (GAATW) discusses 'the victims of anti-trafficking'
http://www.awid.org/go.php?list=analysi ... item=00411
Human Rights Impact of Anti-trafficking Interventions: Developing an Assessment Tool
http://www.bayswan.org/traffick/AIM_Hum ... s_Traf.pdf

* This is satiric, and not an actual quote.





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Beitrag von Marc of Frankfurt »

Menschen ohne Papiere

Organising in the Dark: Interviews about Migrants’ Struggles



Jaya Klara Brekke talks to four UK based groups working to improve conditions for migrants and asks ‘how does one organise in the dark?’


Workers’ struggles to improve conditions traditionally voice demands for visibility, rights and citizenship. But when visibility brings with it the risk of detention and deportation other strategies may be necessary. Equally, when rights are dependent on the whims of employers, how desirable are they? The experience of migration and illegality is multiple and contingent on the resources of class, race, gender and income. Campaigns and struggles therefore cohere around diverse experiences, involve different levels of risk and confrontation, and mobilise such disparate groups as church congregations, community groups, activist networks, unions, mosques, and national associations. The tactics and positions employed entail conflicting ideas about whether or not to collaborate with the state. Here Jaya Klara Brekke talks to four UK based groups working to improve conditions for migrants and asks ‘how does one organise in the dark?’ Their answers describe the day to day experience of a tightening immigration system and responses to it, from direct resistance and support work to proposals for reform.

...

http://www.metamute.org/en/node/11179/print

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Marc of Frankfurt
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Wien: Anti-SW-Medienkampagne zu erwarten

Beitrag von Marc of Frankfurt »

UN: More Human-Trafficking Date Needed

By VERONIKA OLEKSYN | Associated Press Writer
5:22 PM EST, January 22, 2008


VIENNA, Austria
- Better data is needed to determine the magnitude of human trafficking so it can be targeted effectively, and some countries are not taking the problem as seriously as they should, the top U.N. anti-crime official said Tuesday.



Bild

Antonio Maria Costa,
executive director of the Vienna-based United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime
www.unodc.org



"We only see the tip of the iceberg but we have not succeeded in pushing this iceberg out of the water," Antonio Maria Costa, executive director of the Vienna-based United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime, told The Associated Press in an interview.

Costa, who described human trafficking as possibly the most difficult issue his office deals with, made his comments before a conference on the matter to be held in Vienna next month.

The three-day gathering, which starts Feb. 13, is part of the United Nations Global Initiative to Fight Human Trafficking. The initiative was launched by Costa's drugs and crime office in March 2007 to increase knowledge and awareness of the issue, promote effective responses and foster joint action partnerships.

"We need to mobilize people by understanding better and we need better statistics so as to identify specifically what to do," Costa said, while acknowledging that the matter was "murky" and often difficult to quantify.

"We are dealing with human beings. We are not dealing with commodities and that makes it difficult to measure -- but we will succeed," he said.

In preparing the meeting, known as the Vienna Forum to Fight Human Trafficking, Costa said organizers have run into countries that appeared not to fully grasp the severity of the problem.

"We did run into some member states that, how can I say, maintain ... a sort of benign neglect who say, for instance, 'Well, this is not human trafficking or slavery -- it's just prostitution,'" Costa said.

"I sense that greater educational efforts on our part are needed to make sure that the crime is fully understood and the severity fully appreciated," he added.

Costa declined to divulge any names, saying he did not want to "shame" anyone.

"Those are limited cases but in some instances they are important cases, countries well known to all of us," he said.

Costa also noted that some states -- such as Moldova, Belarus and Nigeria -- were becoming very "militant" in their efforts to stop trafficking.

"Belarus and Moldova are on the right track in terms of recognizing the severity of the problem," Costa said, adding that some European and Asian countries, as well as the United States, have also been doing more to fight human trafficking.

Moldova, Belarus and Nigeria were ranked as recruiting countries in a report by the drugs and crime office released in April 2006. The report showed that most victims of human trafficking are women and children who are abducted or recruited in their homelands, transported through other countries and exploited in destination countries.

The report also found that the trafficking of people for sexual exploitation or forced labor affects virtually every region of the world and called on governments to do more to reduce demand, protect victims and bring perpetrators to justice.

On Tuesday, Costa also noted the existence of a U.N. protocol designed to combat human trafficking, adding that it called for better statistical evidence.

"We would like now, on account of this protocol, (to) put additional pressure on member states so that we do get ... basic information," he said.

* __

On the Net:

U.N. Office on Drugs and Crime:
http://www.unODC.org

Global Initiative to Fight Human Trafficking:
http://www.unGIFT.org

(This version CORRECTS RECASTS 1st graf to add element of targeting the problem; corrects quote in 5th graf to make it read "specifically what to do" sted "specifically what is going on.")

http://www.newsday.com/news/nationworld ... 7382.story





Macht Euch auf eine Flut von Anti-Menschenhandels- und auch Anti-Prostitutions-Zeitungsartikel gefaßt.

Fragwürdige Definition "Menschenhandel" des Palermo Protokolls:
viewtopic.php?p=29294#29294

Tipps zur "Medienkompetenz Sexwork" gibt es hier:
viewtopic.php?t=943





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UNO: "Wiener Forum" kämpft gegen Menschenhandel

Beitrag von Zwerg »

UNO: "Wiener Forum" kämpft gegen Menschenhandel

Erste große internationale Konferenz in Wien. Mehr als 1000 Experten aus etwa 100 Staaten werden von 13. bis 15. Februar im Austria Center Vienna

Wien (zoe). „Kellnerin gesucht“ – oft beginnt mit einer so harmlosen Anzeige ein jahrelanger Leidensweg von Menschen, die gegen ihren Willen meist ins Ausland geschleppt und dort zur Arbeit oder zur Prostitution gezwungen werden. Weltweit sind davon etwa 2,5 Millionen betroffen. Sie wurden Opfer von Menschenhändlern, die mit ihrem Schicksal Geschäfte machen.

„Der Mensch ist eine Ware geworden und oft eine sehr billige“, erklärt Doris Buddenberg von der UN-Organisation UN.GIFT (Global Initiative to Fight Human Trafficking) bei einer Pressekonferenz in Wien. „Menschenhandel ist ,big business‘.“

Als erste große internationale Konferenz widmet sich das „Wiener Forum“ dem Kampf gegen Menschenhandel. Mehr als 1000 Experten aus etwa 100 Staaten werden dazu zwischen 13. und 15. Februar im Austria Center Vienna erwartet. Auch die britische Schauspielerin Emma Thompson wird nach Wien kommen. Sie setzt sich für Opfer von Menschenhandel ein.

Emma Thompson als Stargast

„Ich bin mir sicher, auch Sie waren schon in Kontakt mit einem Opfer von Menschenhandel, ohne dass Sie es gewusst haben“, sagt Kristiina Kangaspunta von der UNODC, der Organisation zur Drogen- und Kriminalitätsbekämpfung. Das Phänomen beschränke sich auf keine bestimmten Schichten oder Länder, es handle sich um ein globales Problem. Die meisten Opfer von Menschenhandel sind zwischen 18 und 24 Jahre alt und durchschnittlich gebildet. 95 Prozent von ihnen wird physische oder sexuelle Gewalt zugefügt. Begleiterscheinung des Milliarden-schweren Geschäfts: Korruption und Geldwäsche.

Während der dreitägigen Konferenz wird auch den Wienern einiges geboten: Das „Film Forum“ im Metro-Kino zeigt Spielfilme und Dokumentationen zum Thema. Eine von Emma Thompson initiierte Installation, die vorher in London zu sehen war, erzählt das Schicksal einer Frau, die in die Falle von Schleppern tappt.

("Die Presse", Print-Ausgabe, 30.01.2008)

http://diepresse.com/home/panorama/welt ... a/index.do

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Internationaler Aufmarsch

Beitrag von Marc of Frankfurt »

Was planen denn die Wiener Projekte und ihr Sexworker und Forumbesucher?

Gibt es einen gemeinsamen Infostand von Lefoe, SOPHIE und SEXWORKER.AT, wo mit roten Schirmen Safety-Tipps und Flyer vor dem Kongresszentrum verteilt werden, um auf unsere hervorragende Vor-Ort-Arbeit und Internet-Beratung hinzuweisen?

Gibt es für den ein oder anderen die Chance die Konferenz zu besuchen?

Man könnte ja mal fragen, warum der Wille von Opfern unerheblich ist?

Palermo-Protokoll:
http://sexworker.at/phpBB2/viewtopic.php?p=29294#29294





Bild

Hier die Red-Umbrella-Sexwork-Aktion:

http://sexworker.at/phpBB2/viewtopic.php?p=32705#32705





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Zuletzt geändert von Marc of Frankfurt am 24.04.2008, 20:30, insgesamt 2-mal geändert.

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Links

Beitrag von Marc of Frankfurt »

Migrationsdebatte


1.) Fachtagung Prostitution
Gemeinsamkeiten und Differenzen im Kontext von Migration und Sexarbeit

http://sexworker.at/phpBB2/viewtopic.php?p=30925#30925





2.) CROSSING BORDERS ! - movements and struggles of migration

is an initiative that aims to foster migration-related networking and practical struggles. In this issue we speak about womenʼs migration, and not for the first time: as we believe it is a crucial perspective to understand transnational movements and the organisation of labour. This issue of Crossing Borders! will be initially distributed at the opening initiative of the transnational chain of action – Fight the Monster!

Against Border Regime: Transnationalization now!
(February - October 2008)
Amsterdam, on February 2, 2008.

http://www.noborder.org/crossing_border ... er05en.pdf
(4 Seiten)





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Marc of Frankfurt
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Gut beobachtet und sehr gut analysiert

Beitrag von Marc of Frankfurt »

Sehr guter Aufsatz:

Werden sich die tatsächlichen Sex-Sklaven selber erheben?

Will the Real Sex Slave Please Stand Up?


Bild

Prof. Julia O'Connell Davidson,
Uni Notthingham
  • Intime Analyse der Sexarbeit und ihrer Rahmenbedingungen
  • Migration vs. 'Menschenhandel'
  • Gesetzliche Grundlagen und Polizeipraxis
  • Arbeit und Wettstreit der NGOs
  • Fallbeispiele wie in London Bordelle geführt werden
  • Perspektiven für den emanzipativen, politischen Diskurs
  • 48 Literaturhinweise



Siehe auch ihren Aufsatz oben im Thema:
"Männer, Mittler, Migranten - Marktgesetze des 'Menschenhandels' "
http://sexworker.at/phpBB2/viewtopic.php?p=19228#19228
Dateianhänge
O'Connell Davidson Julia - WILL THE REAL SEX SLAVE PLEASE STAND UP.pdf
Julia O’Connell Davidson 2006, WILL THE REAL SEX SLAVE PLEASE STAND UP? Feminist Review, No. 83, pp 4-23
(122.46 KiB) 2251-mal heruntergeladen
Zuletzt geändert von Marc of Frankfurt am 16.02.2008, 02:19, insgesamt 1-mal geändert.

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Großeinsatz gegen MigrantenMinderheit in West-London

Beitrag von Marc of Frankfurt »

Staatliche legitimierte Kinderentführung um die Community der Roma-Migranten zu disziplinieren oder um vermeintlichen Kinderhandel aufzuklären?





The Guardian: "From brilliant coup to cock-up. How the story of Fagin's urchins fell apart

High profile raid and lurid claims, but no one is to face child trafficking charges"


Helen Pidd and Vikram Dodd
Saturday February 2, 2008
The Guardian


When police made a series of dawn raids on houses across Slough [35 km westlich von London] last week, it was hailed as a blow against modern-day Fagins who were parting poor Roma children from their families and forcing them into a life of crime.

The media was invited along as officers wearing body armour smashed down doors and carried children away - apparently to safety. The face of one of these children appeared on a tabloid front page the next day under the headline: "Fagin's heirs".

The police officer in charge of the operation, Commander Steve Allen, told reporters: "We have evidence that organised crime networks are exploiting and driving the most vulnerable members of their own community."

But within days what seemed a spectacular success had begun to unravel.

In the nine days since the raid all but one child has been returned to the Roma community in Slough, according to a Romanian diplomat, and none of the 24 adults arrested at the scene has been charged with child trafficking offences.

Now a senior diplomat at the Romanian embassy has told the Guardian that the raid which claimed to have cracked a child trafficking ring was a "fiasco" and "a failure". The high-ranking official said he feared the operation, which involved 400 police officers breaking into 17 addresses simultaneously at dawn on January 24 and resulted in 10 children briefly being taken into care, was part of an anti-Romanian trend in Britain.

Fifteen adults have since appeared in court: nine were charged with minor immigration offences dating back seven years or more. Three were charged with theft of mobile phones, two with handling stolen mobile phones and the last with breach of a deportation order. So far just one man, Gheorge Mazarache, 25, has been jailed: he received an eight-week sentence after he admitted handling a stolen mobile phone worth £430.

Explaining the anticlimactic charges, Allen said: "I'm not able to see into the future. I didn't know exactly who and what we were going to find in those addresses."

Now the Romanian embassy wants the Metropolitan police to explain what went wrong. The senior diplomat said: "The main aim of the operation, as far as I have understood from the official declaration from the police and in the newspapers, was to disrupt Romanian traffickers and Romanian trafficked children. At the end of it all I can say, based on concrete statistics and concrete data provided by the British authorities, is there is no one accused of trafficking, but a few people accused of stealing mobile phones and some ancient immigration offences. How did the exaggeration of the gravity of offences happen? It is not the same to be involved in trafficking or child slavery as the attempted theft of a mobile phone."

Staff from the Romanian embassy claim they have not been allowed access to 15 Romanian nationals in police custody. "If a British citizen is arrested in Romania they are seen by someone from the British embassy within 24 hours, but it is not the case for us here," said the diplomatic source.

He criticised the Metropolitan police for tipping off the media. "They must do big operations all the time, but why publicise this raid involving Romanians?" he asked. "Unfortunately for our image, bad news about Romanians sells well. The media reports so rarely about good things that Romanians do." Too often Romanians were scapegoats for society's problems, he added. Initial reports gave the impression that the 10 children taken in the raid - one of whom was less than a year old - had been living with gangmasters rather than their families.

But the diplomat said that six were back in the Roma community in Slough within 48 hours. Some of these were returned to their parents and some to other adults social services deemed "responsible". Just one girl, who sources say is around 14 years old, is yet to be reunited with her parents because social services have so far been unable to trace any of her family members.

No one has yet been charged with trafficking offences, although two sources involved in the operation told the Guardian it would be wrong to conclude no child trafficking was involved just because no one has been charged with that offence. They say mounting such prosecutions are complex and would put the children involved in distress, and so it is better to prosecute adults for other offences. Police say they believe children were trafficked. But the diplomat said it was "hard not to conclude that the operation was a failure - it did not achieve its objectives. It seems to have been a fiasco."

Whatever the truth is in this case, it has certainly given national prominence to the Roma community in Slough, where huge extended families have moved into multiple properties on a cluster of streets within five minutes walk of each other since Romania joined the EU in January 2007.

Slough has long been a favourite destination for Roma. Before Romania's accession to the EU the district had a famously liberal approach to asylum seekers, and many Roma arrived in the town claiming political persecution after the collapse of communism. Many families involved in last week's raid had lived in Slough in the late 90s. They were deported when the UK tightened up its immigration rules, but they returned when the borders were opened.

The Roma's very visible presence has caused consternation in the local community. They complain that the high density of Roma living in nearby properties has led to problems with antisocial behaviour and crime.

Azeem Khan, 40, who lives next door to one of the raided flats in the Chalvey area of Slough, said the noise from the "18 to 20" Roma living in the adjacent one-bedroom flat was so unbearable that his wife, Saima, 34, developed eclampsia while pregnant with their daughter, now six months old.

He said the Roma were noisy, dumped their rubbish everywhere and hung around in "intimidating" gangs on the street. He said he was not surprised to hear they had allegedly been involved in criminal activity. "None of them ever go out to work, yet they have nice cars and you see them eating takeaway food every night," he said.

Suspicion around how the Roma pay for their lives and extensive families was rife this week, when the Guardian spent two days in Chalvey. Residents claimed to have seen the Roma women wrapping up dolls in shawls to use as "baby" begging tools, and said the children often stole sweets from the shops.

A shopkeeper told the Guardian he was always having to tell the children off for shoplifting. His wife said the children, as young as four, came into the shop "all the time", often with no shoes on. "There was a little girl in last week with no trousers or pants on, even in this weather," she said. Many residents complained that they were always seeing Roma going to the toilet on the street, and that house prices had plummeted in the area as a result.

Last night Scotland Yard would not comment directly on the diplomat's criticism, but stood by its actions. In a statement, police said: "We worked in close partnership and cooperation with the Romanian embassy and the Romanian government. Romanian police officers from the embassy were with us on the day of the operation. We have received no formal complaint from the Romanian embassy."

But the Roma believe they are being persecuted and are angry at their treatment. On Alexander Road, where two houses were raided, a large crowd of Roma gathered and shouted, in Romanian with bursts of broken English, how angry they were at the police and the "lies" in the media.

One young man in his early 20s said: "They came into our houses early in the morning, they broke down our doors, took away the children and told the world that the children - our own children - were not ours and that we had stolen them and trained them to commit crime. But now the children are back with us and we are very, very angry," he said. A Roma woman drew a young boy close to her and shouted across the road, "Would you send your child out to commit crime? I wouldn't."

http://www.guardian.co.uk/crime/article ... 53,00.html










Trafficking: return of the ‘white slavery’ scare?

The Metropolitan Police’s legalised kidnapping of 10 Roma children suggests the anti-trafficking industry is the greatest threat to migrants.



They were ‘twenty-first century Artful Dodgers’, we were told, a gang of ‘Fagin’s children’ from Romania, who had been trafficked to Slough, England, in order to work like slaves in a ‘pickpocketing and begging crimewave’. The Metropolitan Police launched dawn raids on various ‘slavery dens’ in Slough last Friday; some of the police reportedly wore balaclavas [Sturmhauben] and riot gear and were closely followed by film crews invited along to witness the moment the ‘child slaves’ were liberated. Footage of officers carrying kids from terraced houses was beamed across the news bulletins, as various newspapers declared: ‘Romanian child slaves freed in Slough.’ A Met officer said his team was committed to ‘dismantling crime networks’ and to the ‘rescue of [trafficked] children’ (1).

There was only one problem with this story: it was as fictional as the original Dickensian tale of artful dodgers. The Roma children were not child slaves; of the 10 kids ‘rescued’ in Slough on Friday (one of whom was less than a year old: hardly pickpocketing material), all but one were reunited with their natural parents or guardians the following day (2). No evidence has been discovered to show that the Roma adults in Slough were involved in a ‘criminal gang’ or a ‘child slave ring’ or any other form of serious criminality. Of the 24 adults arrested, 14 have been charged: nine with immigration offences, three with the theft of mobile phones, and two with handling stolen mobile phones… hardly the kind of crimes that require a heavy-handed, camera-flashing raid at five in the morning.

Officials later admitted that the children appeared ‘healthy and well cared for’, though they had been ‘distressed’ by their forced removal from their family homes by police officers (3). In a spluttering effort to explain why a high-profile raid had been carried out against what appear to be normal families of poor immigrants – living in crowded conditions; in possession of dodgy immigration papers; involved in a bit of petty crime – Metropolitan Police commander Steve Allen said: ‘I’m not able to see into the future. I didn’t know exactly who and what we were going to find in those addresses.’ (4) According to the grandfather of some of the children who were ‘rescued’, the police entered the house at 5am, ransacked it, forbade the grandparents from feeding the children, and finally – finding no hard evidence of ‘slavery’ – took the children away only to return them 24 hours later (5).

The Met’s raids in Slough were effectively legalised kidnapping, the snatching of children as a media stunt designed to show that the police are serious about tackling ‘human trafficking’. According to one account, the police were accompanied not only by social workers, but also by a ‘small army of cameramen, photographers and journalists’, who unquestioningly, one might even say slavishly, reported the cops’ apparently brave efforts to liberate enslaved children from bondage (6). Yet hardly anyone in this army of reporters has bothered to write a follow-up about what happened next. This degenerate episode highlights the dangers in today’s hysteria about human trafficking. The Metropolitan Police found little evidence that Roma children in Slough are being harmed by ‘evil traffickers’ – yet its own high-profile raid shows very clearly that the anti-trafficking industry can cause harm and distress to migrant families, undermine global freedom of movement, and warp the public’s perception of immigration.

In recent years, a motley crew of government and police forces in America and Europe, feminist activists, fundamentalist Christian outfits and celebrity campaigners has turned human trafficking into one of the biggest issues of our time. They claim there is a new ‘slave trade’, that tens of thousands of people – especially women and children – are being sold across borders and into bondage every year. Salacious [anzügliche] newspaper reports (in respectable broadsheets as well as the tabloids) tell us of ‘the teenagers traded for slave labour and sex’; of African children that are ‘nothing but a commodity… traded for tawdry [billig] sex and living under the fear of voodoo’; of Eastern European women moved across Europe ‘like cattle’ to service sex-hungry kerb-crawlers in Britain, Spain, France and Germany (7). The anti-traffickers paint a picture of uber-Dickensian global squalor [Elend], of Conradian darkness, where women and children are bought and sold by evil gangs, and then forced into labour and kept in their place by threats of murder or voodoo vengeance [Vergeltung].

The evidence for these sinister claims is murky indeed. No one doubts that illegal immigration is a messy business. Migrants from some Eastern European countries and from Africa are denied free movement around Europe. Thus they frequently have little choice but to pay middlemen for fake passports, risky forms of transportation and other favours. Those who do make it into Britain, France or Germany have to live beneath officialdom’s radar or risk being deported back to their country of origin: this means they can easily be exploited, becoming beholden to dodgy employers who pay them shockingly low wages and provide them with shoddy housing. But enslaved? Victims of voodoo? Little more than ‘cattle’ or ‘commodities’ driven and shipped around Europe like animals? Such claims seem to spring from the anti-traffickers’ fevered and borderline-xenophobic mindset, rather than being based in reality.

The Slough incident is not the first time that a high-profile raid against ‘modern-day slavery’ has turned out to be something quite different. In late 2005, police in Birmingham carried out a media splash of a raid against a brothel and claimed to have ‘rescued’ 19 women who had been trafficked to the UK and enslaved as prostitutes (8). A few days later, 13 of the women were released when it turned out that they were ‘voluntarily working in the sex industry’; the remaining six, who also denied having been trafficked, were imprisoned at Yarlswood detention centre in Bedfordshire and threatened with deportation back to their countries of origin (9). The 19 women refuted police and media claims that they had been ‘locked up’ in the brothel: then, thanks to what some refer to as the ‘rescue industry’ of the anti-trafficking lobby, some of them were locked up for real in a detention centre.

In 2004, the Metropolitan Police launched Operation Paladin Child at Heathrow airport. In the wake of the publication of various reports that said ‘there may well be hundreds, if not thousands, of children in Britain who have been brought here for exploitation’, the Met monitored the arrival of ‘unaccompanied minors from non-EU countries’ (a PC phrase for young blacks and Eastern Europeans) into Heathrow over a three-month period (10). During this time, 1,738 unaccompanied minors arrived at Heathrow and all but 12 of them were ‘accounted for’: that is, they moved in with family relations or guardians. The outstanding 12 are believed either to have left the UK soon after or to have started work in Britain outside of the authorities’ watch. In 2006, a transatlantic network of anti-traffickers claimed that 40,000 women from Eastern Europe, Asia and Latin America would be trafficked to Germany during the World Cup tournament to service drunken or drug-fuelled horny football fans. A few months after the World Cup, EU documents revealed that five women, not 40,000, had been forced against their will to work as prostitutes in Germany (11).

The anti-trafficking industry’s figures frequently don’t add up. In 2003, UNICEF published a report titled Stop the Traffic!. It claimed that up to a million young people and children are trafficked around the world every year – a claim that hit the front pages in 2003 and which still pops up in reports about trafficked women and children today. Yet UNICEF admits there is ‘little hard statistical information’ on trafficking. ‘Since trafficking can be a complex series of events… it can be difficult to identify a single case of trafficking’, it said. What’s more, for the purposes of its shrill report, UNICEF lumped very different forms of population movement under the category of ‘trafficking’, including instances where African parents ‘send their children to work in other households, sometimes entrusting them to better-off relatives’ and where large numbers of children or young people (which can include 17- and 18-year-olds) move around Africa or Asia in search of work. Here, the everyday African practice of sending children to live with wealthier family members, and the migration of young people in Asia and Africa in search of employment, are stuck alongside claims about voodoo-enabled tawdry sex slavery as part of an overall wicked ‘trafficking industry’ (12).

The US State Department claims that 800,000 people are trafficked around the world every year. Yet according to Laura Maria Agustin, who interrogated the idea that a ‘trafficking industry’ exists for her new book Sex at the Margins: Migration, Labour Markets and the Rescue Industry, this is a ‘fantasy number’. ‘Numbers like this are fabricated by defining trafficking in an extremely broad way to take in enormous numbers of people’, says Agustin. For example, the State Department’s Office to Monitor and Combat Trafficking in Persons uses ‘the widest possible definition [of trafficking]’, says Agustin, including describing nearly all foreign prostitutes in the West as victims of trafficking on the basis that ‘any woman who sells sex could not really want to, and, if she crossed a national border, she was forced’ (13).

The crusade against trafficking looks less and less like a real-world attempt to assist migrants and increase their freedom of movement and choices, and more like a super-moralistic fantasy campaign against evil and perverted Johnny Foreigners. In some ways, today’s trafficking hysteria is similar to the ‘white slavery’ scare of the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries; indeed, one academic study points out that the term ‘trafficking’ first emerged during the white slavery panic (14). Back then, there were widespread concerns that foreign men – in particular Arabs and the Chinese – might kidnap respectable white Western women and force them to work as prostitutes. In 1910, the US passed the White-Slave Traffic Act which banned the ‘interstate transport of females for immoral purposes’ (15). This moral panic had very little foundation in fact. Rather, as various studies have discussed, it was driven by fin de siècle fears about foreigners polluting and corrupting Western civilisation, as represented by the virginal white woman allegedly at risk of being violated by brown-skinned outsiders. In America in the very early twentieth century there were numerous high-profile raids on Chinese gambling halls in search of enslaved white women; most of the raids turned up nothing (16).

Today, too, there is a feverish obsession amongst officials and activists with the alleged ‘transport of females for immoral purposes’. Only today the wicked foreigners tend to be Eastern Europeans and Africans, and their alleged victims are women from their own countries rather than white women from the West. Yesterday’s ‘white slavery’ scaremongers and today’s anti-trafficking campaigners share much in common. Both viewed foreign men as brutal and untrustworthy. Both depicted women as pathetic victims easily trapped into a life of tawdry sex slavery. Both made hysterical claims about women and children being chained up for the pleasure of men. Both gave rise to high-profile raids that often turned up very little. And both seemed to be underpinned, energised, by a culture of fear, by apocalyptic doubts and uncertainties about the standing of Western society and the threat from brown, yellow and black foreigners who might pass unnoticed across porous borders. Now, as then, the discussion of migration as ‘trafficking’ and ‘slavery’ reveals much about the fearful and besieged Western mentality, the desire to raise the drawbridge and keep at bay the coming collapse of moral values.

The anti-trafficking crusade strikingly captures the degraded view many people take of agency and choice today. Anti-traffickers patronisingly describe foreign women, especially those who end up working in prostitution, as objects rather than as active subjects. Apparently these women do not move around the world; rather they are trafficked across borders, smuggled and shifted like pieces on a chess board. Apparently they do not make hard decisions about where to go and what work to carry out; instead they are bought and sold and forced into ‘slave labour’. And worst of all, apparently they do not require our solidarity or support as they move around the globe and work often long hours for little pay; instead they must be rescued by the police, social workers and feminists and sent back to their country of origin as if they were children escaped from a nursery. Once migrants were demonised as potential criminals; today they are looked upon as flotsam and jetsam, who must be guided home by caring Western officials.

Yet as Laura Maria Agustin argues, people who migrate are not pathetic victims; they might have to make hard choices in circumstances that are not of their making, but they are often possessed of gumption and ambition: ‘It is not the most desperate, like famine sufferers, who manage to undertake a migration. In order to go abroad you have to be healthy and you have to have social capital, including a network that will get you information on how to travel and work. You need some money and some names and addresses; you have to have at least some official papers, even if they’re false. You need at least a minimal safety net.’ (17) Migration remains an inspiring expression of human agency and desire, as people take great risks and travel great distances to improve their lives. In labelling such movement as ‘trafficking’ and ‘slavery’, and demanding tougher border restrictions and police-led ‘rescues’ of trafficking’s alleged victims, the anti-trafficking lobby has grossly betrayed the very people it is claiming to help.

Brendan O’Neill is editor of spiked.
www.brendanONeill.net


Endnotes:
(1) Children feared used by crime gangs, BBC News, 25 January 2008

(2) Romanian parents help gang probe, BBC News, 28 January 2008

(3) Report on Today, BBC Radio 4, 28 January 2008

(4) Romanian parents help gang probe, BBC News, 28 January 2008

(5) Report on Today, BBC Radio 4, 28 January 2008

(6) Press-ganged, Comment Is Free, 29 January 2008

(7) For example, see The teenagers traded for slave labour and sex, Guardian, 30 July 2003

(8) Home Office defers expulsion of women held in brothel raid, Guardian, 5 October 2005

(9) Home Office defers expulsion of women held in brothel raid, Guardian, 5 October 2005

(10) See How looking for work turns you into a victim, Brendan O’Neill, New Statesman, 22 November 2004

(11) See What if the figures don’t add up?, Brendan O’Neill, Press Gazette, 23 March 2007

(12) See Trafficking in dubious numbers, by Brendan O’Neill

(13) The Myth of the Migrant, Reason, 26 December 2007
http://www.reason.com/news/show/124093.html

(14) See this interesting study on trafficking and white slavery
http://www.aic.gov.au/conferences/hcpp/david.pdf :027
(7 pages)

(15) See this interesting study on trafficking and white slavery

(16) See this interesting study on trafficking and white slavery

(17) The Myth of the Migrant, Reason, 26 December 2007

Original mit allen verlinkten Fußnoten:
http://www.spiked-online.com/index.php? ... icle/4389/





Historische Parallele?
Fall von William Thomas Stead und der 13 jährigen Eliza Armstrong 1886:
viewtopic.php?p=9415#9415
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eliza_Armstrong_case





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Artikelsammlung

Beitrag von Marc of Frankfurt »

Pressenachlese und Sammlung zur Wientagung s.o.



Menschenhandel: Die Sklaven des 21. Jahrhunderts


12.02.2008 | 18:40 | IRENE ZÖCH (Die Presse)

Weltweit werden pro Jahr 2,5 Millionen Menschen zu Zwangsarbeit und Prostitution angehalten. Die erste internationale Konferenz zum Thema Menschenhandel findet von 13. bis 15. Februar im Austria Center Vienna statt.

Wien. Dem Aufruf einer Model-Agentur aus dem Westen, die vorgibt, in Moldawien Nachwuchs-Schönheiten zu suchen, sind Dutzende Mädchen nachgekommen. Nach einem kurzen Training in den Mode-Metropolen Europas sollen sie einen Vertrag bekommen und schon bald ins glamouröse Geschäft einsteigen. Das zumindest verspricht die Agentur.

Die Realität, mit der sich die jungen Frauen aber konfrontiert sehen, ist alles andere als glamourös: Einmal im verheißungsvollen Westen angekommen, werden ihnen die Reisepässe abgenommen. Geschlagen, vergewaltigt und bedroht, haben sie keine Chance, sich gegen ihre Peiniger, die sie zur Prostitution zwingen, zu wehren.

Von der Armut genug

Solche Szenarien schildern Betroffene von Menschenhandel aus Moldawien, die dem Horror entkommen sind und ihre Freiheit wiedererlangt haben. Doch ihre Opfer finden skrupellose Menschenhändler nicht nur in Osteuropa, sondern auch in Asien und Afrika. Besonders dort, wo die Not am größten ist, fallen die Versprechungen der Kriminellen auf fruchtbaren Boden. Von der Armut in ihrer Heimat haben die Menschen genug, sie hoffen auf ein besseres Leben in der Fremde.

Weltweit werden nach Angaben der UNO 2,5 Millionen Frauen, Kinder und Männer von Menschenhändlern ausgebeutet. Aus 127 Ländern stammen die Opfer, verkauft werden sie in 137 Länder, darunter auch Österreich.

Die Hotspots und die Routen, über die sie geschleust werden, sind weitgehend bekannt: Menschen aus Osteuropa, Asien, Afrika werden in den Nahen Osten, nach Europa und in die USA verkauft. Ihr Schicksal hängt meist von der Zielregion ab. In Asien schuften sie in Fabriken, in europäischen Ländern und in den USA bedienen sie Freier in den Bordellen.

Die Mehrheit der Opfer sind junge Frauen (77 Prozent aller weltweit registrierten Fälle). Sie werden zur Prostitution (87 Prozent der Fälle) oder zu Arbeit (28 Prozent) gezwungen. Dafür erhalten sie kein Geld oder gerade einmal einen Hungerlohn.

Ein Baby um 14 Euro

Auch Kinder fallen immer wieder Menschenhändlern zum Opfer. Sie werden entweder entführt oder von ihren Eltern verkauft. Diese wissen meist nicht, worauf sie sich da einlassen. Auch die Analphabetin Najrul, eine junge Frau aus dem indischen Bundesstaat Westbengalen hatte keine Ahnung, worauf sie sich einließ, als sie ihr zwei Monate altes Baby für ein paar Scheine einem Mann überließ. Er war ins bitterarme Dorf gekommen und hatte den Familien Geld für ihre Kinder geboten. Den Säugling verkaufte er dann an ein eheloses Paar weiter, für umgerechnet 14 Euro. Sein Handel flog schließlich auf, ihm wird der Prozess gemacht.

Mit der „Wegwerfware Mensch“ ist auf dem globalen Markt einiges zu verdienen: Auf mehr als 30 Milliarden US-Dollar werden die Profite geschätzt. Damit ist der Menschenhandel längst zu einem profitablen Geschäft des internationalen Verbrechens geworden, der mit Drogen- und Waffenhandel auf eine Stufe gestellt werden kann. „Der Aufwand für Menschenhandel ist im Vergleich zum Drogengeschäft relativ gering“, erklärt Kristiina Kangaspunta, die Leiterin des UN-Büros für die Bekämpfung von Menschenhandel, im Gespräch mit der „Presse“.

Menschen könne man immer wieder „verwenden und missbrauchen“, während das „einzige Investment die Reisekosten, gefälschte Dokumente und Bestechungsgelder für Beamte sind“, sagt Kangaspunta. Florieren kann das Geschäft auch deshalb nur so gut, weil Polizisten und Beamte ihre Hand aufhalten.

Organisierte Banden, lose Zellen

Doch wer steckt hinter diesem Milliarden-Geschäft? Jede Sparte von Menschenhandel hat ihre eigenen Tätergruppen. „Bei Kindesentführungen zum Zweck der Prostitution gehen organisierte Gruppen ans Werk. Für Zwangsarbeit im Bausektor braucht man keine streng organisierten Gruppen. Das läuft durch Korruption und aufgrund traditioneller Gesellschaften, die das seit Jahrhunderten akzeptieren“, sagt Doris Buddenberg von UN.GIFT, einer Initiative der Vereinten Nationen zur Bekämpfung des Menschenhandels. Einerseits operieren streng hierarchisch aufgebaute Schlepper-Organisationen, die alles von der Rekrutierung bis zur Vermittlung der Opfer übernehmen, aber auch lose Zellen, die miteinander offenbar reibungslos kooperieren.

Eines steht aber fest: Angetrieben werden die kriminellen Gruppen durch die Nachfrage im Westen, in China, Indien oder am Golf, durch den „Bedarf“ an jungen Frauen, die von der Welt, einem besseren Leben und von einer Karriere als Model träumen.

diepresse.com/home/politik/aussenpolitik/362537/index.do?_vl_backlink=/home/index.do






Weltöffentlichkeit auf Verbrechen lenken
UN-Konferenz über weltweiten Menschenhandel


Politik, 12.02.2008, DerWesten

Wien. Die erste internationale Konferenz zum Kampf gegen den Menschenhandel beginnt am Mittwoch unter Federführung der Vereinten Nationen in Wien.

Rund tausend Teilnehmer aus hundert Staaten sollen bei den dreitägigen Beratungen die Aufmerksamkeit der Weltöffentlichkeit auf dieses Verbrechen lenken. Auch die Zusammenarbeit im Kampf gegen den Menschenhandel solle verbessert werden, erklärte die Chefin des zuständigen UN-Büros (UN.GIFT), Doris Buddenberg. «Menschenhandel gibt es überall auf der Welt, in allen Gesellschaften», sagte Buddenberg. Millionen Menschen würden für Zwangsarbeit, Zwangsehen, illegale Adoption, Prostitution und Organhandel missbraucht. (afp)

derwesten.de/nachrichten/politik/2008/2/12/news-23072940/detail.html





Heute.de: "Einen Mensch töten, ohne dass er stirbt"

UNO-Konferenz gegen Menschenhandel in Wien


Prostitution, Zwangsarbeit, illegale Adoptionen - die UNO geht von Millionen von Menschen aus, die Opfer von Menschenhandel wurden. Schlepper verdienen Milliarden mit dem schmutzigen Geschäft. Die UNO befasst sich nun in Wien mit dem Problem.

Ziel des Treffens von rund 1200 Experten aus Politik, Justiz, Wirtschaft und von internationalen Hilfsorganisationen sei es, Informationen zu sammeln und ein weltumspannendes Konzept gegen die moderne Sklaverei zu entwickeln. "Dieses Verbrechen ist eine Schande für uns alle", sagt der Chef des UNO-Büros für Drogen und Kriminalität, Antonio Maria Costa.

Zitat
„Es ist wie einen Mensch zu töten, ohne dass er stirbt.“
Aktivistin Emma Thompson

"Drittgrößte Schattenwirtschaft"

Nach UNO-Angaben ist das ganze Ausmaß des Menschenhandels bis heute nicht bekannt. Die Organisation geht aber von Millionen von Opfern aus, mit denen die Schlepper mehrere zehn Milliarden Euro jährlich verdienen. "Menschenhandel ist weltweit die drittgrößte Schattenwirtschaft nach Drogen und Waffen", sagt die britische Schauspielerin und Menschenrechtsaktivistin Emma Thompson. Das Geschäft habe sich in den vergangenen zehn Jahren drastisch vergrößert.


Die moderne Sklaverei umfasst unter anderem die Verschleppung von Kindern und Erwachsenen für Prostitution, illegale Adoption, Betteln, zwangsweise Arbeit und für den Kampf als Soldaten. "Es ist wie einen Mensch zu töten, ohne dass er stirbt", sagt Thompson. Die Gesellschaft müsse verstehen, dass Menschenhandel für die Opfer Folter bedeute.

"Viele Regierungen sehen weg"

Eine wirksame Strategie gegen das Verbrechen müsse die Prävention der Verschleppung, die Kriminalisierung des Verbrechens und den Schutz der Opfer beinhalten, sagt Costa. Viele Regierungen weltweit würden jedoch nicht genug dagegen tun. In vielen Regionen fehlten die nötigen Gesetze oder das Problem werde komplett ignoriert. Außerdem gebe es bisher nur begrenzt internationale Kooperationen.

Mit Material von dpa
heute.de/ZDFheute/inhalt/16/0,3672,7158704,00.html


wird sicher noch einiges kommen ...

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Menschenhandel: Mädchenfang im Internet

Beitrag von Zwerg »

Menschenhandel: Mädchenfang im Internet

"Wiener Forum": In Chatrooms und Web-Foren stellen Mädchenhändler verlockende Jobs in Aussicht. In vielen Fällen führen die Angebote zur Zwangsprostitution. Workshops an Schulen sollen auf die Gefahr aufmerksam machen.

Mädchenhändler werben ihre Opfer immer häufiger über das Internet an. Darauf machte Marina Starcevic von Care International anlässlich des "Wiener Forums", der UNO-Menschenhandelskonferenz aufmerksam. "Das geschieht über Job-Angebote ebenso wie in Chatrooms", sagte die in Serbien eingesetzte Care-Mitarbeiterin.

In Aussicht gestellt werden Jobs als Kellnerin oder Rezeptionistin. Was verlockend klingt, endet jedoch oft in der Zwangsprostitution. Marina Starcevic und ihr in Kollege Ales Inkret in Montenegro sind zurzeit in Österreich, um sich mit lokalen Hilfsorganisationen zu vernetzen und sie mit Know-how zu unterstützen.

Aufklärungs-Workshops in Schulen

In den Ländern des westlichen Balkans ist die Armut vielfach noch so groß, dass junge Leute unseriösen Angeboten leicht auf den Leim gehen. "Unsere Partnerorganisationen veranstalten Workshops in den Pflichtschulen, um die Mädchen und Burschen auf die Gefahren aufmerksam zu machen", erläuterte Starcevic.

Genaue Zahlen über Menschenhandels-Opfer gibt es laut Ales Inkret nicht. "Es ist schwierig, sie zu identifizieren. Hilfsorganisationen fassen den Begriff 'Menschenhandel' weiter auf, als etwa die Polizei." Diese hat - internationalen Erfahrungen entsprechend - in der Regel gar nicht die Kapazitäten, aufgegriffene Opfer in ausreichendem Maß einzuvernehmen.

(APA)

http://diepresse.com/home/panorama/oest ... 1/index.do

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Menschenhandel in Serbien: Vom Transitland zum Brennpunkt

Beitrag von Zwerg »

Menschenhandel in Serbien: Vom Transitland zum Brennpunkt

Jahrelang war Serbien vor allem Transitland für Frauenhandel, doch heute werden zunehmend auch junge serbische Frauen Opfer von Menschenhandel. In Belgrad versucht das Tageszentrum Astra, den Opfern zu helfen.

Mehr als 2.000 Fälle von Menschenhandel gab es in den letzten fünf Jahren in Serbien. Die Zahl ist geschätzt und hört sich erst einmal bescheiden an in einem Land mit fast 7,5 Millionen Einwohnern. Doch sind es wie überall auf der Welt mehr als 2.000 Frauen-Schicksale, die sich nach dem immer gleichen Muster vollziehen. Von falschen Jobangeboten ins Ausland gelockt, von der eigenen Familie oder dem festem Freund an Menschenhändler verkauft, werden in dem Balkanland immer mehr junge Frauen, meistens im Alter zwischen 15 und 25 Jahren, zur Prostitution gezwungen.



Erfolgreiche Jahresbilanz



In Belgrad versucht das Tageszentrum Astra, den Opfern zu helfen. Jadranka Veljovic sitzt an dem großen Tisch im hell eingerichteten Zimmer einer ehemaligen Wohnung in einem Reihenhaus in Zentrum Belgrads und erzählt: „Vor einem Jahr haben wir das Tageszentrum hier eröffnet und bis jetzt viel Erfolg damit gehabt. Alles, was man hier sieht, haben die Mädchen selber gemacht. Wie diese Latschen zum Beispiel. Hier werden kreative Workshops organisiert, Fremdsprachenkurse, Malkurse usw. Sie arbeiten kreativ. Und bekommen natürlich auch psychologische Hilfe.” Das Tageszentrum Astra bietet den Frauen nicht nur psychologische und ärztliche Hilfe, sondern auch Geld für Essen, Kleidung, Unterkunft etc.



Hohe Dunkelziffer



Astra ist die serbische Abkürzung für Aktion gegen Menschenhandel. Die Organisation ist die wichtigste ihrer Art in Serbien. Sie hilft jungen Frauen, die Opfer von Menschenhandel waren, wieder im Leben Fuß zu fassen. Jadranka Veljovic ist Koordinatorin der Organisation Astra. In den nunmehr sechs Jahren, in denen es Astra gibt, habe die Organisation allein in Serbien 260 Opfer identifiziert. Die tatsächliche Zahl ist wahrscheinlich zehn Mal so hoch, meint die Koordinatorin. Mit eingerechnet seien sowohl ausländische als auch serbische Staatsbürgerinnen. „In den letzten drei bis vier Jahren ist die Zahl der Einheimischen gestiegen. Früher waren die meisten Frauen Ausländerinnen aus Ländern wie die Republik Moldau, Russland, Ukraine, Italien. Die steigende Zahl der Serbinnen ist mit verstärktem internen Handel zu begründen. Die Grenzen werden viel strenger überwacht”, erklärt Jadranka Veljovic.



Vom Transit- zum Herkunftsland



Jahrelang war Serbien vor allem ein Transitland für die Menschenhändler und deren Opfer. Tausende Soldaten der internationalen Friedenstruppen in Bosnien und Kosovo sollten mit Prostituierten aus aller Welt versorgt werden. Nicht alle sind freiwillig in die Bordelle und Striptease-Bars auf dem Balkan gekommen. Immer wieder berichteten Belgrader Medien, wie junge Frauen aus Osteuropa einen Ausweg aus der Armut gesucht haben und dabei Menschenhändlern in die Hände gefallen sind. Ihnen wurden Jobs als Au Pair oder Kellnerin in Griechenland oder Deutschland versprochen. Einmal in den Fängen der Verbrecher, wurden sie durch wiederholte physische und psychische Misshandlung zu Sexsklavinnen in Serbien und den Nachbarländern.



Nachfrage auf innerserbischem Markt



In den letzten Jahren kommen die Opfer vermehrt aus Serbien. Zwar werden junge Frauen vor den Gefahren der unseriösen Jobs im Ausland gewarnt. Doch die Frauen glauben eher den Versprechungen der vermeintlichen Arbeitgeber, wenn die angebotenen Stellen in Serbien sind. So hat sich in den letzten Jahren ein innerserbischer Markt entwickelt. Zum Beispiel wurde in der südwestlichen Stadt Novi Pazar im Dezember ein illegaler Nachtclub entdeckt, in dem zwei Frauen aus nordserbischen Dörfern eingesperrt und zur Arbeit gezwungen wurden – als Prostituierte, Putzhilfe und Tellerwäscherinnen. Sie wurden zwei Jahre lang gefangen gehalten. Als Mitglied des Menschenhändlerrings wurde auch ein örtlicher Staatsanwalt angeklagt.



Mühsamer Fortschritt in Strafverfolgung



Jadranka Veljovic von der Aktion gegen den Menschenhandel betont indes die eigentlich gute Zusammenarbeit mit Polizei und Justiz, moniert aber: „Es gibt Urteile. Es gibt laufende Prozesse, und viele sind beendet. Oftmals werden rechtskräftige Urteile aber nicht vollstreckt. Einige rechtskräftig verurteilte Menschenhändler sind noch auf freiem Fuß. Und die Verurteilten müssen lediglich zwei oder drei Jahre ins Gefängnis.” So will es das serbische Gesetz. Im Vergleich ist es jedoch schon ein Fortschritt, da Menschenhandel erst seit fünf Jahren ausdrücklich als Straftat anerkannt ist. „Der entsprechende Artikel wurde eigentlich erst 2006 in vollem Umfang eingeführt. Den gab es zwar ab 2003, doch damals wurde Menschenhandel nicht als spezielles Verbrechen behandelt, sondern in einen Topf mit illegaler Migration geworfen”, sagt Veljovic.



Kinder vermehrt Opfer von Menschenhandel



Opfer des Menschenhandels in Serbien, so Veljovic, sind nicht nur Frauen, sondern immer öfter auch Kinder, die zu Sex, aber auch zu Diebstahl oder zum Betteln gezwungen werden. Schätzungen zufolge verdient der Verbrecher beim ersten Verkauf eines Kindes oder einer Frau auf dem Balkan zwischen 500 und 2.500 Euro. Da die meisten Opfer mehrmals verkauft werden, lohnt sich das Verbrechen Menschenhandel finanziell.



Die Frauen werden meist erst durch Polizeirazzien aus der Sklaverei befreit. Einige schaffen es aus eigener Kraft, einige mit Hilfe anderer Menschen. Von denen, die es nicht schaffen, gibt es keine Statistiken. Doch die offiziellen Zahlen sind mit Sicherheit viel zu niedrig, betont Astra-Koordinatorin Jadranka Veljovic.

http://www.dw-world.de/dw/article/0,214 ... 41,00.html

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Tactic "happy trafficking"

Beitrag von JayR »

Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty:
[ das war der US Propaganda-Sender, der im kalten Krieg in den Ostblock ausstrahlte. Anm. Marc ]


UN, Campaigners Highlight Grim Reality Of 'Happy Trafficking'


Lia was lured by a "friend" from her native Moldova with promises of a job and a better life. But once in Turkey, those hopes were quickly replaced with fears for her life after the acquaintance turned her over to sex traffickers.

She'd been "betrayed" and unwittingly sold into a nightmare existence.

"I was humiliated, and I can't find the right words to describe the horrors I was going through," Lia told RFE/RL's [Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty] Romania-Moldova Service after she'd managed to escape. "I took a bath every time I came across some water, hoping the soap could wash away all the pain from my body. There was not a single day without sexual abuse and threats."

Reliable data are hard to find, but an estimated 2.5 million people are victims of forced labor at any given moment around the world, many for sexual exploitation. Victims are trafficked across borders, regions, and continents as part of a trade that reaps some $32 billion a year -- half of it from transactions in the industrialized world.

The antitrafficking community -- allying government officials, multinational organizations, and civil-society activists -- fears that the prevalence of a tactic known as "happy trafficking" could extend the reach of traffickers and exacerbate the problem.

The method minimizes risks to organizers and maximizes profits in a sort of human pyramid scheme. It combines physical and psychological pressure with financial and other incentives to turn victims into proxy recruiters and, eventually, traffickers.

In part to avoid detection by authorities, traffickers pledge to release some victims -- and even reward them financially -- on condition that they return to their home countries and recruit one or more women to replace them. "Happy" refers to recruiters' practice of pretending to have had an ideal experience in legitimate jobs in the West or elsewhere, hiding the fact that they'd been forced into prostitution themselves.

International media first signaled the emergence of "happy trafficking" in the Balkans and Italy, but campaigners warn that it has become common practice in many parts of the world.

Post-Soviet Vulnerability

In Europe, the converted recruiters are frequently former sex workers from Russia, Ukraine, Moldova, or Balkan and Southeastern European states like Bulgaria and Romania.

Central Asia is also emerging as one of the hotspots where "happy traffickers" are active.

One activist who works with trafficked women in Thailand told RFE/RL that large numbers of Central Asian women have been turned into sex workers in Bangkok. The activist, who asked not to be identified for fear of reprisals, singled out young Uzbek women as especially prevalent, perhaps due to broad unhappiness over poverty and dire social conditions at home.

"I meet literally hundreds of women from Central Asia -- particularly from Uzbekistan -- on any night of the week," the activist said. "I haven't got any statistics, but I would probably estimate that at least a couple of thousand Uzbek women, if not more, are in Thailand as sex workers."

She said thousands of women from Uzbekistan are lured to Thailand by Uzbek recruiters known as "Mama-sans" -- former sex workers who have themselves become madams under the supervision of traffickers.

Reprisals are harsh against those who try to escape, so the prospect of release in exchange for recruiting new victims can be difficult to resist.

Traffickers are keen to use the former sex workers as go-betweens because they are familiar with the business and, at the same time, provide criminal organizers a way to remain invisible to authorities.

Kristiina Kangaspunta, the head of the UN Office on Drugs and Crime's (UNODC www.unodc.org Wien) antitrafficking unit, says "happy trafficking" reinforces the perception of traffickers exercising total power over their victims. Women who accept roles as facilitators or madams are being given a poisoned chalice [Kelch] by traffickers, Kangaspunta says, becoming traffickers themselves.

[ die drehen den Sexworkern das Wort um Mund herum. Anm. Marc ]

"They are not given all kinds of jobs -- very often they are not at the top of the organization," Kangaspunta says. "They are also given jobs which are the most visible [to] the authorities, so they are also the most risky. So traffickers can protect themselves and use victims as traffickers...and the authorities might think that they are also victims, so that it's not so visibly evident that they are also traffickers. So, in a way, they are once again abused by traffickers, but [in order to control] the others."

Psychological Torment

Antitrafficking activists note that "happy trafficking" is simply refined psychological coercion that says: Comply, and you'll be rewarded; cross us, and unspeakable things can happen to you and your family.

Some women who manage to escape sex traffickers provide testify to the terror to which they are subjected. Irina, a 16-year-old Moldovan girl, was lured to Russia by a neighbor who promised her a job as a seamstress. Once she left her home, Irina was sold to sex traffickers for $200.

"If we didn't want [to do as we were told], they beat us," Irina says. "They told us that they would push us out the window, that they would kill us. They told us that they bought us -- they paid good money for us -- and they can do what they want with us."

Steve Chalke, who heads Stop The Traffik, a global coalition of more than 700 charities in 60 countries that is working to stop the buying and selling of people, tells RFE/RL that the psychological barrier is even more effective than physical coercion. But he suggests that it does not represent any fundamentally new challenge.

"'Happy trafficking' is just the latest term for what's actually been happening for a long while," Chalke says. "All trafficking relies on manipulation. 'When a girl is trafficked to the city and used as a prostitute, why doesn't she just leave the brothel? Why doesn’t she just run on the street and throw herself at a passing policeman, or run away as fast as she can?' The actual fact is that she could do that, but [hihlight=yellow]the only thing that stops her from doing that is the mental barrier."[/highlight]

[ das zeigt m.E. das das ganze Konzept der sog. "Zwangsprostitution" und unterstellten psychologischen Manipulation äußerst fragwürdig ist. Anm. Marc ]

He and other experts lay some of the blame on societies from which the trafficked women hail -- where from an early age girls are encouraged to accept male dominance and a woman's role as a sex object.

UN Deputy Secretary-General and UNODC Executive Director Antonio Maria Costa told RFE/RL on the sidelines of the UN-organized Vienna Forum to Fight Human Trafficking in mid-February that trafficking victims remain "mental slaves even after their body is free to move and has been rescued physically."

At the same conference, Kangaspunta highlighted the pernicious threat posed by "happy trafficking."

"Probably the most vulnerable group to be victimized through human trafficking are those sex workers who are already working in the business," Kangaspunta told RFE/RL. "They are very vulnerable, nobody is protecting them, their value already in the society is quite low. So in that sense, they are very vulnerable for being recruited for human trafficking -- because actually nobody cares."

(RFE/RL's Romania-Moldova Service contributed to this report.)


Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty
[ das war der US Propaganda-Sender, der im kalten Krieg in den Ostblock ausstrahlte. Anm. Marc ]
www.rferl.org/featuresarticle/2008/02/4 ... 81347.html

Finanziert vom CIA
http://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Radio_Free_Europe

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Marc of Frankfurt
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Fragwürdig: Ideologie-Konstrukt 'happy trafficking'

Beitrag von Marc of Frankfurt »

Dieser Radiosender ist ein Relikt aus dem kalten Krieg:
http://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Radio_Free_Europe

Inwieweit deren Informationspropaganda nicht ähnlichem Reglement unterliegt, wie die 15 Mrd $ US-PEPFAR-Gelder (US President's Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief), nämlich keinstenfalls Prostitution zu tolerieren oder sich darum sorgende Organisationen zu fördern (Anti-Prostitutions-Bürgschaft), entzieht sich meiner genauen Kenntnis.
viewtopic.php?p=12925#12925

Gut ist wenn solche Propaganda bei jungen, armen, mobilen Frauen Problembewustsein weckt, obwohl es Studien gibt die zeigen, daß es längst vorhanden ist:
IOM hat geschrieben:0,2 bis 0,7 % der Befragten gaben an in ihrer Familie betroffen zu sein von einem Fall des Menschenhandels zur sexuellen Ausbeutung [Seiten 6, 50]. Demgegenüber war das Gefährdungsbewußtsein extrem hoch bei über 95 % [S. 43].

Der Bericht | www.iom.int | www.gfk.com
[1. Posting im Thema]

Mit dem neu eingeführten Konzept "happy trafficking" werden abermals Entscheidungskompetenzen und Urteilsfähigkeit handelnden Frauen abgespochen. Mir drängt sich der Verdacht auf, es werde versucht, die Stimme von selbstentschiedenen Sexworkern und Ex-Sexworkern -hier als "happy trafficker" bezeichnet- erneut zu diskreditieren, um eine über 100 Jahre bewährte Opfer-Ideologie und Menschenhandelsmystik (white slavery) aufrechterhalten zu können um entsprechende Einrichtungen zu finanzieren.

Selbstverständlich gilt es nach wie vor Korruption, mafiöse Strukturen und Ausbeutung zu bekämpfen. Jeder geschehene Mißbrauch ist ein verabscheuungswürdige Tat zuviel. Gebt den Menschen Rechte. Rechte auf Bildung, Arbeit, Arbeit im Ausland und auf Sexarbeit.

Es klingt sehr nach Doppelmoral a la Schwarzer ganze Gruppen von ausländischen Frauen und (Ex-)SexarbeiterInnen als psychisch manipuliert darzustellen und einen scheinheiligen Gegensatz aufzubauen zu allen in unserer einheimischen freiheitlichen Arbeitswelt täglich ordnungs- und umsatzgemäß "funktionierenden Arbeitnehmern und Konsumenten".





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Marc of Frankfurt
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Äußere und innere Wahrheiten

Beitrag von Marc of Frankfurt »

Aktuelles Beispiel, wie sich die Weltwahrnehmung von Traumatisierten verschieben kann
und wie daraus seinerseits Falschdarstellungen resultieren:

Spiegel: GEFÄLSCHTE HOLOCAUST-MEMOIREN
Erfolgsautorin gesteht Betrug


Die Autorin Misha Defonseca hatte behauptet, beschützt von einem Wolfsrudel den Holocaust überlebt zu haben. Nun gab sie zu, ihre Autobiografie sei eine Fälschung. Ihr Buch wurde gerade verfilmt.

...

In ihrer Stellungnahme räumte Defonseca ebenfalls ein, sie heiße in Wahrheit Monique De Wael. Ihre Eltern seien tatsächlich von der Gestapo verhaftet worden, sie seien allerdings keine Juden gewesen, sondern seien beim belgischen Widerstand gewesen. Sie selbst sei als Vierjährige zu Verwandten gebracht worden. "Ich fühlte mich anders. Seither fühlte ich mich als Jüdin, und später bin ich mit mir selber ins Reine gekommen, weil mich die jüdische Gemeinschaft akzeptierte", sagte sie.

Als verwaistes Kind habe sie sich ein Leben fern von den Menschen gewünscht, erklärte die Schriftstellerin weiter. "Deshalb habe ich mich für Wölfe begeistert. (...) und ich habe alles miteinander vermischt. Es gibt Augenblicke, in denen es mir schwerfällt zu unterscheiden, was tatsächlich geschehen ist und was sich nur in meinem inneren Universum ereignet hat", erklärte Defonseca ihre gefälschte Biografie. Die Geschichte in ihrem Buch sei "nicht die wirkliche Realität, aber das war meine Realität, meine Methode zu überleben."

Die in Frankreich, Belgien und Deutschland gedrehte Lebensverfilmung läuft derzeit in den belgischen Kinos.

cc/ AP

Original vollständig:
spiegel.de/kultur/literatur/0,1518,538651,00.html





Misha Defonseca: "A Memoir of the Holocaust Years" 1997 Mt. Ivy Press.

Bild
Das Buch: Surviving with Wolves


Älteres Gerichtsurteil:
Schadensersatzzahlung an Misha Defonseca verdreifacht - Holocaust-Überlebende erhält insgesamt 22,5 Millionen USD
http://www.prnewswire.co.uk/cgi/news/release?id=84483





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Marc of Frankfurt
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Menschenhandelsbekämpfung vs. Sexarbeitskriminalisierung

Beitrag von Marc of Frankfurt »

Musterbrief an Abgeordnete
gegen eine verschärfte -weil zugleich vereinfachte- Menschenhandels-Strafgesetzgebung
der Leitkulturnation U.S.A.

Model Letter - Protest against Federalizing, Expanding Prostitution Criminalization



Anlaß: Skandal um Eliot Spitzer und Escortgirl Kristen:
Der verheiratete US-Gouverneur hat als 'Minister Saubermann' die Prostitution per Menschenhandelsgesetzgebungsverschärfung bekämpft.
Jetzt hat er sein Escort-Girl Kristen (The Spitzer Girl) aus Washington DC über mehrere Bundesstaatengrenzen nach NYC ins Myflower-Hotel bestellt und hat sich damit selbst des Menschenhandels schuldig gemacht.
viewtopic.php?p=33665#33665
http://deepthroated.wordpress.com/2008/ ... effective/


Please send to your Senator and distribute widely! The model letter is attached. Below is the cover letter :





Dear Sex Worker Supporters,

Sex Workers Outreach Project-Northern California and the US PROStitutes Collective have joined together to oppose changes in the William Wilberforce Trafficking Victims Protection Reauthorization Act of 2007 (TVPRA H.R.3877). On December 4, 2007 the Bill was passed in the United States House of Representatives with 405 ayes and 2 nays and it is now before the US Senate.

As you may know, concern about trafficking is being exploited to promote a moralistic and dangerous crusade against prostitution - a crusade we are determined to stop.



H.R. 3887 has two very problematic aspects:

1) It would allow the Department of Justice to prosecute traffickers without having to prove "fraud, force or coercion", or a victim's status as a minor.

2) It adds an amendment to the discredited 1910 Mann Act which prohibits interstate transportation of women for 'immoral purposes' so that if a person 'induces or entices' any individual to engage in prostitution or attempts to do so, they can be charged with the new offence of 'sex trafficking' and imprisoned for up to 10 years.



We know from speaking to politicians who have been lobbied that the campaign for this legislation is a determined one which is having some success. It is being presented as a progressive change. Congresswoman Carolyn B. Maloney (D-Manhattan, Queens), co-chair of the Congressional Human Trafficking Caucus and co-author of H.R. 3887 said recently "By eliminating the need to prove force, fraud, or coercion except to obtain enhanced penalties, prosecutors will have a more effective way to crack down on traffickers." Nothing could be further from the truth. Sex workers and our friends and family will be pursued as easy targets and criminalized under this law whilst the real traffickers will go free.

Please urgently send your own letter, or the enclosed form letter, to your Senator and encourage them to vote against H.R. 3887. If you don't know who your Senator is or how to contact them please click here and follow the directions:

http://www.visi.com/juan/congress/


More info:
http://www.bayswan.org/traffick/HR3887.html
http://multiracial.com/site/content/view/1582/49/
http://www.govtrack.us/congress/bill.xp ... ab=summary
http://www.opencongress.org/bill/110-h3887/show
http://thomas.loc.gov/cgi-bin/query/D?c ... c110rVUxT3::


Robyn Few,
SWOP-USA

Rachel West,
US Prostitutes Collective

Carol Leigh,
BAYSWAN





Beispiel-Brief

Model letter



The Honorable ____________
United States Senate
331 Hart Senate Office Building
Washington, DC 20510

Re: HR 3887 William Wilberforce Trafficking Victims Protection Reauthorization Act of 2007





Dear Senator _________________ ,

As you are aware, many people are justifiably concerned about people trafficked into sweat shops, farms, the sex industry and elsewhere. But proposed amendments to HR 3887, currently in the Senate, which reauthorizes the Trafficking Victims Protection Act (TVPA) by amending the Mann Act will make it more difficult to investigate and prosecute serious cases involving violence and coercion while providing no extra protection to victims.

These amendments to the Mann Act say that if someone 'induces or entices' any individual to engage in prostitution or attempts to do so, they can be charged with the new offence of 'sex trafficking' and imprisoned for up to 10 years. No proof of 'force, coercion and fraud' is needed to prosecute cases. This is so broad as to potentially criminalize anyone peripherally involved in helping someone practicing prostitution in another state.

This change is premised on the claim that all prostitution is coerced. Sex workers, like everyone, have always distinguished between the sex they consent to (for money or not) and rape. While many may prefer another job, they also point to the fact that sex work is often better paid than most of the low-waged jobs women do.

Fraud, coercion and deception are already part of the TVPA. Existing laws of abduction, kidnapping, false imprisonment, rape, grievous bodily harm and extortion can also be used.

These changes will:

1) Create an impractically large class of people under the jurisdiction of federal sex trafficking/ prostitution law enforcement, even when they consensually exchange sexual services for money;

2) Divert needed resources and attention away from very real cases of trafficking which involve coercion, force and violence. The millions of dollars designated for the TVPA to go after violent assailants of women and children will be instead used to go after sex workers;

3) Put more power to arrest and prosecute people in the hands of Federal agencies who are unaware of local issues rather than State authorities.


There is now considerable evidence to show that figures on the number of trafficking victims are inaccurate and inflated. This legislative change which makes no distinction between genuine victims and those working independently in the sex industry would artificially inflate the figures further.

We urge you to vote against these changes to H.R. 3887, which would dangerously undermine efforts to combat serious trafficking by conflating trafficking with prostitution.

With warmest regards,

Me
1234 any avenue
Anytown, USA 12345






Mann Act gegen Jack Johnson:
viewtopic.php?p=38558#38558





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Zuletzt geändert von Marc of Frankfurt am 12.06.2008, 00:15, insgesamt 1-mal geändert.