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FOR ALBANIANS, IT'S COME TO THIS:
A SON FOR A TV
By Nicholas Wood
November 13, 2003 (NYT) Fatmira Bonjaku's
husband is in jail, accused by the police of selling their 3-year-old
son to an Italian man in return for the television set that six
other children watch in the family's dimly lighted room. The police
also say her husband had plans to sell their newest born, whom she
is breast feeding.
Mrs. Bonjaku, interviewed at her family's two-room shack on the
outskirts of this port city, denied that she intended to sell her
newborn but admitted trading her son, Orazio, thinking the Italian
man "would provide a good life."
Over the past 12 years, since the collapse of Stalinism here, a
substantial trade in children has established itself in Albania,
Europe's most impoverished and long most isolated country.
No one has exact figures for the number of children involved, but
the government estimates that 6,000 children have been sent abroad
for use in begging and prostitution rackets, or in some cases sold
to Western couples for adoption.
A vast majority come from the Jevgjit community, a group of some
300,000 Albanian-speaking Gypsies, or Roma, who have fared even
more poorly than most.
Albania's anti-trafficking police estimate that more than 1,000
children are currently in Greece, working mainly as beggars. One
or two Albanian minors are arrested every day on Albania's border
with northern Greece and sent home, the Swiss charity, Terre des
Hommes, reported this year, citing the head of the police's juvenile
department in Salonika in northern Greece.
The trafficking is part of a larger trade in humans, including East
European women shuffled through Albania for prostitution, and is
an outgrowth of the misery and the organized crime that has blossomed
in this clannish society.
In Albania most documented cases of child trafficking have involved
older children who are sold or rented by their families to minders,
or pimps, who take them to Greece and Italy, where they work as
beggars or child prostitutes.
Many families apparently believe, like Mrs. Bonjaku, that their
children will gain better lives abroad; for several, too, it can
seem a relatively small step to send children from the streets of
Albania to neighboring Greece.
"You also have to understand what immigration means to most
Albanians," Pierre Ferry, a child protection officer with Unicef
in Tirana, the Albanian capital, said. "To send your child
abroad is also a kind of success and does not appear as primitive
exploitation."
In Pogradec, a town of 20,000 on the shores of Ohrid Lake, which
straddles the Albanian border with the Macedonian republic, half
a dozen young children beg on the waterfront on most days.
Judy Mitstifer, 43, a missionary from Liberty, Pa., has set up a
school for street children in Pogradec. Many of them, she said,
are on the cusp of becoming child prostitutes and run a high risk
of being trafficked.
"The kids here, we try to keep track of them," said Ms.
Mitstifer, after approaching two girls, Bukuria, 11, and Bala, 12.
"We know who buys and who sells. Our hope is that the school
is attractive enough so they stay."
Ms. Mitstifer showed a visitor a school photograph of 12 children
from 2000. Seven, she said, had already been sent abroad or their
families were involved in the trade. The proportion, she said, was
typical for her 110 pupils, three-quarters of them Roma.
Lila Shuli, who herself begs a living in Pogradec streets, sends
four of her children to Ms. Mitstifer's school. Over the past decade,
she said, her family has been split up by trafficking.
Lila's younger sister was married at 14 to a man from the next town
who later took her to France and made her work as a prostitute.
Nine years ago, Ms. Shuli said, her mother sent Lila's 6-year-old
son, Armandor, to work in Greece. He has not been heard from since.
In an interview, Lila's mother, Kimete Sinani, denied that she sold
the boy but admitted to "hiring" him out for $80.
Now, Ms. Shuli said, she is coming under pressure from a neighbor
who said he could take her son Fadil, 11, to Greece.
From: http://www.nytimes.com/2003/11/13/international/europe/13ALBA.html
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