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Brazil Tries to Stem Tide
of Sex Slavery
By Jen Ross
June 19, 2005 - (WeNews) -It's 9 p.m. and
a young woman in a short black skirt buttons up her fake fur-collared
jacket, on her way out the door of the Partenon Flats Hotel. In
her black stiletto heels, she carefully navigates the sidewalks
of the trendy Sao Paulo suburb of Pinheiros.
Waiting for fares outside the hotel, taxi driver
Rogerio Crisostomo shakes his head. "You see that girl? She's
one of the girls from the program, the ones who sell their bodies.
It's really common here in Brazil. They start here; then get sent
to Spain."
The program Crisostomo is referring to isn't a popular
TV show, but the widely active trafficking rings that trap women
into prostitution and sex slavery, putting them to work in Brazil
before sending them off to work in European countries such as Spain.
There's a good reason for the widespread interest
in human trafficking in Brazil. The country--where prostitution
is legal, but international trafficking is not--is the largest supplier
of female sex slaves in Latin America, according to the United Nations
Office on Drugs and Crime.
The Brazilian government has begun actively addressing
the problem, passing laws against trafficking and targeting funds
to break up prostitution rings and help women trapped in sex slavery
build new lives.
Although the Brazilian government has no official
numbers, the United Nations and the Helsinki International Federation
for Human Rights say 75,000 Brazilian women are being forced to
work as prostitutes in the European Union. Another 5,000 are in
Latin America. In the United States, an annual congressional report
has estimated it as low as 900 per year.
John Miller, the director of the U.S. federal Office
to Monitor and Combat Trafficking in Persons, says the largest category
of slavery is sex slavery.
"Information on slavery is very inexact, but
we believe that the majority of slave victims, in the neighborhood
of 80 percent, are of the female gender, and that around 50 percent
are children," Miller said last year after the release of the
2004 Trafficking in Persons Annual Report.
Caught in Prostitution Rings
While many of the people taken out of Brazil are men seeking work,
Brazilian police say most of the women end up in prostitution rings.
"Recruiters convince poor, humble women to
go abroad with false promises," says Paulo Marchins da Cunha,
chief of the policing section of Sao Paulo's Federal Highway Police,
charged with intercepting women being smuggled across Brazil's borders.
"They are usually made promises of work and riches from a job
abroad, sometimes even promises of marriage. But when they arrive,
they're made to work in the sex trade."
While some women are duped, da Cunha says others
sneak out of the country on their own and turn to prostitution because
they lack documentation for other work. Some know they will be prostituted,
but don't realize the extent.
"We've seen cases where women have been imprisoned
in a house abroad for years, without even knowing what street it
was on," says da Cunha. "That's what makes this different
from regular prostitution. That's why we characterize it as sexual
slavery."
Government Starts Attacking Problem
The government of Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva--now facing its worst
crisis as it undergoes a congressional probe following accusations
of bribery in state firms and the ruling party--began dealing with
the problem on a number of fronts last October.
It began by allocating close to $125,000, plus an
additional $275,000 from the United Nations Office on Drugs and
Crime, to be used over two years.
Since then Brazilian police have teamed up with
foreign agencies to enact several international sting operations
of human-trafficking that, with annual proceeds estimated at between
$7 billion and $10 billion, is the third most lucrative crime in
the world, trailing only drugs and the arms trade.
So far those efforts have produced three busts of
major trafficking networks in Europe.
In March, the government passed a law that expands
the definition of international trafficking and makes trafficking
in minors and teens a crime within Brazil, giving police more resources
to make arrests and urging judges to apply the maximum penalties
of up to 12 years in jail.
This month, the government will wind up a project
to train 360 law enforcement officials and civil servants--including
diplomats and consular officials--to recognize human trafficking
networks and protect potential victims. For instance, highway police
are being trained to read body language and ask women traveling
across the border whether they are related to the people driving
the vehicle, then to ask for supporting documents.
A new distance-training course, which involves some
class work and correspondence by phone, mail, fax and Internet,
has also been set up by the government with the University of Brasilia,
to train another 600 professionals by the end of 2005.
Public Awareness Campaign Trail
The government initiatives started off with a public-awareness campaign,
launched last October, that includes media, posters, and folders
handed out in passports by airport agents to potential victims.
One poster, which is displayed nationally and at
border crossings and airports, has writing on a woman's bare back
that reads: "If someone offers you lodging, food, clean clothes,
etc. . . . abroad, be wary."
In 2003, the government also began a victim support
hotline for youth, which it expanded to focus specifically on trafficking.
It is preparing a database to track how many women are involved
in trafficking circles and how many end up returning to work as
prostitutes.
Victim reception programs will soon be financed
as the last part of this multi-pronged approach. So far, the government
has invested almost the equivalent of $100,000 and says that plans
are underway to put more money into new centers in the coming months.
The Association for the Defense of Women and Youth,
a nongovernmental organization based in Guarulhos that counsels
former sex slaves and tries to prevent women from being seduced
into the trade, was one of the main advocacy groups that galvanized
the government into the fight against sex slavery.
The organization, which has counseled over 150 women
in that past two years, provides plane tickets to send women back
to their homes in often distant rural parts of Brazil and helps
victims file charges and get into police protection programs. But
founder Dalila Figueiredo says she's constantly frustrated to see
the majority of women return.
"Sometimes we pick up the same woman from the
airport twice," she says. "I'd say 9 in 10 try to go back,
because when they do, they get paid. It's more than they'd be making
in Brazil and they can even send money home."
Figuereido says what's missing is a more aggressive
effort to address the source of the problem; Brazil's poverty and
social inequality. "While investments in social problems are
helping, there's still a long way to go to create conditions that
would stop Brazilians from taking such risks in the first place."
Jen Ross is a Chilean-based freelance journalist
who covers social issues across the region.
From: http://www.womensenews.org/article.cfm/dyn/aid/2342/context/cover/
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For more information:
United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime:
http://www.unodc.org/unodc/en/trafficking_human_beings.html
Brazil Begins Talking Openly About Abortion:
http://womensenews.org/article.cfm/dyn/aid/2296/
Writers in Brazil Let Us into Their Worlds:
http://womensenews.org/article.cfm/dyn/aid/1338/
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