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TRADING IN MISERY
By IWPR's Balkan reporting team
Tens of thousands of Eastern European women are falling
victim to the Balkan sex trade.
September 15, 2003 (IWPR'S BALKAN CRISIS REPORT, No. 460) Marcu
scratches his unshaven face and stares intently out of the window at the
queue of battered tankers, trucks and cars beyond.
He's nervous, tired and desperate. Sitting in a small café on the
Greek-Bulgarian border, he hesitates over his coffee before asking us
a favour, a big favour.
"Look, I know you're Romanians. May I ask you to take these two girls
in your car and drive them over to Greece?" he said, pointing to
a car outside where a couple of young girls are sitting in the back seat.
He's figured out where we're from by the plates on our vehicle.
"They're from Brasov [a town in central Romania] and need to get
to Thessaloniki [northern Greece]. I'll pay you good money. Their papers
are OK," he added enthusiastically.
Marcu tells us he is trying to make a living by trafficking the two girls.
"I'll find them good positions in a club in Thessaloniki. I have
an address and I'll get good money from this. You know how hard it is
to make a living nowadays. The girls are poor too, they're sisters and
their parents are drunkards," he said.
"Greece is a much better future for them. I arrived here with them
by bus but now I'm afraid to cross the border together with them because
I heard the Greek custom officers are very suspicious and can stop us
from entering."
Leaning over the table, Marcu began to look worried, "Please help
me, take the two girls in your car and then we'll meet on the other side
and you'll get some easy money."
"Why don't you just take a cab across?" we asked.
"No, I don't want to hire a cab because these guys are crooks, they
can rob me," he snapped back.
Marcu was getting edgy and wanted us to do a deal to take the girls across
and quickly. Leaving the coffee shop, he followed, shuffling along to
our car. We were about to talk to him further when, nervously examining
our distinctive Romanian Dacia, he noticed we had made a mistake. On the
back seat were our cameras and equipment: our cover was well and truly
blown.
He didn't look back as he sprinted away down the road, getting into his
car and disappearing round a bend into Bulgaria. He will no doubt be back
to try another day.
Marcu is one of the hundreds of traffickers working across this and many
other borders in the Balkans, smuggling not guns, drugs or stolen cars
but women.
HOW THE TRADE WORKS.
In November 2002, an the Organisation for Security and Cooperation in
Europe, OSCE, conference on the trafficking of human beings estimated
that some 200,000 women in the Balkans had fallen victim to a smuggling
network that extends across the region into the European Union.
According to the latest figures from International Organisation for Migration,
IOM, the four biggest exporters of girls to Western Europe are Moldova,
Romania, Ukraine and Russia.
Romania is the nexus of the trade for two reasons: its geographic location
makes it a good transit country and the presence of large numbers of impoverished
women desperate to make money provide a ready source of trafficking victims.
Two main smuggling routes begin here: one going north into Hungary, southwest
through the former Yugoslavia to Albania and then across the Adriatic
by speedboat to Italy; the other runs directly south, through Bulgaria
to Greece.
With the first route, girls are taken to Romanian cities such as Bucharest
and Timisoara, near the Serbian border. Many are then sold to Serbian
gangs who move them south, putting them to work as prostitutes in Belgrade
or selling them to criminal groups in Bosnia, Kosovo or Montenegro. Some
will be smuggled into Albania, and then on to Italy and other European
countries.
The second route runs from Romania directly south through Bulgaria to
Greece. In Bulgaria, some of the girls are sold to gangs who smuggle them
into Macedonia, then Albania and on to Italy.
The trade is a coalition of interests that crosses ethnic divides. Well-organised
groups, familiar to each other from drugs or gun deals, trade across frontiers,
as do lone traffickers.
War has made the Balkans a traffickers dream. Their illicit trade has
been able to flourish as a result of the chaos of the last decade, which
has weakened border controls and fractured and impoverished communities
that were once held together by rigid moral codes.
Throughout the Balkans, checkpoints are badly policed by often corrupt
officials, well used to taking bribes as guns and drugs moved through
the region during the wars. Forged or stolen passports are easily available
and visa regulations are flouted.
The wars have has also created a market for girls inside the Balkans.
The influx of cash from the international community policing the peace
in Bosnia, Kosovo and Macedonia has swelled the trade in prostitution.
One United Nations Mission in Kosovo, UNMIK, source told IWPR in August
that the market is now so developed that many of the girls smuggled into
the protectorate now willingly work as prostitutes. Their profits are
good, their pimps are treating them decently and, they say, it's "
better than returning to Moldova", the source said.
Of the 826 girls helped by IOM's projects in the region from May 2001
to December 2002, 590 - 77 per cent - were reportedly destined for either
Kosovo, Bosnia or Montenegro.
There are several methods of recruiting girls. One is through newspaper
advertisements promising menial jobs such as waitressing in Western Europe.
Others are attracted by promises of marriage to EU nationals.
After luring the girls, the traffickers seize their passports, then take
them to major regional sex trade centres, where they are forced to work
as prostitutes.
Some escape from their captors. We met several girls who had managed to
flee. But a number of those who do are often recaptured by the traffickers
or are hounded by them when they seek refuge in womens' shelters.
In a major investigation, involving IWPR reporters in eight Balkan countries,
we set out to explore this massive trade in people across the region.
Our teams followed the trafficking routes, going from Romania, south into
Bulgaria and Greece, across to Albania and then north through former Yugoslavia.
We visited clubs, bars, hotels and brothels, speaking with the traffickers,
the pimps, the authorities and the girls themselves, to build up a picture
of how this cross-border network of criminal gangs smuggling women operates.
TRAFFICKING FOR THE OLYMPICS
At the Kulata border crossing between Greece and Bulgaria, dozens of taxis
line up on the Bulgarian side of the frontier. According to a Bulgarian
police source, some of the vehicles are waiting to ferry Greek traffickers
to two local towns, Sandanski and Petrich, which have become regional
sex trade centres - market places for girls from all over the Balkans
and the former Soviet Union who are bought and sold with impunity. Some
are destined to be smuggled to Italy and other EU countries, but the majority
are purchased by nightclub owners from northern Greece.
In a bitter twist of irony, Sandanski is also well known for being the
birthplace of the world's most renowned slave, Spartacus. But today's
young slaves are not likely to rebel against their captors. They're too
weak, too far away from home and become involved in a highly organised
criminal trade that leaves them little opportunity to escape.
Greek police sources have told IWPR that the transfer of the women from
Bulgaria to Greece is well established, controlled by a tight-knit group
of criminals. The officers say that a man well known to them in Sandanski
controls the whole enterprise - including the taxi firms used by traffickers
to smuggle girls over the border - and is either tolerated or actively
protected by Bulgarian law enforcers.
In April, our team of journalists, posing as potential clients, questioned
taxi drivers in both Sandanski and Petrich about buying women in the area.
Initially reticent, the drivers soon began talking, saying they could
put us in touch with people who could "solve our problem".
The prices charged for the girls depend on their age and experience. On
average, they are sold for between 2,500 and 3,000 euro. "If the
girl is fresh, very young and not used, the price is higher," one
trafficker told us.
The cost and number of women being smuggled into Greece is expected to
rise during next year's Olympics in Athens, with traffickers apparently
calculating that the prostitution business will be brisk.
The traffickers are highly organised. They go to great lengths to check
out the identity of clients in order to avoid police traps; possess high-tech
instruments such as communication encryption software that prevents police
tracking their mobile phones; and even run illegal TV stations broadcasting
porn and advertising brothels.
THE ALBANIAN MAFIA
On the outskirts of a desperately poor Albanian village, where donkeys
stacked high with fire wood crawled along potholed streets, we witnessed
the bizarre sight of gleaming Audis, Mercedes and even the odd Lamborghini
cruising past.
In this impoverished country, this sort of conspicuous wealth is associated
with organised crime, which has filled the vacuum left by the communists
and spread its tentacles throughout Europe. In June, the World Markets
Research Centre said in a report that Albanian mafia groups have established
a reputation in continental Europe as being amongst the most efficient
drugs pushers and people smugglers on the continent.
Over the past five years, successive Albanian interior ministers, and
two chief prosecutors, have admitted that Albania is a transit country
for prostitutes on their way to Western Europe and that significant numbers
of Albanian girls were being coerced into the trade.
In this strongly conservative society, prostitution is beyond the pale,
but trafficking girls across to Italy and other EU countries is not.
The IOM's 2001 Victims of Trafficking in the Balkans report notes that
the smuggling of girls through Albania "is primarily orientated"
to the EU through its Adriatic ports of Vlore and Durres.
Once in Italy, the girls continue to run considerable risks. The Italian
ministry of interior reported in 2001 that 168 foreign prostitutes had
been murdered, mainly by their pimps. The majority of the former were
either Albanian or Nigerian.
The trafficking of Albanian girls into Italy has become so bad that it
prompted a change in Italian legislation in 1998. Article 18 of the Aliens
Law provided for a care programme - run by over 200 NGOs with the Italian
ministry for equal opportunities - for those brought into the country
for sexual exploitation. Figures from the programme from March to December
2000 show that 20 per cent of the girls that were helped came from Albania.
In the central Albanian town of Fier, three little metal huts with a few
ancient bunk beds and some desks provide shelter for girls that have managed
to escape the clutches of the traffickers.
The facility was established by Colonel Xhavit Shala, a former senior
police official and presently serving in the statistics and analysis office
in the interior ministry. He raised 18,000 US dollars from local businesses
to fund the project when the government refused to help.
Shala has held talks with local leaders, teachers, business people and
residents to explain how the trafficking trade is wrecking village life
in the country.
Speaking to IWPR, he was adamant that if trafficking through and from
Albania is to be tackled and locally trafficked girls are to be reintegrated
back into society then it will require a massive change of heart, particularly
from the girls' families.
"Albanians need to learn to treat these women as victims and not
prostitutes. We tell families that it is not only their daughters' responsibility
for falling into prostitution but their own," he said.
"Statistic's show that their daughters were deceived into becoming
prostitutes. We ask them why their families permitted them to be deceived."
Such is the fear of falling victim to trafficking that many girls are
refusing to go to school. Save the Children reported in 2001 that "in
remote areas, where pupils may have to walk for over an hour to get to
school, research has discovered that as many as 90 per cent of girls no
longer receive a high school education". One of the main factors
was parents' concern that their children would be abducted on the way
to class.
People smuggling has become so endemic in Albania that even the police
are implicated. During the first five months of 2002, 102 officers were
identified as being involved in the trade following a major police crackdown
that was prompted by international pressure to stem the tide of girls
reaching Europe. Sixteen of the suspects have been jailed, 12 transferred
to other jobs and 15 given minor punishments, according to the Albanian
interior ministry.
The extent of human trafficking from Albania is revealed in a secret internal
government report seen by IWPR. According to the document, more than 100,000
Albanians were smuggled out of the country between 1993-2001. How many
have ended up as prostitutes across Europe is hard to establish. But evidence
from the streets tells its own story. According to IOM's 2001 survey,
the majority of prostitutes in London's Soho area are either from Albania
or Kosovo.
MACEDONIA'S POROUS BORDERS
We made our way north through Macedonia to Kumanovo along the picturesque
roads that climb high into Sharplanina mountains. Amid the town's busy
streets, we came across a jeweller whose trade seemed to be thriving.
"So many women pass through Kumanovo, so my business is safe,"
said the owner of the shop in the centre of town. "I sell so many
rings for women from Ukraine, Romania and Albania. Sometimes I sell the
jewelry to the man who is in charge of them. He needs to have beautiful
women so that he can do his business."
If Romania is often the beginning of the trafficking journey and Albania
the end, one country, Macedonia, plays the role of a key mid point. It
has more shared borders than any other former Yugoslav republic and its
mountainous, poorly patrolled borders are ideal for traffickers. According
to Kosovan law enforcement sources, the country's frontier with the protectorate
is probably the most porous in Europe.
Sitting on a plastic chair in the baggy sports clothes provided by the
centre that rescued her, Julijana Sherban talks to the floor, red rimmed
eyes peering out from behind her long, dark hair.
The 21-year-old Romanian girl doesn't want to say much. After what she's
been through, it's no surprise. But Julijana is lucky, she is one of the
few in Macedonia to have escaped the clutches of her pimp and testified
against him in court, having been placed on a witness protection programme.
Surrounded by other girls in the shelter in Skopje, she begins to tell
her story.
Her case reveals the enormous trade in women that runs through the town
of Tetevo and Valesta and Struga further south.
Her pimp, Dilaver Bojku Leku, was convicted of soliciting in a court in
Struga in March and received a six-month jail sentence. Leku is thought
to have controlled the biggest prostitution ring in Macedonia, running
10 bars in the region, recruiting Moldovan, Romanian and Ukrainian girls
who had been sold on by several gangs on the route from Romania through
Serbia.
"I was told that I would work in Greece, but I didn't expect they
would sell me. I was sold in Serbia a dozen times. I arrived in Macedonia
in 2001, in Velesta, where I stayed for five months working in Leku's
bar, Expresso," Julijana told IWPR.
In a public relations disaster for the Macedonian government, Leku escaped
on June 20 and fled to Montenegro where he was eventually caught and extradited
on July 4. He is currently awaiting a retrial along with four others.
The case has attracted the attention of the international community eager
to see the south Balkans crack down on organised crime and stop the flow
of girls into the EU. Lawrence Butler, the US ambassador to Macedonia,
expressed serious misgivings about the country's sentencing in prostitution
cases earlier on this year. "The failure to [impose long jail terms]
opens new questions such as: are you afraid? Are you corrupt or incompetent?"
he said at the annual launch of the State Department's report on human
trafficking.
SERVICING THE INTERNATIONALS
One by one, the three girls start clapping their hands, begging for applause
and money after stripping naked in front of us. Welcome to The Dancer
- a dingy, basement strip joint in downtown Pristina.
In the corner, a short, skinny woman bellows hoarsely at them to make
more of an effort to attract our attention.
The night has just begun and we're the only clients in the bar. After
a while the fearsome looking madam comes to our table and asks us if we
are enjoying the striptease. Noticing our disapproving looks, she tells
us that she knows we're not here for the dance but for what she called
"some fun with the girls".
"It's 50 euro for one hour. It's safe. Nobody will enter the bar
unannounced. The local police won't make any problems," added the
woman who introduces herself as Iana.
Security is clearly an issue at The Dancer. The underground bar is like
a small fortress - no windows and reinforced doors. Near the entrance,
hidden behind some breeze blocks, sits a young boy who sells chewing gum
and vets customers as they come in.
"Didn't you like the girls? Maybe this time they're not that good,"
he said as we left the club." Frankly, I don't like them very much,
either. Will you come here some other time? We will have fresh girls soon.
They're on their way from Ukraine."
There are numerous such brothels and strip joints in Kosovo. The region
is one of the main destinations for the traffickers. But the girls aren't
looking to entice locals - they're here for the "internationals".
The Kosovan economy is largely dependent on the presence of international
officials and troops in the protectorate. In towns like Pristina and Prizren,
western-style shops, restaurants and pubs have sprung up all over town
to cater for the tastes and pockets of the thousands of well-paid foreigners.
Many ordinary Kosovans have been sucked into the local prostitution racket,
which the traffickers view as one of the most profitable in Europe.
"The majority of people here earn their money from trafficking in
drugs or women. They know the routes very well, they know the mined zones
and they go through areas where KFOR never goes," a senior officer
in the Kosovo Protection Force, KFOR, told IWPR.
"KFOR is not intervening because they don't want to risk a conflict
and they're not interested. Not long ago a rocket was launched against
a UN checkpoint.
The KFOR guys are not from this area so they don't really care about what's
going on."
POLICE SHORTCOMINGS AND CORRUPTION
The KFOR source said the local Kosovan police are incapable of dealing
with the problem, claiming that some officers are running human trafficking
operations.
" I don't know if we can call them police. The locals become officers
after attending a three-month course in law enforcement. Afterwards, they're
only interested in boosting their salaries and showing off the uniforms,
guns and cars that the international community provided them," he
said.
Elsewhere in the Balkans, the policing problem is just as acute as in
Kosovo. In Bosnia, efforts to curb organised crime gangs and traffickers
have been undermined by premature changes to the international policing
effort in the country, critics of the authorities believe.
In January this year, the UN's International Police Task force, IPTF,
was replaced by an EU-led police mission, EUPM.
One thousand six hundred IPTF police were posted in some 200 locations
throughout the country to train, equip and monitor local officers. Latest
figures from August 2003 show that EUPM's presence is less conspicuous,
with only 480 members currently deployed around the country.
Before the scale down in January, the IPTF coordinator for the Special
Trafficking Operations programme, John O'Reilly warned that trafficking
gangs were stepping up their activities, "The criminals are already
bringing in new girls. Of all the bars we closed, there's a number of
them actually being renovated."
Speaking with IWPR, O'Reilly was doubtful whether the EU force would be
up to the job of handling the scale of the human trafficking problem.
"In my humble opinion it won't work. You've got the will but there
is a lot of corruption and a lot of people in important places don't want
this to work," he said.
The situation is similar in neighbouring Montenegro where a recent human
trafficking scandal involving a leading official has seriously embarrassed
the government.
In July, an OSCE commission was invited to investigate the alleged involvement
of the Montenegrin deputy state prosecutor Zoran Piperovic and three other
officials in people smuggling.
Piperovic was arrested along with three others in November last year on
suspicion of involvement in human trafficking following revelations by
a Moldovan woman who escaped from a Montenegrin trafficking gang to a
refuge. She claimed that Piperovic had been involved in her incarceration,
during which time she was drugged and raped.
Piperovic and the three other men deny the charges.
Controversially, the Montenegrin senior state prosecutor, Zoran Radonjic,
ruled in May that there were insufficient grounds for a prosecution, sparking
a major public outcry that prompted the authorities to invited the OSCE
to pass judgment on the case.
OSCE mission chief to Serbia and Montenegro Maurizio Massari said in July
that the Piperovic case "raised the issue of the ability of the Montenegrin
legal system to cope with the complexity of cases related to human trafficking".
INTO THE MINEFILEDS
Leaving Pristina, we traveled first to Prizren in southern Kosovo and
then on to Qafa i Prushit on the Kosovo-Albanian border. According to
out KFOR source, Qafa i Prushit is a people- and drugs-trafficking hot
spot. The route to the border point goes through villages where the signs
of the last war, the continuing tensions and new wealth are all too apparent.
Close to the border, in front of the newly built two-storey houses, sit
freshly polished Mercedes. Almost all bear Swiss plates. "Lots of
the cars belong to the Kosovars. Many of them moved to Switzerland during
the conflict and now they come back here to do their business, mainly
in the field of organised crime," our KFOR source told us.
A few kilometres away from Qafa i Prushit lie the minefields. A dusty
road cuts through the deadly terrain. On either side, yellow triangles
with the inscription "minas, minas" and giant concrete structures,
called "dragons teeth", which were put up by the Serb forces
to stop the movement of NATO tanks.
Qafa i Prushit's UN checkpoint, guarded by only a few officers, is perched
up on hills dominating the area. The post's surveillance activities are
assisted by UN mobile patrols that put up roadblocks and search suspect
cars in the valley below. Girls here are being moved in both directions.
According to the IOM, the majority are going to Albania and then on to
Italy, but others are moving into Kosovo and the buoyant Pristina market
place.
Despite the UN efforts at Qafa i Prushit, the trafficking continues to
grow partly because the international and local police will not risk their
lives by leaving the safety of the road to go into the minefields.
To the northeast lies another unguarded border that is regularly used
by traffickers between Kosovo and Montenegro. The crossing point goes
through mountains that soar as high as 2,600 metres. As in other parts
of the Balkans, this geography helps those trafficking people and makes
tracking them extremely difficult.
And the multinational nature of the traffic also makes the task of stopping
the flood of people particularly hard.
"There is no linguistic, religious or any other problem among the
criminals," Jacques Klein, the outgoing head of the UN Mission in
Bosnia told IWPR shortly before he stepped down in December 2002. "They
have no dilemma dealing with each other - it's a very sophisticated crime
structure."
By working together, Balkan criminals of different ethnicity create a
secure trafficking network through which profits and girls can be controlled.
But some do manage to escape.
GIRLS FLEE CAPTORS
Not all the girls we met on our travels were controlled by pimps. In Bucharest,
we came across several who were working alone, having fled their captors.
And in Belgrade, we met with girls who continued to work in the city,
after escaping from Serbian traffickers.
Vera is one such girl. Her modest downtown flat is basic, but clean. On
the bed lies a packet of condoms, in the corner a closet. Nothing else.
She has no pimp, no ties. The 22-year-old takes great pride in telling
us how she, and her housemate, got here.
"In March, I finally managed to run from the traffickers who held
me in a house in Novi Sad [a town north of Belgrade] after they had disappeared
with our passports," she said. " I now have my own business.
I place my adds in the newspapers and I publish my mobile phone number.
We are working for ourselves."
Their relief was palpable, but they remain extremely wary.
Neither would say where they had come from or where the traffickers were
taking them.
"The traffickers sold us, abused us and kept us locked up. Now we
only have to take care who our clients are," continued Vera. "
We tell them it is the wrong number if they ask us in Serbian. We have
only foreign clients. Of course, the money would be better if we'd take
Serbians too but we are afraid they might be traffickers that try to take
us back."
Recent clamp downs on organised crime following the murder of prime minister
Zoran Djindic in March is likely to have had some effect on the gang operations
in Serbia.
One result of police action against prostitution has been to spread the
problem beyond central Belgrade. The 2002 OSCE report on human trafficking
in the region noted that "due to control and raids by the police,
the number of bars has decreased and part of the trafficking business
has moved from the centre into the suburbs and less obvious locations".
In much of the Balkans, substantial amounts of international funds have
been directed at curbing trafficking, but Serbia has not fared as well
in this regard.
Nonetheless, NGO pressure here has kept the issue of trafficking on the
political agenda. In July 2001, the interior ministry allocated space
for a shelter for trafficked women and legislative changes increased penalties
for traffickers.
A REGIONAL ANTI-TRAFFICKING STRATEGY
From Serbia, we traveled back to where we began, Romania. There we paid
a visit to Iana Matei, the director of the Reaching Out project, which
provides a refuge for girls who've managed to escape the clutches of the
traffickers. So far, Matei and his colleagues have managed to build a
few apartments for the girls in the town of Pitesti - 100 km north of
Bucharest - home to the massive, belching Dacia car plant.
In this unappealing town many of the girls have found some respite. But
the exact location of the shelter has to be kept secret for fear that
traffickers will hunt the girls down.
It's here that we met up again with Diana. Back in January, IWPR reported
on an undercover investigation into Romanian smugglers, in which our reporters
bought her from a Bucharest pimp for 400 US dollars. Just like Marcu,
we could have taken Diana down to the prostitution centres in the Balkans
or sold her on to Serbian gangs in Timisoara.
Then, she was cold, terrified, almost naked and starving. She had spent
the previous New Years Eve in Bucharest, chained to a dog cage.
But now, with the shelter's help, she is making progress back to a relatively
normal life. She is sharing a flat with some other girls, learning how
to look after herself and how to live without fear.
It will be a long road for Diana. The mental scars of years of physical
and sexual abuse by pimps and clients have taken their toll.
Analysts agree that human trafficking through the Balkans is a major international
problem that will require a coordinated response from regional and Western
European governments and their respective law enforcement agencies.
To this end, the EU set up a group of 20 independent experts in March
to recommend further actions on coordinating the fight against trafficking.
The panel is just one of several moves coming from last year's EU conference
on combating the crime.
The conference recommended further coordination between EU member states
on legislation and policing, urging greater harmonisation of national
laws, so that traffickers face the same penalties in whichever member
state they are caught. Brussels has made funding available under the AGIS
programme for police and judicial cooperation across the EU to tackle
the problem.
Julie Bindel, a member of the EU panel and a researcher with the child
and women abuse unit at the University of North London, says that although
Brussels is looking hard into the issue, progress is slow, and concentrating
on tightening and coordinating EU law on the issue is not enough.
"The problem starts mainly in the Balkans and the EU needs to be
doing more in the region. What legislative and funding changes there have
been are pretty piecemeal, and are only aimed at tackling things at one
end of the chain," she said.
"For example, the UK foreign office has provided some funds to compile
a database of all NGOs working on the human trafficking issue, and money
has been made available to tackle child prostitution but its still the
case that there are less than 20 officers based at Charing Cross police
station who deal specifically with human trafficking and this is for the
whole of London."
As Balkans countries begin to eye up EU accession, many will have to do
more to tackle the traffickers if they are to stand a chance of ever gaining
entry. The Treaty of the European Union explicitly refers to trafficking
of human beings and demands that members comply with overall standards
of policing and legislation on the issue. Right now, few Balkan countries
are even close to this.
But there are signs that a regional approach to the problem is beginning
to take shape.
In September 2002, the Romanian based Southeast European Cooperative Initiative
Centre for Combating Trans-Border Crime, SECI, launched the first regional
anti-human trafficking operation. Code-named MIRAGE, the initiative brought
together police forces from ten countries including Albania, Bosnia, Bulgaria,
Romania, Croatia, Macedonia, Greece and the UN Mission in Kosovo.
By January 2003, SECI concluded in its report on the operation that 237
victims of trafficking and 293 traffickers had been arrested after over
20,000 raids on nightclubs, discos, restaurants and border crossing points
in the Balkans.
But while MIRAGE was a relative success, it did expose corrupt practices
among many Balkans police forces that go someway to underpinning the trade.
Indeed, numerous investigations during MIRAGE pointed to policemen being
involved in trafficking. It's a sobering assessment - and one that underlines
the difficulties governments face in tackling this terrible scourge.
This report was coordinated by Paul Radu in Romania and compiled by David
Quin, IWPR's assistant investigations editor in London. The following
contributed to the research: Stefan Candea and Sorin Ozon in Romania,
Julie Harbin and Nidzara Ahmetasevic in Bosnia-Herzegovina, Gazmend Kapllani
in Greece, Milorad Ivanovic in Serbia, Kaca Krsmanovic and Boris Darmanovic
in Montenegro, Zylyftar Bregu in Albania, Zoran Jachev and Zaklina Gjorgjevic
in Macedonia.
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