Human trafficking finds new ways
Published:
7 November 2003 y., Friday
Every week now, dozens of people are caught trying to cross illegally into Western Europe through the Balkans. They mask the many more who get through.
Some are males from the Middle East led to believe a better life waits the other side. But thousands of young women and girls have been travelling this route. It is the route to prostitution, police and non-governmental organizations (NGOs) agree. A large number remain in the Balkans, but scores are taken further West. "Hideous crimes are committed against thousands of women (in the Balkans)," Madeleine Rees from the United Nation High Commission for Human Rights (UNHCHR) office in Sarajevo told IPS.
"Western governments treat this problem as illegal immigration that should be solved with law enforcement," she said. "But it is the human rights perspective we want to introduce to explain human trafficking, as the women who end up being forced into sexual slavery can only be treated as victims."
NGOs are stepping in to help these women in eight countries in the region - Albania, Bosnia-Herzegovina, Bulgaria, Macedonia, Moldova, Kosovo, Serbia & Montenegro and Romania. With the help of UNHCR and other international organizations they are working first to educate the public, police and media about the problem.
"These countries are both transit countries and source countries for trafficked women," Jelena Djordjevic from the Belgrade-based NGO Astra told IPS. "We have received some 900 phone calls from women who became victims of human trafficking in the January 2002-June 2003 period. We provided shelter for dozens of them."
A study on human trafficking released earlier this month by the Stability Pact for South Eastern Europe (SPSEE), an organization funded by the European Union, says 5,000 female victims of human trafficking have been identified and assisted in the January 2000-June 2003 period.
Šaltinis:
dawn.com
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.
The most popular articles
Opposition presidential candidate Viktor Yushchenko called on the government Friday to prevent any violence in this weekend's crucial presidential repeat vote
more »
Driven by Christmas shopping fever and growing hunger for material goods, Europeans in former communist states are putting aside a historic aversion to taking out loans as their spending habits change and a new generation of debtors takes root
more »
POLL SAYS KAZAKHS DON'T EXPECT REPEAT OF UKRAINE EVENTS
more »
Ukraine's repeat election campaign officially kicked off on Sunday
more »
Macedonian citizens consider the judicial sector as the most corrupted in Macedonia, according to results of the Transparency International Global Corruption Report 2004
more »
Ukraine's opposition leader Viktor Yushchenko has congratulated supporters on winning "a great victory" after parliament passed wide-ranging reforms
more »
Hungary's new prime minister looked to have scored a major victory today when the opposition failed to garner enough votes to pass a referendum giving citizenship to millions of Hungarians abroad
more »
Ofelia Boudaguian says she hoped for fair treatment when she and her family came to the United States in 1995
more »
A comprehensive conference on migration opened in the Kazakh commercial capital, Almaty, on Tuesday, revealing a negative migration balance for Central Asia's largest state
more »
The first potential pitfall in the long and difficult road towards ratifying the European Constitution will come on Wednesday (1 December)
more »