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Young Women Have no Notion of Sexual Risks that Jobs
Abroad Pose
Fighting human trafficking, a really dangerous crime
demands very tough measures
Dmitry Latypov
Representative of the justice department in the US
Embassy in Moscow Terry Kinney said at the
International Human Trafficking Conference held in
Russia's Vladivostok that the criminal turnover of
human trafficking is as high as with arms and drug
smuggling.
On the post of the federal prosecutor in Chicago,
Terry Kinney in 1996 investigated the case of
Russian citizen Alex Mishulovich who had decoyed
about 30 girls from the CIS into working in
striptease clubs in the US. He promised the girls
would be paid $60,000 a year for working at night
clubs, but in fact the girls were forced to do
strip-tease, and Mishulovich seized all the money
they earned. Later, two of the girls
were sold
in Chicago for $15,000. Terry Kinney says the
hardest thing about the case was to prove that the
white slaves were kept in the place by force. And
this is at the time when legislation on fighting
human trafficking was adopted in the US. Alex
Mishulovich was sentenced to 15 years of
imprisonment for human trafficking.
Experts present at the conference in Vladivostok
arrived at a conclusion that the problem could be
partially solved if public organizations in
different countries get united for fighting the
problem. For the time being,
girls
seem to be absolutely unaware of all troubles they
may face going abroad for work. Not only girls from
province where the unemployment rate is very high
but also women from large cities may get into a trap
of human traffickers.
One girl, named only as Yelena, from a large city
needed money and decided to work a waitress
somewhere in
China.
There was an agency in her city recruiting women for
work in China and it seemed to be quite reliable.
The agency registered a tourist visa for Yelena, and
the girl left for China together with other six
girls. A company that received the girls in China on
the Russia-China border ordered dinner for them and
after the meal the Russian girls fell asleep. Yelena
regained conscience in some dirty house and could
not understand in what place she was at all. One of
the six girls stayed in the same house. The girls
had no documents; the man who forced them into
working as prostitutes often beat them. Yelena was
lucky indeed: one of her clients felt pity for her
and took her for a walk right to the Russia-China
border where the girl entreated Russian frontier
guards to help her. Fortunately, Yelena happily got
back home but for some reason did not appeal to the
police and instituted no criminal proceedings
against those who decoyed her into working as a
prostitute. And this is quite typical of women who
fall victims of violence not to appeal to the
police. Being absolutely scared and insulted they
rather forget the dangerous adventure then make it
public. And this is the reason why the mass human
trafficking is concealed from the eyes of the
society and the police. At that, police in different
countries prefer to ignore the shameful phenomenon
of today's life.
It is perfectly obvious that today fighting human
trafficking, a really
dangerous crime
demands very tough measures. Usually, organized
criminal groups deal with human trafficking, that is
why there must be special police units fighting the
crime.
As of today, just few criminal procedures have been
initiated in Russia in connection with human
trafficking. People fall victims of human
traffickers because the federal law does not protect
Russians from the trouble, some experts believe.
There are just two clauses of the RF Criminal Code
that concern the problem. Today, law enforcement
structures stand aside from the problem because it
is very hard to prove that this or that crime was in
fact human trafficking.
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