The
United States is no exception to the practice of modern day slavery.
The US State Department said that despite its global reach, human
trafficking takes place locally — “in a favorite nail salon or
restaurant; in a neighborhood home or popular hotel; on a city street
or rural farm.” The US Department of Homeland Security (DHS) says
every year, “millions of men, women, and children are trafficked
worldwide – including right here in the United States”.
Urmila
Bhoola the UN Special Rapporteur on Contemporary Forms of Slavery,
told IPS last March that slavery was the first human rights issue to
arouse wide international concern.
But
it still continues today—“and slavery-like practices also remain
a grave and persistent problem”.
Romina
Canessa, a human rights lawyer and program officer at Equality Now’s
“End Sex Trafficking” team, said: “Unfortunately, we do not
have any exact numbers on how widespread sex trafficking is in the
USA”
“We
do know that America is a source, destination, and transit country
for trafficking. We also know that the majority of trafficking
victims in the USA are from within the country and that the most
prevalent form of trafficking is sex trafficking of women and girls.”
Canessa
of Equality Now said currently, there is no official estimate for the
numbers of victims in the USA, nor are there reliable resources.
There are statistics, for example, on the number of federal sex
trafficking cases but this isn’t an accurate representation as many
cases aren’t prosecuted or are prosecuted under different laws for
various reasons.
She
said cases frequently go undetected or unreported. “Many sex
trafficking victims are prevented from seeking help, and it is also
common for people not to self-identify as someone who has been
trafficking...Sex trafficking in the USA can involve migrants and
refugees, and traffickers will often use an immigrant’s legal
status as a tool for coercion. Trafficking can involve nail salons,
spas, farms, but also involves a wide range of other industries,
including: hospitality; traveling sales; janitorial services;
construction; restaurants; domestic work; childcare and looking after
persons with disabilities; retail; fairs and carnivals; peddling and
begging; drug smuggling and distribution, amongst others.
Trafficking
can affect anyone but certain dynamics can place people at higher
risk. Factors that can increase someone’s vulnerability include
being in foster care, a runaway or being young and homeless. Living
in poverty, problems with immigration status, and being LGBTI are
also risk factors.
A
2018 report by the Global Slavery Index estimated some 403,000 people
being trapped in modern slavery in the U.S. – seven times higher
than previous figures.
Elizabeth
Melendez Fisher, co-founder and chief executive of Selah
Freedon/Selah Way Foundation, says the sexual abuse and exploitation
of vulnerable women and children have always occurred in the US.
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