¡Ya Basta! Stop Human Trafficking Today

Texas RioGrande Legal Aid

  • ¡Ya Basta! Blog Updates You On:

    Human trafficking news and South Texas resources.

    What is Human trafficking?
    Human trafficking is modern day slavery. Victims of human trafficking are subjected to force, fraud, or coercion, for the purpose of sexual exploitation or forced labor.

    Look Beneath the Surface Report Human Trafficking on the National Trafficking and Referral Line:
    1-888-3737-888
  • Stop Human Trafficking Today Project

    Stop Human Trafficking Today is a project of Texas RioGrande Legal Aid. Our team educates the community on the issue of human trafficking by providing workshops and presentations to community members, as well as social service providers and law enforcement. We also provide direct outreach to various communities within our service area to help identify victims of modern day slavery.
  • Victims of Trafficking and Their Needs

    There are four general areas of victim needs: * Immediate assistance - Housing, food, medical, safety and security, language interpretation and legal services * Mental health assistance - Counseling * Income assistance - Cash, living assistance * Legal status - T visa, immigration, certification

    Victims of human trafficking are vulnerable human beings who have been subjected to severe physical and emotional coercion. Trafficking victims are usually in desperate need of assistance. They need to know that once they come in contact with social service providers and law enforcement, they are safe and will be protected.
  • Choice

    You cannot make a choice to be a slave.

    Not all victims of human trafficking are undocumented.

    Not all victims have crossed international borders.

Archive for November, 2007

Nobodies: Modern American Slave Labor and the Dark Side of the New Global Economy

Posted by yabastablog on November 29, 2007

ABOUT THIS BOOK

http://www.randomhouse.com/catalog/display.pperl?isbn=9781400062096

Most Americans would be shocked to discover that slavery still exists in the United States. Yet most of us buy goods made by people who aren’t paid for their labor–people who are trapped financially, and often physically. In Nobodies, award-winning journalist John Bowe exposes the outsourcing, corporate chicanery, immigration fraud, and sleights of hand that allow forced labor to continue in the United States while the rest of us notice nothing but the everyday low price at the checkout counter.

Based on thorough and often dangerous research, exclusive interviews, and eyewitness accounts, Nobodies takes you inside three illegal workplaces where employees are virtually or literally enslaved.

In the fields of Immokalee, Florida, underpaid (and often unpaid) illegal immigrants pick the produce all of us consume, connected by a chain of subcontractors and divisions to such companies as PepsiCo and Tropicana. At the top of the chain are stockholders and politicians; at the bottom is a father of six, one of whose children suffers from leukemia, who entered America only to become the unpaid employee of a labor contractor nicknamed “El Diablo” for his cruelty.

In Tulsa, Oklahoma, the John Pickle Company reaped profits for years making pressure tanks used by oil refineries and power plants. Feeling squeezed by foreign competition and government regulations, JPC partnered with an Indian and Kuwaiti firm to import workers from India. Under the guise of a “training program,” fifty-three workers, including college-educated Uday Ludbe, came to the United States, only to have their documents confiscated and to find themselves confined to a factory building. Pickle laid off Americans and paid the Indians three dollars an hour.

Saipan, a U.S. commonwealth in the Western Pacific where the author lived for three years, has long been exempted from American immigration controls, tariffs, and federal income tax–a status quo assiduously protected by lobbyist Jack Abramoff and Congressman Tom DeLay. There, garment magnates–selling to clothing giants like the Gap and Target–live in luxury while thousands of foreign factory workers, 90 percent of them female, work sixty-hour weeks for $3.05 an hour and spend weekends trying to trade sex for green cards. The garments they make are allowed to be labeled MADE IN AMERICA.

Nobodies
is a vivid and powerful work of investigative reporting, but it is also a lively examination of the eternal struggle for power between free people and unfree people. Against the American landscape of shopping mall, outlet stores, and Happy Meals, Bowe reveals how humankind’s darker urges remain alive and well, lingering in the background of every transaction and how understanding them may lead to overcoming them.

Posted in materials, slavery | Leave a Comment »

Immigrant maid describes beatings, torture

Posted by yabastablog on November 29, 2007

HEMPSTEAD, N.Y., Nov. 6 (UPI) — An immigrant from Indonesia testified that the woman she worked for in New York beat her and kept her so short of food she ate garbage.

The woman, testifying at the trial of Varsha and Mahender Sabhnanil, was identified only as Samirah. She said that life in their house in the enclave of Muttontown on Long Island’s North Shore was so miserable she just wanted to leave, The New York Post reported.

“I said, ‘Missus, just send me home to Indonesia,’ ” she told a jury Monday.

On Tuesday, the judge suspended proceedings for the day because the two court-certified interpreters, a married couple, were absent because the wife was sick, Newsday reported.

Samirah described being forced to eat chili peppers and then hot pepper mixed in water with salt, the Post said. When she threw up, her mistress forced her to eat her vomit, she said.

Sabhnani’s lawyer says that Samirah and another maid who is scheduled to testify mutilated themselves in witchcraft rituals.

http://www.upi.com/NewsTrack/Top_News/2007/11/06/immigrant_maid_describes_beatings_torture/9123/

Posted in domestic servitude, human trafficking | Leave a Comment »

new website that the Women’s Rights Project has just launched about the enslavement of domestic workers by foreign diplomats in the U.S

Posted by yabastablog on November 27, 2007

http://www.aclu.org/womensrights/employ/domesticworkers.html

Modern Enslavement of Migrant Domestic Workers by Foreign Diplomats in the United States

Modern-day slavery flourishes in the United States as well as abroad.

Foreign diplomats — supposedly the ambassadors of goodwill and international diplomacy — are enslaving, exploiting, and abusing domestic workers, and the United States government is looking the other way.

These women have had the courage to speak out against these abuses, but none has achieved any form of redress on account of diplomatic immunity. The United States government has failed to ensure these women any remedy for their enslavement.

Posted in human trafficking, slavery | Leave a Comment »

STUDENTS AGAINST HUMAN TRAFFICKING/SLAVERY

Posted by yabastablog on November 16, 2007

  • Write an editorial about human trafficking for your student newspaper. Chances are there have been incidents of trafficking in the region where your college or university is located.
  •  If your college or university has a television station, urge the station to air PSA’s about human trafficking. The Stop Human Trafficking Project coordinator can assist you in locating these PSA’s.
  • Blog about the local efforts being made to bring awareness on human trafficking. Highlights anti-trafficking news & developments in the U.S. and around the world.
  • Start a resource library on human trafficking at your institution’s Women’s Center.
  • Invite a speaker to help build awareness on your campus about this terrible human rights abuse. Work with your student activities office, Women’s Center or other interested groups or professors to arrange the program.
  • Work with your student activities office to set up an information table in your student center on human trafficking.
  • If you speak another language fluently, volunteer to translate materials for an organization that works to combat trafficking. People are trafficked from every world region and speak a multitude of languages. Translation is a significant need.
  • Encourage your professors to include a section or class about human trafficking in their curriculum. Human trafficking can be incorporated into courses focusing on issues in women’s studies, migration, exploitation, labor, public health, criminal justice and others.
  • Start a student group focused on combating modern-day slavery. Work with your student activities center to form the group. Activities can include all of the above points.

Posted in community education, human trafficking | Tagged: , | Leave a Comment »

JOIN THE STOP HUMAN TRAFFICKING TODAY PROJECT

Posted by yabastablog on November 16, 2007

Yes! Our organization wants to join the campaign to stop human trafficking and bring awareness in our community.

request-to-join-the-stop-human-trafficking-today-project

Posted in coalitions, community education | Leave a Comment »

Line in the Sand

Posted by yabastablog on November 13, 2007

In our library, available for viewing:

The Line in the Sand: Stories from the U.S./Mexico Border

The Line in the Sand uses the power of theater to tell the personal stories of people affected by U.S./Mexico border migration.

Through an hour-long collection of monologues and photos, audiences are exposed to a variety of points of view on this complex and critical issue.

Posted in library | Tagged: , , , | Leave a Comment »

Demand Documentary

Posted by yabastablog on November 8, 2007

Dear Friends,

 

The End Human Trafficking Today Project of Texas Rio Grande Legal Aid is hosting a screening of the groundbreaking documentary DEMAND.. Please join us at this important event where we can create local awareness on the commercial exploitation of women and children.

 

Date: November 17th

Time: 3PM

Location: 204 N 1st St.

Harlingen, TX 78550

Men’s Resource Center

 

DEMAND., a new report and documentary from Shared Hope International (SHI), reveals for the first time the opportunistic and sophisticated business model for sex trafficking and tourism- modern day slavery DEMAND. exposes the market drivers that fuel and normalize a business which exploits and enslaves women and children.

 

SHI conducted a 12 month investigation of commercial sexual exploitation in Jamaica, Japan, the Netherlands, and the Unites States. Although vastly differently culturally, economically, and historically, each country has a culture of tolerance allowing major markets for local and international sex tourism and trafficking to flourish. In the United States, SHI conducted investigative research in Atlanta, Las Vegas and Washington, DC.

 

The End Human Trafficking Today Project is hosting this event to bring local awareness to this important issue. We hope you join us and support our grassroots effort in informing our community about the prevalence seemingly legal, yet illicit enterprises that line the pockets of traffickers and pimps.

 

We hope you will join us at our DEMAND. Screening on the 17th of November at 3PM in Harlingen.

Posted in community education, documentary, human trafficking, sex trafficking | Leave a Comment »

STOP TRAFFIC NOW: 2008 Anti-Human Trafficking Conference

Posted by yabastablog on November 8, 2007

What: STOP TRAFFIC NOW: 2008 Anti-Human Trafficking Conference

Date: March 21-22, 2008

Place: University of Missouri; Columbia, Missouri

Host: Stop Traffic, Anti-Human Trafficking Activist Group

Sponsors: FAIR Fund, Chancellor’s Diversity Initiative, Not for Sale, Hope House, Americans for Informed Democracy, Women’s and Gender Studies Program, Women’s and Gender Studies Undergraduate Group, Gamma Rho Lambda

Delegate fees include:            

*3 meals                                                                            *Speaker fees                                                              *Materials                                                                                Conference Attire: Business casual

To apply to the Stop Traffic Now Conference, please click here.

Contact: martha@stoptrafficnow.com    

Posted in conference | Leave a Comment »