¡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 September, 2009

Unaccompanied minors

Posted by yabastablog on September 22, 2009

The new law may have brought some confusion….

More Children Held in Detention Centers

La Opinión, Posted: Sep 22, 2009 //

LOS ANGELES — The detention of immigrant children for federal investigation has led to confusion among consulates and human rights groups claiming that hundreds of children could be detained for months before reuniting with their families, reports La Opinión.

A new law designed to combat labor and sex trafficking, the William Wilberforce Trafficking Victims Protection Reauthorization Act, H.R. 7311, requires that the case of every unaccompanied minor detained along the border be investigated before the child is repatriated. The law calls on investigators to research the reason for their entry into the country and the immigrant status of their parents.

But critics say its implementation could do more harm than good. In the past, when the Border Patrol detained a minor, they notified the consulate, which then located the minor’s family and reunited them. Now, the minor is delivered to the Department of Health and Human Services’ office and stays in a Division of Unaccompanied Children’s Services (DUCS) shelter until his or her parents are located. Federico Bass Villarreal, spokesperson for the Mexican Consulate in San Bernardino, said minors would no longer be handed over to consulates until their family was located. A process that used to take hours, he said, could now take months. According to the Department of Homeland Security, about 10 percent of the immigrants arrested crossing the border are minors.

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Clinton Global Initiative Award

Posted by yabastablog on September 22, 2009

Another heartening article to read to help us work on these issues on a daily basis. Good is happening!

Can Clinton Award-Winner Ruchira Gupta Change the World?

By Katherine Gustafson | Monday, September 21, 2009 4:58 PM ET

Ruchira Gupta found it impossible to walk away from the women.

She had spent 18 months hanging around the Bombay brothels where they lived, posting up at a dingy café nearby as she tried to catch on tape the horrors she had discovered in this dirty corner of the world’s economy. Ominous men had pulled knives on her. Some of her informants had disappeared. She had begun to call the café “Hotel California.”

That tune might actually be the best metaphor for the world Gupta was inexorably entering. The song famously concludes with the words “You can checkout any time you like, but you can never leave.” And this, it turned out, was true for both for the subjects of the documentary she was making and for Gupta herself.

Many of the women she was watching day after day — sex slaves who had been sold into Bombay’s booming system of prostitution in their teens or younger — were now so traumatized, diseased, unskilled and drug-addicted that they would die on the sidewalks after clients stopped coming and their pimps threw them out. And Gupta herself, so shocked and outraged by the inhumanity of the exploitation and the intensity of the suffering she had uncovered, would never be the same again.

“I had never seen such deliberate exploitation of one human being by another at an individual level,” she told me when I asked what made her turn from a reporter for the BBC into a full-fledged anti-sex-trafficking activist. “I couldn’t walk away … I made eye contact with these women.”

And now, more than 20 years after finishing the documentary Selling of Innocents, which went on to win an Emmy Award, she is finally getting the world to take notice of the harrowing system it chronicles and what can be done to stop it.

This week Gupta will be awarded the 2009 Clinton Global Citizen Award, an honor that recognizes work of “visionary leadership in solving pressing global challenges.” She will receive the award on Sept. 24 at a special event as part of the Clinton Global Initiative, the annual conference of political, business, philanthropic and academic leaders who gather to discuss and commit to solutions to the world’s worst ills.

This recognition comes as a profound relief and an important vote of confidence for Gupta, who has spent long and lonely decades toiling with little support to help these women start new lives and to shed light on the injustice of their situation.

It all started when the women who had helped her make the film asked her to help them escape from prostitution. Gupta knew that enabling the strength she saw in them would be the key to their success. She told them “I can help you if you want to change your lives yourselves.”

They did, and Gupta’s life also changed forever. She founded a nonprofit organization, Apne Aap Women Worldwide, which means “self-help” in Hindi. With a messianic dedication and courageous spirit, she has grown the effort from that small beginning to a program of self-empowerment, group support and skills training involving 10,072 women and girls. Apne Aap has expanded its reach to four states — Delhi, West Bengal, Bihar and Maharashtra — where 67 self-help groups give these women a second chance.

While Gupta has made great progress without much support, the award finally gives her the backing she has missed all this time. Winning it, she said, “means I’m not alone. It means I finally see that I have a lot of support in my struggle. It means there are real leaders in the world and not just leaders who do things for political expediency. There are people who want to reach out to the poor and who want to stand side by side with an activist.”

Jennifer Buffett, whose NoVo Foundation nominated Gupta for the prize, said that meeting the tough standards of the Clinton Global Initiative “is a real stamp of approval.” She believes that recognizing Gupta’s efforts is the right choice.

“This is someone we really trust,” Buffett said. “She’s very smart, she’s very organized, she’s very passionate. She knows her stuff so well … With the Clinton award I think she’ll really be empowered. I can’t wait to see what happens.”

What will happen, Gupta thinks, is that her perspective will gain new legitimacy, which will make a tremendous difference in her ability to pursue her ambitious goals. And they are indeed ambitious: She aims to fully dismantle the prostitution system in India.

“This is what I want to tell all the global leaders that will be sitting at the award dinner that night,” she said. “If you invest in a girl or a woman, you can change a whole system. The best approach to solving this problem is to dismantle the system and invest in the girls.”

Making that case is a lot easier with powerful people backing you up. “People say [the system of prostitution] is inevitable,” she said. “Now with this award, people will have to realize that there are very influential leaders who think something can be done about it and are willing to support me.”

The system she is trying to disassemble is designed to chew up and spit out women. Traffickers lure girls between 9 and 12 years old from rural villages in India and Nepal with promises of legitimate work in the big city. For the first five years, the girls are kept in slavery, let out of their rooms only for servicing clients, or, as Gupta chose to put it, “repeated rape every night.”

Within those first years, said Gupta, a girl is “traumatized so much that she loses any link with her home, mentally and physically. She’s taught to become dependent on the brothel manager. She often has a child in the first two years. She has to repay the debt of her purchase price by working.” After that it is a fast and inexorable decline until, at 30 or 35, she is so “used up” that she no longer gets any customers and the pimp won’t keep her anymore. She is left to beg and die on the street. “That,” said Gupta, “is when she comes to organizations like ours.”

I asked this remarkable woman how she keeps going year after year in the face of such atrocity. She responded that the stories of the girls and women who make it out inspire her profoundly.

“A week ago, I was phoned by a woman who was married to a trafficker when she was 10 years old,” she told me. “She ran away three times to her own family, who always took her back. She joined Apne Aap in Bihar. She formed a group with other women and became the treasurer. They started meeting and holding open mics and becoming leaders in their community.

“She phoned and said ‘You know what? I went to the town chief and he said he would not give me cooking oil at the subsidized rate the government gives to poor people. He said it was because I was a prostitute. But I made him give me the cooking oil at the lower rate. You know, I was able to fight for myself, and I actually won!’”

Gupta paused, savoring again this small but — at least in one woman’s life — monumental victory. “That,” she said, “was magic.”

Stay tuned to Tonic all week for special, live coverage of the 2009 Clinton Global Initiative.

(Photos courtesy of Apne Aap and NoVo Foundation.)

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Immigration agents and human trafficking

Posted by yabastablog on September 22, 2009

Working in the field of human trafficking we sometimes get so down about our relationship with Immigration Customs Enforcement Agency, (ICE). It is rare to find an agent that will take the time to do the investigative work before putting our client into deportation proceedings.  A lot of times they assume our clients are lying about their situation, or they feel the client is not giving them enough information to help them make a case. Instead of doing what they can to help the victim, which is their job as a victim services agent, they decide it isn’t worth it and deport our clients.

This puts our attorneys under a ton of pressure to find another way to get help for their client. They have to go through another federal agency that is usually linked to ICE anyway.  Our attorneys have been able to obtain T Visas for our clients, but through the Department of Justice, which ended up being quite a bit longer process. It also took a lot more court dates, which added even more bureaucracy to the process.

So, when you read the following article, know that this ICE agent is the exception. She went above and beyond for a case that most agents and DA offices do not prioritize–a human trafficking case. The penalities for traffickers are still too light and most attorneys do not feel they can get the best results using the human trafficking laws.

Read this heartening article about a Philadelphia agent who put the human trafficking laws to work.

The U.S. agent who put away two sex tourists

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Cactus Investigations

Posted by yabastablog on September 21, 2009

Check out these older investigations about the town of Cactus, TX

Lots of labor abuses are occurring, but how can we find trafficking victims in such a huge meat packing factory?

Cactus, Texas from the Dallas Morning News

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More news in Brownsville

Posted by yabastablog on September 19, 2009

Couple pleads guilty to smuggling illegal immigrants for prostitution

A Brownsville man, who called himself Don Juan, and his girlfriend have pleaded guilty to smuggling undocumented immigrants into the United States to prostitute them.

Juan Luis Coronado, 37, aka Juan Hernandez, and Lee Ann Zieger, aka as Lee Ann Motilla, 40, entered the guilty pleas Wednesday, the same day their trial was scheduled to begin.

Coronado pleaded guilty to one count of attempting to import a minor for prostitution purposes.

Zieger, also of Brownsville, pleaded guilty to two counts of harboring aliens for prostitution, the U.S. Attorney’s Office said. The two will be sentenced Dec. 8.

Coronado remained in federal custody without bond. Zieger remained out of jail on a $75,000 bond pending sentencing.

The April arrests of Coronado and Zieger were the result of a seven-month, U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement investigation in which special agents monitored the couple.

According to the U.S. Attorney’s Office, Coronado admitted to asking a prostitute who was working for him to smuggle a 14-year-old undocumented immigrant from Mexico to work for him as a prostitute. He made the request in October.

Coronado also admitted to smuggling and managing two other undocumented immigrants who worked as prostitutes, federal authorities said.

The women who worked as prostitutes were housed at a hotel in Brownsville, where Zieger worked as a manager, according to the U.S. Attorneys Office.

Angela Dodge, a spokeswoman for the U.S. Attorney’s Office, confirmed that the hotel is the Value Place hotel on Media Luna Road.

Authorities also said that Zieger allowed a room at the hotel to be used for prostitution purposes by giving Coronado a room key labeled “property manager,”

Dodge confirmed that Coronado and Zieger also took women to the South Padre Island to be prostituted at the annual SPI Bikefest held in October.

Zieger admitted to furnishing Coronado with the room, which she knew was being used to prostitute the undocumented immigrants and to picking up the prostitutes after they crossed the border from Mexico, federal authorities said.

Zieger and Coronado each face up to 10 years in federal prison and fines of up to $250,000 each, followed by three years of supervised release.

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Outreach

Posted by yabastablog on September 19, 2009

I’m out on the road doing outreach in the Texas Panhandle to farm worker communities. I will be going to Hobbs– NM, Plains, Hereford, Pampa, Dumas and Cactus!

I’ll update soon on the outcome!

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Men and Trafficking

Posted by yabastablog on September 15, 2009

Great blog post in Huffington Post about one of my favorite topics of study in the human trafficking field. Men and trafficking. There are so little resources for them, and so few of them come forward we do not really have the statistics to show how big of a problem it really is.

Read on….

Dying To Work: Human Trafficking and the Construction Industry

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Economics and trafficking

Posted by yabastablog on September 14, 2009

We’ve known that poverty is a huge reason why human trafficking  exists today. So, why can’t we figure out how to alleviate the worst forms of poverty that force people to have to make decisions like selling their children, or leaving their families to look for work in a foreign land. Is globalization actually working? Can’t statements from the Secretary of State really make a difference? We need action!

Clinton Urges Crackdown on Human Trafficking

Secretary of state warns that human trafficking is flourishing in the shadows of the global economic downturn.

FOXnews.com

AP

Monday, September 14, 2009

VIENNA — U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton warns that human trafficking is flourishing in the shadows of the global economic downturn.

Clinton gave a video address to an international conference in Vienna examining the scourge of forced labor, sexual slavery and other forms of exploitation. She says urgent steps are needed to crack down on traffickers.

Clinton says she has seen the suffering firsthand: girls in Thailand who were trafficked as young children and are now dying of AIDS, and mothers in Eastern Europe whose daughters have vanished.

She warns that “new economic pressures are likely to aggravate the problem further.”

Clinton’s speech Monday kicked off a two-day conference of the Organization of Security and Cooperation in Europe.

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Outreach in North Texas

Posted by yabastablog on September 14, 2009

We will be going up north to do outreach in the great Panhandle of Texas the last few weeks of Sept. 2009! There have been many tips of labor exploitation going on in meat packing plants up north. Now that we know there are immigrants from all over the world in the small towns up north, we realize a lot of exploitation could be occurring. I will keep you up-to-date on the latest about our trip!

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The Aussies

Posted by yabastablog on September 14, 2009

Hmmmm…..Maybe the U.S. isn’t the only nation that believes profits or whether or not one is legal in their country is more important than the fact that children are being exploited…..

Child sex tourism study ‘blames Aussies’

STEVE LILLEBUEN

September 13, 2009

With a middle-class background and an internet connection, the Australian man is keen to explore travel deals advertised across the web.

He is the co-worker, relative and mate who awaits cheap flights to Southeast Asia that the economic downturn has made all the more plentiful.

But he is drawn to such tropical places not for the beaches, cheap drinks and a brief escape from the rat race.

He is the customer in a growing global issue that sees over 1.8 million children as young as eight years old being sold for sex – sometimes up to ten times a day – until they’re considered “worthless” before they reach their 30th birthday.

And new studies reveal this man has more mates than ever who think and act just like him.

Australians make up the largest portion of foreign sex offenders against children in Thailand, according to research at John Hopkins University in Baltimore that studied patterns of arrests and prosecutions between 1995 and 2006.

His money is fuelling a $US31.6 billion ($A36.5 billion) industry in trafficking in what a recent report by a global network of groups against child sex slavery concludes is a “massive human rights violation that is currently going largely unnoticed around the world”.

Bernadette McMenamin, CEO of Child Wise Australia, says child sex trafficking remains a hidden problem that most Australians have become complacent about – even though a main root of the global crime is the Australian offender.

“People tell us, ‘It happens overseas. Isn’t that an issue we talked about years ago?’ But what we’ve found is that … the supply and demand factors fuelling child sex slavery have actually grown,” she told AAP.

“The number of children entering the trade has grown. Efforts to combat this problem have not succeeded despite pouring money into overseas governments.”

A new global campaign called “Stop Sex Trafficking of Children and Young People,” will be launched on Monday to help reverse the trend and bring the issue back into the homes of the average Australian.

Being run across 45 countries, the campaign aims to raise awareness, conduct a survey on people’s attitudes and lobby national governments.

In February, Child Wise will step up the campaign by backing stalled amendments to child sex tourism laws in the federal parliament.

Rather than seeing authorities wait for child sex to occur before acting, the amendments seek out preparatory offences: stopping sex offenders from travelling overseas, buying flights and possessing child pornography.

“We’ve waited long enough,” Ms McMenamin says of the proposed changes. “We’re simply not keeping up with travelling sex offenders.”

Only small changes are required to save Asian girls from being sold into a life of slavery, she says.

The Body Shop has already joined the Child Wise campaign by selling a hand cream that directs profits to Cambodian outreach programs.

Such programs can provide support for girls and keep them in school with books, pens and bicycles.

It may not seem like a lot but the average child sex slave is sold for only a few hundred dollars by a family or boyfriend in poverty desperate for cash, she says.

In Cambodia children are brought in from Vietnam or taken from village to village, then off to Thailand.

All these victims suffer lifelong mental and physical damage. Some contract HIV/AIDS while most find it hard to reintegrate into society after a decade of such slavery.

Ms McMenamin says most Australians view the price of petrol as a greater concern than the welfare of foreign children.

“We have increased awareness and there have been some arrests but overall we’re not putting a dent in the problem,” she says.

“We need people to try and think beyond what’s going on in their lives.”

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