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Jan. 2009 News
Mexico
|
 |
|
Senator
Manlio Fabio Beltrones
(PRI Party)
Photo: Oswaldo Ramírez - Milenio Online |
Calderón atora la ley contra la trata de
personas: Beltrones
La demora deja
abierto un espacio de impunidad a la delincuencia organizada
El atraso de más
de ocho meses impide la creación de la Comisión Secretarial, indica.
Acusan al Presidente de no cumplir con los compromisos
internacionales.
Senator Beltrones: Mexico’s Human Trafficking Law is
Stuck Thanks to President Calderon's Refusal to Act
The delay leaves a wide open space for impunity and organized crime,
and
prevents the creation of the [inter-agency]
Secretarial Commission [required by the law].
Members of Congress accuse the President of
failing to comply with Mexico’s international commitments.
The coordinator of the Institutional Revolutionary Party (PRI) in
the Senate of the Republic, Senator Manlio Fabio Beltrones, has
accused President Felipe Calderón of causing the national law
against human trafficking to become 'stuck' because of the
President’s refusal to publish federal regulations to actually
implement the law.
Senator Beltrones stated that the situation
reflects a lack of willingness by the President to honor Mexico’s
international commitments in the midst of the current wave of
violence plaguing the country. The Senator added that there
should be no more excuses for inaction on the issue.
In
a meeting with members of the Confederation of National Popular
Organizations (CNOP) and the group’s leader Marco Antonio Bernal,
PRI party members expressed concern about the fact that the tools
that Congress has given to the government to fight this violence
have been
kept in the freezer.
In
a press release, the PRI block in the Senate summarized their
meeting with the CNOP and
expressed their regret that the Senate's attempt to provide legal
instruments to the Mexican Government to tackle this crime against
humanity [human trafficking] have so far been incomplete, due to the
defiance of the executive branch in regard to issuing the needed
regulations.
The press release urged President Calderon to rush the law's
regulations to publication, given that these delays are leaving
open a space of impunity for organized crime.
"The delay of over eight months in issuing the regulations, which
the law had required to be in place by May 21, 2008, has prevented
the formation of the inter-agency Secretarial Committee to be established by
the National Program to Prevent and Punish Trafficking in Persons,"
Senator Beltran said...
Further Background
• The
PRI in the Senate last week issued a
warning in the
Standing Committee of Congress that requires President Felipe Calderón
to issue the regulations of the Law to Prevent and Punish Trafficking in
Persons.
• It
is the fourth warning made to President Calderon, with the first three
having been issued on July 8, September 10 and December 4, of
2008 respectively. These previous calls to action went unanswered by President
Calderon.
•
The
warning signed by the PRI states that: "The
Federal Executive has committed a serious omission for
not having issued the regulations that will activate the law," .
Full English Translation
El coordinador
del PRI en el Senado, Manlio Fabio Beltrones, denunció que el
presidente Felipe Calderón ha atorado por ocho meses la promulgación
del reglamento de la ley para prevenir y sancionar la trata de
personas, lo que denota una falta de compromisos internacionales en
medio de la violencia que azota al país, y no debe haber más
pretextos para emitirlo.
Al reunirse con
integrantes de la CNOP encabezados por su dirigente, Marco Antonio
Bernal, los priistas manifestaron su preocupación por la crisis de
violencia que se ha generado a escala nacional y porque los
instrumentos que le ha dado el Congreso al gobierno se mantengan en
la congeladora.
En un comunicado,
la bancada tricolor reveló lo ocurrido en la reunión de Beltrones
con cenopistas, en la que el propio líder senatorial lamentó que el
esfuerzo del Legislativo por proveer de instrumentos jurídicos al
Estado mexicano para hacer frente a este delito de lesa humanidad
haya quedado, hasta ahora, “incompleto por la actitud omisa del
Ejecutivo federal” en la expedición del reglamento...
Angelica Mercado
Milenio Online
Jan. 26, 2009
Costa Rica
 |
|
Sign: Machista judges: Violence
against women is always a crime! |
Costa Rica
Urgent Campaign: Violence Against Women Is Always
a Crime
In a
divided vote, the Costa Rican Supreme Court’s constitutional
division, the Sala IV, declared unconstitutional the two types of
abuse most commonly punished under the Law to Penalize Violence
Against Women: physical abuse and emotional violence. The justices
decided that this aggression does not result in incapacitating
injuries and that verbal abuse, insults and systematic aggression
are endured by thousands of women everyday through out the country.
In light
of this tremendous setback, a campaign entitled “Violence Against
Women Is Always a Crime” has been launched to denounce the ruling of
Costa Rica’s Supreme Court. Promoted by the Red Feminista Contra la
Violencia Hacia las Mujeres (Feminist Network Against Violence
Against Women) and developed by the
Centro Feminista de Información y Acción
(CEFEMINA, Feminist Information and Action Center), this campaign
demands urgent international solidarity and support.
Deborah Meacham
Latin American and Caribbean Women's
Health Network
Jan. 16, 2009
Mexico
La ropa provoca, dice clero a mujeres
Autoridades
eclesiásticas responsabilizaron a las mujeres de ser culpables de
las agresiones sexuales que sufren, debido a la ropa “provocativa”
que visten
Clothing Provokes Violence, Clergy Tells Women
[Translation by Kristin Bricker]
Ecclesiastical
authorities say women are to blame for the sexual aggressions they
suffer, due to the "provocative" clothing they wear.
Note by author Kristin Bricker's:
The Catholic Church held
its Sixth World Meeting of the Families in Mexico City this month.
The World Meeting of the
Families was founded by Pope John Paul II. Mexican President Felipe
Calderon gave the surprise keynote address at the beginning of the
conference.
Ecclesiastical authorities blame women
for the sexual aggressions they suffer due to the "provocative"
clothing they wear.
With plunging necklines and mini-skirts, "they're provoking men,"
said the archbishop of Santo Domingo, Nicolas de Jesus Lopez
Rodrigez during the Sixth World Meeting of the Families.
Women expose themselves to rape, to
being used, to being treated like an old dishrag, because they
devalue themselves and their dignity, said the auxiliary bishop of
Tegucigalpa, Darwin Rudy Andino.
Likewise, laypersons who attended the
meeting said that women are the ones responsible for physical as
well as verbal attacks. They should dress modestly and not arouse
kinkiness in other people.
"It's their fault that they attack
them," added Ecuadorian Alexandra Marcillo.
Renato Ascencio, the bishop of Ciudad
Juarez said: women should not only change the way they dress, but
also their behavior. Modesty has been lost in the Mexican family...
The World Meeting of the Families'
official website recommends that women don't use provocative
clothing, that they watch how they look and gesture at other people,
and that they don't allow "hot jokes."
Additional notes from
Kristin Bricker:
*Ciudad Juarez is
internationally considered to be the femicide capital of Mexico.
While accurate estimates of how many women have been murdered in
Juarez are unavailable, what is most striking is how the dead women
are found. They are often raped and sexually mutilated beyond
recognition.
Bishop Renato Ascencio's
statement leads one to believe that he thinks women's lack of
modesty causes men to kidnap them, rape them, bite off their nipples
and mutilate them in other ways, murder them, and hide their bodies
for months before dumping multiple bodies killed in the same manner
in a field in his city.
Is women's lack of
modesty also to blame for the fact that these murders almost always
go unpunished, and that Mexican police rarely carry out rigorous
investigations?
Autoridades eclesiásticas
responsabilizaron a la mujer de ser culpables de las agresiones
sexuales que sufren, debido a la ropa “provocativa” que visten.
Con escotes pronunciados y minifaldas
“está provocando al hombre”, dijo el arzobispo de Santo Domingo,
Nicolás de Jesús López Rodríguez, durante el sexto Encuentro Mundial
de las Familias.
Las mujeres se exponen a violaciones, a
que las usen, que las traten como un trapo viejo, porque desvaloran
su persona y su dignidad, dijo por su parte el obispo auxiliar de
Tegucigalpa, Darwin Rudy Andino...
Natalia Gomez Quintero and Noemi
Gutierrez
El Universal - Mexico City
Jan. 16, 2009
Translated by Kristin Bricker
Jan. 17, 2009
See also:
La Iglesia culpa a escotes y minis de violaciones, ¿estás
de acuerdo?
El foro de El Universal sobre el tema
(El Universal newspaper's Internet forum about this story - in Spanish)
and...
Barrio Terrazas: dejó atrás el feminicidio y es embajador en Canadá
Las víctimas ocasionaron su muerte, decía el ex gobernador
Mexico's Congress has confirmed Francisco Javier Barrio Terrazas, of the National Action Party (PAN), as ambassador to Canada. Barrio Terrazas once declared that the murders of women in Ciudad Juarez, in Chihuahua state - of which there are over 400 to date - were "natural" because the victims were walking in dark places and had dressed provocatively
in miniskirts.
Full English Translation
México DF, 16 enero 09 (CIMAC).- México ratificó como embajador ante el Gobierno de Canadá al hombre que afirmó que los asesinatos de mujeres en Ciudad Juárez, Chihuahua --más de 400 hasta hoy-- era una situación “natural”, en virtud de que las víctimas caminaban por sitios oscuros y “se vestían de manera provocativa” con minifaldas: Francisco Javier Barrio Terrazas, del Partido Acción Nacional (PAN)...
Gladis Torres Ruiz
CIMAC Noticias
Jan. 18, 2009
About the PAN
The National Action Party (Partido Acción Nacional), known by the acronym PAN,
is a conservative and Christian Democratic party and one of the three main
political parties in Mexico...
In some cases, PAN mayors and governors have banned public employees from
wearing miniskirts (in Guadalajara)... and once, in Baja California, brought
religious and political pressure to bear on a
teenaged rape victim to dissuade her from the
abortion to which she was legally entitled. Carlos Abascal, secretary of the
interior in the latter part of the [Vicente] Fox administration, called birth
control pills weapons of mass destruction in 2005. Such stances are not,
however, shared by many of the PAN's middle-class rank and file members...
For the presidential election in 2006,
Felipe Calderón, a former party president, was
selected as the PAN candidate for the office of president, beating his
opponents...
From: NationMaster.com
Mexico
Juarez Femicides Lawyer Murdered
All lawyers involved in
the defense of two Juarez bus drivers falsely accused of femicide
have been executed; state police
[had] shot one in the head [in 2002]
Two unidentified gunmen executed Mario
Escobedo Salazar and his son Edgar Escobedo Anaya, also a lawyer, in
their Juarez office on Tuesday, January 6 [2009].
The double homicide comes nearly seven
years after Chihuahua State Judicial Police killed Escobedo
Salazar's other son, Mario Escobedo Anaya, during a chase. The
police originally stated that Mario Escobedo Anaya died when his
vehicle crashed during the chase. It was later revealed that he died
of a gunshot wound to the head fired by state police.
Prior to Mario Escobedo Anaya's 2002
execution, he, his father, and a third lawyer, the late Sergio Dante
Almaraz Mora, represented the two Juarez public transportation bus
drivers accused of murdering eight women whose bodies were found
dumped in an area of Juarez known as "the Cotton Field." Escobedo
Salazar's recent execution means that the entire defense team is now
dead; all were executed. One of the bus drivers also died under
suspicious circumstances while in police custody...
Kristin Bricker
My Word is My Weapon
Jan. 10, 2009
Added: Jan. 30, 2009
Mexico
 |
|
Lydia Cacho with her new book
“Not With My Child” Photo:
Deborah Bonello / Los Angeles Times |
Lydia Cacho publishes manual for parents on detecting child abuse
Lydia Cacho’s celebrity was apparent from the get-go last Thursday night in the trendy Condesa neighborhood of Mexico City, where the journalist launched her new book “Not With My Child” (Con Mi Hij@ No).
...Her latest book [is] a manual for parents in Mexico to help them recognize if their children are being abused and, if so, what they can do about it...
The sexual abuse of minors is a topic she has specialized in, and Cacho has been the victim of harassment due to her investigations into the issue.
She was a relatively unknown journalist until she published a book in 2006 that alleged the existence of a child sex ring in the southern state of Cancun, after which she was illegally arrested and harassed by some of the powerful men she implicated in “Los Demonios del Eden.”
She catapulted to fame when she challenged her aggressors by going public and filing a legal action against them — although it was ultimately unsuccessful.
Since then, Cacho has become something of a symbol for the issue of the repression of journalists and freedom of expression in Mexico. Her last book, “Memories of a Disgrace (Memorias de una Infamia)” detailed the events that unfolded after the publication of “Los Demonios del Eden.”
Speaking to a packed auditorium on Thursday, Cacho said that after “Los Demonios del Eden” was published, she was inundated by more than 3,000 e-mails from people who were worried their children were being abused, or who knew their children had been abused and didn’t know what to do about it. That prompted her to write “Not With My Child,” which she says is an effort to answer the questions she received from her anxious public...
“Not With My Child” includes chapters on the history of pedophilia and the sexual abuse of children, as well as how to negotiate Mexico’s ineffective justice system. Cacho says that building strong social networks is one of the most important means of detecting and putting a stop to child abuse in Mexico...
Deborah Bonello
Mexico Reporter
Jan. 26, 2009
United States
The Right Priority Now
National Association to Protect Children advocates for including anti-exploitation project funding in
President Obama's economic stimulus legislation
$50 MILLION in new funding for anti-child exploitation teams has been included in the Senate economic stimulus bill, thanks to Sen. Barbara Mikulski of Maryland.
PROTECT has worked with Sen. Mikulski on child exploitation and child rescue issues since 2007. She's a tough pro-child, anti-crime champion for children. Next, the full Senate will vote on the bill. Then House and Senate will hammer out differences between their two stimulus bills... the final hurdle for getting stimulus funding for child rescue.
Quick Overview: The heart of President Obama's Economic Recovery Plan is getting federal dollars to "shovel-ready" projects to generate jobs and economic activity. The President says these projects should be important for America and subject to full accountability. The single best way to do that, right now, is to gear up the national effort to combat child exploitation. This can be done by directing economic stimulus funds for the Justice Department (BJA, COPS and OJJDP) to state and local law enforcement for anti-child exploitation work...
Also from the Protect.org...
Last year [2008], law enforcement identified over 300,000
suspects distributing sadistic movies and photographs of very young children
being sexually abused, raped and tortured. The demand for these foul crime scene
recordings can only be supplied one way: through the abuse of more and more
children.
But the explosion of child pornography trafficking has not only caused a
modern-day human rights crisis, it has also given law enforcement powerful new
tools to find and stop child predators. Hundreds of thousands of criminals are
now hiding in plain sight, and 1 out of 3 arrests for child pornography uncovers
evidence of local child sexual abuse victims. Investigators can follow the trail
of child pornography trafficking "back through the Internet," directly to the
door of these criminals. That means that for the first time ever, we have the
power to stop and prevent child sexual abuse on a massive scale.
...The shocking truth is that while we could rescue thousands of children
tomorrow, less than 2% of these known suspects are even being investigated due
to lack of resources. In 2008, PROTECT won a major victory with the passage of
the PROTECT Our Children Act, but thousands of children will not be rescued
until the bill is fully-funded.
National Association to Protect Children
Jan. 20, 2009
|
United States
Big Increase In Child Pornography Cases Leads To Backlog At FBI's Forensic Laboratories
The FBI's stepped-up effort to fight Internet child pornography has led to an evidence backlog in the bureau's computer labs, auditors said Friday.
The Justice Department's inspector general said the number of such cases handled by the FBI rose more than 20-fold between the 1996 and 2007 budget years. As a result, the heavy volume meant it took an average of about two months to examine such evidence in 2007 _ and even as long as nine months.
The FBI, which has built a new lab in Maryland to handle the increased demand, agreed with the inspector general's recommendations to create deadlines to reduce the backlog.
In a written response to the report, the FBI's executive assistant director, Stephen Tidwell, said the bureau should try to hire more staff to handle the growing number of people needed to process digital evidence, not just in child exploitation cases but in other types of criminal investigations...
The Associated Press
Jan. 30, 2009
Washington, DC, USA
Pornografía de menores de edad atasca laboratorios del FBI. Número de casos se
multiplicó por 20
Washington, DC - El aumento de los casos de pornografía infantil en Internet ha
provocado un atasco en los laboratorios informáticos de la Oficina Federal de
Investigaciones (FBI), según una auditoría del Departamento de Justicia
publicada hoy. Recursos insuficientes
El informe señala que el número de casos tramitados por el FBI entre 1996 y 2007
se multiplicó por veinte, por lo que recomienda que se marque objetivos para
acabar los trabajos y tratar así de desbloquear los laboratorios de
investigación.. Es tal el aumento que el pasado año el FBI construyó otro
laboratorio informático para poder gestionar esta demanda, pero no ha sido
suficiente. El FBI señaló en un comunicado que está de acuerdo con las
recomendaciones del inspector general del Departamento de Justicia, Glenn A.
Fine, para crear los plazos para reducir el retraso.
En un comunicado, el subdirector ejecutivo del FBI, Stephen Tidwell, señaló que
la oficina tratará de contratar más personal para atender estos casos. Según
explicó, cada vez se necesitan lunes, enero 26, 2009
Univisión and EFE
Jan. 26, 2009
|
Native United States
Sex offender registries raises sovereignty issues
Washington, DC - Two laws authorizing national sex offender registries were highlighted during the year [2008].
The Violence Against Women Act, would establish a national tribal sex offender registry, as well as a related tribal registry of civil and criminal orders of protection issued by tribes and proximate jurisdictions.
The Adam Walsh Child Protection and Safety Act is not Native-specific and does not authorize a tribal orders-of-protection registry. AWA mandates the creation of tribal sex offender registries, but it does so on terms that empower the U.S. attorney general to revoke the jurisdiction of tribes that cannot or will not comply with the difficult, expensive and uncertain details of its implementation.
But because of the threatened transfer of tribal registration duties to states if Native governments do not meet federal government deadlines, and despite being left out during the law’s crafting and enactment, almost 200 tribes had agreed to establish their own AWA registries by mid-year.
At a meeting of National Congress of American Indian’s National Task Force to End Sexual and Domestic Violence Against Women, NCAI’s associate counsel Virginia Davis described the AWA as a “quagmire.”
“Unfortunately, the Adam Walsh Act basically tells about half the tribes in the country that if they don’t comply with these really onerous mandates that are in the law – that, again, don’t really make sense for tribal communities – if the tribes fail to comply with those, then all of the tribe’s authority to track and register and manage sex offenders on tribal lands will be given to the state,” Davis said. “So it raises some serious sovereignty concerns and we’re continuing to really struggle with the Adam Walsh Act. So the Adam Walsh Act is becoming a quagmire, a real challenge for Indian country that I think we’re going to keep talking about for the next couple of years...”
Gale Courey Toensing
Indian Country Today
Dec. 31, 2008
Colombia
 |
|
Raúl Quiroga Ariza |
Por delitos de pornografía infantil y acto sexual abusivo es encarcelado hombre en el Meta
Man is jailed for acts of child sexual abuse and child pornography
Meta - Raúl Quiroga Ariza, aged 48, was arrested while he was in possession of a cell phone
with nearly 30 pornographic pictures of minors. In court proceedings Quiroga Ariza
pleaded guilty.
"Using guile and ingenuity, Quiroga Ariza photographed the girls nude through
various means," said police commander Colonel Pablo Emilio Suarez Gomez.
Colonel Gomez Suarez stated that Quiroga Ariza obtained photographs of the
victims by first earning the confidence of mothers with limited economic resources.
He then gained easy access their daughters, who were girls between 8 and 12 years
of age.
Despite threatening to murder the victim's parents if they told of the abuse,
two girls did tell their parents, who immediately called police.
Colonel
Gómez Suárez made a public call for parents to report cases of sexual abuse of their sons and daughters, and
to take precautions against strangers who approach their children.
Raúl Quiroga Ariza, de 48 años de edad, fue capturado mientras tenía en su poder un teléfono celular con cerca de 30 fotografías pornográficas de menores de edad. El delincuente admitió ante un juez de control de garantías los cargos que le fueron imputados por la Fiscalía. "Valiéndose de artimañas y de la ingenuidad de las niñas, las manoseaba y fotografiaba de distintas maneras, con sus cuerpos desnudos", afirmó el coronel, Pablo Emilio Gómez Suárez, comandante de la Policía Meta.
Para obtener las fotografías de las menores, Quiroga Ariza primero se ganaba la confianza de las madres, de escasos recursos económicos, para así acceder sin dificultades a las hijas, niñas entre los 8 y 12 años, precisó el coronel Gómez Suárez.
A pesar de que a las pequeñas las mantenía en silencio bajo amenazas de que si denunciaban o le contaban a alguien lo que les estaba haciendo, mataba a sus mamás, 2 de las niñas decidieron contarle a sus papás lo que ocurría, quienes de inmediato denunciaron los hechos.El coronel Gómez Suárez hizo un llamado para que los padres denuncien los casos de abuso sexual de sus hijos e hijas, y tomen precauciones frente a las personas extrañas que se acercan a sus hijos. jueves, enero 29, 2009
El Tiempo
Jan. 26, 2009
Mexico
|

Congressional Deputy
Violeta del Pilar Lagunes Viveros
|
Puebla, décimo lugar en pederastia
La propuesta de la legisladora panista incluye la no prescripción del delito.
Puebla state holds tenth place in child sexual
abuse
Congresswomen proposes reforms in state criminal laws
Federal
congress-woman from Puebla state
Violeta Lagunes, of the National Action Party (PAN), has urged the Puebla state legislature to reform its penal Code of Social Protection to include acts of sexual abuse against children as
aggravating circumstances in cases where religious ministers and priests, or school teachers are involved.
Yesterday, Deputy Lagunes, who is the chair of the Special Committee for Policy and Administration of Justice Linked in Relation to Femicide of Congress, submitted a letter to the General Secretariat of the Congress of Puebla, urging them to use their moral and social authority to modify state laws in regard to the sexual abuse of children.
Lagunes' proposal is extremely avant-garde, inasmuch as her proposal, in-line with laws in the United States, would open a legal window to allow adults who suffered childhood sexual abuse to seek prosecution of the perpetrators.
Deputy Lagunes: "Based on [our] research, we realized the shortcomings in criminal law in the states, including the state of Puebla...
The letter presented by Deputy Lagunes states: "Puebla is among the 10 states with the highest rates of pedophilia in the country, and that there have been very serious cases in which ministers of religious denominations
who have been active subjects in sex crimes, such as the case of Father Nicolas Aguilar Rivera, who is accused of having sexually abused about sixty children.
"In the same vein, according to reports from the Secretariat of Public Education in the state of Puebla, during the year 2008, 11 teachers were prosecuted for committing sex crimes against minors in their care. These cases demonstrate the need for strong laws
that establish penalties covering both scenarios."
Presenta ante el Congreso local una serie de propuestas para reformar el Código de Defensa Social para que se incluya la agravante al delito de abuso sexual infantil cuando se perpetre por algún ministro de culto o docente
Con el escandaloso caso del cura pederasta Nicolás Aguilar Rivera y las 11 denuncias de abuso sexual infantil en contra de profesores, Puebla ocupa el décimo lugar a nivel nacional en pederastia, por lo que la diputada federal
Violeta Lagunes urgió al Congreso local modificar el Código de Defensa Social para que se incluya como agravante del delito cuando se perpetre por algún ministro de culto, sacerdote o docente.
Ayer, la diputada panista y presidenta Comisión Especial para Conocer las Políticas y la Procuración de Justicia Vinculada a los Feminicidios del Congreso de la Unión presentó ante la Secretaría General del Congreso local un escrito para que la LVII Legislatura modifique su ley para sancionar a las personas que abusen sexualmente de menores, valiéndose de su calidad moral o social.
Selene Ríos Andraca
La Quinta Columna
Jan. 29, 2009
Mexico
Enhanced role expected for U.S. in drug cartel battle
Mexico Bureau chief
chief Alfredo Corchado is currently a Nieman fellow at Harvard University.
Alarmed by spiraling drug violence along their shared border, U.S. and Mexican officials say they foresee an enhanced U.S. role in the battle against powerful cartels, including joint operations that could involve private American contractors or U.S. military and intelligence personnel.
The U.S. and Mexican officials say their cooperation could go beyond the current practice of "sharing intelligence." They say that historical concerns about Mexican sovereignty may be overcome by the challenge in restoring stability to key regions, particularly along the border...
"Mexico is not a narco state, but we're witnessing a giant criminal apparatus operated by drug traffickers," said Arturo Yañez, an author and security expert at the Autonomous University in the state of Mexico. "If Mexico is not a failed state, it sure is acting like one..."
Howard Campbell, a border anthropologist and drug expert at the University of Texas at El Paso...
"I really characterize this as a civil war, even if it's not formally declared," Campbell said. "We're seeing all the casualties of a war, people murdered, people wounded, people fleeing their homes, social disintegration and chaos...
"This is more like Afghanistan than Colombia, with regional, powerful chieftains who operate with complete authority, oftentimes through graft and corruption."
Alfredo Corchado
Dallas Morning News
Jan. 28, 2009
LibertadLatina
Note:
The lawless conditions across Mexico's northern and southern
border zones provide cover to drug cartels and other organized sex
trafficking organizations who systematically target the poor...
migrants, indigenous and rural women and girls especially, for mass
rape, kidnapping and enslavement in prostitution in Mexico, across
the United States and in Japan and Europe.
We call upon the administration of U.S. President Barak Obama to
structure its multi-hundred-million dollar support for the Calderon
government to ensure that they are required to end the corruption
and impunity that fuels these criminal mafias and their mass sexual
victimization of women and children.
It is just as likely that some of the $400 million dollar U.S.
funded
Merida Initiative aid package to
fight drug cartels will end up in the hands of those cartels
themselves, as not, given the corruption in the region.
In the meantime, women and girls, and all innocent members of
Mexican society and those who cross Mexico as migrants from South
and Central America (and Asia), are sitting ducks for waves of
violent sexual predators who victimize tens of thousands of women
and girls while the world sits on the sidelines and does,
effectively, nothing.
The victims, and those at risk of exploitation, enslavement and death await
our serious and effective efforts to protect and rescue them!
End impunity now!
Chuck Goolsby
LibertadLatina
Jan. 28, 2009
Mexico
Leticia Valdez Martell
Lydia Cacho
Puebla y Oaxaca, historia de un país productor de pornografía infantil
Desde el poder político y judicial, los pedófilos se fortalecen
Puebla and Oaxaca states, the history of a
child pornography producing nation
Pedophiles are protected by the heads of political and judicial
power
Lydia Cacho - [This] is the story of the
nation of Mexico as a producer of child pornography, where the
kidnapping of children is, in many cases, linked to sexual
exploitation. It is the story of a nation where, from the seats of
political and judicial power, pedophiles are strengthened, a nation
where such men unite and celebrate their power.
Three months ago, the mother of a victim of a child
pornography network sought me out. Her daughter was
abused at the age of 5 by a crime network that was run by
[millionaire businessmen] Succar Kuri and Kamel Nacif.
Their criminal enterprise was
protected by [Puebla state governor] Mario Marin and Emilio Gamboa, among
others...
Succar Kuri [now on trial] has... insisted that the
daughter return to court to retell her story for the umpteenth time.
The girl, now age fifteen, speaks of committing suicide if
she is forced to go to [the trial court in] the prison of La Palma
to confront her abuser once again, and if another judge dares to ask
her to narrate, again, her memories of childhood terror...
The victim’s mother is even less motivated to return to court
given that the Supreme Court of the Nation made a ruling that
effectively protected the child sex trafficking network of Kamel Nacif
and Governor Mario Marín.
The Court’s decision [in the Lydia Cacho
case] shielded the network of pedophiles and politicians,
who protect each other's shared personal and business interests and who
engage in political money laundering.
Like the families in the Succar Kuri case, Leticia Valdez
brings to court the videos of her young son’s abuse, and carries
photographs and medical evaluations that describe the damage caused
to her baby by pedophiles. And she talks and talks, seeking
that her country believe her…
Leticia Valdez… demands that the guilty pay for the crimes
that are clearly visible in the videos: acts of the rape of young
children carried out in a school.
While Valdez Martell dares to tell the truth,
Oaxaca state governor Ulises Ruiz Ortiz gives orders
intended to silence any discussion of the case. According to a court
secretary in Oaxaca, there are clear orders from the governor for
the case to be prolonged, so as not to allow the further
accumulation of evidence to take place….
But Valdez Martell is not alone. She has already benefited
from the fact that the Attorney General of Oaxaca has provided her
with twelve files of similar cases involving the same suspects. In
addition, the names of state police agents from Veracruz and Oaxaca,
as well as PRI [Institutional Revolutionary Party] officials, and,
according to sources, a PRD [Party of the Democratic Revolution]
member, also appear.
None of these 12 cases has ever been follow-up on…
Meanwhile, the media evades getting to the root of the
problem.
Why have the mothers and fathers of the other
children who were raped and used to produce child pornography by the same
clan [at the San Felipe Institute] remained silent?
Why did
Mexican Attorney General Eduardo Medina Mora
insist during a news interview with tv talking head
Carlos Loret de Mola, that human
rights violations reported by Amnesty International are [just]
individual cases?
Why have special prosecutors denied the
existence of pornography networks despite the fact that
journalists and the victims themselves have, time and again,
demonstrated that they do exist?
These networks of criminal impunity are not created in
silence, but in view of the entire country. They are woven together
beginning at the seats of power.
Pedophilia, Before the Supreme Court
Why did the Valdez case reach the Supreme Court?
…The case reached the Supreme Court because Ulises Ruiz, the
constitutional governor of Oaxaca, indirectly protects the network
of pedophiles that is involved in the case.
The case never came to court [in Oaxaca
state] because one of the lawyers for the [accused] pedophiles and
their accomplices is Jorge Franco Jimenez, who is the father of
Jorge Franco Vargas, the current president of the PRI political
party in Oaxaca…
The state government of Oaxaca will [act to save their
friends]. Meanwhile the production of “home” child pornography, as
one INTERPOL agent has called it, continues to grow under the
protection of those in power.
Mexico’s Attorney General will find arguments to make this case,
like millions before it, into one of “individual acts” of human
rights violations, while ignoring the role of the use of state power
in the defense of criminals.
We know that the federal
government of Mexico rejects the defense of human rights, and they
spit in the face of [president of the National Human Rights
Commission]
Jose Luis Soberanes, the Ombudsman who dreams of
presenting the Supreme Court with cases that the victim's [lawyers]
have prepared well...
The attacks against Leticia Valdez and her family will not
remain hidden. Society is watching Governor Ulises Ruiz and the
child pornography networks that he protects. One thing is clear:
Neither Leticia nor her family are alone. Millions of Mexican men
and women are on her side.
Full English Translation
Hace tres meses, me buscó la madre de una de las niñas que fuera utilizada, a los 5 años, para fabricar pornografía infantil por la red de Succar Kuri, protegido de Kamel Nacif, de Mario Marín y Emilio Gamboa, entre otros.
Con la mirada inundada de desesperanza, con la voz cansada, con la ira colgada de su pecho, me dijo que luego de casi cuatro años de abogados, de juicios, de amenazas de muerte, Succar otra vez quiere que su hija vaya a verlo y declare por enésima vez.
Y la niña, ahora de quince años, habla de quitarse la vida si la fuerzan a ir al penal de La Palma a ver a su abusador; si otro juez se atreve a pedirle que narre sus recuerdos de terror infantil. Y la madre dice que si tiene que matar a alguien, pues mata, pero a su hija no la vuelven a llevar a un juzgado.
Lydia Cacho
Appearing in CIMAC Noticias
Jan. 21, 2009
See also:
Lydia Cacho Starts Foundation
In October, 2008 Lydia Cacho formed
the Lydia Cacho Foundation, based in Madrid, Spain.
Please donate!
FundacionLydiaCacho.org
Video excerpt from the 2007 film
Demons of Eden,
that documents
the campaign of retaliation against Lydia Cacho.
This film clip includes a short statement by a girl who was
trapped by the Jean Succar Kuri / Kamel Nacif child sex
trafficking network, and includes video of Kamel Nacif
confronting Lydia Cacho during legal proceedings. Also
included is a audio conversation recorded between Kamel
Nacif and Puebla governor Mario Marin, during which Nacif
admits that he took revenge (with Governor Marin's help)
against Lydia Cacho for exposing what Nacif states were his
"parties with children."
Despite this extensive audio evidence, the Supreme Court
(which can investigate cases of high-level state
corruption), denied that any violation of Lydia Cacho's
basic rights took place (and thus shielding the child sex
trafficking network from scrutiny).
(See the below listed video for the Mexican public's
reaction to this decision by the Court.)
(In
Spanish)
TVCiudania (Citizen TV)
Presented on YouTube
Dec. 3, 2007
Video documentation
Leticia Valdez Martell speaks out at
rally for Lydia Cacho
Leticia Valdez Martell speaks at large rally
in front of Mexico's Supreme Court to protest the Court's
decision to reject a Court investigation of Puebla governor
Mario Marin and accused pedophile millionaire Kamel Nacif,
plotters in the kidnapping and torture of activist
journalist Lydia Cacho in revenge for publishing her exposé
against pedophile networks in Cancun: Demons of Eden.
(In Spanish)
TVCiudania
(Citizen TV)
Presented on YouTube
Dec. 3, 2007
Rogelio Mora-Tagle entrevista a la
periodista mexicana Lydia Cacho
Extensive TV news report on the the Lydia
Cacho case with Rogelio Mora-Tagle, including an interview
with Lydia Cacho in which she explains her arrest and
torture, the involvement of corrupt politicians and the
impunity that provides protection to accused child sex
traffickers in Mexico.
(In Spanish)
TVCiudania
(Citizen TV)
Presented on YouTube
Nov. 27, 2007
Lydia
Cacho interview after receiving the 2007 CNN Hero of
the World award.
(In
English)
|
CNN
Presented on YouTube
Dec. 3, 2007
|
Mexico
Mexico On Path To Becoming Bigger Security Threat Than Iraq
...The prospect that America's southern neighbor could melt into lawlessness
provides an unexpected challenge to Barack Obama's new government. In its latest
report anticipating possible global security risks, the U.S. Joint Forces
Command lumps Mexico and Pakistan together as being at risk of a "rapid and
sudden collapse."
"The Mexican possibility may seem less likely, but the government, its
politicians, police and judicial infrastructure are all under sustained assault
and pressure by criminal gangs and drug cartels," the command said in the report
published Nov. 25...
Retiring CIA chief Michael Hayden told reporters on Friday that that Mexico
could rank alongside Iran as a challenge for Obama _ perhaps a greater problem
than Iraq.
The U.S. Justice Department said last month that Mexican gangs are the "biggest
organized crime threat to the United States." National security adviser Stephen
Hadley said last week that the worsening violence threatens Mexico's very
democracy...
The grim assessments from north of the border got wide play in the Mexican media
but came as no surprise to people here. Many said the solution lies in getting
the U.S. to give more help and let in more migrant workers who might otherwise
turn to the drug trade to make a living.
Otherwise the drug wars will spill ever more heavily into America, said Manuel
Infante, an architect. "There is a wave of barbarity that is heading toward the
U.S.," he said. "We are an uncomfortable neighbor."
The Huffington Post
Jan. 18, 2009
Mexico
Threat of Violence on the Mexican Border Could Draw Federal Troops ...
Mexico City -
Escalating drug violence in Mexico and a fear that it may soon spill over into
the United States has resulted in a comprehensive defense plan that could see an
unprecedented military presence along the southern border.
...Concentrated around busy drug routes, especially the town of Ciudad de Juarez
just across the border from El Paso, Texas, the violence has resulted from a
struggle to control the lucrative narcotics trade into the United States,
representing the “greatest organized crime threat to the United States,"
according to a 2009 threat assessment prepared by the U.S. Department of
Justice.
Although the Department of Homeland Security kept exact details of the plan
under wraps, the Associated Press reported that it would likely include “federal
homeland security agents helping local authorities and maybe even military
assistance from the Department of Defense, possibly including aircraft, armored
vehicles and special teams to go to areas overwhelmed with violence.”
The Huffington Post
Jan. 12, 2009
Mexico, United States
Mexico's Instability Is a Real Problem
Don't discount the possibility of a failed state next door.
Mexico is now in the midst of a vicious drug war. Police officers are being bribed and, especially near the United States border, gunned down. Kidnappings and extortion are common place. And, most alarming of all, a new Pentagon study concludes that Mexico is at risk of becoming a failed state. Defense planners liken the situation to that of Pakistan, where wholesale collapse of civil government is possible.
One center of the violence is Tijuana, where last year more than 600 people were killed in drug violence. Many were shot with assault rifles in the streets and left there to die. Some were killed in dance clubs in front of witnesses too scared to talk.
It may only be a matter of time before the drug war spills across the border and into the U.S. To meet that threat, Michael Chertoff, the outgoing secretary for Homeland Security, recently announced that the U.S. has a plan to "surge" civilian and possibly military law-enforcement personnel to the border should that be necessary.
The problem is that in Mexico's latest eruption of violence, it's difficult to tell the good guys from the bad. Mexico's antidrug czar, Noe Ramirez Mandujano was recently charged with accepting $450,000 from drug lords he was supposed to be hunting down. This was the second time in recent years that one of Mexico's antidrug chiefs was arrested for taking possible payoffs from drug kingpins. Suspicions that police chiefs, mayors and members of the military are also on the take are rampant.
In the past, the way Mexico dealt with corruption was with eyes wide shut. Everyone knew a large number of government officials were taking bribes, but no one did anything about it. Transparency commissioners were set up, but given no teeth.
And Mexico's drug traffickers used the lax law enforcement their bribes bought them to grow into highly organized gangs. Once organized, they have been able to fill a vacuum in underworld power created by Colombian President Álvaro Uribe's successful crackdown on his country's drug cartels...
Joel Kurtzman
Wall Street Journal
Jan. 16, 2009
LibertadLatina
Commentary
The drug cartels that are waging war against the Mexican
state also control large segments of the highly profitable sex trafficking
business that kidnaps, rapes and enslaves thousands of women and girls each
year.
We encourage the incoming Obama administration to take note of this fact, and
not allow the human rights tragedy facing women and girls in Mexico to go
without a strong and effective international response.
In this drug war, sexual exploitation and slavery targeting Mexico's most
vulnerable people (children, migrants, the indigenous and other poor women) has
been pushed not just to the back burner of public and political attention, but
the subject has been pushed off the burner altogether.
Yet the sex traffickers and the drug cartels are often one in the same.
The lawless vacuum that exists across Mexico
today gives free reign to those who actively engage in the mass rape,
kidnapping, enslavement and murder of women and underage girls to fuel their
prostitution empires around the world.
Enough is enough!
Only the voices of we the people, directed
to our politicians, will raise awareness of this human rights crisis to a level where the United States,
Mexico and international institutions will have to take action.
The victims, and those at risk of exploitation, enslavement and death await
our serious and effective efforts to protect and rescue them!
End impunity now!
Chuck Goolsby
LibertadLatina
Jan. 16/19, 2009
|
Added: Jan. 19, 2009
Washington,
DC, USA
More than 1,200 alleged incidents of human trafficking reported in the U.S.
Washington - In the first 21 months of operation, the Human Trafficking Reporting System (HTRS) recorded information on more than 1,200 alleged incidents of human trafficking, the U.S. Department of Justice’s Bureau of Justice Statistics (BJS) announced today. The HTRS contains data collected by 38 federally funded human trafficking task forces on alleged incidents of human trafficking that occurred between January 1, 2007, and September 30, 2008.
The Trafficking Victims Protection Act of 2000 (TVPA), and its reauthorizations in 2003, 2005, and 2008 define a human trafficking victim as a person induced to perform labor or a commercial sex act through force, fraud, or coercion. Any person under age 18 who performs a commercial sex act is considered a victim of human trafficking, regardless of whether force, fraud, or coercion was present.
Most (83 percent) of the reported human trafficking incidents involved allegations of sex trafficking. Labor trafficking accounted for 12 percent of incidents, and other or unknown forms of human trafficking made up the remaining five percent. About a third (32 percent) of the 1,229 alleged human trafficking incidents involved sex trafficking of children...
Hispanic victims comprised the largest share (37 percent) of alleged sex trafficking victims and more than half (56 percent) of alleged labor trafficking victims. Asians made up 10 percent of alleged sex trafficking victims, compared to 31 percent of labor trafficking victims...
Bureau of Justice Statistics
Jan. 15, 2009
Arkansas, USA
Lack of translators for sex offender program
Bentonville - The state Correction Department says it does not have enough translators to accommodate non-English speakers if they are ordered into a treatment program for sex offenders.
The issue came to light after Circuit Judge David Clinger included the year-long treatment program as part of the sentences for two sex offenders. The department wrote Clinger, asking him to drop the requirement for the two convicts and to not make participation in the program a requirement if the defendant does not speak English.
Correction Department spokeswoman Dina Tyler said two men Clinger sentenced have holds through Immigration and Customs Enforcement and will likely be deported immediately upon release, Tyler said.
The department says about 360 of its inmates are Hispanic. Tyler says most speak at least some English.
"This non-English speaking population is new for us. Most of our population of this nature is coming from Benton County," Tyler said.
The Associated Press
Jan. 14, 2009
Mexico
Barrio Terrazas: dejó atrás el feminicidio y es embajador en Canadá
Las víctimas ocasionaron su muerte, decía el ex gobernador
Mexico Congress has confirmed Francisco Javier Barrio Terrazas, of the National Action Party (PAN), as ambassador to Canada. Barrio Terrazas once declared that the murders of women in Ciudad Juarez, in Chihuahua state - of which there are over 400 to date - were "natural" because the victims were walking in dark places and had dressed provocatively
in miniskirts.
Barrio Terrazas was the Mayor of Ciudad Juarez in the 1980s, and became Chihuahua state's governor in 1992.
This week, the plenary session of the Standing Committee of Congress approved Barrio Terrazas as Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary of Mexico to Canada.
On January 7th, 2009 President Felipe Calderón nominated Barrio Terrazas for Senate confirmation. Barrio Terrazas did not solve the femicide Ciudad Juarez and Chihuahua. He refused to create a special prosecutor's office the cases, and had received a recommendation from the National Human Rights Commission that he be censured for impunity and neglect in investigating the murders.
Only the Democratic Revolution Party (PRD) questioned the presidential appointment and abstained in the vote. Gerardo Villanueva of the Aztec Sun Party added his concerns that Barrio Terrazas had "done little or nothing in the fight against corruption in Mexico."
Pleas fall on deaf ears
During Barrio Terrazas' time as governor of Chihuahua, a coalition of community organizations called the Pro-Women Coordination called for the creation of a special prosecutor's office to investigate the crimes of women.
In 1997 Barrio Terrazas said that "special prosecutors have never been useful for anything." During the same year the national Congress set up a Special Commission to come to Ciudad Juárez to verify status of investigations.
Barrio Terrazas ended 1997 still refusing to create the special prosecutor's office. In January 1998, one month after Barrio Terrazas met with the visiting federal commission, he finally agreed to create a special prosecutor's office, and appointed Maria Antonieta Esparza as its head.
Also during 1998, the National Human Rights Commission (CNDH) addressed the case of femicide in the region and issued recommendations that highlighted the existence of impunity, and noted deficiencies in the investigations. For the first time in its history, the CNDH declared that sexism had impeded the investigation.
Shortly before the CNDH report was published, then ex-governor Barrio Terrazas stated that the rate of crimes against women in the region were within the "normal" range.
As CIMAC Noticias has documented, Barrio Terrazas has always minimized the importance of femicide, much as did former PRI (Institutional Revolutionary party) governor (from 1998 2004) Patricio Martinez, who said that the women who were murdered had caused their own deaths.
Today femicide remains an unresolved issue in Chihuahua state, to such a degree that on January 7, 2009, the same day that Calderon nominated Barrio Terrazas, the organizations Justice for Our Daughters and the Center for Human Rights for Women submitted to the Standing Committee of the Congress of Chihuahua state a petition to activate a Alert Gender, a law enforcement state of emergency that is stipulated in the state's Law Giving Women the Right to a Life Free of Violence.
The request is a reaction to the ongoing femicide. Far from being a settled issue, acts of femicide murder claimed two lives in the first week of 2009, according to Luz Estela Castro, coordinator of the Center for Human Rights for Women. Since November 25, 2008, the Day of Non-violence Against Women, to date, media have reported the malicious killings of 20 women. Fifty percent of those cases involved domestic violence.
As Lucha Castro says, "the femicide today has a history, which is one of neglect and apathy in the case of the missing victims." And part of that story involves the failure to act by officials, including former governor Barrio Terrazas, who dismissed the cries of help for the victims. So, stated the mothers of the victims, "we talk of negligence and complicity."
México DF, 16 enero 09 (CIMAC).- México ratificó como embajador ante el Gobierno de Canadá al hombre que afirmó que los asesinatos de mujeres en Ciudad Juárez, Chihuahua --más de 400 hasta hoy-- era una situación “natural”, en virtud de que las víctimas caminaban por sitios oscuros y “se vestían de manera provocativa” con minifaldas: Francisco Javier Barrio Terrazas, del Partido Acción Nacional (PAN).
Esta semana, el Pleno de la Comisión Permanente aprobó el dictamen por el que se ratificó como Embajador Extraordinario y Plenipotenciario de México en Canadá a quien fuera también Presidente Municipal de Ciudad Juárez y Gobernador de Chihuahua, en 1983 y 1992, respectivamente.
Fue Felipe Calderón quien el 7 de enero de 2009 le propuso al Senado de la República que Barrio Terrazas --cuya gestión de gobierno no solucionó el feminicidio en su entidad, se negó a crear una Fiscalía especial y recibió una recomendación de la Comisión Nacional de los Derechos Humanos (CNDH) por impunidad y negligencia en las investigaciones de los asesinatos-- fuera distinguido como embajador de México en Canadá.
Gladis Torres Ruiz
CIMAC Noticias
Jan. 18, 2009
Mexico
4º extrañamiento a Calderón: no publica Reglamento de Ley de Trata
Ha incurrido en una omisión grave: PRI
Mexico's Congress warns President Calderon for the
forth time for his failure to publish rules to
enable the 2007 Anti-Trafficking Law
Mexico City - The PRI (Partido Revolucionario Institucional) caucus in the Standing Committee of the Congress had reached an agreement to release its forth Letter of Concern [warning] to President Felipe Calderón in response to the President's failure to publish rules that will allow the 2007 Law to Prevent and Punish Trafficking in Persons to be put into force.
The first call made to insist that President Calderón publish the regulations that implement the law was announced on July 8, 2008. The second request was made on September 10, 2008 and the third on December 4 2008. All three previous requests went unanswered by the President.
During its regular session on January 13 this year, senators from the PRI stated that Calderon has engaged in a serious omission by not issuing the regulations, because "in the fight against crime the state must follow-through with its responsibilities [hold up its end of the bargain]."
Senator Raul Gonzalez Mejia asked the President to report to Congress on the status of progress in forming the Inter-Ministerial Commission which the Act calls-for in its Article 12.
The Act states that the federal government should establish an Inter-Ministerial Commission, under Article 21 of the Organic Law of Federal Public Administration, to coordinate their actions to develop and implement the National Program to Prevent and Punish Trafficking in Persons.
The Commission shall be composed of agencies of the Federal Public Administration and the Attorney General's Office, and should include the Calderon government's policies on the prevention and punishment of trafficking in persons, as well as guidelines for the protection and care of victims...
Under the law, federal Interior Ministry and the Ministry of Public Security must both sign agreements with the the states and the federal district in regard to the law.
The law establishes that a person shall be in violation of the crime of human trafficking when they encourage, order, offer, facilitate, transport, hand-over or receive, for themselves or for another person, a person. A person who, through physical or moral violence, deception or abuse of power, causes a victim to be subjected to sexual exploitation, forced labor or services, slavery, practices similar to slavery, servitude or the removal of an organ, is guilty of the crime of human trafficking.
When a convicted person is declared criminally responsible for the crime of trafficking, the judge must order that person to pay reparations to the victim(s), including the costs of medical treatment, rehabilitation, physical therapy, occupational therapy, transportation, and food and housing.
La bancada del Partido Revolucionario Institucional (PRI) en la Comisión Permanente del Congreso presentó un punto de acuerdo para emitirle un cuarto extrañamiento y primero de este año a Felipe Calderón por no expedir el reglamento de la Ley para Prevenir y Sancionar la Trata de Personas (Ley de Trata) publicada en el Diario Oficial de la Federación el 27 de noviembre de 2007.
Este es el cuarto exhorto que se le realiza a Felipe Calderón respecto la publicación del Reglamento de la Ley de trata, el primero fue hecho el 8 de julio de 2008, el segundo el 10 de septiembre de 2008 y el último el 4 de diciembre de 2008, los tres quedaron sin respuesta.
Durante la sesión ordinaria del 13 de enero de este año, las y los senadores del PRI afirmaron que Calderón ha incurrido en una omisión grave, al no expedir dicho Reglamento, pues “en la lucha contra el crimen el Estado tiene que cumplir con la parte que le corresponde.
Gladis Torres Ruiz
CIMAC Noticias
Jan. 16, 2009
Mexico, United States
Mexico's Instability Is a Real Problem
Don't discount the possibility of a failed state next door.
Mexico is now in the midst of a vicious drug war. Police officers are being bribed and, especially near the United States border, gunned down. Kidnappings and extortion are common place. And, most alarming of all, a new Pentagon study concludes that Mexico is at risk of becoming a failed state. Defense planners liken the situation to that of Pakistan, where wholesale collapse of civil government is possible.
One center of the violence is Tijuana, where last year more than 600 people were killed in drug violence. Many were shot with assault rifles in the streets and left there to die. Some were killed in dance clubs in front of witnesses too scared to talk.
It may only be a matter of time before the drug war spills across the border and into the U.S. To meet that threat, Michael Chertoff, the outgoing secretary for Homeland Security, recently announced that the U.S. has a plan to "surge" civilian and possibly military law-enforcement personnel to the border should that be necessary.
The problem is that in Mexico's latest eruption of violence, it's difficult to tell the good guys from the bad. Mexico's antidrug czar, Noe Ramirez Mandujano was recently charged with accepting $450,000 from drug lords he was supposed to be hunting down. This was the second time in recent years that one of Mexico's antidrug chiefs was arrested for taking possible payoffs from drug kingpins. Suspicions that police chiefs, mayors and members of the military are also on the take are rampant.
In the past, the way Mexico dealt with corruption was with eyes wide shut. Everyone knew a large number of government officials were taking bribes, but no one did anything about it. Transparency commissioners were set up, but given no teeth.
And Mexico's drug traffickers used the lax law enforcement their bribes bought them to grow into highly organized gangs. Once organized, they have been able to fill a vacuum in underworld power created by Colombian President Álvaro Uribe's successful crackdown on his country's drug cartels...
Joel Kurtzman
Wall Street Journal
Jan. 16, 2009
LibertadLatina
Note:
The drug cartels that are waging war against the Mexican
state also control large segments of the highly profitable sex trafficking
business that kidnaps, rapes and enslaves thousands of women and girls each
year.
We encourage the incoming Obama administration to take note of this fact, and
not allow the human rights tragedy facing women and girls in Mexico to go
without a strong and effective international response.
In this drug war, sexual exploitation and slavery targeting Mexico's most
vulnerable people (children, migrants, the indigenous and other poor women) has
been pushed not just to the back burner of public and political attention, but
the subject has been pushed off the burner altogether.
Only the voices of we the people, directed
to our politicians, will raise awareness to a level were the United States,
Mexico and international institutions will have to act.
The victims, and those at risk of exploitation, enslavement and death await
our serious and effective efforts to protect and rescue them!
End impunity now!
Chuck Goolsby
LibertadLatina
Jan. 16, 2009
California, USA
Arrestan a hombre que habría "vendido" a su hija
Tanto el padre como el joven fueron detenidos por violar las leyes de California sobre tráfico humano y violación de un menor
Un hombre de 36 años, de nombre hispano, fue detenido en una zona rural de California por haber pactado casar a su hija de 14 años a cambio de dinero, alcohol y comida, informó el martes una fuente policial.
Según la policía de Greenfield, una región agrícola a 225 km al sudeste de San Francisco, Marcelino de Jesús Martínez acordó con un joven de 18 años que contrajera matrimonio con su hija adolescente a cambio de 16.000 dólares, 100 cajas de cerveza y comida.
El hecho fue descubierto por las autoridades luego de que el padre acudiera a la policía a quejarse por no haber recibido el pago del acuerdo, mientras la hija de 14 años había sido obligada a mudarse con su "marido".
Tanto el padre como el joven fueron detenidos por violar las leyes de California sobre tráfico humano y violación de un menor.
www.laprensahn.com
Jan. 15, 2009
Added: Jan. 14, 2009
California, USA
Police: Man sold teen daughter into marriage for cash, beer, meat
Such arrangements are normal in Mexican state where family is from, police say
Greenfield -
A California man sold his 14-year-old daughter to an 18-year-old man for cash, beer and meat -- then called police when the prospective bridegroom didn't live up to his end of the deal, authorities said Tuesday.
Marcelino de Jesus Martinez, 36, of Greenfield, California, was arrested Monday and booked into the Monterey County Jail, Greenfield police said in a statement. He faces felony charges of receiving money for causing a person to cohabitate, police said.
All those involved in the case are from the western Mexican state of Oaxaca, the police chief said. In the Oaxacan community, such an agreement is "normal and honorable," he said. "In California, it's against the law..."
"The 14-year-old juvenile moved in with Galindo and when payments were not received, the father, Martinez, called Greenfield PD to bring back the daughter," according to a written police statement...
The Greenfield area has had a large influx of Oaxacans. A presentation on understanding Oaxacan culture is posted on the Greenfield police Web site.
"Arranged marriages are common in several cultures, and this is not an issue among consenting adults over the age of 18," police said in the statement. "But California has several laws regarding minors, the age of consent and human trafficking."
Police are trying to be culturally sensitive, Grebmeier told CNN, but "when I'm in Mexico, I have to respect Mexican laws. When you're in the United States, you have to respect United States laws. That's the bottom line."
Ashley Broughton
CNN
Added: Jan. 13, 2009
California, USA
Dad Sells Girl, Calls Cops to Complain He Wasn't Paid
One hundred cases of beer was only part of what a California man wanted in exchange for his daughter.
Greenfield - Greenfield, Calif., police said Marcelino de Jesus Martinez, 36, tried to arrange for his 14-year-old daughter to marry Margarito de Jesus Galindo, 18, for $16,000 and 100 cases of beer, along with several cases of meat and other items.
After the girl moved in with Galindo, Martinez called police to complain that he hadn't been paid. Police said he asked for their help getting his daughter back...
Galindo, the intended buyer/groom, was booked on suspicion of statutory rape, police said.
Police said the practice of arranged marriage in some cultures is not
relevant in the case, and even if it were, California law doesn't go for it when one or both parties have been coerced.
NBC4 Los Angeles
Jan. 13, 2009
LibertadLatina
Commentary
Within
the southern Mexican state of Oaxaca and its regional neighbors Chiapas
and Guerrero, many indigenous cultures engage in the tradition of arranged
marriage. Typically this practice starts at age 11 for girls. This
involves an exchange of food and goods that are given to the girl's parents (a
sort of dowry).
Child marriage is also common across Latin America.
These 'traditions' have caused a clash with the cultural values and laws of the United States,
which is the destination of tens of thousands of people who practice these
beliefs.
Unfortunately, human
traffickers long-ago figured out how to exploit these traditions for their
profit.
Members of trafficking gangs 'marry' young, underage girls in southern Mexico
[and in neighboring Guatemala], in exchange for a few boxes of fruit and cases
of beer, and then they sell these girls into forced prostitution both locally
and internationally via organized sex
trafficking networks.
Tens of thousands of these girl victims are enslaved in brothels, in places like
Tapachula, a child prostitution mega-center on the Mexico-Guatemala
border, in the child prostitution mege-centers of Tijuana and Acapulco (which
cater largely to thousands of male sex tourists from the U.S.), in the San
Diego County, California child rape camps (where a large Oaxacan
population also lives), and in Europe and Japan.
The nation of Mexico does nothing of substance to protect these victims. Within
the United States, the problem is off-the-radar-screen for many in law
enforcement.
Mexico's indigenous population has been looked-upon as free source of labor and
sexual exploitation for centuries. With billions of dollars of drug cartel money
in their pockets, sex trafficking networks today
(including Colombian and Mexican drug cartels, the Japanese Yakuza, the maras
(youth gangs) and the Russian Mob - are taking that condoned 'tradition'
of exploitation to a
whole new commercial level as the World, including the United States, stands-by and does nothing.
That must change!
Meanwhile, on Mexico's southern border with Guatemala, organized criminal culture (made up of
these same mafias, cartels and gangs, as well as thousands of
corrupt police, immigration agents and soldiers)...
systematically rape 450 to 600 migrant women and underage
girls each day, with no police response whatsoever,
along migration routes traveled daily by thousands of people.
And that is just the statistic in the southern border region.
Women and girls in the region, and especially along the "Milky Way" (the local
name for the entire south-to-north migration route across Mexico to the U.S.
border, where sex traffickers systematically kidnap and enslave women), and
especially women and girls in Mexico's many indigenous communities, are
at risk. Today, as poverty in the region increases dramatically, they are not protected by anyone from this mass
for-profit anti-female crime wave and gender-hostile
living environment.
Urgent action is needed to protect victims and those who are at risk!
We look forward to the active interest and participation of the new U.S.
presidential administration of Barak Obama, and incoming Secretary of State
Hillary Clinton, in regard to forming, finally, a truly organized response to
these crimes against humanity, that
does not blatantly ignore the real needs of Latin Americas poor, Afro-descendent and indigenous victims.
Stop this madness!
U.S. political pressure on Mexico's government and its human trafficking cartels
will not happen unless and until we the people add our voices of outrage to
the political process.
Its time to act ... today, not tomorrow!
End impunity now!
Chuck Goolsby
LibertadLatina
Jan. 14/15, 2009
See also:
En Japón, de 3 a 4 mil niñas mexicanas víctimas de ESCI
Afirma la experta Teresa Ulloa
Three to four thousand underage indigenous girls from the poor states of Oaxaca, Chiapas, Guerrero and Mexico [state] have become victims of commercial sexual exploitation of children
(CSEC) in Japan.
Puebla city, in Puebla state - Teresa Ulloa, Latin America and Caribbean Director of the Coalition Against Trafficking of Women (CATW)
announced her estimates of the numbers of indigenous children sex trafficked to
Japan, and explained that traffickers trick the victims using offers of
thousands of dollars for their parents in exchange for [obtaining
permission] to take their daughters. The parents are told that their girls are going to the United States to work in fast food restaurant jobs.
The city of Tapachula, near
Mexico's border with Guatemala,
is one of the largest and most lawless child sex
trafficking markets in all of Latin America.
A 2007 study by...
ECPAT
[End Child Prostitution and Trafficking]...
revealed that over 21,000 Central Americans, mostly
children, are prostituted in 1,552 bars and brothels
in Tapachula.
Undercover Reporter in Spain Poses as Buyer, is Offered Six 13 Year Old 'Virgin' Mayan Girls Kidnapped from Chiapas, Mexico, Mexican Trafficker's Price: $25,000 Each.
(In Spanish)
Chiapas State Investigates Sale of Young Mayan Girls in Europe.
(In Spanish)
The Girls Next
Door
The New York Times'
ground-breaking story on child and youth sex trafficking
from Mexico into the United States
LibertadLatina
|
Mexico
Al salir, viajar por México hacia EU y regresar a casa
Migración de centroamericanas, el fenómeno de la violencia
Central American women face violence during migration
Comitán [in southern Mexico] - Central American women migrants leave their countries of origin and then travel through Mexico on their way to the United States.
During their travels they experience many forms of gender violence.
That violence does not end when they return to their homes. Upon returning, they are stigmatized for having left their towns, and they are looked upon as being 'easy' women by local men.
This situation is worse for returning women migrants, mainly from Honduras, El Salvador and Guatemala, who have been victims of sex and labor trafficking. They return to their homes without money, and are seen as having failed. By contrast, men who return home are viewed with dignity.
Men in their local communities believe that if these women were sexually
exploited outside of the country, they too have a right to do so.
It is important to note that indigenous Central American women are up to four times more vulnerable to these forms of violence, because of their
gender, ethnicity and condition as undocumented migrants.
These issues were addressed during the Second Binational Workshop on Gender and Intercultural Identity, which was conducted in Comitan,
in Chiapas state. Rubí Escamilla from the International Organization for Migration (IOM) spoke at the event.
Escamilla is a member of the IOM team in the city of Tapachula, Chiapas [an epicenter of child sex trafficking
near the Guatemalan border], where she provides inter-agency assistance to women who are victims of sex and labor trafficking, as well as those who have faced sexual violence during their migration across Mexico to the United States.
During the meeting, which was convened by the Latin American Association of Organizations for the Promotion of Development (ALOP), Ruby Escamilla explained that six to
eight out of every ten Central American women - some 30 to 40 percent of 1,500 migrants who cross Mexico's southern border daily, suffer some form of sexual violence
[that amounts to 450 to 600 new victims of rape
with impunity each day].
Women migrants also face robbery, physical assault, extortion and abduction by
criminal groups and by elements of federal and state police forces and the Mexican Army.
Escamilla reported that women migrants leave their homes due to poor [local] economies and insecurity
[vulnerability to organized crime].
Luís Flores, project officer for the IOM in Tapachula, noted that during the two and a half years that their project has spent working on the southern Mexican border, they have identified at least 150 cases of sex and labor trafficking. Some 40 to 50 victims have been assisted. Some victims have refused help.
Central American migrant women are also stigmatized in Mexico. Honduran migrants, for example, are refused domestic work, unlike other Central American women, because they are considered to be husband stealers (roba maridos).
This situation forces them to work in bars to earn enough money to continue their journey to the United States. In Tapachula, roughly 90 percent of Honduran migrant women are sex workers, which makes them vulnerable to human traffickers.
Despite the existence of Mexico's human trafficking law, and the fact that the Attorney General's Special Prosecutor for Violent Crimes Against Women and Trafficking (FEVIMTRA) exists, few if any of the 331 human rights complaints filed by migrants in 2007 have succeeded.
Despite having been created by Congress to address gender violence issues, FEVIMTRA has yet to formulate policies and receive funding that will allow it to operate.
Las migrantes centroamericanas durante el tránsito de sus países hacia México rumbo a Estados Unidos viven distintos tipos de violencia, que no terminan cuando regresan a sus lugares de origen, pues al volver son estigmatizadas por haber salido de sus pueblos, consideradas “fáciles, sin valor”, por los hombres de sus comunidades.
Esta situación se agudiza cuando las mujeres migrantes, provenientes principalmente de Honduras, El Salvador y Guatemala, son víctimas de trata de personas con fines de explotación sexual y laboral, pues regresan sin dinero a sus casas, “fracasadas”; caso contrario al de los varones que al volver “se dignifican”.
Cabe mencionar, que las migrantes centroamericanas indígenas son todavía más vulnerables, hasta cuatro veces por su condición de género, migrante, sin documentos y su origen étnico.
Guadalupe Cruz Jaimes
CIMAC Noticias
Dec. 23, 2008
See also:
The city of Tapachula, near
Mexico's border with Guatemala,
is one of the largest and most lawless child sex
trafficking markets in all of Latin America.
A 2007 study by...
ECPAT
[End Child Prostitution and Trafficking]...
revealed that over 21,000 Central Americans, mostly
children, are prostituted in 1,552 bars and brothels
in Tapachula.
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LibertadLatina
News /
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Updated:
June 24, 2010
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Últimas Noticias
Latest News
Texas, USA
Texas Supreme Court: Kids in Prostitution Are Victims, Not Criminals
The case of a 13-year-old girl who was prosecuted for prostitution (while her 32-year-old pimp got away) in Texas was decided by the Texas supreme court this week. And they've said categorically that children in the commercial sex industry aren't criminals, they're victims of child sex trafficking. This decision is significant not only for the children of Texas, but for kids around the country as more and more states may begin to see child prostitution for what it is: a crime against children.
On the one hand, declaring that children in prostitution are victims as opposed to criminals sounds like a no-brainer. Every state has an age of sexual consent that prohibits children of a certain age from consenting to sex. Why should the fact that a financial transaction is involved suddenly make children and young teens able to consent to sex? But Texas, like almost all states, never provided an age limit on the crime of prostitution. So it was legally possible for a 13-year-old to be a victim of the crime of statutory rape, but a perpetrator of the crime of prostitution -- both for the same act!
The Texas Supreme Court decision is poised to change that -- not just in Texas, but across the country. The ruling sets an important precedent by stating that children in the commercial sex industry are victims of a crime and should be treated as such. Will other states take this ruling and use it in their own cases, aiming to protect children from sexual exploitation? Will this lead a new movement to decriminalize minors in prostitution while placing the onus for their abuse on their pimps and the men who buy them? Only time will tell.
If this does mark the beginning of a new trend, then one thing is abundantly clear: we need some place to put these girls. One of the major reasons the Texas 13-year-old was prosecuted in the first place was the D.A. argued that jail was safer than the streets, and in juvenile detention she'd have access to social services she couldn't get elsewhere. And the sad thing is in many areas, the only safe place off the streets is juvenile detention. But locking up victims (aside from being wrong) can traumatize them even more. So if we as a country follow Texas's lead and say teens in prostitution are victims, then we need to build them shelters and safe houses, not jails...
Amanda Kloer
Change.org
June 24, 2010
|
Texas, USA
Loophole closed for illegal immigrants accused of serious crimes
They are accused child rapists, drug dealers and thieves. And because of major reforms in the justice system
- spurred by a News 8 investigation - those people now face prosecution.
As recently as November, because of a loophole in the law, many would have simply been set free without ever going to trial.
Until it was fixed, the loophole allowed for the deportation of accused criminals
- and a breakdown in the justice system.
We introduced you to "Sylvia" back in November. While she is an American citizen, her husband, Jose Salvador Tinajero, is Mexican.
He had just been deported instead of prosecuted for molesting her two children.
"There is no justice," Sylvia said last year, "especially for my girls, my family. There is none."
Today, she is simply overwhelmed at the progress that's been made.
News 8 first broke the story that more than 1,000 illegal immigrants who were charged with serious crimes like murder had been deported before their cases ever went to trial.
Many were bused back to Mexico and simply set free across the border.
In November, we spoke to Sgt. Ernesto Fierro, an investigator for the Dallas County District Attorney's office. At the time, little was being done to fix the problem, and Fierro said he was "furious" about it.
Buena Valentin is a Mexican citizen charged with raping his girlfriend's seven-year-old daughter. After the attack on the girl
- and her sister - they immediately ran to church for help.
"She looked really bad. Very bad," said Eleuterio Cabrera of Templo de Dios. "She was crying. The girls were very, very, very bad. It was horrible."
What was the problem?
After an arrest, the district attorney's office was usually not notified until a case had been in the system for several weeks. In that gap of time, the accused paid his bond.
Then - because the suspect was in the U.S. illegally - he was turned over to ICE, Immigration and Customs Enforcement. The job of that agency is to deport, regardless of pending charges.
Now, however, because of News 8 reports, those holes in the system are all plugged, and Sgt. Ernesto Fierro has a new, full-time assignment: Keeping people like Buena Valentin in jail.
"I feel great; I feel really good," Fierro said. "I feel like I've really done something here."
And the 90 crime suspects in Fierro's book will remain incarcerated in the Dallas County jail until their cases are settled.
"Many of them would've been on the bus back to their home country," Fierro said, without the changes to the system.
Two big fixes are:
* A mandatory $100,000 bond for anyone who is a flight risk due to possible deportation. In some cases, that's a 20-fold increase.
* Improved communication and cooperation between Dallas County and ICE.
"I appreciate you guys highlighting," said Nuria Prendes, the top ICE agent in Dallas. "If we're not made aware of things, there's no way we can fix them." ...
Federal officials say one in four felony defendants are in the U.S. illegally. News 8 has attempted to find out how many are deported before trial, but no government agency tracks the issue, and privacy rules have impeded our efforts to learn more.
Still, there is strong evidence the loophole does exists nationwide. We found cases in Florida, Massachusetts and New York...
Davis Schechter
WFAA
June 23, 2010
See also:
Texas, USA
Hundreds in Dallas County
Deported Before Their Trials
Hundreds of defendants awaiting trial for violent
crimes in Dallas County have been deported by
federal immigration officials and then set free in
their home countries.
The practice goes back to at least 1991 and includes
the release of murder, kidnapping and child rape
suspects. U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement
officials say they're required to deport illegal
immigrants quickly but are now in talks with local
agencies who are trying to resolve the problem...
One survey of prosecutors shows that since 1991 in
Dallas County, nearly 1,000 illegal immigrants have
not stood trial after being accused of felonies.
That number also counts cases in which a wanted
person fled before being arrested, but does not
include all Dallas County cases - just ones that
prosecutors judged to be of the highest priority.
Those who post bail and agree to then be sent home
are taking advantage of the system to escape
justice, said Terri Moore, top assistant to District
Attorney Craig Watkins...
Officials from the DA's office, the Dallas County
Sheriff's Department and ICE met this week to
discuss the problem. No quick fixes were found, but
they plan to meet again, officials said...
The agency's policies led to
the deportation of one defendant, Jose Rico, who
returned to Mexico before he could stand trial in
the rape of two girls in separate incidents. DNA
connected him to both sexual assaults, court records
show.
Both girls, ages 12 and 14,
were bound with clear duct tape. The attacker told
one of the girls: "I have a gun. I will kill you."
Rico, 34, posted his $125,000
bond and was deported in August...
In Dallas County, judges this week took a step
toward decreasing the chances that someone in the
country illegally will post bond and be deported
before trial. Judges began setting the bail at
$100,000 per charge if a defendant is in the country
illegally.
Under the new system, the bail for Rico, the child
rape suspect, probably would have been $200,000...
Jennifer Emily
Dallas News
Nov. 14, 2009
See also:
Dallas Police Identify Suspect
in 2 Child Rapes
Dallas police today released the identity of the man
believed to be responsible for raping two children
in northeast Dallas.
He
was identified as Jose Rico, 33, an illegal
immigrant, police said.
Rico
was being held in the Dallas County jail on charges
of aggravated sexual assault and burglary of a
habitation.
He
is also under an immigration hold...
In
both assaults, the victims -- girls between 12 and
14 -- were home alone when a man entered through an
unlocked doors. Both girls were bound before they
were raped.
[During] the
Oct. 16 assault the attacker... entered the home
while the girl and an 11-month-old baby were alone.
The
man confronted the girl as she was coming out of a
bathroom, pushed her back in and turned off the
lights. He threatened to hurt the baby if she
screamed.
[During] the
Jan. 30 attack... a man with a similar description
bound and raped a girl while she was home alone.
Dan X. McGraw
The Dallas Morning News
March 26, 2009 |
Connecticut, USA
|
 |
|
Kimberly Revolorio and Celetino Aguilar |
New Haven Police Ask For Help Finding Missing Teen
Police are asking for the public's help locating a missing 15-year-old girl.
Kimberly Revolorio was last seen on May 29 at 903 Congress Ave.
Police said they believe she left willingly and may be with Celetino Aguilar, 35.
Revolorio is described as a 5-foot-tall, 103-pound Hispanic female with long black hair and a light brown complexion, police said.
Aguilar is a 6-foot-tall, 175-pound Hispanic male with short black hair. He may be clean shaven but is known to have a mustache and goatee, police said.
Anyone with information on their whereabouts is asked to call the New Haven Police Department at 203-946-6316 or the Special Investigations Unit at 203-946-6290.
Julie Stagis
The Hartford Courant
June 24, 2010
New Jersey, USA
Pennsylvania halfway house escapee is caught in Newark, charged with sex assault
A man who escaped from a Pennsylvania Department of Corrections halfway house and was captured Wednesday in Newark has been charged with raping a 12-year-old child while he was on the loose.
Daniel Rosario, 33, was captured by the U.S. Marshals Service in Newark.
U.S. Marshal Michael Regan says Rosario failed to return March 25 to a halfway house in Scranton where he had been serving time on burglary charges. Authorities allege that Rosario raped a child in Dickson City earlier this month.
U.S. Marshals caught up with Rosario at an apartment building in Newark. Regan says Rosario fled on foot and scaled a razor-wire fence before being captured...
The Associated Press
June 24, 2010
The World, Latin America
|
 |
|
Latin America in the global crime big
picture
* Latin America exports $38 billion
annually in cocaine to the U.S., while exporting $34
billion to Europe
* The region generates $6.6 billion
by smuggling 3 million migrants annually into the
U.S. and Canada
Note that much of Latin America's
drug trade profits are used to finance human
trafficking operations.
By comparison, the world's second
largest organized criminal enterprise - heroin
trafficking from Afghanistan, generates $33 billion
in annual sales to Europe and Asia.
In other words, the impunity of human
trafficking is not ending any time soon in Latin
America. - LL |
UN warns of gangs’ global muscle
International crime networks now enjoy such an extensive reach that the gangs behind them must be regarded as a significant economic power, says a United Nations report.
In one of the most comprehensive analyses undertaken of transnational criminal activity, the UN Office on Drugs and Crime has calculated that the illicit trade in a range of commodities – including drugs, people, arms, fake goods and stolen natural resources – has an annual value of roughly $130
billion.
The report shows how transnational crime continues to be dominated by the trade in cocaine and heroin, a business whose product is worth about $105
billion
a year...
Cocaine trafficking from the Andean region to North America, a business with an annual value of $38
billion
at destination, is the biggest sector in the illegal narcotics trade. The export of cocaine from the Andean region to Europe is worth about $34
billion
a year.
However, the UNODC believes that the North American cocaine market is shrinking because of lower demand and greater law enforcement. It says this has generated a turf war among trafficking gangs, particularly in Mexico, and prompted them to forge new drug routes...
The second-biggest sector in international organized crime is people-trafficking.
The trade in women for sexual exploitation is now worth about $3
billion a year. Much of the trade involves trafficking people from Africa and the Balkans to other parts of Europe, where about 140,000 women are being manipulated by gangs at any one time.
The illegal smuggling of economic migrants is worth about $6.6
billion
a year to those who run the trade, according to the report.
The dominant illegal migrant flow is across the southern border of the US, with about
3 million Latin Americans illegally moving to North America each year. Flows from Africa to Europe are far smaller, with about 55,000 migrants smuggled into Europe in 2008...
James Blitz
The Financial Times Limited
June 17, 2010
See also:
"La delincuencia organizada se ha globalizado
convirtiéndose
en una amenaza para la seguridad"
En un nuevo informe de la UNODC se expone cómo, mediante la
violencia y los sobornos,
los mercados internacionales de la delincuencia han pasado a ser grandes centros
de poder
"Organized Crime Has Globalized and Turned
into a Security Threat"
A new UNODC report shows how, using violence and
bribes, international criminal markets have become major centres
of power
United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC)
June 17, 2010
Mexico
Delitos impunes, a pesar de que la CIDH pidió enviarlos a la vía civil
Suma justicia militar 5 casos de violación a mujeres indígenas
México, D.F. - Desde hace nueve años, la Comisión Interamericana de Derechos Humanos (CIDH) recomendó al Estado mexicano que fuera la justicia civil quien investigara la violación sexual ejercida por militares en perjuicio de tres mujeres indígenas, no obstante, hoy dicha recomendación no se ha cumplido y a ella se han sumado dos casos similares en la jurisprudencia militar.
El 4 de abril de 2001, fue la primera vez que la CIDH exhortó al gobierno mexicano trasladar a la Procuraduría General de la República (PGR) un caso de violación sexual ejercida por soldados, esto con el objetivo de juzgar con mayor efectividad a los miembros de las fuerzas armadas que incurrieran en violaciones contra los derechos humanos.
Dicha recomendación del organismo internacional fue por el caso de Ana, Beatriz y Celia González Pérez (nombres ficticios), de tres indígenas tzeltales, que el 4 de junio de 1994 fueron detenidas en un retén militar, instalado tras el levantamiento del Ejército Zapatista de Liberación Nacional (EZLN) en Chiapas.
Cabe recordar que las hermanas González Pérez y su madre, Delia Pérez de González fueron interrogadas y privadas de su libertad durante dos horas. En tanto, las tres hermanas fueron golpeadas y violadas en reiteradas ocasiones por los militares. Después de lo ocurrido, el 30 de junio de 1994, las jóvenes agredidas -de 20, 18 y 16 años de edad- presentaron una denuncia ante el Ministerio Público Federal.
Sin Justicia Expedita
Sin embargo, el 2 de septiembre de 1994, el expediente de dicha denuncia fue trasladado a la Procuraduría General de Justicia Militar, quién dos años después, en febrero de 1996, decidió archivar el expediente con el argumento de: “la falta de comparecencia de las víctimas a declarar nuevamente y a someterse a pericias ginecológicas”.
Cabe mencionar que el 17 de septiembre de ese año, la defensa de las víctimas presentó un amparo para evitar que la justicia militar investigara el caso, pero éste fue negado.
Este hecho permitió que el caso permaneciera en la impunidad, ya que a decir de la defensa de las tres indígenas, era inaceptable la pretensión de que estas mujeres, que fueron torturadas por miembros de la institución castrense, se sintieran seguras declarando (por tercera vez) ante este organismo...
A pesar de estas declaraciones y de que han transcurrido 16 años, la investigación permanece en la justicia militar y en la impunidad.
Rapes of civilian indigenous women remain in impunity
despite the demands of the Inter-American Human Rights Commission that Mexico
move the cases to civilian courts
The case of the 1994 beatings and rapes of three Tzeltal Mayan indigenous
sisters, who were then ages 16, 18 and 20, and are known by their pseudonyms of Ana, Beatriz y Celia González Pérez, remains
in impunity 16 years after the fact. Mexican President Felipe Calderón's policies
have never allowed civilian jurisdiction in this case, nor in the cases of two other
indigenous rape victims, who have also faced impunity (and ongoing intimidation
for having sought to bring criminal complaints against soldiers).
Despite the fact that the Inter-American Human Rights Commission has, since
2001, called upon Mexico to allow its civilian criminal justice system to take
over cases involving soldiers attacking Mexican civilians, President Calderón
has ignored these pleas.
Anayeli García Martínez
CIMAC Noticias Women's News Agency
June 14, 2010
See also:
|
 |
|
CIMAC Noticias' collection
of over 300 news articles on the rape of (mostly
indigenous) women with impunity by soldiers in
Mexico
(in Spanish) |
Cuba
Cuba denounces US criticism on human trafficking
Havana - Cuba reacted angrily... to its inclusion on a U.S. list of countries that could be sanctioned for failing to fight human and child trafficking, calling it a "shameful slander" and part of Washington's efforts to justify its trade embargo.
Cuba is one of 13 countries put on notice... that they are not complying with the minimum international standards to eliminate the trade in human beings and sexual slavery, and could face U.S. penalties.
Compiled by President Barack Obama's administration, the list also includes Iran, North Korea, and Myanmar. Another 58 countries were placed on a "watch list" that could lead to sanctions unless their records improve.
Cuba was singled out for allegedly not doing enough to prevent the trafficking of children who work as prostitutes on the island, mostly serving foreign tourists. It also said some Cuban doctors have complained that the government leases out their services to foreign countries as a way of canceling Cuba's debt.
"Cuba categorically rejects these allegations as false and disrespectful," Josefina Vidal Ferreiro, director of the Cuban Foreign Ministry's North American affairs office, said in a statement sent to the foreign news media Tuesday.
She said the allegations are all the more offensive because the communist government has concentrated its limited resources on protecting women and the young, providing far more for the most vulnerable members of society than most nations in the region.
While Cubans receive low wages, the island offers free education through college, free health care and heavily subsidized housing and transportation. Crime rates and drug usage are extremely low in a country where the state maintains near total control.
"These shameful slanders profoundly hurt the Cuban people. In Cuba, there is no
sexual abuse against minors
[well, that certainly is an exaggeration -
LL],
but rather an exemplary effort to protect children, young people and women,"
Vidal Ferreiro said. She said Cuban laws "put us among the countries in the
region with the most advanced norms and mechanisms for the prevention of abuse."
...
The latest report notes that Cuban laws against trafficking appear stringent, but that the country has not provided enough evidence to show they are being enforced.
Interestingly, the report does not concentrate on Cubans seeking to emigrate to the United States, a diaspora
which has meant vast profits for traffickers, who can charge thousands of
dollars for illicit transportation to the U.S., often through Mexico...
Vidal Ferreiro said Cuba's inclusion on the trafficking list is political.
"It can only be explained by the desperate need that the U.S. government has to justify, under whatever pretext, the persistence of its cruel blockade, which has been overwhelmingly rejected by the international community."
Cuba was not the only country in the region to react strongly to the report.
Guyana, which received slightly better marks than Cuba, said the report hurts its friendship with the United States. The Dominican Republic is also included on the list
[and richly deserved to be there -
LL]. The country's official in charge of monitoring human trafficking, Frank Soto, called the list "a lie with no merit."
Paul haven
The Associated Press
June 15, 2010
Colorado, USA
Woman molested at 7-11 in Colorado Springs
Colorado Springs police are warning residents about a sexual assault that happened this weekend at the 7-11 store at 3306 E. Fountain Blvd.
A 17-year-old girl was standing with some friends while filling their car at about 4:40 p.m. Saturday when a large green van pulled up behind the car.
The victim said a Hispanic man, age 30-40, made some small talk with her and then molested her.
The man was described as 5-feet-7-inches tall, heavy and wearing black Dickies shorts and a gray or white tanktop shirt.
The van was large and had red "For Sale" signs on the side and the rear windows.
James Amos
KOAA
June 22, 2010
The World
|
 |
|
2010 report from
the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC) |
UN: Organized crime spans planet, involves big economies - Summary
New York/Vienna - International mafias with their enormous power in money and weapons have sent and marketed illicit goods across and in all continents, affecting the world's biggest economies, the first UN report on transnational crime said Thursday.
Europe has become one of the destinations, with an estimated 140,000 victims of sexual exploitation generating gross annual income of 3 billion dollars to human traffickers, the UN Office on Drugs and Crime
(UNODC) said in the report The Globalization of Crime.
Major human trafficking routes flow from Africa to Europe and from Latin America to the United States.
"Worldwide there are millions of modern slaves traded at a price not higher in real terms than centuries ago," said UNODC executive director Antonia Maria Costa who presented the report in New York.
"Transnational crime has become a threat to peace and development, even to the sovereignty of nations," Costa said. "Criminals use weapons and violence, but also money and bribes to buy elections, politicians and power."
...
UNODC warned that transnational crime threatens to derail security especially in poor countries that already suffer from conflicts.
"Crime is fuelling corruption, infiltrating business and politics, and hindering development," Costa said.
He pointed to drug cartels that spread violence in Central America, the Caribbean and West Africa, as well as to cooperation between insurgents and criminals in Southeast Asia and Northern and Central Africa.
The UNODC said governments should try fighting criminal markets rather than crime syndicates, by stopping money laundering and informal transfer systems...
Two main routes for smuggling migrants are from Africa to Europe and from Latin American to the US. Up to 3 million migrants are smuggled from Latin America to the US every year, providing more than 6 billion dollars to smugglers.
The heroin market in North America has declined because of lower demand and more effective law enforcement. But it triggered a turf war among gangs, particularly in Mexico, for new drugs trafficking routes.
Afghanistan produces opium and Colombia coca, but the drug profits are made at their destination rich countries. Afghan heroin is sold for an estimated 55 billion dollars around the world, but Afghan farmers, traders and insurgents probably receive only about 2.3 billion dollars...
Earth Times
June 17, 2010
See also:
International criminal markets have become major centres
of power, UNODC report shows
The UN Office on Drugs and Crime
June 17, 2010
Guyana
The US human trafficking report is defective
US human trafficking policy is a product of religious leaders,
neo-conservatives, and abolitionist feminists. It was Michael Horowitz from the
Hudson Institute who set up a coalition of evangelicals to advocate for the
legislation that became the Trafficking Victims Protection Act (TVPA); the
legislation received approval from the US House of Representatives by a 371-1
vote, and by the US Senate by 95-0 vote, and was signed into law by President
Clinton on October 28, 2000.
The TVPA’s aims are to prevent human trafficking overseas, protecting the
victims of traffickers, and prosecuting traffickers. A singular dimension of
TVPA has to do with the US’s demands on overseas countries to enact preventive
measures against sex trafficking.
This TVPA as a matter of policy requires the State Department to
effect an annual assessment of other countries’ anti-trafficking efforts, and to
evaluate each country on the basis of its procedures undertaken to combat
trafficking. For this reason, the Office to Monitor and Combat Trafficking in
Persons with the State Department executes its work through a mandate from
Congress to produce annual Trafficking in Persons (TIPS) reports that ranks each
country’s progress to end trafficking.
The US keeps awarding itself a Tier 1 status, meaning it is
making sufficient efforts to end trafficking; countries that do not do well in
US judgment are labeled Tier 2 or Tier 3.Tier 3 countries could receive
sanctions from the US.
If you look carefully, you will see that Tier 3 countries are
countries that may be more concerned about paying no mind to this US program,
rather than their efforts to end trafficking. Some recent Tier 3 countries are
Cuba, North Korea, Venezuela, Indonesia, India, United Arab Emirates, Bahrain,
Lebanon, Sudan, Qatar, Turkey, etc. These are countries not comfortable with US
imperialism, where Enloe (2000) argued that the US sets itself up as “a model to
be emulated” and [performs] the role of “global policeman.”
Trends in Organized Crime (2006) noted that the US State
Department’s justifications for its ranking awards to countries that do not
satisfy minimum standards to end human trafficking, are deficient, and the State
Department’s report is applied patchily to establish government-wide
anti-trafficking programs and projects.
Some of the minimum standards are subjective, and the report
fails to delineate how these standards were applied, reducing the report’s
integrity. For instance, country narratives for Tier 1 countries do not make
clear compliance with the second minimum standard pertaining to approved
penalties for sex-trafficking crimes.
The US itself has to address domestically the problem of about
200,000 children at risk for human trafficking each year, and it would serve
that country well to effect some house cleaning there, as that problem has begun
to fester. And instead of sitting in judgment over other countries’ issues on
trafficking, there may be better outcomes if all the affected countries worked
in unison to stamp out this evil trade.
Yours
faithfully,
Prem Misir
Letter to the editor
Stabroek News
June 17, 2010
Added: Jun. 22, 2010
Cuba,
The Americas
We present a continuing dialog on the
perennial inclusion of Cuba in the worst rating categories in
the annual U.S. Trafficking in Persons Report
Cuba,
The Americas
Added: Jun. 22, 2010
Response to the 2007 TIP Report
 |
|
Rosa Miriam Elizalde
|
Crime or Punishment in Cuba
Myths about the sex trade
[A Cuban activist's analysis in
response to the
2007
U.S. Trafficking in Persons report's
allegations of child sex trafficking in Cuba]
"...The... report... avoids to mention that
before the 1959 triumph of Revolution, Cuba had a population of
about 6 million and was known as the "North American brothel in
the Caribbean." Some 100,000 women worked either directly or
indirectly on prostitution due to poverty, discrimi-nation or the
absence of jobs. The Revolution educated them and offered them
employment."
In... the “2007 Trafficking in Persons Report," Cuba and
Venezuela head-up the U.S. State Department’s black list. The
annual verdict - it has been issued now since 2001 - repeats
practically the same arguments already used for seven years. It
reiterates that both women and children are "internally
trafficked" for sexual exploitation and that the country,
[is] an
important destination...
In the Cuban case, it is not in the social or the individual
levels where this myth “woman = prostitute” reveals itself more
clearly, but in the international news media. Cuba has lived the
unusual experience of a political manipulation of the drama of
prostitution that has become the center of an international
campaign presenting Cubans, all of them, as potential saleable
objects. “You will feel watched by hundreds of approachable
women,” starts an article in Man magazine...
By linking the reemergence of prostitution in Cuba with the
measures enacted to strengthen [the] economy they are actually trying
to demonstrate the unfeasibility of the Cuban social project.
...It [the existence of prostitution] is offered-up as
the highest evidence of the political disintegration of the
Cuban system, the return to a type of trade that had disappeared
in the initial decades of the Revolution. “This campaign intends
to present the increasing number of tourists in the country as a
wave of sex-starved males that will find their desires fulfilled
in an island plunged into poverty, with women selling their
bodies for their daily bread," as a Spanish journalist who
took part in a debate on the topic in the magazine Cambio 16
stated.
The attempt at [highlighting this part of the economy continues
to grow] thanks to the sex
market... There have even been those who have
rashly awarded Cuba the credential of “erotic imperialist” when
trying to explain the signs of economic recovery in a blockaded
country. In this type of analysis, of course, the image of Cuban
prostitutes is presented out of context. Since, as a rule, the
phenomenon is seen superficially and tendentious information is
offered, foreigners imagine that these prostitutes are not
essentially different from those who sell themselves in
bordellos and streets in their cities and that form part of a
highly organized and lucrative business, all this quite far from
Cuban reality.
"Whether directly or indirectly, what is being sold as an image
is the possibility of subduing the Cuban nation."
As a mathematical formula [that runs in an endless loop], the equation
“woman = prostitute = Cuba” has ended up as a new version of the
myth maintaining that all women are whores: it is the
stigmatized identity of a country and the tropical version of
the failure of socialism.
Whether directly or indirectly, what is
being sold as an image is the possibility of subduing the Cuban
nation. That “all women are approachable” does not only mean
that you can buy sexuality and power over another human being –
and, by extension, take control of a country for a period of
time established beforehand – but that you can avail yourself of
their intimacy, [that place] in human beings, no matter where
they are from, where the link with shame and taboo runs deep. ..
Rosa Miriam Elizalde
Translated by María Teresa Ortega
July 27, 2007
See also:
Cuba
Response to the 2010 TIP Report
Reconoce UNICEF ejemplo de Cuba en protección a la infancia
Es el cuento de nunca acabar. Autoridades estadounidenses ya no
saben de cuál gajo colgarse en su enfermizo empeño contra Cuba.
La mala nueva es ahora la aparición de la lsla entre los peores
países del globo en cuanto al tráfico de personas, según informe
elaborado por el Departamento de Estado en relación con el tema…
Paradojas: hace apenas cinco días, en La Habana, Juan José
Ortiz, representante del Fondo de Naciones Unidas para la
Infancia (UNICEF) ofreció declaraciones en las cuales resaltó:
"En el planeta, millones de menores sufren la falta de
escolarización y de vacunación contra enfermedades prevenibles,
además de ser víctimas de explotación laboral y sexual en las
redes internacionales de prostitución, ninguno es cubano"...
UNICEF recognizes Cuba as a leader in
childhood protection
The story never ends. U.S. authorities no longer know from which
hook to hang in the ongoing campaign against Cuba.
The newest story to come out is that Cuba appears as one of the
worst nations on earth in regard to human trafficking, according
the [2010 Trafficking in Persons report of the] U.S. Department
of State.
Cuba did not hesitate to respond. Josefina Vidal,
director for North America for the Cuban Chancellery responded
to the 2010 TIP report by declaring the allegations to be “false
and disrespectful.”
Paradoxically, five days ago, Juan Jose Ortiz, a representative
of the United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF), made the
following statement: “Across the world, millions of minors
suffer from a lack of access to education and vaccines to
protect against preventable diseases, in addition to being
victims of international sexual and labor exploitation networks.
None of these children are Cuban."
During recent years Cuba has achieved important, positive
progress in regard to protecting children, a fact which has
transformed Cuba into the Latin American nation with the highest
quality of life for girls and boys.
An age-old saying in Cuba goes: “Tell me what you accuse me of,
and I will show you what you, yourself are lacking.” This fits
like a ring on a finger in the case of the allegations made
against Cuba.
The U.S. leads in statistics regarding all forms of trafficking,
immigration. Drug use, murders, mafias, wars, etcetera…
The [allegations of child trafficking made against Cuba] show
the blindness of certain authorities in the Obama
Administration. They have never visited Cuba, and they have
apparently never read UNICEF’s reports in regard to conditions
for children here.
Continuing with the statement of conditions in Cuba by UNICEF’s
Juan Jose Ortiz, he says: “quantitatively and qualitatively, we
can say that the
Convention on the Rights of the Child is applied very well
in Cuba."
In Ortiz’ opinion, this state of affairs has come about through
the collaboration between the Cuban Government and UNICEF,
making Cuba a shining example for children rights for the rest
of Latin America.
Everything is not perfect. Nothing exists in simple, black and
white tones. Shades of grey do exist. As one poet stated it:
“none of use live in a perfect society.” But to say that
children in Cuba are subjected to the degrading business of
human trafficking and child prostitution is a repugnant form of
political aggression.
Cuba is not a rich country, but it does not interfere in
the “persistent effort to guarantee protections for children,”
which is, according to UNICEF, a state of affairs made possible by
[the actions of] Cuba’s
government.”
Children in
Cuba may lack financial resources, but there is no lack of love
and good will to support them…
Marcos Alfonso
Radio Guantanamo
June 16, 2010
See also:
Added: Jun. 21, 2010
Cuba,
The Americas
LibertadLatina
Commentary
Response to the 2010 TIP Report
|
 |
|
Chuck Goolsby |
We do not take a position on the political situation in Cuba, beyond
acknowledging that Democracy must come, some day, to that island nation. In
addition, we are not communists, socialists or any other 'ist' that can be
negatively labeled.
As a musician specializing in, among other things, Afro-Cuban folkloric music
(Rumba) for the past 32 years, I have had many Cuban friends, of all ages, races and political
leanings. As one of Cuba's best African folklorist's, a man named Hector, told
me when he came to Washington, DC after the
1980 Mariel Boatlift exodus of
refugees: "The lack of political freedom in Cuba was terrible, but the fact
that all of your needs were met - education, food, housing and
healthcare - was a good thing."
In regard to the rights of children and human trafficking, we find that the
recent report from Cuba's
Radio Guantanamo (see the above article), and also UNICEF official
Juan Jose Ortiz's recent comments on Cuba's treatment of children, ring much closer to the truth than the
allegations contained in the 2010
U.S. State Department's assessment, which declares that Cuba deserves a "Tier 3" (the
lowest) rating for supposedly
refusing to address the issue of human trafficking.
Before the Cuban revolution in 1958, Cuba was literally the top sex
tourism destination for U.S. citizens in the Americas. After the revolution, prostitution was
banned and former prostitutes were given job training, an approach that would
have been considered unthinkable in any other Latin American nation at the time,
despite the continent-wide epidemic of prostitution that then plagued (and still
plagues) the region.
After the victory of Castro's forces in 1958, one of his first acts was to allow
Afro-Cubans to attend public beaches (a practice banned under the dictator
Batista). We note with horror that Mexican police had been known to clear
Acapulco's beaches of
Afro-Mexican children and adults - also with
the goal of 'pleasing' U.S. tourists, as recently as
a decade ago.
In
1975, I recall seeing a mainstream television news story about Fidel Castro
declaring that women would be given equal rights in Cuba.
At the time, this policy change caused enraged men to flock to Cuba's streets en-mass to protest.
Yet equality became official policy. By contrast, women did not even win the
right to vote in Mexico until 1953.
In 1991, a very high level official in the U.S. Department of Health and Human
Services (the director of an HHS region) had a very long conversation with me about the human rights of children in
Latin America. What this official said to me was that Cuba was the only nation in
Latin America that properly cared for all of its children. He added that hunger,
lack of access to medical care, lack of access to education and other maladies
that plague all other Latin American nations are non-existent in Cuba. This
official's assessment from 1991 is compatible with UNICEF's recent (2010)
comments on the positive, pro-children efforts that are clearly visible
throughout Cuba.
In addition, African descendents, who are 60% of Cuba's current population, are
given access to equal education and, even if poor, can look forward to attending
excellent medical schools if they qualify academically and so desire. You
will not find that state of affairs anywhere else in the Americas.
The
Latin American School of Medicine (ELAM) in Havana, has graduated more than
7,000 doctors from Latin America and nations around the world, often via
scholarships. One family friend, who's son's medical practice partner in Colombia is
Afro-Colombian, noted that Colombia's racist medical schools refuse to admit even ONE
Afro-Colombian student. This perfectly qualified physician therefore received
his training in Cuba.
In Cuba, the social drivers that create the conditions necessary to expose
children to mass human trafficking simply do not exist.
By contrast, millions of indigenous children in Mexico are forced to work for a
living while facing unspeakable racial hatred focused against them by the
nation's Spanish descendents. It is well documented that indigenous and African
descendant children in Mexico are forced to go to schools with dirt floors and
often without bathroom facilities (a public health factor that was widely
discussed in the context of the 2009 Swine Flu outbreak). Tens of thousands of
poor indigenous girls in the 12 to 14-years-of-age range must work, with no
access to schooling, as domestic servants for middle and upper class Mexican
households. Only a few of these children are actually paid, and many of them are
routinely raped with impunity by the homeowner and/or his sons.
In addition, some 3,000 to 4,000 indigenous children and youth
have been kidnapped with complete impunity by Japanese Yakuza mafias and their
accomplices in Mexico, and have been sent to Japan to be enslaved as Geisha prostitutes,
while neither Mexico nor Japan have ever lifted even one little finger to help these innocent victims
of serial rape until death.
Activists in Mexico admit that the federal government does little to stop human
trafficking, and police agents are complicit in a large number of trafficking crimes.
None of these critical human rights issues are visibly active on Mexico's national agenda, even
now that the United Nations Blue Heart Campaign against human trafficking has
begun a ground breaking effort to combat human slavery in that nation.
It has been a concern of ours for years that the U.S. State Department
Trafficking in Persons Report has
repeatedly rated Cuba as the worst location in the Americas for human
trafficking (which is a stretch, at best), while virtually ignoring the easily
demonstrable pandemic of mass enslavement of poor women and
children in Mexico, Argentina, the Dominican Republic and other major source
countries for victims.
Does prostitution and adult sex tourism exist in Cuba? Yes. Is Cuba's problem
with human trafficking anywhere near as bad as it is in Mexico? No. Not by a long
shot.
Cuba was always targeted for low ratings in the TIP report when President George
W. Bush was in office. It was understood by many that this was political payback.
If Cuba deserves a Tier 3 rating, then Mexico and Argentina deserve a Tier 4
rating (of course, tier 4 does not actually exist).
If Mexico is a gleaming example of a nation that is doing good work, and better
work than Cuba to stop child sex trafficking, then our nation's assessment techniques
are flawed and inaccurate, and are therefore in BIG trouble.
...Just keeping the discussion honest.
End impunity now!
Chuck Goolsby
LibertadLatina
June 21/22/23, 2010
See also:
UNICEF's background report on conditions
Cuba
See also:
Press response to the 2010 TIP Report
Ambassador CdeBaca on 10th Annual
Trafficking in Persons Report
CdeBaca answers questions on modern
slavery, sex and labor trafficking
Question [from a reporter]: Thank
you.
Ambassador CdeBaca: Yes.
Question: Yes. Back on the case of
Cuba, I’m wondering what actually is the justification for the -
I mean, I read a little bit, but it sounds - it seems like the
U.S. might be open to charges of political ranking. I’m just
trying to get why Cuba is on Tier 3.
Ambassador CdeBaca: Well, I think
that one of the things that we see for Cuba is that there is no
law against this practice. There’s some other laws that could be
cobbled together perhaps in order to prosecute a trafficker, but
there’s no evidence that that has actually been done. I think
one of the things that we also look at there is, again, the age
of legal prostitution. Again, children are – can legally be in
prostitution at ages 16 and 17.
[We note that the age of sexual consent in
Mexico continues to be age 12 in the majority of states, a fact
the fuels a massive child sex trafficking industry who's
regulation is not even hinted at by Mexico's government. Police
do not enforce any laws against 12-year-olds being involved in
prostitution in Mexico because these girls and boys are of legal
age to consent to sex.
Yet
that fact did not place Mexico in a Tier 3 ranking,
contradicting Ambassador CdeBaca's rationale for singling out
Cuba (where he states that 16 and 17-year-olds, who are of the
age of consent in Cuba, engage in prostitution).
Most Latin
American nations have ages of consent in the 12 to 15-years-of-age
range, and their prostitution 'industries' reflect that fact. -
LL]
Ambassador CdeBaca: We also see the lack of human trafficking protections and no
training for the police, prosecutors, or social workers on what
to do if one sees a human trafficking situation. So in a country
where not only do you have a – such a large tourist industry,
other countries in the region that draw tourists from the same
places as Cuba, have large child sex tourism problems, and are
working to address those, we don’t see the same activity in
Cuba. So it’s a multifaceted approach as far as why they would
end up on Tier 3.
U.S. Department of State
June 14, 2010
[We note that Latin American
and Caribbean nations other than Cuba, where child sex tourism is rampant,
have few if any of the extensive protections that are available in Cuba that guarantee
children shelter, food and a good education.
The result is that young
people in these other nations easily fall victim to sexual exploitation. Cuba
maintains a high level of support for children despite the fact that, as the UNICEF web page
on Cuba
notes, the U.S. trade embargo has had the effect of raising infant
mortality rates. -
LL]
Cuba
Another view of the Cuban reality
Havana Has The Air of a Brothel...
...Havana has the air of a brothel at times, particularly if you pass through Monte Street where it meets Cienfuegos. Young women in their flashy - if a little faded - clothes offer their "merchandise," especially after night falls and the spandex doesn't look quite as baggy nor the circles under their eyes quite as dark. These are the ones who can't compete with those who can snag a manager or a tourist to take them to a hotel and offer them, the next morning, a breakfast that comes with milk. These are the ones who don't wear perfume and who finish their work in the cramped quarters of a solar or even on the landing under the stairs. They traffic in groans, exchanging spasms for money.
These men and women - merchants of desire - avoid tripping over the uniformed police who guard the area. Falling into their hands can mean a night in a cell or, for those in the city illegally, deportation to your home province. Everything can be "resolved" if the officer accepts the hint of a probing thigh and agrees to withhold an official warning in exchange for a few minutes of privacy. Some officers return regularly to take their cut, in money or in services, that allows these nocturnal beings to continue taking up their positions on the corner. A woman who refuses the exchange can find herself in a prostitute reeducation camp, while the men might be charged with the crime of pre-criminal dangerousness.
And so the cycle of sex for money comes full circle, in a city where honest work is a museum relic and the needs bring many to position their bodies and swing their hips in hopes of an offer.
Yoani Sanchez - Award-Winning Cuban Blogger
The Huffington Post
April 26, 2010
See also:
Cuba
Response to the 2008 TIP Report
Cuba Rejects Its Inclusion on US List of Countries Not Fighting Human Trafficking
Cuba on Sunday rejected U.S. claims that it does not do enough to combat human trafficking, saying that Washington "has a lot to learn" about life on the island.
U.S. authorities "are unfamiliar with and distort" Cuban reality, the Foreign Relations Ministry said in a written response to the U.S. State Department's annual "Trafficking in Persons Report," released Wednesday. The report tracks human trafficking for the sex trade, coerced labor and the recruitment of child soldiers, outlining efforts to fight it, including prosecution, sentencing and programs to help victims.
Listing Cuba among the world's worst offenders, the report said poor women and
children on the island are often forced into prostitution by family members. But
it also noted that human trafficking cannot be properly measured in Cuba, given
the government's refusal to cooperate with independent observers. Cuba said it
maintains a "firm" policy against human trafficking and prostitution and noted
that its communist system provides for the basic needs of all citizens...
"Cuba does not see any value in the State Department's report," the Foreign Ministry's statement said. "The government of the United States has a lot to do in its own country to combat the rampant phenomenon there of prostitution, sexual exploitation, forced labor and the trafficking of people."
"The government of the United States has a lot to learn about Cuba and is not in a position to judge anyone," it said.
The International Herald Tribune
June 13, 2008
See also:
Cuba, The World
Sixty-second General Assembly - Thematic Debate on Human Trafficking
The representative of Cuba said that, since industrialized countries were the main destination for human trafficking, and their actions increased the demand for women and child sex workers, a credible United Nations anti-trafficking strategy should advance a more just international economic order that would put a stop to inequalities.
The United Nations General Assembly
June 03, 2008
See also:
Venezuela
Response to the 2006 TIP Report
Venezuela's Record in Combating Human Trafficking
Since 2000 the U.S. State Department has issued a yearly report on the status of trafficking in persons (TIP) throughout the world. In June 2006 the Office to Combat and Monitor the Trafficking of Persons, the State Department body responsible for studying TIP and issuing the report, characterized Venezuela as an egregious human trafficker and designated it a Tier 3 nation, subject to economic sanctions. The TIP Report claims that Venezuela “does not fully comply with the minimum standards for the elimination of trafficking and is not making significant efforts to do so.”[1] This ruling, for the second year in a row, sits in stark contrast to the facts surrounding Venezuela’s human trafficking record.
Is Venezuela's tier 3 designation politically motivated?
According to the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC) many countries with many more human trafficking violations than Venezuela have been assigned Tier 1 or Tier 2 status while others with less serious records receive Tier 3. Michael Shifter of the Inter-American Dialogue notes in an opinion piece published in the New York Times that “in the State Department’s 2003 Human Trafficking report Venezuela did not even appear among the five worst offenders in the Western Hemisphere” and that “the Bush administration has not provided compelling and persuasive evidence that warrants singling out one country.”
Mexico serves as a case in point.
In the 2006 TIP Report Mexico is described in far worse terms than Venezuela and even noted as “a source, transit, and destination country for persons trafficked for sexual exploitation and labor.” In contrast to Venezuela’s record, the government of Mexico has repeatedly refused to gather official data on human trafficking within its borders and keeps no law enforcement statistics on trafficking investigations, arrests, prosecutions, or convictions. Even more disturbing, “there are no shelters or related services that specifically aid trafficking victims” in Mexico. Despite these dismal results, Mexico was assigned a Tier 2 designation for the third consecutive year. Washington justifies this designation in the Report by noting a “future commitment” from the Mexican government to undertake efforts in prosecution, protection, and prevention. Venezuela on the other hand has pro-actively addressed all of these areas.
In a statement regarding the State Department’s Human Rights Report issued in early 2005 the Deputy Director of the Washington Office on Latin America (WOLA) Kimberly Stanton noted “political considerations are evident in some of the findings… The credibility of the reports depends on consistent, objective analysis. This year the U.S. government policy priorities are affecting the evaluation of the data in some cases.”
VenInfo.org
2006
See Also:
The reality is that
Mexico fares much worse than Cuba or
Venezuela in regard to the treatment of its
self-created mega-crisis of child and adult trafficking
Mexico
Víctimas del tráfico
de personas, 5 millones de mujeres y niñas
en América Latina
De esa
cifra, más de 500 mil casos ocurren en
México, señalan especialistas.
Five million victims
of Human Trafficking Exist in Latin America
Saltillo, Coahuila state -
Teresa Ulloa Ziaurriz, the director of the
Coalition Against Trafficking in Women's
Latin American / Caribbean regional office,
announced this past Monday that more than
five million women and girls are currently
victims of human trafficking in Latin
America and the Caribbean.
During a forum on successful
treatment approaches for trafficking victims
held by the Women's Institute of Coahuila,
Ulloa Ziaurriz stated that
500,000 of these
cases exist in Mexico, where women and girls
are trafficked for sexual exploitation,
pornography and the illegal harvesting of
human organs...
Mexico is a country of
origin, transit and also destination for
trafficked persons. Of 500,000 victims in
Mexico, 87% are subjected to commercial
sexual exploitation.
Ulloa Ziaurriz pointed out
that locally in Coahuila state, the nation's
human trafficking problem shows up in the
form of child prostitution in cities such as
Ciudad Acuña as well as other population
centers along Mexico's border with the
United States.
- Notimex /
La Jornada Online
Mexico City
Dec. 12, 2007
See also:
Added March 23, 2008
Mexico
Un millón de menores
latinoamericanos atrapados por redes de prostitución
Former Special
Prosecutor for Violent Crimes Against
Women - Alicia Elena Perez Duarte:
|
At least one million children across Latin
America have been entrapped by child
prostitution and pornography networks.
[In many cases in Mexico] these child
victims are offered to businessmen
and politicians. |
Full story (in
English)
See also:
Added Oct. 28, 2007
Central America and Mexico
Trata de blancas
en Centroamérica
For
non-governmental organizations, the child kidnapping
and sex trafficking case of 11-year-old Jackeline
Jirón Silva fom Nicaragua is emblematic, as it
shows clearly how the third most profitable criminal
enterprise in the world operates.
...Jackeline has been forced to work in brothels all
over Central America. Her pimps now have her in
Tapachula, in Chiapas state [near Mexico's southern
border with Guatemala].
María de Jesús Silva [Jackeline's mother, who
searched all over Central America and southern
Mexico for her daughter]: "I saw things that I never
imagined existed... The brothels are full of
children, sold by traffickers and abandoned by their
parents. I saw them prostitute themselves and wished
that any one of them would have been my daughter. I
settled for caressing the hair of these girls, and I
imagined that in the 'next' brothel, I was going to
find my daughter. Everything that I have suffered
through is nothing compared to what my girl is going
through."
...According to Ana Salvadó, executive director for
Mexico, Latin America and the Caribbean for
Save the Children:
"the panorama for childhood in Latin America is
growing more bleak over time, and child trafficking
is growing rapidly in each of these countries..."
…Save the Children has
identified the border region between Guatemala and
Mexico as being the largest hot spot for the
commercial sexual exploitation of children in the
entire world. Ana Salvadó: "It is a
bottleneck, because many children attempt to migrate
from Central [and South] America to the United
States, and they never get past [southern] Mexico…
…A study by the international organization
ECPAT…
made public three weeks ago in Guatemala City,
reveals that over 21,000
Central Americans, mostly children, are prostituted
in 1,552 bars and brothels in Tapachula, Mexico…
Traffickers sell these child victims to Tapachula's
pimps for $200 each.
More that 50% of these children are from
[indigenous] Guatemala. The rest are Salvadorans,
Hondurans and Nicaraguans.
They range in age from eight to fourteen-years-old.
...In 2006, the
International
Labor Organization conducted a survey of
adult attitudes in Mexico, Central America and South
America, where it is quite easy [for men] to engage
in sexual relations with children.
|
Some 65% of
respondents stated that they don't see any
problem, and they don't feel any sort of
conflict or fear in regard to having sex
with boy and girl children, and "they don't
feel that there is anything wrong with doing
it." |
...Mexico has been converted into a paradise for
pimps and a living hell for thousands of Central
American girl children like Jackeline Jirón Silva,
whose captors have prostituted her during the past
32 months. It is known that during half of that
time, Jackeline has been held in the southern
Mexican state of Chiapas.
-
Ana Lilia Pérez
Revista Contralínea
Oct. 22, 2007
See also:
Mexico: Más de un
millón de menores se prostituyen en el
centro del país: especialista
Expert: More than one
million minors are sexually exploited in
Central Mexico
Tlaxcala city, in Tlaxcala
state - Around 1.5 million people in the
central region of Mexico are engaged in
prostitution, and some 75% of them are
between 12 and 13 years of age, reported
Teresa Ulloa, director of the Regional
Coalition Against Trafficking in Women and
Girls in Latin America and the Caribbean...
La Jornada de Oriente
Sep. 26, 200
[Note: The figure of 75% of 1.5 million
indicates that 1.1 million girls between the
ages of 12 and 13 at any given time engage
in prostitution in central Mexico alone. -
LL]
See also:
Blacks in Mexico: A
Forgotten Minority
...The [estimated one million] Afro-Mexicans
face considerable hurdles. ...The all-black
shantytowns near
Yanga [in
Veracruz state] lack schools, and eager
young migrants who move to bigger cities for
work complain of blatant discrimination.
A report released... by Mexico's Congress
said that roughly 200,000 black Mexicans who
reside in the rural areas of Veracruz and
Oaxaca and in tourist cities like Acapulco
are out of the reach of social programs like
employment support, health coverage, public
education and food assistance. ..
LibertadLatina
We truly appreciate the wonderful work of the
Office To Monitor and Combat Trafficking in Persons
(TIP) in the U.S. Department of
State, but it
is absolutely ridiculous to point the finger
at Cuba on the issue of child sex trafficking, when,
by comparison, Mexico's
'pampered' government has not even pretended to bring the
crisis of mass gender atrocities
affecting Mexican and migrant Central American children in its territory under the control
of the rule of law.
The TIP office cannot employ a double standard that
uses their annual report to advance geopolitical
goals that are not tied directly to the issue of
human trafficking.
The whole world is watching!
End impunity now!
Chuck Goolsby
LibertadLatina
June 22/23, 2010
|
North Carolina, USA
|
 |
|
Pedro Ventura Chavez |
Cary man charged with sexually abusing child
A [city of] Cary man has been accused of sexually abusing a 10-year-old girl, according an arrest warrant.
Pedro Ventura Chavez, 33, had been abusing the girl for over a year, sources told WRAL News.
Chavez, of 304 Middleton Ave., was charged Sunday with one count of felony taking indecent liberties with a child.
He was being held Sunday in the Wake County jail under a $150,000 bond. His first court appearance was set for Monday afternoon.
Chavez has also been placed under a retainer by federal Immigration and Customs Enforcement agency.
North Carolina Most Wanted
June 20, 2010
Delaware, USA
|
 |
|
Sketch of suspect |
Camera Captures Images of 9-Year-Old’s Rapist
Child rape suspect's Chevy Tahoe caught on surveillance camera
A surveillance camera captured images of what police believe to be the car of the man who abducted and raped a 9-year-old Alban Park, Del. girl June 9.
The 9-year-old girl accepted a ride from a stranger when she was accidentally locked out of her home. The man drove her to the 200-block of Liberty Street in Wilmington and raped her before she could get out of the car, police say.
The young girl was dropped off at her 500-block of Homestead Road address by a family friend. She walked into her building but when she was unable to get inside her door, she walked back outside to look for her sister and parents, police say.
While walking along Alban Drive near the Canby Park Shopping Center, a man described as an Asian or Hispanic male with short black hair, round eyes, “chubby cheeks” and a “chubby build” offered her a ride. After some conversation the child accepted the ride, police say.
The suspect’s SUV is a 1995-2005 Chevrolet Tahoe with a registration containing a “2” in the middle of the tag.
If you have any information on the suspect, please contact the New Castle County Police Department at 395-8110, attention Detective Timothy Argoe. Or text tip at: 847411 (TIP411) and begin your message with NCCPD and then type your message. Tipsters may also call Crime Stoppers at (800) TIP-3333.
Teresa Masterson
NBC Philadelphia
June 21, 2010
Texas, USA
Body Found in Field - Woman Strangled
Houston - An autopsy has revealed that a woman whose body was found in a southeast Houston field was strangled.
Investigators found the body of Raquel Mundy at approximately 4 p.m. Friday in the 300 block of North St. Charles Street.
Police say Mundy, 24, was seen at 1:30 a.m. Thursday driving her mother and two children to the Greyhound Lines bus station in downtown Houston. Mundy had apparently parked the vehicle in a McDonald's restaurant parking lot where it had been towed from.
After Mundy had obtained her mother's debit card to pay for the tow bill, she tried to contact other relatives to get a ride but was not able to reach anyone, according to a statement released by the Houston Police Department on Monday.
Witnesses told investigators that Mundy was seen entering a gray car with a male. Mundy sent a text message to her mother that said she thought she was in danger and was with a Hispanic male.
Police ask anyone with information about Mundy's death to contact the HPD Homicide Division at 713-308-3600 or Crime Stoppers of Houston at 713-222-8477 (TIPS).
Alexander Supgul
Fox Houston
June 21, 2010
New York, USA
|
 |
|
Christian Inga |
Undocumented immigrant held in Cortlandt home invasion
Cortlandt - A Peekskill man faces felony charges in the home invasion of an ex-girlfriend's apartment where police say he struggled with a 15-year-old girl who was inside with a 2-year-old at the time.
Christian Inga, who state police said is an undocumented immigrant from Ecuador, has been charged with first-degree burglary and second degree attempted kidnapping, felonies. Additional charges are expected as an investigation continues.
The break-in was reported by a neighbor who heard screams around 6:40 p.m. Friday and called 911. Arriving troopers say they found Inga attempting to flee out of a rear window. Police did not disclose the location of the home invasion.
Inga was said to be wearing all black at the time, including a black bandana over his face, a black hat and black gloves.
He was to be remanded to the Westchester County Jail in Valhalla following arraignment. Police filed an Immigration and Customs detainer.
The arrest was made by Trooper Peter A. Zerrle and investigators Sean J. Morgan and Paul M. Schneeloch of the Cortlandt barracks.
Brian J. Howard
Lower Hudson dot com
June 19, 2010
Colombia
Explotación sexual infantil, amenaza a los menores del Valle
Ana María* solo tiene 16 años y un bebé de trece meses de edad, vive en una humilde vivienda en el oriente de la ciudad junto a su padre y a su madre. Los progenitores de esta menor la obligan a que ejerza la prostitución en un bar todas las noches.
El papá y la mamá de Ana María la explotan sexualmente con la condición de echarla de la casa sino accede. Lo peor de este caso, el dueño del prostíbulo entrega el dinero directamente a los progenitores de Ana María. Este es sólo un caso de los muchos que atiende la línea infantil 106.
En lo que va corrido del año el Instituto Colombiano de Bienestar Familiar, Icbf, ha recibido 223 denuncias de abuso sexual en el Valle del Cauca, en esta categoría entran los casos de explotación sexual comercial infantil, pornografía infantil, turismo sexual infantil y acto sexual abusivo.
"En Cali y el Valle del Cauca la prostitución es un problema social que está tocando todas las esferas en los menores", dice Lucy Mancilla Marulanda, aboga especializada en derechos humanos del Departamento Administrativo de Seguridad, DAS...
Child sexual exploitation threatens the lives of minors in
the Cauca Valley and the city of Cali
[English translation to follow.]
Diario Occidente
June 20, 2010
Louisiana, USA
61-year-old Gretna man sentenced to life in prison for raping boy
A 61-year-old Gretna man received a mandatory life sentence in prison Thursday for his conviction of raping a boy under his care.
Carlos Hernandez was convicted June 4 of the aggravated rape of a boy who said he was 5 or 6 years old when the crimes occurred.
In handing down the sentence, Judge Henry Sullivan of the 24th Judicial District Court said he found that Hernandez was a risk to society. Hernandez's attorney Marquita Naquin objected to the sentence and said the conviction will be appealed.
Assistant District Attorneys Amanda Calogero and Jennifer Rosenbach prosecuted the case.
The boy was 11 years old in January 2008 when he told his mother that Hernandez had abused him. The claim came to light after Hernandez was arrested amid allegations that he sexually abused girls, when the boy's mother began asking whether Hernandez had abused anyone else.
Hernandez is awaiting trial on a charge of aggravated incest involving a 7-year-old girl and sexual battery, for allegedly touching two 7-year-old girls in December 2007, according to the Jefferson Parish Sheriff's Office.
The Times-Picayune
June 17, 2010
Canada
|
 |
|
An undated picture from a Canadian
religious boarding school for indigenous children
Canadian and U.S. Indigenous children
by the tens of thousands were forcibly taken from
their parents and were then sent to either
government-run or religious boarding schools, where
they were forbidden from speaking their languages,
and were raped and sometimes sold to local
pedophiles.
Some girls who became pregnant from
the rapes perpetrated by their teachers in Canadian
schools were murdered and buried in secret
graveyards.
We continue to scream BLOODY MURDER!
- LL |
Residential school survivors speak at historic hearings
The Truth and Reconciliation Commission of Canada said it's counting on people to share their stories of living in residential schools.
Hundreds of aboriginals gathered in Winnipeg Wednesday to share their stories of abuse suffered during years of living in Canada's disgraced residential school system.
The hearing was the first in a series of seven national events being run by the Truth and Reconciliation Commission, which aims to document the physical and sexual abuse and other horrors endured by children at residential schools across Canada.
"You will not be questioned. You will not be asked to prove anything. You do not have to share anything that you do not wish to share," commission chair Justice Murray Sinclair told those in attendance.
The Winnipeg hearing runs until Friday.
About 150,000 First Nations, Inuit and Metis children were taken from their homes and forced to attend the government- and church-sponsored residential schools over a period of more than 100 years, beginning in the 19th century.
The last school, in Regina, closed in 1996. There are about 85,000 former residential school students still alive across Canada.
Most children were forbidden from speaking their native languages and many were physically and sexually abused.
Manitoba's deputy premier, Eric Robinson, has said he never got to know his mother and was sexually abused in the residential system.
Survivor Robert Joseph, B.C. hereditary chief of the Kwagiulth nation on Vancouver Island, told CTV Winnipeg he hopes the event starts the healing process.
"Us survivors are going to benefit by being able to tell our stories and release the anger and the resentment," he said.
Joseph told the crowd it took him nearly all of his 70 years to share the "dark, ugly, painful, degrading, dehumanizing secrets" of his residential school experience.
Joseph said the sexual abuse he endured, as well as the loss of his culture, left him angry, ashamed and an alcoholic.
"I didn't know how to raise my family. I was just so angry ... I don't want to pass my anger on any more," he said.
Survivor Gerald McIvor said he appreciates the opportunity to speak out about what happened to him, telling CTV Winnipeg that "disclosure here is great to heal the victims. (But) what about rehabilitating the perpetrators? Nobody is addressing that."
...
The Winnipeg event is the first of seven national commission events to be held over the next four years.
The official program started Wednesday with the lighting of a sacred fire and a pipe ceremony.
CTV.ca
June 16 2010
See also:
LibertadLatina
About the sexual exploitation with
impunity of indigenous children and women in Canada
Canada
Canada still has much to do when it comes to human trafficking
We need a national strategy to investigate traffickers and to find and help victims
It's an indication of how grim things are elsewhere that Canada -- by meeting only the minimum standards for legislation and enforcement -- is once again ranked among the best countries in the world in the U.S. state department's 2009 human trafficking report.
Once again, Canada was singled out as a source, destination and transit country for people being trafficked into prostitution and forced labor, in the report released earlier this week.
Aboriginal women and girls are the most frequent targets here, while it's mostly Asians and Eastern Europeans who either end up in Canada or passing through en route to other countries.
The majority of victims are women, who wind up in massage parlors and brothels. Forced labor is acknowledged as a problem here, with the highest incidence reported in Alberta and Ontario, in agriculture, sweat shops and processing plants, and as domestic servants.
It's a mug's game trying to put numbers on the extent of the illegal trade. The only Royal
Canadian Mounted Police estimate, made a few years ago, is that there are 600 to 800 people trafficked into Canada each year. Victims' and immigrants' services agencies say that figure is far too low...
The U.S. report notes that Canada is "also a significant source country for child sex tourists, who travel abroad to engage in sex acts with children." As of late February, there were 32 cases before Canadian courts involving 40 alleged traffickers and 46 victims. Not one of those is in British Columbia even though the U.S. report has, in the past years, fingered Vancouver as a port of major concern.
It's also in spite of the British Columbia government's claim to be "leading the way nationally in responding to human trafficking situations."
Canada does have adequate anti-trafficking laws. What it lacks is a national strategy for investigating traffickers and identifying victims, even though Parliament unanimously approved one three years ago.
Victim support services are a provincial patchwork, which also makes it difficult to both identify victims and to help them once they are found...
Daphne Bramham
The Vancouver Sun
June 19, 2010
Mexico
|
 |
|
Impunity!
Father Alejandro Solalinde,
director of the shelter "Hermanos en el Camino de la
Esperanza " [Shelter
for Migrant Brothers on the Road of Hope]
and the
coordinator of the Southern Zone of the Pastoral
Dimension of Human Mobility of the Mexican Episcopal
Conference - is thrown into the back of a pickup
truck and taken away by corrupt police forces in
Oaxaca state.
Amnesty International:
"Father
Alejandro
Solalinde has been repeatedly arrested, threatened
and intimidated by local authorities and criminal
gangs [for his work assisting migrants]..."
How is the Blue Heart
Campaign going to end the madness of corrupt police
action against migrants, others at risk of human
exploitation and those who help them,
President Calderón? - LL |
Gangs, corrupt officials make illegal migrants' trip through Mexico dangerous
Ixtepec, Mexico - As the Mexican government condemns a new immigration law in Arizona as cruel and xenophobic, illegal migrants passing through Mexico are routinely robbed, raped and kidnapped by criminal gangs that often work alongside corrupt police, according to human rights advocates.
Immigration experts and Catholic priests who shelter the travelers say that Mexico's strict laws to protect the rights of illegal migrants are often ignored and that undocumented migrants from Central America face a brutal passage through the country. They are stoned by angry villagers, who fear that the Central Americans will bring crime or disease, and are fleeced by hustlers. Mexican police and authorities often demand bribes.
Mexico detained and deported more than 64,000 illegal migrants last year, according to the National Migration Institute. A few years ago, Mexico detained 200,000 undocumented migrants. The lower numbers are the result of tougher enforcement on the U.S. border, the global economic slowdown and, say some experts, the robbery and assaults migrants face in Mexico.
The National Commission on Human Rights, a government agency, estimates that 20,000 migrants are kidnapped each year in Mexico.
While held for ransom, increasingly at the hands of Mexico's powerful drug cartels, many migrants are tortured - threatened with execution, beaten with bats and submerged in buckets of water or excrement.
"They put a plastic bag over your head and you can't breathe. They tell you if you don't give them the phone numbers" of family members the kidnappers can call to demand payment for a migrant's release, "they say the next time we'll just let you die," said Jose Alirio Luna Moreno, a broad-shouldered young man from El Salvador, interviewed at a shelter in the southern state of Oaxaca.
Luna said he was held for three days this month in Veracruz by the Zeta drug trafficking organization, which demanded $1,000 to set him free. He said he was abducted by men in police uniforms and taken to a safe house with 26 others.
'Epidemic' in kidnappings
Of the 64,000 migrants detained and expelled by Mexico last year, the Mexican government granted only 20 humanitarian visas, which would have allowed them to stay in Mexico while they testified and pressed charges against their assailants.
"We have a government in Mexico that emphatically criticizes the new immigration law - which is perfectly valid, to criticize a law with widespread consequences - but at the same time doesn't have the desire to address the same problem within its own borders," said Alberto Herrera, executive director of Amnesty International in Mexico.
"The violations in human rights that migrants from Central America face in Mexico are far worse than Mexicans receive in the United States," said Jorge Bustamante of the University of Notre Dame and the College of the Border in Tijuana, who has reported on immigration in Mexico for the United Nations.
U.N. officials describe the kidnapping of illegal migrants in Mexico as "epidemic" in scope...
Amnesty International says that as many as six in 10 women experience sexual violence during the journey...
At a meeting Wednesday, Interior Minister Fernando Gomez Mont, the U.S. ambassador and the governors of the southern Mexican states pledged to work harder to protect migrants.
Like 'merchandise'
The small city of Ixtepec in the humid hills of Oaxaca is a crossroads for illegal migrants moving north on trains. At the edge of town, along the tracks at a shelter for migrants run by the Catholic church, 100 migrants slept on cardboard in the shade, waiting for an afternoon meal, before they move on.
Sergio Alejandro Barillas Perez, a Guatemalan at the shelter, said he was kidnapped in the gulf state of Veracruz this month and held for three days by men who said they worked for the Zetas.
He said his kidnappers demanded $10,000 for him and his girlfriend. "They told me if you don't give us the phone numbers, we'll kill your girlfriend," said Barillas, whose face was still bruised. "We were all in a house, a normal house. When they beat us, they would put a rag in our mouths and they turned on the music, loud, like they're having a party."
He said the kidnappers knocked out his girlfriend's teeth and dragged her away. He and others escaped. He said he does not know what happened to his girlfriend.
"These migrants aren't people -- they are merchandise to the mafias, who traffic drugs, weapons, sex and migrants," said Alejandro Solalinde, the Catholic priest who runs the Brothers of the Road shelter in Ixtepec. "They suck everything out of them."
The priest said that federal authorities do not protect the migrants and that local officials also look the other way, or take their cut from the robbers and traffickers.
Solalinde has battled local authorities who want to shut down his shelter, which feeds as many as 66,000 passing migrants in a year. More than 100 were at the shelter last week.
The priest said many Mexicans are distrustful of the outsiders. In 2008, townspeople became enraged when a Nicaraguan man who was living in Ixtepec was accused of raping a young girl. As police and the mayor were outside the gates at the shelter, Solalinde said, 100 angry protesters got inside.
"They had stones and sticks and gasoline," the priest said. "They wanted to burn us down."
William Booth
The Washington Post
June 18, 2010
Mexico
Urge ley contra trata de personas, dice Rosi Orozco
Ciudad de México.- El tráfico de personas en México, que registra entre 16 y 20 mil niñas y niños, cifra actualizada hasta el 2005, no podrá combatirse mientras no se apruebe la Ley General contra la Trata de Personas, que se encuentra en comisiones de la Cámara de Diputados y que obliga a los tres órdenes de gobierno a combatir el delito, aseguró la panista Rosi Orozco.
La presidenta de la Comisión Especial de Lucha contra la Trata de Personas de la Cámara de Diputados dijo que sólo cuatro estados de la república:
Tlaxcala, Chiapas, Distrito Federal y Tabasco tienen leyes en la materia.
Congressional anti-trafficking leader Rosi Oroszco urges
the passage of new federal bill held-up in committee
Mexico City - Human trafficking in Mexico, which includes 16,000
to 20,000 girls and boys, according to statistics developed in
2005, cannot be effectively fought until Congress approves the
new General Law Against Trafficking in Persons, according to
congressional deputy Rosi Orozco.
Orozco, who is president of the Special Commission to Fight
Human Trafficking in the Chamber of Deputies, added that only
four of Mexico's [31] federated entities,
Tlaxcala, Chiapas and Tabasco states, as well as the Federal
District [Mexico City], currently have anti-trafficking laws.
Gabriel Xantomila
El Sol de México
June 16, 2010
Note: Press reports from Mexico have
commonly stated that 21 of
Mexico's 32 federated entities have passed
anti-trafficking legislation. The context of Deputy Orozco's figure of four
states having anti-trafficking laws represents a discrepancy that will require
some investigation to resolve.
The Dominican Republic
Migración califica de injusto informe sobre trata de personas
En cuanto al punto del informe que se refiere a la parte fronteriza, el director de Migración, señaló que todos los países del mundo tienen un nivel de trata de personas
Santo Domingo - El director de Migración, Sigfrido Pared Pérez, también se pronunció en contra del informe del Departamento de Estado de los Estados Unidos que degrada a República Dominicana a la categoría tres en el combate a la trata de personas.
Pared Pérez calificó el informe de injusto y explicó que uno de los puntos a mejorar que señala el documento, el de la explotación de dominicanas en el exterior, no es responsabilidad de República Dominicana, sino del país de destino.
"Esas dominicanas que son explotadas en el exterior algunas son engañadas, eso tiene que ver con las autoridades del país de destino, no de origen", indicó.
En cuanto al punto del informe que se refiere a la parte fronteriza, el director de Migración, señaló que todos los países del mundo tienen un nivel de trata de personas.
"Ahora bien, decir que República Dominicana no está haciendo esfuerzos para tratar de desarticular eso es una cosa que escapa al juicio valedero", agregó.
Al ser entrevistado a su salida del programa Diario Libre AM, el funcionario destacó que en el país hay una ley (Ley 173-03) sobre Trata de Personas y en adición a esa ley un decreto (575-07) que creó una comisión para la aplicación de esa ley.
"Hay dos factores importantes a tomar en cuenta para un informe, y ese informe de este año fue peor que el de 2003, 2004 y 2005", indicó.
The government of the the Dominican
Republic calls the U.S. State Department's 2010 Trafficking in
Persons (TIP) report unjust
[English translation to follow.]
Paolah Soto
Diario Libre
June 17, 2010
Mexico, Latin America
Informe anual en Washington del Departamento de Estado: Más de 12 millones de personas, víctimas de trata en el mundo
México, tránsito y destino para prostitución y trabajo forzado, afirma
Washington, DC - Unos 12 millones 300 mil personas fueron víctimas de la trata de personas en el mundo entre 2009 y 2010, según un informe anual sobre la materia, publicado hoy por el Departamento de Estado estadunidense, que mantuvo a Cuba en su lista negra de países donde se trafican personas y colocó bajo "observación" a Venezuela, Nicaragua, Guatemala y Panamá.
Éste es el décimo año consecutivo que el Departamento de Estado publica el informe, el cual por primera vez incluyó a Estados Unidos, del que dijo tiene políticas "a la altura de nuestros ideales".
Washington utiliza tres categorías para evaluar la acción de 177 países en esta materia. La primera comprende a aquellos que cumplen totalmente con el Acta de Protección de las Víctimas de Tráfico Humano e incluye a Estados Unidos, varios países europeos y Colombia, la única nación latinoamericana en este grupo.
En el segundo nivel se ubican los estados que no cumplen con los estándares mínimos del acta, pero hacen "esfuerzos significativos" para alcanzarlos. Aquí se encuentran México y la mayoría de los países de la región, incluido Argentina en este año, que se reincorporó después de haber permanecido un tiempo en una llamada "lista de observación".
La tercera categoría abarca a los que no tomaron medidas adecuadas para detener el tráfico humano ni adoptaron "medidas significativas" para cambiar la tendencia. En este peldaño la República Dominicana se puso al lado de Cuba, de cuyo gobierno el reporte indica que por primera vez compartió información.
Con referencia a México, el reporte señaló que este país es fuente, tránsito y destino de hombres, mujeres y niños sujetos a la trata, especialmente en lo relacionado con la prostitución y el trabajo forzado. Los extranjeros más afectados son de Guatemala, Honduras y El Salvador.
Annual U.S. State Department Trafficking in Persons
(TIP) report states that 12 million people are victims of human trafficking
across the world
[English translation to follow.]
Afp, Dpa y Notimex
June 15, 2010
Argentina
Avanza proyecto legislativo sobre trata de personas
Buenos Aires - Legisladores del oficialismo y la oposición de Argentina se comprometieron hoy a impulsar una nueva legislación contra la trata de personas, a la que definieron como "una forma de esclavitud".
Oscar Aguad, presidente del bloque opositor UCR, resaltó que "la trata de personas es una forma de esclavitud, igual que la droga. Y si hay droga y si hay trata es porque hay complicidad de la Policía fundamentalmente". Los legisladores coincidieron, durante una conferencia de prensa, que "tenemos que darle a la Justicia y a los jueces las herramientas para que puedan combatir estos delitos".
Legislative initiative against human trafficking
advances
Buenos Aires - Legislators from Argentina's ruling and opposition parties today
committed themselves to push for new legislation to control human
trafficking, which they defined as a form of modern-day slavery.
Oscar Aguad, president of the UCR opposition block, emphasized that human
trafficking is a form of slavery, equal to drug addition. Congressman Aguad:
"If drugs and human trafficking exist, that condition is made possible
because of police complicity." During a press conference on the subject, the
legislators agreed that "we must give prosecutors and judges the tools that
they need to allow them to combat these crimes."
Legislator
María Luisa Storani, one of the authors of the bill, noted that:
"This is a plague that will require the collaboration of legislators and
civil society to fight, given that the majority of victims are women,
children and the poor."
ANSA
June 18, 2010
Mexico
Refrenda gobierno federal compromiso para prevenir trata de personas
El gobierno federal refrenda su irrestricto compromiso de consolidar políticas públicas transversales para prevenir y sancionar la trata de personas, así como dar atención integral a las víctimas de este delito, afirmó el titular de la Segob, Fernando Gómez Mont.
En un comunicado, la Secretaría de Gobernación (Segob) informó que lo anterior se patentó al realizarse la segunda sesión ordinaria de la Comisión Intersecretarial para Prevenir y Sancionar la Trata de Personas, presidida por el funcionario federal.
Puntualizó que en cumplimiento de la Ley para Prevenir y Sancionar la Trata de Personas, en la sesión se presentaron informes de los trabajos de la Subcomisión Consultiva, órgano encargado de la elaboración del Programa Nacional para Prevenir y Sancionar la Trata de Personas.
Además se dieron a conocer las actividades del lanzamiento, el pasado 14 de abril, de la Campaña Corazón Azul y todas las demás acciones encaminadas a informar a la población sobre el delito de trata de personas, como foros académicos, diálogos con la comunidad, la próxima carrera deportiva y conciertos...
Informó que como representantes de las organizaciones de la sociedad civil con actividades preponderantes en la prevención o asistencia a las víctimas de trata, se seleccionó a la Fundación Camino a Casa, A.C.
También a la Coalición Regional contra el Tráfico de Mujeres y Niñas en América Latina y El Caribe, A.C., y a la Alianza por la Seguridad en Internet, A.C.
,,,
The government of Mexico re-dedicates itself to
the fight against human trafficking
[English translation to follow.]
Notimex
May 24, 2010
New York, USA
Albany Moves to Let Sex Trafficking Victims Clear Criminal Records
New York - Sex trafficking victims may soon be able to have prostitution convictions against them vacated, thanks to new legislation approved in Albany.
Young women are often lured to the New York area with promises of jobs and then find themselves coerced into prostitution. Many of these young women get arrested and charged with a crime even though they were forced to do the work against their will.
Sienna Baskin, a staff attorney for the Sex Workers Program at the Urban Justice Center, says treating trafficking victims like criminals simply pushes them back into the hands of their abusers.
"They end up with a conviction on their record and they go right back into the hands of their trafficker, so we have clients who were arrested up to ten times before escaping their trafficking situation, usually on their own," Baskin says.
Baskin adds that those convictions can make it harder for women to get jobs or legal residency. The landmark legislation--New York's law is the first in the country--will allow trafficking survivors to start their lives over with a clean slate. As it stands, women who've been abused for years are then forced to disclose their criminal convictions to potential employers.
"Even after [the victims] escape from trafficking, that criminal record blocks them from decent jobs and a chance to rebuild their lives," says Democratic Assemblyman Richard Gottfried of Manhattan, the author of the bill. "This bill will give them a desperately needed second chance they deserve.”
The New York State Senate passed the bill on Tuesday and the Assembly passed the same bill in May. The governor still has to sign the bill into law, but advocates believe he will. The governor's office says he will review the bill when it is delivered to him by the legislature.
Secretary of State Hillary Clinton released a State Department report earlier this week that acknowledged for the first time the modern "slave trade" is going on in this country.
WNYC
June 17, 2010
California, USA
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Phillip Michael Dominguez and Racquel Martinez |
San Jose Pair Arrested In Child Sex Assault
A man and woman were arrested Wednesday in connection with the kidnapping and sexual assault of a 5-year-old girl in San Jose on Tuesday, police said.
The child was playing on the front lawn of her home in the 600 block of Balfour Drive on Tuesday afternoon when a man grabbed her and took her to a house nearby, where he sexually assaulted her, according to police.
Dominguez later let the child go and fled before officers arrived.
Investigators identified San Jose resident Phillip Michael Dominguez, 34, as the suspect and issued a warrant for his arrest. He was taken into custody on Wednesday morning.
Dominguez's girlfriend, 29-year-old San Jose resident Racquel Martinez, was also arrested on suspicion of aiding and abetting in the kidnapping and sexual assault. Both were booked into Santa Clara County jail.
Anyone with information on the case is asked to call Detectives Martin or Ichige, or Sgt. Robb of the Police Department's child exploitation detail, at (408) 277-4102. Those wishing to remain anonymous can call Crime Stoppers at (408) 947-STOP.
CBS 5
June 17, 2010
California, USA
2 Accused Of Sex Assault At Menlo Park Restaurant
Two employees of the British Bankers Club in Menlo Park were arrested Tuesday for allegedly groping two women at the restaurant, police said Wednesday.
The suspects, 26-year-old Moises Rojas and 29-year-old Juan Gustavo Robles-Alejo, allegedly groped the women while they were inebriated and unable to stop the advances, according to police.
The alleged incident was caught on surveillance video, and Rojas and Robles-Alejo were taken into custody Tuesday and booked into San Mateo County jail, police said.
Anyone who may have experienced similar incidents or who has information on this incident is asked to call Detective Ed Soares at (650) 799-9459.
CBS
June 17, 2010
Florida, USA
Attempted rapist captured on surveillance camera
Orlando - Police say a man who attempted to rape a woman at the Fountains of Millenia apartments may be a resident, or a regular visitor. Detectives released surveillance video of the attack which happened at one o'clock in the afternoon on June 13.
In the video, the surveillance camera captured the attacker walking away from the pool restroom and across the pool deck. After the suspect changes, he reappears in the surveillance video where he's seen lounging in the pool. Ten minutes later, the victim, a 34-year-old female enters the side of the screen and walks towards the restroom. The suspect takes notice, and thirty seconds later, he gets out to go show the victim how to get into the restroom through an open vent. Police say she went into the bathroom stall.
But when the victim came out, she saw the attacker right in front of her. A struggle began, and she told police he was trying to sexually attack her, so she fought back.
Fortunately, she scared off her would-be rapist, and the last shot of him is as he's running with his stuff towards the pool exit.
The suspect is described as a Hispanic male in his early 20s, thin to muscular build, with short hair and possibly a thin beard. He has tattoos on this chest, shoulder, and calf. he also had a beach towel designed like the flag of the Dominican republic.
WOFL FOX 35
June 19 2010
Oregon, USA
North Coast's Most Wanted: Elias Ramirez
North Coast law enforcement agencies are on the lookout for a man on the "Most Wanted" list.
Elias Arriaga Ramirez is wanted for the rape of an 11-year-old girl that occurred in Astoria in 2009. Arriaga Ramirez is a 25-year-old Hispanic man who is about 5-foot, 8-inches tall and weighs about 145 pounds. He has black hair and brown eyes.
There is an outstanding felony warrant for Arriaga Ramirez with a bail of $250,000.
If you have any information about the whereabouts of Elias Arriaga Ramirez, contact Detective Andrew Randall of the Astoria Police Department at (503) 325-4411, ext. 24 or dial 9-1-1.
The North Coast's "Most Wanted" is brought to readers by The Daily Astorian with cooperation from all the region's law enforcement agencies.
The Daily Astorian
June 17, 2010
Arizona, USA
Victim, suspect turn themselves in to Avondale police
Avondale - Avondale police are looking for a woman possible kidnapped by her abusive husband.
According to a witness, the victim, Italia Figueroa, and the witness were driving to court to obtain an order of protection for Italia when they were forced to stop in the roadway.
The witness said the suspect, Leonardo Rodriguez, drove his car and blocked them from continuing and then took Figueroa against her will.
Figueroa was forced by Rodriguez into his 2002 silver Honda Civic that was last seen driving northbound on Fairway Drive towards Van Buren Street.
The 2002 silver Honda Civic four door has Arizona license plate HPG-060.
Figueroa has told the witness she had been the victim of domestic violence as recent as two days ago, sustaining numerous bruises on her arms after Rodriguez assaulted her.
Update: Just before 9 p.m. Friday evening [June 18, 2010] Rodriguez showed up at the Avondale Police Department.
Figueroa, his wife, was with him when they showed up to the police station. She was unharmed.
They were cooperating with police interviews.
No word of if any charges will be filed.
Natalie Rivers
azfamily.com
June 18, 2010
Southwest USA
U.S. Border Patrol Weekly Blotter
Excerpt
June 15, 2010 - Buffalo Sector - Border Patrol agents arrested an illegal alien from Mexico at the Greyhound bus station in Rochester, New York. Records checks revealed the subject had a prior conviction for child molestation and had previously been removed from the United States.
June 15, 2010 - Tucson Sector - Border Patrol agents arrested an illegal alien from Mexico near Douglas, Arizona. Records checks revealed the subject had a prior conviction for attempted unlawful sexual intercourse with a minor in the state of California, and had previously been removed from the United States.
June 15, 2010 - Tucson Sector - Border Patrol agents arrested an illegal alien from Honduras near Sierra Vista, Arizona. Record checks revealed the subject had a prior conviction for indecent liberties with a child and had previously been removed from the United States.
June 13, 2010 - Laredo Sector - Border Patrol agents seized a tractor-trailer and arrested a USC and 47 illegal aliens at the traffic checkpoint near Laredo, Texas. The USC subject presented himself for inspection, and a Border Patrol canine alerted to the trailer. A search by agents revealed the 47 illegal aliens inside the locked trailer. Record checks revealed that the USC was a registered sex offender and had an extensive criminal history.
June 13, 2010 - Tucson Sector - Border Patrol agents arrested an illegal alien from Mexico near Coolidge, Arizona. Records checks revealed the subject had a prior conviction for rape of a child in the state of Washington, and had previously been removed from the United States.
June 11, 2010 - Tucson Sector - Border Patrol agents arrested an illegal alien from Guatemala near Tucson, Arizona. Records checks revealed the subject had a prior conviction for lewd or lascivious battery upon a minor in the state of Florida and had previously been removed from the United States.
U.S. Border Patrol
June 16, 2010
Kansas, USA
How should the media cover the human-trafficking story?
Last year, The Star did a big
series on human trafficking that got a lot of positive attention. One of the reporters who worked on that project, Mike McGraw, was on a panel yesterday at the United Nations... The big takeaway: The media needs to do a better job on the issue. (I was shocked by this critique, as I'd assumed the mainstream media was without flaw. How wrong I was.)
But I do think they made good points about coverage of human trafficking. When it does get covered, the stories tend to focus on the sex angle. That might have something to do with the fact that a lot of human-trafficking victims are forced into the sex trade. Not all of them are, though, as demonstrated by Mark, Mike and Laura Bauer's reporting. Case in point:
Sebastian Pereria told a friend last year about his life in America. How he wanted to see his wife and children in India, but his boss kept his identification papers and wouldn’t let him go.
Other waiters who worked with him at a Topeka restaurant told of how they were forced to work 13-hour days, six days a week. They talked of how the boss underpaid them and pocketed their tips. In the end, Pereria, 46, got his wish. He finally arrived home last year. In a coffin.
I have my own theory about why human trafficking hasn't caught fire as a cause among the U.S. public. I think a lot of Americans view human-trafficking victims not as someone who's being hurt, but as people who chose to illegally immigrate to the United States. That dries up the sympathy among a lot of Americans - even to the point where they overlook the terrible conditions that human-trafficking victims live in.
The Kansas City Star
June 17, 2010
See also:
The Americas
LibertadLatina
Commentary
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Chuck Goolsby |
Great job, Kansas City Star
Responding to the Kansas City Star's opinion piece: How should the media cover the human-trafficking story?
The Kansas City Star did a great job in its award-winning series on human trafficking published in December of 2009.
I have been an anti-trafficking activist since the late 1990s, focusing on the Latin American, and Latin U.S. immigrant aspects of the issue. I developed a web site:
Libertad Latina, which today contains 1,300 factual news articles, papers, abstracts and essays about the emergency of human trafficking.
I applaud the Star for having focused on the Latin American aspects of the issue.
I agree with this article's author in viewing at-least part of the public apathy in regard to human trafficking issues as being associated with anti-immigrant bias.
At the same time, many parties 'conflate' voluntary migrant smuggling with forced human trafficking. Federal authorities at-times report progress in the fight against cross-border (Mexican - U.S.) human trafficking, when they are really including arrests related to human smuggling operations.
As the Star series pointed out, many migrants who are smuggled voluntarily are later kidnapped, raped, tortured and sometimes murdered by 'coyotes' (smugglers), who decide to extort victim's families for an exaggerated smuggling fee.
[These cases often start as voluntary smuggling, and end-up as human
trafficking.]
According to veteran Mexican women's rights lawyer Teresa Ulloa, who is now the head of the Latin American and Caribbean branch of the Coalition Against Trafficking in Women (CATW-LAC), 17% of the gross national product across Latin American nations in derived from prostitution. Ulloa identifies 500,000 victims of human trafficking as existing in Mexico (compared to perhaps 200,000 cumulative victims in the U.S.). Child sex tourism from U.S. perpetrators are among the outrageous crimes that are rampant in Mexico's border regions and resort towns. An estimated 3,000 to 4,000 indigenous girl children have been kidnapped by the Japanese Yakuza mafias, and have been sold in Japan as 'geisha' prostitutes. Neither Mexico nor Japan have lifted a finger to save those children.
Although labor trafficking exists, sexist and racist machismo in Mexico and Latin America's other nations create special conditions where criminal men who act with impunity can literally get away with kidnapping, rape, murder and
[sexual]slavery with impunity. The U.S. public has very, very little visibility into these realities. U.S. federal anti-trafficking efforts, and the work of most NGOs have not provided the Latin American crisis, and especially its severely impacted indigenous people's component, a place at the table of decision making and public discourse on this emergency.
My efforts with
LibertadLatina
have focused on filling the gap in mainstream news coverage in regard to human trafficking's Latin American crisis. For the past 9+ years I have documented as much of the crisis as possible, so that the general public, legislators, law enforcement and criminal justice folks and advocates have access to the truth. Much of that truth, in regard to Latin America's crisis exists as Spanish language reporting by passionate and dedicated reporters and activists. Many of them, especially in Mexico, risk being jailed or killed by corrupt officials and mafias for speaking these truths. I translate as many critical stories as possible, and believe that the effort has had a positive impact on the crisis. In recent months, Mexico has been forced by global public outrage to finally begin to take action to address its huge human trafficking crisis.
So yes, the mainstream press needs to address human trafficking in more detail. The Kansas City Star has made a good start at setting an example for others in professional journalism.
Chuck Goolsby
LibertadLatina
June 18, 2010
Mexico
2010 Trafficking in Persons (TIP) Report - Mexico
Excerpt
Mexico is a large source, transit, and destination country for men, women, and children subjected to trafficking in persons, specifically forced prostitution and forced labor. Government and NGO statistics suggest that the magnitude of forced labor surpasses that of forced prostitution in Mexico. Groups considered most vulnerable to human trafficking in Mexico include women, children, indigenous persons, and undocumented migrants. Mexican women, girls, and boys are subjected to sexual servitude within the United States and Mexico, lured by false job offers from poor rural regions to urban, border, and tourist areas…
The vast majority of foreign victims in forced labor and sexual servitude in Mexico are from Central America, particularly Guatemala, Honduras, and El Salvador; many transit Mexico en route to the United States and, to a lesser extent, Canada and Western Europe…
The Government of Mexico does not fully comply with the minimum standards for the elimination of trafficking; however, it is making significant efforts to do so. Mexican authorities increased anti-trafficking law enforcement efforts and achieved the first convictions under the 2007 anti-trafficking law, in addition to opening a government-funded shelter dedicated to sex trafficking victims. The Secretariat of Government assumed more active leadership of the interagency trafficking commission and the Mexican Congress created its own trafficking commission. Given the magnitude of the trafficking problem, however, the number of human trafficking investigations and convictions remained low. While Mexican officials recognize human trafficking as a serious problem, NGOs and government representatives report that some local officials tolerate and are sometimes complicit in trafficking, impeding implementation of anti-trafficking statues…
NGOs, members of the government, and other observers continued to report that corruption among public officials, especially local law enforcement and judicial and immigration officials, was a significant concern. Some officials reportedly accepted or extorted bribes or sexual services, falsified identity documents, discouraged trafficking victims from reporting their crimes, or tolerated child prostitution and other human trafficking activity in commercial sex sites…
NGOs noted that many public officials in Mexico, including state and local officials, did not adequately distinguish between alien smuggling and human trafficking offenses and that many judges and police officers are not familiar with anti-trafficking laws. In order to address this problem, both government and outside sources provided some law enforcement officials, prosecutors, and social workers with anti-trafficking training.
…According to NGOs, victim services were lacking in some parts of the country and remained inadequate in light of the significant number of trafficking victims… Foreign victims who declined to assist law enforcement personnel… were repatriated to their home countries and were not eligible for victim aid or services in Mexico. Although authorities encouraged victims to assist in trafficking investigations and prosecutions, many victims in Mexico were afraid to identify themselves or push for legal remedies due to their fears of retribution from trafficking offenders. Furthermore, victims had little incentive to participate due to a culture of impunity, reflected by official complicity, the limited number of trafficking prosecutions and convictions, and the fact that no trafficking victim has been awarded compensation for damages. The law establishes legal protections for trafficking victims, though in practice, according to NGOs, witnesses were not offered sufficient protection…
U.S. Department of State
June 14, 2010
Arizona, USA
Who's coming to Arizona from Mexico?
Phoenix - Arizona's border with Mexico is the busiest crossing for illegal immigrants, and a number of them are criminals, according to the Border Patrol.
Last year, the Tucson sector of the Border Patrol caught 240,000 people trying to sneak into the United States illegally.
"Right about now, we're apprehending between 400 and 600 people a day," said Colleen Agle with the Border Patrol. She said this is the slow time of year; the number of illegal crossers peaks at around 1,000 a day in cooler weather.
Several criminals are among the illegal immigrants, Agle said.
"Rapists, child molesters, a lot of violent gang members."
She said it's tough to determine just what percentage of illegal immigrants have criminal backgrounds, but agents encounter them on a daily basis.
In the past few days, agents at Douglas have arrested an illegal immigrant who had been convicted of rape and another who had been convicted of having sex with a child under 3 years old. A child molester was arrested at a Nogales border crossing and an illegal who had been convicted of manslaughter was arrested in Casa Grande.
"We definitely see these types of individuals on a weekly basis," said Agle, "and I'd say pretty close to every day, we're apprehending somebody (criminal) -- whether it's a child molester or some sort of sex offender or violent gang member. Those are definitely people who are trying to get into the United States."
Pamela Hughes
KTAR
June 17, 2010
Texas, USA
Lawsuit alleges boy was raped in bathroom connected to CBP office
Brownsville — The office of the city attorney is reviewing The Brownsville Herald’s request to release an incident report regarding an alleged sexual assault of a child at the
Brownwsville and Matamoros International Bridge.
The report contains information on the investigation into the alleged sexual assault of a 7-year-old boy in a bathroom connected to the U.S. Customs and Border Protection office at the port of entry.
The boy and his mother — both residents of Matamoros — had accompanied his grandmother to the facility, where she was interviewed in connection with a criminal investigation regarding then Hidalgo County Commissioner Sylvia Handy.
The Herald on Thursday requested the report from the Brownsville Police Department after the child’s mother filed a lawsuit against the U.S. government, several federal agencies and BPD.
The mother claims federal and local law enforcement agencies mishandled evidence and released a suspect without charging him in connection with the assault, the lawsuit states. The mother is accusing authorities of covering up the crime.
The mother seeks unspecified actual and exemplary damages, the lawsuit states.
City Attorney Mark E. Sossi said Tuesday that he would have a resolution soon to The Herald’s request for public information. The Police Department appears to be the lead agency conducting the inquiry.
CBP spokesman Eddie Perez said Tuesday, “We are not at liberty to discuss any case that is in pending litigation.”
The woman filed the lawsuit May 28 in U.S. District Court...
According to the lawsuit, the boy, his mother, two sisters and grandmother were present at a CBP office because the FBI was to interview the grandmother in connection with a criminal investigation regarding then Hidalgo County Commissioner Sylvia Handy. Handy, who represented Hidalgo County Precinct 1, subsequently pleaded guilty to tax evasion and conspiracy to harbor illegal aliens and then resigned from her elected office.
“The FBI knew that (the grandmother) would necessarily have to bring her family and agreed to safeguard all of them while in the United States for government purposes,” the lawsuit states. “The sole purpose of their visit was to be interviewed at the CBP Office regarding an ongoing FBI investigation.”
On the family’s arrival at the CBP office, the FBI began to interview the boy’s grandmother while the remaining family members waited nearby, the lawsuit states. The boy then went to use the restroom.
The mother alleges that when she went to look for her son, there was a man inside wearing glasses and a striped shirt who raced past her out of the restroom and out the CBP office.
The child was found unconscious on the floor in the restroom, the lawsuit states.
Emma Perez-Treviño
The Brownsville Herald
June 08, 2010
Tennessee, USA
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Valentino Vasquez Miranda |
Illegal immigrant admits raping, killing Alabama woman; will reveal accomplice
The illegal immigrant who confessed to raping and killing an Alabama homecoming queen in a West Knoxville hotel room made a vow Thursday to expose his accomplice.
"That is a promise I make to the family (to) give them some peace," Valentino Vasquez Miranda said via an interpreter in Knox County Criminal Court.
Miranda admitted at a hearing Thursday that he used a master key to get inside a sleeping Jennifer Lee Hampton's hotel room at the Days Inn on Lovell Road and then raped and strangled her in September 2008.
As part of a plea deal approved by Judge Bob McGee, Miranda was sentenced to life with the possibility of parole after a mandatory 51-year prison term.
Hampton, 21, was in Knoxville to help train workers at a new Mama Blue's restaurant set to open here. Miranda and girlfriend Rosa Hernandez were living and working at the Days Inn as housekeepers.
Assistant District Attorney Kevin Allen told McGee that the attack on Hampton was a violent one, with guests in an adjoining room reporting a crash against her wall severe enough to shake items in their room. Hampton fought for her life, he said, evidenced by bits of Miranda's flesh under her fingernails.
"The cause of death was strangulation," he said...
At a hearing earlier this year, Allen signaled that his office might seek the death penalty in the case. But the Mexican consulate, acting on behalf of Miranda and his family, later questioned whether Miranda was 17 at the time of the slaying rather than the age of 20 as suggested by fake Social Security documents. Birth certificates are not issued in Mexico, so there is no way to verify a Mexican citizen's age. Under Tennessee and federal law, juveniles cannot be put to death.
To avoid a battle over the issue, Knox County District Attorney General Randy Nichols declined to authorize what's known as a "death notice" to be filed against Miranda.
Spared death and a lifetime behind bars, Miranda still tarried several hours Thursday before inking his plea deal.
Hampton's mother, Cynthia Senn, said she was told Miranda did not want to face her daughter's loved ones. He relented shortly before a 1:30 p.m. deadline.
Attorney Eddie Daniel already won a civil settlement on behalf of the Hampton family from the Days Inn. The terms have been kept under wraps.
Jamie Satterfield
The Knoxville News Sentinel
June 18, 2010
Pennsylvania, USA
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Louis Alberto Berrios-Rodriguez |
Police ID second suspect in Berks carjacking, rape
State police have identified a second suspect in the 2008 carjacking, beating and rape of a 22-year-old woman in Berks County.
State police at Reading issued an arrest warrant Wednesday night for Louis Alberto Berrios-Rodriguez, 22, formerly of Reading. He has not been captured, and is believed to be living in Puerto Rico.
Police in Puerto Rico and Reading are actively looking for him and anyone with information is asked to call state police at 610-378-4011, or Crime Alert Berks County at 877-373-9913. Callers are eligible for a reward of up to $10,000.
On Wednesday, state police said Raymond Cosme-Gomez, 21, formerly of Reading, was captured in Puerto Rico for the brutal Alsace Township rape on Oct. 18, 2008. He is awaiting extradition.
Police said an intensive investigation, which included the use of DNA evidence, led them to Cosme-Gomez.
Police said Cosme-Gomez and Berrios-Rodriguez were two of the three men who were in an Alsace bar with the victim. The three men followed the woman out of the bar and carjacked her in a parking lot across from the bar, police said.
The men robbed the victim of her money and drove her to a remote area about a quarter-mile away, where she was assaulted and raped, police said.
The attackers left the victim there, taking her car and her cell phone.
About an hour later, police found her car burning in Reading.
The Morning Call
June 17, 2010
Arizona, USA
Report: Man in Sparkletts uniform sexually assaults woman
Phoenix- A Phoenix woman claims she was sexually assaulted in her home this week by a man dressed in a Sparkletts water uniform.
Luis Samudio with the Phoenix Police Department said the woman told authorities she heard a knock on her door in the area of 51st Avenue and Cactus Road around 6 p.m. Tuesday.
The woman reportedly looked through the peep hole and saw a man wearing what appeared to be a Sparkletts uniform.
Samudio said the woman told authorities she opened the door and the suspect forced entry into the home.
The man allegedly sexually assaulted her and struck her several times in the head with a black semi-automatic pistol.
The suspect is described as a Hispanic male between 25 and 30 years old, 5 feet 8 inches tall, 190 pounds, and was wearing a Sparkletts water polo, a matching baseball cap, leather gloves, and tan shorts. Police also said he had a ‘chinstrap’ goatee.
Samudio said this appears to be an isolated incident. Police say the crime in under investigation.
Katrina Schaefer
Scripps Media, Inc.
June 17, 2010
The World, The United States
2010 Trafficking in Persons Report
U.S. State Department
June 15, 2010
Cuba
Cuba Rejects U.S. Allegations About Underage Prostitution
Havana - The Cuban government rejected Tuesday as “false and disrespectful” the U.S. State Department report on human trafficking and denied any trafficking of minors, as stated in the document.
The 2010 Trafficking in Persons Report, presented Monday in Washington, listed Cuba among countries that fail to meet minimum international standards in battling human trafficking, and said that sexual exploitation of minors is common on the communist-ruled island.
“This shameful slander deeply offends the Cuban people. Sexual trafficking of minors does not exist in Cuba, but rather there is an exemplary record of protecting children, young people and women,” according to Josefina Vidal, head of the North America desk in the Cuban Foreign Ministry.
In a statement sent to the media, Vidal said that Cuba does not figure, “either as a country of origin, or of transit, or as a final destination for this scourge.”
She said that the legislation and measures adopted against that crime place Cuba among the countries of the region with the “most progressive” regulations and mechanisms to prevent and combat human trafficking.
The State Department report, she said, “can only be explained by the desperate need the U.S. government has to justify, under any pretext whatsoever, the persistence of its cruel policy of (economic) embargo, rejected overwhelmingly by the international community.”
EFE
June 17,2010
New York, USA
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Victor Orozco |
Rapist sentenced to 25 years
[Albany] Only the quiet sound of shackles could be heard as Victor Orozco, 24, made his way into the courtroom. His fate resting in the hands of Judge Jonathan Nichols.
"The nature and extent of your crime against the victim and her family is probably one of the worst crimes in terms of victim impact that i've had to preside over," said Judge Nichols.
Orozco pled guilty to the rape of a Stockport woman back in January. Even more shocking -- the victim's two young children were forced to watch.
"He duct taped them, told her to make them stop screaming or he would kill her in front of her kids," said Columbia County District Attorney Beth Cozzolino.
The victim, who we couldn't show on camera, spoke to the judge through tears, saying "He destroyed my life and my children's lives."
"They will be forever traumatize by this. They can't go to the bathroom. They're afraid to fall asleep at night. They're afraid to go home," said Cozzolino.
Orozco waived his right to a hearing, and thus a trial. His attorney asked that to be taken into consideration during sentencing.
But the judge's concern was for the victim, handing down 25 years in prison.
"I'm really pleased the judge gave him the maximum sentence," Cozzolino says. "There really is no other sentence you could give an animal like this."
"He didn't know why he did it. He's sorry he did it. He wishes he could take it back," says defense attorney Michael Howard. "But that's obviously after the fact."
Now, Columbia County District attorney Beth Cozzolino says the victim is going to focus on moving forward.
"She's back to work," Cozzolino says. "Her kids are back to school and I'm hoping that they recover from this."
Cait McVey
WXXA
June 15, 2010
Pennsylvania, USA
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