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Human trafficking 101: What trafficking is all about

Human trafficking is considered one of the most profitable organized crimes in the world
as it generates almost $32 billion each year.

MANILA, Philippines – Eighteen-year-old Julie (not her real name) was working in a
beerhouse in her hometown of Cebu when an opportunity difficult to ignore presented
itself.

Alicia Tongco, who introduced herself as an owner of a talent management agency in


Manila, offered to make her an actress and to become her manager. It was an
opportunity she couldn’t pass up.

Ignoring her parents’ admonition not to leave, she left for Manila with Tongco in
November 2003. Tita Bing, as Tongco was fondly called by her “talents”, allowed Julie
to live in her house for free along with other women.

Everything seemed all right, until Julie was peddled to customers hungry for sex. She
was sold 9 times to different men.

600 kilometers away from home, Julie worked not as a movie star as Tita Bing had
promised, but as a sex slave.

Hers is a story common in the Philippines and throughout the world. Julie is just one of
about 400,000 women trafficked within the Philippines annually, according to the US
State Department’s Human Rights Report.

All over the world, over 10 million Filipino men, women, and children are subjected to
sex trafficking and forced labor, according to research done by the US government in
2014.

But while Julie’s story is now part of reported cases and statistics on human trafficking,
many people, mostly women and children, suffer in silence, their stories unknown and
hidden in this underground global business that generates about $32 billion (P1.5
trillion)* a year. Many trafficked persons are not as lucky as Julie, whose traffickers
were convicted in 2005.

Away from home, trafficked persons end up in brothels, sweatshops, farms, or in any
other place they were made to believe was paradise.
What is human trafficking?

Although one case may differ from another, most human trafficking cases follow the
same pattern, according to a report of the United Nations Office on Drugs and
Crime (UNODC): (1) people are abducted or recruited in a country of origin; (2)
transferred through transit regions; and then (3) exploited in a destination country.

The UNODC cites 3 elements that constitute human trafficking:

 the criminal act of recruitment, transportation, transfer, harboring, or receipt of


persons within or across national borders
 by means of: threat or use of force, coercion, abduction, fraud, deception, abuse
of power or vulnerability, or giving payments or benefits to a person in control of
the victim
 for the purpose of exploitation, which includes, at a minimum, exploiting the
prostitution of others, other forms of sexual exploitation, forced labor or services,
slavery or similar practices, and the removal of organs

“At least one element from each of these three groups is required before the definition
applies,” the UNODC report stated.

That Tongco tricked Julie to believe she would be a movie star and that she transported
her from Cebu to Manila, where she was exploited as a prostitute, qualifies Julie’s story
as a human trafficking case. With or without the victim’s consent, any case similar to
this would still be classified as human trafficking, because no person would ever agree
to be exploited in the first place.

Unlike human smuggling, human trafficking involves coercion and subsequent


exploitation once the victim is brought to another city or province within the country, or
to a foreign land. Trafficked persons are usually forced to engage in prostitution, illegal
labor, begging, pornography, sex tourism, organ sale, and other jobs where they are
exploited and taken advantage of.

Next only to the trafficking of drugs and guns, trafficking in persons is now the world’s
third most profitable organized crime. Hundreds of thousands of people, mostly from
Asia, are trafficked every year.

As a major source of migrant workers all over the world (it has 7 million migrant workers
worldwide, according to the International Labor Organization), the Philippines is no
stranger to human trafficking, “a lucrative underground economy” inside the country,
said the Visayan Forum Foundation.

The UNODC, in fact, ranks the Philippines as “high” in terms of incidence of human
trafficking.
According to a 2016 Trafficking in Persons report, the usual destinations for trafficked
persons in the Philippines are Metro Manila, Metro Cebu, central and northern Luzon,
and urbanized areas in Mindanao.

Trafficking, it added, also occurs in tourist destinations such as Boracay, Angeles City,
Olongapo, Puerto Galera, and Surigao.

How it’s done

Ferdinand Lavin, former chief of the Anti-Trafficking Division of the National Bureau of
Investigation (NBI), said that prospective recruits are usually promised decent jobs in
urban areas within the country or abroad, where job opportunities are commonly
perceived to be abundant.

“If these people were recruited in the Visayas or Mindanao, they have to be transported
to the urban centers, because the urban centers are the places for exploitation,” he
said.

Recruiters usually scout for potential recruits in local communities, aided by


headhunters who know the community and its residents well enough. These
headhunters help recruiters convince parents to allow their children to leave. Often, the
recruiters give parents cash, making it even more tempting for them to send their
children to work.

To facilitate transit, a recruit’s personal documents, such as his or her birth certificate,
are faked. Once in transit, they are not allowed to talk to anyone outside the group and
to handle their legal or travel papers.

Upon reaching their destination, the recruits are told that their transportation expenses,
along with other incurred expenses, would be deducted from their salary. Having huge
debts to pay, they then begin to work, not as sales ladies or caregivers or any other job
promised them, but as prostitutes, laborers on bondage, or even beggars, according to
a primer of TUCP (Trade Union Congress of the Phillippines).

Taking action

Widespread as it is, human trafficking is a global menace that world leaders have been
wanting to stop.

A significant milestone is the United Nations Convention against Transnational Crime,


adopted by the UN General Assembly during its Millennium Meeting in November 2000.
The convention and its two supplementing protocols, opened for signature in December
of the same year, was described by the UNODC report as “the first serious attempt by
the international community to answer the global challenge of transnational organized
crime with a global response in the form of international law.”

In the Philippines, as a response to the convention, Congress passed the Anti-


Trafficking in Persons Act of 2003, or Republic Act (RA) 9208. It was also part of the
country’s commitments as a signatory to the UN Protocol to Prevent, Suppress, and
Punish Trafficking in Persons, Especially Women, and to the Convention on the
Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination Against Women.

RA 9208 set up policies to eliminate trafficking in persons, especially of women and


children. It also established the necessary mechanisms to curb the problem, and
imposed penalties of as much as P5 million and life imprisonment.

In line with this, the Inter-Agency Council Against Trafficking (IACAT) was also formed
to address human trafficking in the country. It consists of 6 government agencies and 3
non-government organizations, and is chaired by the justice secretary.

The IACAT is tasked, among others, to: formulate policies and programs aimed at
preventing human trafficking; assist victims in the filing of cases; train personnel who
will directly address cases of trafficking; and engage in information and education
campaigns with local governments.

Despite these, however, many still fall prey to trafficking due to poverty, lack of job
opportunities, conflict in Muslim Mindanao, and the inability of young children to
continue going to school, according to a fact sheet prepared by the Visayan Forum.

The Visayan Forum adds that as criminal organizations continue to grow and expand,
there still are problems such as the ease of obtaining fake documents and the lack of
cooperation from neighboring countries.

From Tier 2 in 2015, the Philippines now belongs to Tier 1 of the US State
Department’s 2016 Trafficking in Persons Report, which means that the government
"fully meets the minimum standards for the elimination of trafficking."

These requirements include vigorous investigation and prosecution of trafficking cases,


severe punishment for traffickers, and persistent efforts to purge other forms of
trafficking, among others.

From 2003 to 2015, data from IACAT show that 246 individuals – including Tongco and
her husband – have been convicted of human trafficking in the country. (READ: Human
trafficking convictions: How has government fared?)
According to the 2016 Trafficking in Persons report, the Philippine government
convicted 42 traffickers, including five for online child sex trafficking and two for forced
labor, from 2015 to 2016. It also convicted two immigration officers and charged 5
officials allegedly complicit in trafficking.

The report added that the police investigated 329 alleged trafficking cases – an increase
from the 282 suspected cases in 2014 and 155 in 2013. The National Bureau of
Investigation, meanwhile, conducted 40 operations which yielded 151 suspected
traffickers and the investigation of 67 sex trafficking cases and 4 for forced labor.

For forced labor, victims were usually engaged in "the fishing, shipping, construction,
education, nursing, and agricultural industries, as well as in domestic work, janitorial
service, and other hospitality-related job" across the Middle East, Asia, and North
America.

There is existing support for victims but the government should also focus on "long-term
care."

“The lack of long-term care, absence of mental health services, and familial involvement
in facilitating exploitation left many victims vulnerable to re-trafficking,” the report said. –
with a report from Jodesz Gavilan/Rappler.com

AUTHOR: Paterno Esmaquel II and Ryan Edward Chua

DATE OF PUBLICATION: Published 10:00 AM, December 12, 2015 Updated 1:57 PM,
May 23, 2017

SOURCES: https://www.rappler.com/newsbreak/iq/115637-human-trafficking-101

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