Friday, August 15, 2014

Network of nuns helping fight human trafficking in PHL

Story originally published on August 2, 2014

Associations of nuns across the Philippines have pledged to help law enforcement agencies and NGOs in the fight against human trafficking in the country. The nuns are part of an international organization called Talitha Kum formed in 2009 to raise awareness of human trafficking worldwide. In the Philippines, Talitha Kum’s members include local law enforcement, congregations of religious women and the Philippine Interfaith Movement Against Human Trafficking (PIMAHT). Talitha Kum has already helped to rescue several trafficked women in Southeast Asia. Recently, a priest on board a ship going to Jakarta, Indonesia noticed that five women seemed troubled and decided to speak to them. Upon hearing of their situation, he called the nuns at Talitha Kum who subsequently called the police. The women were returned home shortly afterward. A Drugs and Crime Global TIP Report published in 2012 by the United Nations states that between 800,000 and two million people are trafficked yearly around the world.

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Baldoz thanks EU for P6.8 million support for PH's anti-human trafficking and illegal recruitment drive

Story originally published on August 12, 2014

The European Union (EU) has provided financial support worth P6.8 million to promote initiatives against human trafficking and illegal recruiting in the Philippines. The grant will go to the Philippine Overseas Employment Administration (POEA), a DOLE agency. Labor and Employment Secretary Rosalinda Dimapilis-Baldoz thanked the EU for its assistance and added that she "will ensure that the grant will be used as intended: to strengthen the POEA's capabilities and enhance cooperation between national and local authorities in combating illegal recruitment and trafficking". The grant comes a month after the Philippines and Australia signed the Australia Asia Program to Combat Trafficking In Persons (AAPTIP) agreement. Australia provided funding of AUS$5 million to the Philippines and other ASEAN countries under the agreement. Trafficking and illegal recruiting have remained prevalent in the Philippines; the POEA said that, in 2011, there were 224 victims of trafficking and 135 cases of illegal recruitment.

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Monday, August 11, 2014

FBI Sting Spotlights Human Trafficking


Story originally published on July 17, 2014

The FBI recently arrested four men in Arizona following a sting operation that uncovered a human trafficking scheme. The FBI began preparing the sting after it learned last summer about an attempt by several persons to buy sex slaves from Malaysia. Though that offer turned out to be a scam, the FBI was able to gain the contact details of the suspected traffickers. They lured one, Edward Kandl, to a fake sex slave auction after he attempted to buy a mail-order bride for $5,000 from the same website in December 2013. Kandl expressed interest in attending the auction and he arrived at the auction venue with $10,000, where he was subsequently arrested. A search of his home revealed a bed with chains, locks and a room with blacked-out windows. George Steuer of the Phoenix FBI field office stated that "We realized that there was this group of individuals in the U.S who were interested in owning a human slave both for sexual exploitation and domestic labor". According to the annual State Department report, there has been a rise in the prosecution of human traffickers in the U.S. with the Justice Department winning 174 convictions for sex and labor trafficking in 2013.

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Australia, Philippines ink agreement to continue fight against human trafficking

Story originally published on July 4, 2014

Australia and the Philippines signed the Australia Asia Program to Combat Trafficking In Persons (AAPTIP) agreement in Manila in July 2014. The Australian Ambassador to the Philippines, Bill Tweddell, signed for Australia, while Undersecretary Jose Vicente Salazar of the Department of Justice, who heads the Philippines’ Inter-Agency Council Against Trafficking (IACAT) signed the pact for the Philippines. The agreement will run for five years and will provide AUS$5 million in subsidies to the Philippines and other ASEAN countries to help improve their capacity to tackle human trafficking and bring offenders to justice. Australia will work closely with the Philippine government and support the country through 'technical assistance and training'. The Philippines has been trying to bolster its anti-trafficking laws by amending the Anti-Trafficking in Persons Act, which widens the number of offences that an offender could be charged with.

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