Children And Women Trafficking
Contents:
- Child Trafficking
- Women Trafficking
- Trafficking Techniques
- What Children are Trafficked For?
- Child Sex Exploitation
- Factors Responsible for Trafficking
Child Trafficking
Child Trafficking is a form of human trafficking and is defined as the “recruitment, transportation, transfer, harboring, and/or receipt” of a child for the purpose of exploitation.
- Local Contacts – Traffickers enlist the help of local persons and villagers to identify vulnerable families.
- Direct Sale – Women and children are sold to traffickers by parents or other family members.
- Deceit – Unscrupulous agents deceive parents and lure women and girls with false promises of well-paid work in cities or marriages to rich husbands.
- Debt Bondage – Traffickers provide economic incentives and financial loans to parents which bind their children into sex-slavery or other exploitative forms of labor. Debt terms are often ill-defined.
What Children are Trafficked For?
Children are trafficked for:
- Child sexual exploitation or child pornography
- Prostitution
- Slavery or practices similar to slavery
- Removal of organs/organ trade
- Forced early marriage
- Illicit International adoption
- Recruitment as child soldiers
- domestic servitude such as cleaning, childcare, cooking
- Forced labour in factories or agriculture
- Criminal activities such as pick-pocketing, begging of alms, transporting drugs, working on cannabis farms, selling pirated DVDs, bag theft.
Trafficking for Organ Trade
Trafficking of organs is a form of children or women trafficking. It can take different forms. In some cases, the victim is compelled into giving up an organ. In other cases, the victim agrees to sell an organ in exchange of money/goods, but is not paid (or paid less). Finally, the victim may have the organ removed without the victim’s knowledge (usually when the victim is treated for another medical problem/illness – real or orchestrated problem/illness). Migrant workers, homeless persons, and illiterate persons are particularly vulnerable to this form of exploitation. Trafficking of organs is an organized crime, involving several offenders:
- the recruiter
- the transporter
- the medical staff
- the middlemen/contractors
- the buyers
Trafficking for organ trade often seeks kidneys. Trafficking in organs is a lucrative trade because in many countries the waiting lists for patients who need transplants are very long.
Child Sex Exploitation
- “The use of girls and boys in sexual activities remunerated in cash or in kind (commonly known as child prostitution) in the streets or indoors, in such places as brothels, discotheques, massage parlors, bars, hotels, restaurants, etc.”
- “The trafficking of girls and boys and adolescents for the sex trade”
- “Child sex tourism”
- “The production, promotion and distribution of pornography involving children”
- “The use of children in sex shows (public or private)”
Factors Responsible For Trafficking
Poverty: Poverty and lack of educational and economic opportunities in one’s hometown may lead women to voluntarily migrate and then be involuntarily trafficked into sex work.
Globalization: As globalization opened up national borders to greater exchange of goods and capital, labor migration also increased. Less wealthy countries have fewer options for livable wages. Globalization and the rise of Internet technology has also facilitated sex trafficking. Online classified sites and social networks have been under intense scrutiny for being used some traffickers in facilitating sex trafficking and sex work in general. Traffickers use explicit sites and underground sites to market, recruit, sell, and exploit females.
Domestic Violence: Domestic violence is one of the most widespread violations of women’s rights in the world. Due to limited legal mechanisms and support for abused women in many communities, women often see few opportunities to end the abuse. Research suggests that victims of domestic violence may also be at risk of becoming victims of trafficking when they seek work abroad in order to leave the abusive situation.
Maltreatment: Some children who are being maltreated and not taken care of ted to run away from the homes in which this happens. Most of them are deceived and end up in the hands of traffickers.
Social and Cultural Practices: Many societies and cultures devalue, abuse and exploit women and girls, creating perilous living conditions for these women. With little opportunities of upward mobility and with little value placed on women and girls, they are more vulnerable to human trafficking.
Escape from War and conflict: Armed conflicts can lead to massive forced displacements of people. War creates large numbers of orphans and street children who are especially vulnerable to trafficking. Their families have either passed away or are fighting a war, complicating child-rearing.
Bad Economic Situations
Working Conditions of Trafficked Persons
- Conditions of work and treatment often involve slavery-like practices and prison-like environments.
- Physical and sexual abuse is common.
- Trafficked persons have almost non-existent access to health and medical facilities.
- Trafficked persons work long hours, with little to no rest or recreation.
- Earnings are withheld with prolonged indebtedness to traffickers
6 thoughts on “Factors Responsible For Children And Women Trafficking”
child trafficking is bad…. nigerians quit….pls
HUMAN TRAFFICKING IS VERY BAD AND WE NEED TO FIGHT AGAINST IT
l hate human traffickers.Nigerians need to fight against it. Any human trafficker in Nigeria die by fire prayers.
Good
It is v bad but no consequences what
puting an end to human trafficking starts from the home,let desist from this act,