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2022 Assembly

 

CCARHT 6th Annual Summer Symposium.

 

Theme: The Body in Trafficking. 29 June – 2 July 2021

Register Here

The above link includes a 50% discount for RENATE members who register for the symposium.

The four-day symposium with three days open to scholars, policy makers, media specialists, protection services, and a fourth day particularly dedicated to developing young researchers in the field – will interrogate in depth some of the most egregious assaults on the human body effected by Human Trafficking and Modern Slavery crimes.

CCARHT works with the Centre of Global Human Movement, the Cambridge Centre for Social Innovation and the Institute of Criminology, at the University of Cambridge, and brings academics, policy makers, NGO project directors and CEOs, business, law makers and prosecutors to an annual symposium, held at the Judge Business School in the first week of July every year.

Currently in Pandemic times all offerings from CCARHT are online.

IJM news June 2021 from Shawn Kohl

 

News from RENATE colleagues at the International Justice Mission (IJM).

Shawn Kohl, Director for Eastern and Central Europe, INTERNATIONAL JUSTICE MISSION ® shares news about the official opening of IJM’s in-person week-long training for police detectives and prosecutors focused on the following themes; forensic interviewing of victims and children; interviewing of suspects; on-line open source investigations and trauma informed approaches to cases of THB.

The event was graced with the presence of the acting US Ambassador, and the Ministries of Interior, Justice and the Prosecutor General and the heads of the Anti-organized crime units for prosecution and police.

More at IJM.org

RENATE member Ana Stakaj, Executive Leader Mary Ward Loreto Albania, shares about empowerment of women and girls when addressing the SECOND PREPARATORY MEETING OF THE 29th OSCE ECONOMIC AND ENVIRONMENTAL FORUM 10/11 June 2021.

 

Theme: Promoting Comprehensive Security, Stability and Sustainable Development in the OSCE area through Women’s Economic empowerment. 

RENATE member Ana Stakaj, Executive Leader at Mary Ward Loreto Albania, presented at the annual June gathering, where she shared about the most important factors in the empowerment of women. 

Drawing upon her years of service commitment at MWL and RENATE, Ana was able to inform the delegates about the realities of life for women on the margin, in both urban and rural settings. Ana shared about the power of cultural morés, whereby long held traditions continue to influence society and women and girls are not encouraged or supported to stay in school and attain gainful employment. 

Ana shared that one of the most important factors in the empowerment of women is to Increase women’s and girls’ educational attainment. Programs for education, upskilling and re-skilling– especially to keep pace with rapid technological and digital transformations affecting jobs—are critical for women’s and girl’s health and wellbeing, as well as their income-generation opportunities and participation in the formal labour market. 

The women Ana interviewed were well able to identify the importance to them of being able to earn an income, which not only helped sustain family life but helped personally sustain the self-esteem of the women themselves. 

When it comes to recommendations based on informed experience, Ana recommends community development approaches for tackling social and cultural norms that prohibit women from the celebration of human rights. Additionally, Ana recommends Free legal aid as it is crucial for women who don’t have steady or adequate income. 

From the experiences at MWL,  the collaboration of CSO’s with the public and private sector supports opening access to opportunities not only at the basic levels of living standards, but to also achieve higher levels of security and well-being through education, training and employment opportunities.

Tune in to the video at: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EZiC_xeEu88

Read the full address

Traffick Analysis Hub Online Conference Invitation: The Intelligence Community Conference:- Trafficking and Exploitation: ‘’It’s the Economy, stupid!’’

 

The Traffik Analysis Hub (TUB) will hold its annual Intelligence Community Conference on 22 July 2021 14:00- 16:00 (BST) & (15:00 – 17:00 (CET). 

The conference will put a spotlight on the economy of human trafficking  and will follow a series of conversations surrounding the errant economy that sustains trafficking and exploitation. The conference will also focus on the importance of intelligence networks and survivor stories.

To register: https://zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_lwBPcgF4TuOAOclgDS4lvQ

 

SAVE THE DATE 14 Jun | WHAT WORKS TO ELIMINATE CHILD LABOUR IN ARTISANAL MINING.

 

To celebrate the World Day Against Child Labour, the Good Shepherd International Foundation and Bon Pasteur Kolwezi are holding a webinar entitled:

WHAT WORKS TO ELIMINATE CHILD LABOUR IN ARTISANAL MINING 

The Experience of Bon Pasteur Kolwezi  

Date: Monday, June 14th 2-4pm CEST (The webinar will be in English. Translation in French available).

To register for the event: https://docs.google.com/forms/d/e/1FAIpQLSftHleLJPLeqnn5SYgciAGMZT6Y-kkv6oL1HJmRrfzN3pCUtg/viewform 

For further information: events@gsif.it 

YOU ARE NOT FOR SALE – CARITAS Slovakia CAMPAIGN 2021.

 

Report from RENATE member Jana Urbanova, CARITAS Slovakia.

SUPPORT THE CAMPAIGN

“You are not for sale!” is the slogan of CARITAS Slovakia’s new campaign. In Slovakia, Caritas plays an important role in the fight against human trafficking, by means of helping victims and also by organising prevention and education activities. In the Not for Sale campaign, the organisation wants to appeal to young women and girls in particular and to warn them of the dangers that are more real than we think.
Since 2008, when Caritas started implementing its victim-assistance programme, it has helped more than 120 victims of human trafficking under the Programme for the Support and Protection of Victims of Trafficking in Human Beings which is financed by the Ministry of the Interior of the Slovak Republic. It gradually expanded the initial victim-care project to include assisted voluntary return services and the operation of a free National Helpline for Victims of Trafficking 0800 800 818. In this new campaign, Caritas warns against sexual exploitation which is the second most common form of trafficking registered in Slovakia in the past year, and it is the most common form of exploitation in the EU.

The abuse of girls and women is still a big problem

“Your worth lies not just in your body, but first and foremost in who you are. You are as precious as a diamond. Therefore, do not allow anyone to treat you like a commodity, ” the actress Petra Polnišová says in one of the three videos.
In addition to the participation of this popular actress, the rapper EGO, already known from a previous CARITAS Slovakia campaign against forced labor, is part of this current campaign and, in a third short video, a former Caritas client who herself experienced the nightmare of sexual exploitation abroad authentically talks about her experience.
The risk of modern-day slavery generally threatens the poorer regions of southern and eastern Slovakia, where there is a shortage of jobs, and, in the form of sexual exploitation, it mainly affects Roma women and girls. Victims are often lured by perpetrators who pretend to have a romantic relationship with them, or approach them with an offer of a promising job and a vision of a better life. After being transported abroad or away from home within Slovakia, their personal documents are confiscated and are forced to engage in prostitution through psychological and physical abuse. Alarmingly, almost half of the identified victims of sexual exploitation in Slovakia in the last year were children.

Victims of trafficking due to poverty

The Not for Sale campaign builds on a previous series of videos from the 2019 campaign called Don’t Become a Slave/Do Not Get Enslaved. The aim of both campaigns is to reach out to young people in their own language and to inform them about the risks that they can easily overlook due to socio-economic conditions in an effort to “improve” their lives.
Jana Urbanová, who is the prevention coordinator of the STOP Human Trafficking project believes “on the one hand, it is the greed and egoism of the traffickers who see others as a means of enrichment. On the other hand, it is also extreme poverty that leads vulnerable groups to accept a dubious job offer or believe in beautiful promises of a better future. Here we come across the acute problem of marginalized Roma communities, which has still not been addressed effectively enough. In addition, the problem also affects children, who are all the more vulnerable in these inadequate conditions.‘‘
According to Jana, there is a great need to raise the awareness of social workers and other representatives of the state infrastructure, as well as representatives of non-governmental organisations, in order to be able to identify potential victims and intervene adequately. When the COVID-19 restrictions are lifted, CARITAS wants to organise in-person meetings and workshops with field social and community workers together with members of Roma communities. The project employees did the same during the 2019 campaign, when more than 350 people attended these meetings. “We have received a positive feedback from the field and we believe that this time we can also reach out to young people who may be preparing for work abroad in the summer and encourage them to be careful,” concludes Jana.

STOP Trafficking Newsletter June 2021. Vol 19. No. 6.

 

FOCUS: This month’s newsletter focuses on those often unrecognized victims of human trafficking: persons with disabilities.

Last year’s Trafficking in Person’s Report (TIP 2020) cited trafficking of persons with disabilities in reports on more than 40 countries. While trafficking for sexual and labour exploitation continues to prevail amongst persons with disabilities, an additional concern is the exploitation of persons with disabilities for the purposes of theft of social security and disability benefits. People with disabilities are three and a half times more likely to be victims of sexual assault and more likely to be the victims of violent crimes. Most victims know their perpetrators, while a quarter of victims of violent crime believe they were targeted because of their
disabilities. Common forms of trafficking of people with disabilities include commercial sexual exploitation, forced labour, debt bondage, forced begging or peddling, involuntary servitude and servile marriage.

Click here to download the June 2021 newsletter (English).
Haga clic  aquí  para descargar el boletín de Junio 2021 (Spanish)

Link to the U.S. Catholic Sisters Against Human Trafficking website:
https://www.sistersagainsttrafficking.org/stop-trafficking-newsletter/

Event report: ‘’The Intersections of Family Homelessness and Human Trafficking.’’ UNANIMA International Publication Launch

 

 ‘’The Intersections of Family Homelessness and Human Trafficking.’’  11 May 2021. Webinar to mark the launch of UNANIMA International publication.

UNANIMA International is a coalition of communities of women religious –in 83 countries – who bring their voices, concerns and experiences as educators, health providers, social workers, development and community builders to the United Nations (UN). 

UNANIMA International’s continued and evolving focus on women and children/girls who have been displaced has prompted the organization to take a lead role, including research, in homeless advocacy at the United Nations. Its present focus is on homelessness and displacement as one of several global concerns it seeks to address, at the United Nations.

 “Transforming our world” is the core mantra for 2030 Agenda for UN Sustainable Development Goals and its pledge to ‘leave no one behind, especially those furthest left behind.’  Addressing family homelessness, displacement and trauma are integral to achieving that 2030 agenda.  In this regard, UNANIMA undertook a significant piece of research on ‘The Intersections of Family Homelessness and Human Trafficking,’  including reflections on the lived experiences of homeless and trafficked persons; along with service providers; advocates and policy makers.

At its launch, speakers were represented from Australia, the Philippines, India, Italy, Albania, USA and Ireland, giving a wide-ranging view of the plight of people suffering the trauma of homelessness, and this trauma combined with human trafficking in some instances.

Sr. Noelene Simmons, ACRATH (Australian Catholic Religious Against Human Trafficking), s outlined its response to emerging issues of migrants and homelessness.

A woman from the Philippines told her heart-rending story of surviving trafficking and homelessness, attributing her recovery to the support she received from women religious who guided her rehabilitation.

The Co-ordinator of Talitha Kum  – a network of Catholic nuns working in anti-human trafficking – Gabriella Bottani, shared on  trans-national, collaborative anti-human trafficking work across 92 countries, seven Continents. Its theme for 2021 International Day of Prayer Against Human Trafficking (IDPAHT), 8th February, An Economy without Human Trafficking highlighted the present dominant economic model as   one of the major causes of human trafficking. Adi Shakti shared about the SoulWork initiative in India.

Rocio Moron and Kirin Taylor shared on the work of UNANIMA International, specifically the work behind the creation of its publication and Amarachi Grace Ezeonu, SND, representing the sisters of Notre Dame de Namur at the UN, shared her mission of advocacy on family displacement, homelessness and human trafficking. 

Imelda Poole, IBVM, President RENATE Europe spoke to the central themes of family, homelessness, and human trafficking, with power-point slides. 

Drawing upon her work at Mary Ward Loreto Albania with its mission to end human trafficking and exploitation, Imelda shared from her years of experience working with people in dire poverty leaving them homeless. She also shared her work on human trafficking, homelessness and the cross-border transits that  is the reality for the those marginalised in Albanian society. Her account illustrated a starkness to the real-life situations for the Roma community in Albania and the undocumented Romanian girls on the street at Euston station, London. 

Imelda went on to say how Ineffective legislation plays its own part in the intersections of family homelessness and human trafficking when in so many, many countries worldwide, domestic workers (largely immigrant women) are often unprotected by labour laws. 

 

In addition to each one’s particular story, the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic was referenced by all speakers, but Imelda highlighting additional impacts such as the closure of homeless shelters and drop-in centres; the closure of police front-desks; Charities and NGOs being furloughed and the ensuing lack of supports to support and protect homeless people. It all contributes to destitute and desperate people falling into the hands of predators who lurk on the mean streets, watching for and seizing upon the opportunity to exploit those who are at their most vulnerable.

Referencing a UK based foundation, Street Linkshttps://www.streetlink.org.uk    Imelda laid bare the undisputed truth that displaced peoples have human rights and are members of society and yet they suffer daily deprivation and  discrimination (Street Link app). 

With increased unemployment arising from the pandemic, hundreds of homeless people are recruited into ‘slave’ labour, recruited form street corners and soup kitchens, lured by the empty promises of cash, food, drink or drugs. Imelda talked about these hopeful people being locked into squalid conditions, beaten, forced to work unrelenting hours and without access to fundamental human rights.

 

She challenged us living in the UK, with ‘which of us can say we don’t know much of this’ now that radio programmes such as The Archers and drama TV shows such as Grey’s Anatomy have incorporated the themes of human trafficking and homelessness in various episodes in the past year? 

 

But it was Imelda’s statement that society causes human trafficking which created the greatest impact, as step-by step, she peeled back the onion-like layers of society, exposing our complicity – albeit indirectly mostly– in factors contributing to human trafficking: systemic poverty, breakdown of family leading to dysfunction, homelessness as we demand cheaper goods and services to maximise profits 

In the face of the moral imperative to respond to the question ‘’what can be done?’’  Imelda pointed out some very basic steps such as the following;

  • Become aware/educate yourself;
  • Raise awareness at night shelters (https://theclewerinitiative.org );
  • Work Together (Let’s Talk initiative); 
  • Research (Hostia and the Passage);
  • Advocate and speak out.

The launch of The Intersections of Family Homelessness and Human Trafficking has opened the door and shone a light for all to see. 

Just as society – individuals as well as policy-makers – responsible for allowing homelessness, exploitation and human trafficking to continue, all are  equally responsible to step up and play a crucial role to end these open-wounds on contemporary society.

Her final message is: Let us all play our part together, mindful of the simple steps we need to take.  

 

 

Stop Human Trafficking | Pray for Trafficked Persons