TRAFFICKING IN HUMAN BEINGS AFFECTS SOULS

Tackling Modern Slavery in Supply Chains.
Needing to learn more about supply chains and labour trafficking?
A useful link is https://www.stronger2gether.org/
Stronger2gether is a multi-stakeholder initiative, which aims to reduce modern slavery by providing guidance, resources, training and a network to employers, labour providers, workers and their representatives.
There are free downloadable resources on the website, including Tackling Modern Slavery in UK Businesses Toolkit; Tackling Modern Slavery in Global Supply Chains Toolkit, Tackling Modern Slavery in the Construction Sector Toolkit and Tackling Forced Labour in Business Toolkit International.
Flagship annual event & a world-leading human rights forum November 13th and 14th 2019.
Day One:
Towards more Inclusive Economies: Creating a fairer economic system for those left behind.
Main points:
Yet 71% of CEOs are being challenged to fix society as well as grow their business. This is a new trend. Not just focus on growing your own business but put the focus on fixing society with the wealth you have. Re-focus the business mind. e.g., many big corporates in the USA, despite Trump leading USA out of the Paris agreement, decided to cut down carbon emissions on the same line as the Paris agreement. A new world is emerging.
Animals are also being displaced. There is a massive decline in penguins, sardines, cormorants – they lack the food they need. Mexico city has trouble with clean water, the lakes are drying up, San Francisco has a decimated landscape. So much more to tell…………………
legal impunity. Legal systems are distorted and supersede the law towards the greedy. The lack of legal aid lawyers in a country leads to abuse. It should not be that there is monetary remuneration for illegal activity – criminal activity – linked with corruption and eco non-compliance.
Blake Howard
Day 2:
Civil Liberties Under Attack: Protecting Privacy and Freedom of Expression
Safety and Journalists
Panel of family member of journalists or journalists who had been assassinated or taken as hostages over the last 5 years.
The New Forms of Human Rights.
Need to study Spatial and Visual culture to see beyond the image. (Eyal Weizman)
This conference was also valuable for the contacts made, doors opened and the many conversations taking place throughout the two days, which have had an impact for life. The USA sent many Reuters journalists, data analysts and economists who were open to be challenged and to challenge. We had many conversations on cyber-trafficking and the summary of these was that it is still foxing most of the experts and especially how to tackle crime taking place in the thousands of private chat rooms where smugglers and traffickers ply their trade. There were school girls there who had been sponsored by their school to become more empowered for life. We chatted with Indians, Nepalese, Italians, Turks, Africans, people from nearly all over the world. I met a research agro-tourism analyst from Albania, we are having lunch together back here in Tirana tomorrow, Monday 18 Nov. 2019! You could not leave such a conference without feeling that your mind was needing the space to de-clutter and sift through so many new ideas and challenges to the known and unknown ideas which will frame the new consciousness for tomorrow. Imelda Poole IBVM – RENATE
Our work can often be compared to a snowflake: just as each snowflake is unique, every survivor’s story is different. Human trafficking is not about statistics; it’s about people. All the pain and hardship, the achievements and setbacks in the healing process reveal the inner beauty of surviving evil.
To build upon the awareness about Human Trafficking which was raised by the EU Day Against Human Trafficking, 18 October 2019, you are invited to contribute to the Instagram campaign LIKE A SNOWFLAKE.
By sharing the stories of survivors, we can raise awareness about human trafficking and the work we do to help those we serve. We can help change the way people think and respond to exploitation. We want to show the many facets of trafficking and how no one person’s story is alike We want to show the beauty and strength that can come from surviving something so heinous. We also want to highlight that this is not a minor crime that affects few people, but that we are facing a widespread criminal enterprise and major violation of human rights, in Europe and globally.
To this end, we have created a dedicated Instagram page to present the stories behind THB.
To participate, take a photo of a victim/survivor or an impersonator from behind and in an emblematic place of your city (a tourist attraction, a famous site, a monument, etc.). Include a few lines to tell the story behind the image, or the message or thoughts that the person wants to share.
The person should not be recognizable (put a fictitious name) and should have their arms open and raised in the air, with open palms.
Mail Text example:
My name is Grace. When I arrived from Nigeria my Madam told me that if I asked for help, I would be deported, so I thought had no other choice but to become a prostitute. My mother begged me to do what they said. You don’t feel like a person when you are treated like a commodity.
From Barcelona, APIP-ACAM FONDATION contact : fundacionapipacam@fundacionapipacam.org
Email your picture and story to: sefoir@fundacioapipacam.org or silvia.lamonaca@payoke.be with the name of the city, of your organization and a contact person.
The name of the Instagram page will be communicated later on, once it starts getting populated.
Please feel free to contact us if you have any questions.
We look forward to your participation to make the “Like a Snowflake” campaign succeed.
Warm regards,
Natalia Massé Silvia Lamonaca
Fundació APIP-ACAM PAYOKE
sefoir@fundacioapipacam.org silvia.lamonaca@payoke.be
Natalia Massé
Fundació APIP-ACAM
Carrer Riereta 18, 08001 Barcelona
Tel.: 93.442.09.17 I Fax: 93.442.23.23 I sefoir@fundacioapipacam.org
As the migration flows continue to grow, despite the uncertainty of secure travel and the increased risks of human trafficking, there continues to be the voice of intolerance, judgement towards those who are simply trying to find a better life. Unfortunately, migrants are met with fear, prejudice and unjust treatment, instead of understanding, welcome and open arms.
With this reality, RENATE members at Fundacion Amaranta share with us news about their day-seminar held in July, 2019, which focused on sensitive communication and in particular, the language and terminology we use when referring to ‘the other.’
The main goals of the day were as follows:
The processes at the seminar included spaces for reflection, learning and leisure. All agreed that the seminar comprehensively addressed the key topics such as the need for improvement in the field of comprehensive policies against poverty and the urgency of reporting and raising awareness within the population to overcome / curb / combat hate speech which in turn cause various prejudices and lies.
Continuing to raise awareness and understanding remains a work in progress, to be continued!
UK members of RENATE held their country group meeting in London on 14 September 2019.
The notifications for the meeting – and subsequent reminders- coincided with the summer months when members were in transit for work and holidays etc., but enough responded to ensure a valuable meeting took place.
Marie Power (SHFB) chaired the meeting which was hosted by the by the Holy Family Sisters at 36 Albert Square, Stockwell London SW8 1BZ, a short walk from Stockwell Tube station.
The meeting began with lunch at 12.15pm, followed by a Gathering Prayer (led by Patricia Mulhall, csb) and discussion (led by Marie) of the AGENDA.
How can members as a body make a difference to the mission of combating HT in the UK?
– How can the membership support each other?
– Can the membership support national networks against HT in collaboration with TRAC?
– what are the Training needs of members within UK?
– What is the greatest need for capacity building of membership in the UK?
Most of the time was spent discussing the RENATE Film Festival event planned of r18 October 2020 in London and how to make maximum use of the occasion to highlight the work of RENATE and anti-human trafficking. Names were mentioned as good PR persons for the event. Mary McHugh suggested getting in touch with University Media-Studies students. Others suggested celebrity names – which will be passed on to the Film Festival Group.
Although the open questions were discussed, the overall thinking was that before another meeting is proposed – for summer 2020 – it would be good to find out what members want from such a gathering and how this would benefit their present work. Training was suggested as a good option, particularly up-to-date information on present and future Legislation, the work of Police in anti-trafficking, role of the Independent anti-Slavery commissioner, statistics on prosecutions, roles of ‘safe house’ providers (Medaille Trust / Bakhita House)
The meeting concluded at 3pm.
Patricia Mulhall,csb, RENATE Board and Core Group member.
Announced in early August when many of us were on Annual Leave, it may be helpful to share the information that the European Union and the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC) Regional Office for the Middle East and North Africa are launching a three-year project aimed at supporting Egypt, Libya, Morocco, and Tunisia in dismantling migrant smuggling and human trafficking criminal networks operating in North Africa, the duo announced in a press statement.
The EU has set a budget of €15m ($16.69m) for the project, which will be implemented by the UNODC Regional Office for the Middle East and North Africa under the framework of the North Africa Window of the European Union Emergency Trust Fund for Africa.
According to the UNODC, trafficking in persons is the acquisition of people by improper means such as force, fraud or deception, intending to exploit them. Smuggling of migrants involves the procurement for financial or other material benefits of illegal entry of a person into a state of which that person is not a national or resident.
The project aims at supporting member states in dismantling organized criminal networks involved in migrant smuggling and human trafficking.
Since poverty is a critical push factor in the area of Human Trafficking and Exploitation, it is essential that more work is done to eradicate existing poverty and its prevention.
The commitments taken by member States with respect to the European Social Charter and other Council of Europe conventions must be perceived and implemented with even greater intensity and attention when it comes to tackle poverty and homelessness of children, emphasised Giuseppe Palmisano, President of the European Committee of Social Rights, at the ceremony marking the International Day for the Eradication of Poverty, 17 October.
Marie Hélène attended the ceremony which was organised by the Conference of INGOs of the Council of Europe in the presence of Jean-Baptiste Mattéi, Permanent Representative of France to the Council of Europe and Anna Rurka, President of the Conference of INGOs, as well as members of the Secretariat of the Council of Europe.
In addition, school children from Strasbourg read messages sent by other children living in poverty or in extremely precarious conditions, some of them demanding European countries to take action. Because, as pointed out by Jan Malinowski, Head of the Department of the European Social Charter, poverty and homelessness are not a fatality and have to be addressed.
Each October, Europe takes time to pause, to turn our attention to those who are caught in worlds of Human Trafficking and those whose lives have been challenged, affected and fractured by exploitation for the purpose of generating a profit.
This year, MECPATHS (Mercy Efforts for Child Protection Against Trafficking With the Hospitality Sector), were extremely proud to partner with The Department of Justice and Equality to mark EU Anti Trafficking Day, October 18th, to raise awareness, to discuss and to collaborate and to bring the issue of Modern Day Slavery ‘to the courts.’
RENATE members at MECPATHS Ireland send their report on how they marked the occasion of the EU Day Against Human Trafficking, 18 October, 2019, available on the following link:
https://mecpaths.com/mecpaths-marks-eu-anti-trafficking-day/
Photos from the event are available at: