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Report Says Trafficking Victims Come From Mainstream Society

FrontLines - May 2009


Photo by Katherine Wolf, USAID
ACSA consultant Eugen Revenco discusses the new technology of tomato seedling production with Ala Novac.

When USAID’s Albania office began its anti-trafficking program in 2003, there was little reliable information on how trafficking in human beings was taking place.

But now, the program has published its fourth annual report which serves as an almanac for anti-trafficking activists in the country, presenting information about government, civil society, and international initiatives underway in Albania.

The latest report, “State of Efforts in Albania to Combat Trafficking in Persons 2007-08,” includes an extra chapter on trends in human trafficking based on individual case data provided by antitrafficking shelters.

It is commonly believed that victims of trafficking are primarily from minority communities, from outside major urban areas, and have extremely low levels of education. The data in the report challenges these assumptions by concluding that:

  • Over 90 percent of the victims for sex trafficking in the shelters come from the general Albanian population; only 9 percent were from the Roma and Balkan Egyptian minority communities.
  • Most were recruited from moderately economically distressed urban areas.
  • The majority were recruited in their home communities by someone they knew.
  • Over half had completed compulsory education.

Video: Video Postcard from Berat - Click to view
VIDEO: "In Protection of Urban and Rural Women's Rights" in Berat, is a grantee of the Albania Initiative: Coordinated Action Against Human Trafficking programs, funded by USAID and implemented by Creative Associates International. Click to view video.

It is difficult to obtain reliable information about human trafficking due to the violent criminal nature of the business and the collaboration of traffickers, their clients, and their business partners. Victims are reluctant to come forward for fear of life-threatening reprisals against themselves or their family members.

In addition, some government entities across the globe are under pressure to demonstrate an increased capacity to combat the phenomenon.

As a result, systemic data gathering is sometimes discouraged, and authorities are rewarded by decreasing the official numbers of identified victims. Increased data collection and analysis by independent governmental agencies and NGOs is essential to combat the problem of severe exploitation of children and women every year.

A full copy of the report is available online at: www.caaht.com/reports.htm.

 


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