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Sex
Trafficking: The Real Immigration Problem
by John W.
Whitehead
4/10/2006
While debates
concerning immigration rage over economics and labor, little has
been said about the Mexican women and children being bought and
sold as sex slaves. The third largest crime scheme after drug
and weapons trafficking, sex traffickers transport at least 18,000
captives into the United States each year.
In fact, the
U.S. is one of the top destinations for sex traffickers. And trafficking
rings have become adept at penetrating U.S. suburban areas. High
rates of trafficking are found in California, Florida, Georgia,
Illinois, Michigan, New York, Texas and Washington, as well as
other areas.
The southern
border of the U.S. is the main thoroughfare for sex trafficking.
Girls are smuggled into the U.S. from all over the world through
this gateway. But trafficking along this route is not limited
to rings based only in Mexico. Tijuana is a good crossing
point because its a prostitution zone, said Melissa
Ugarte, a sociologist for EYE, an agency aiding children in crisis
in San Diego. Its easy to get from Tijuana into Arizona,
California, Texas, to New York. Its simple.
Tijuana, a
border town, is a short drive from San Diego. It provides a daily
flood of sex-hungry tourists and a police department that looks
the other way. Each trafficking ring uses its own route from Tijuana
into the U.S. Some drive girls into the U.S. by flashing counterfeit
documents at the California border. Other sex slaves are slipped
across the border on foot and then shuttled by van to brothels
through a network of covert safehouses spread across
the country.
Tightly organized
groups of pimps known as Los Lenones operate as wholesalers.
These pimps collect human merchandise and make deliveries to brothels
in thriving sex-trafficking hubs in major U.S. cities. One of
the largest trafficking operations is based in San Diego. It was
recently uncovered when child welfare officials teamed with county
sheriffs and raided one of many houses of prostitution hidden
in lower-class neighborhoods.
The discoveries
shocked these officials to the core. The first thing they saw
was a girl no older than 14, dressed in provocative clothing.
What moved them was not the girls appearance, but the look
of sheer terror in her eyes. The girl, whose name is Paola, had
been kidnapped from her home in Oaxaca, Mexico, and smuggled into
the U.S. as part of an extensive prostitution ring. During her
first days in America, Paola had been passed through multiple
exploitation camps. Because of her beauty, she became preferred
merchandise and day and night had to service long lines of men,
both indoors and out. But of the twenty dollars that each client
paid, Paola received nothing.
Housed in
squalid conditions, hidden away from the public in innocent-looking
neighborhoods, girls like Paola are suffering the darkest form
of abuse and exploitation. The sex-trafficking pimps have various
ways of procuring these victims. They build an emotional relationship
with them; convince the adolescent girl and her family to let
her be taken to the U.S. to work; or they kidnap them. The girls
are bound to their captors by both emotional and physical bonds
and are often told that the pimps will marry them. Desperate to
escape from their destitute lives in Mexico, they unknowingly
walk into a life of exploitation and terror. Many of the girls
have children, and a pimp is usually the father. The children
are often snatched from their mothers and kept as hostages. When
a girl tries to escape, she is told that her child will be killed.
Melissa Ugarte
was first introduced to sex trafficking when she met Reyna, a
victim of the sex traffickers. When Reyna was rescued, she had
a split lip and was covered in bruises. At age 11, Reyna had been
given to a local police chief in Puebla, Mexico, by her desperate
father. She was raped often and bore a child that she could not
support. So when she was offered a job as a servant in the U.S.,
she had no choice but to leave her child. After being forced to
prostitute herself for a week in Tijuana, she was moved to San
Diego and into the farm workers exploitation camps. Now
participating in a program for child victims of exploitation,
Reyna has been reunited with her child. She was one of the lucky
ones.
In the nearby
neighborhood of Carlsbad, New Mexico, the tortured bodies of young
Mexican girls have begun to appear. Abandoned by their clients
and dons, the bodies remain unclaimed because they are presumed
to be undocumented. Since they are not reported missing from their
hometowns, they remain the nameless victims of abuse.
American and
Mexican officials are fighting the heartbreaking problem from
both ends. However, both supply and demand must be addressed in
order for a solution to be reached. Dr. Janice Crouse explains
the evil nature of the business: The demand fuels the industry,
she said. Unlike drugs which are only usable once, a human
being may be sold over and over again, sometimes 30 times a day,
to make money. When a victim is used up in one market, he or she
can be sold to another pimp, transferred into another area or
moved into another aspect of the criminal activity.
Unfortunately,
much of the demand comes from within the U.S. Most people who
pay for sexual acts are men seeking to own a human
being, even for just a short while. And while the demand is great,
the supply is ever-expanding and always getting younger. Children
as young as 11 are forced into the slavery that will break their
spirits and, for many, result in death.
What can be
done? The Bush Administration has acknowledged the human trafficking
problem, and President Bush has mentioned the problem in several
major speeches, but more has to be done than mere talk.
Federal trafficking
legislation has only been in place since 2000. It provides stricter
penalties for trafficking and gives victims a variety of benefits,
including a special temporary visa for three years. The victim
can get medical counseling, psychological counseling and emergency
shelter. However, the catch is that the victim must testify against
her traffickerssomething that most girls, out of fear, will
not do.
Stricter control
of the Mexican-American border would reduce the volume of human
cargo. Raising awareness of the issue at the local and federal
government levels could result in a reduction of the facelessness
of the crime, as well as encourage local law enforcement to take
on the issue. Moreover, pressure must be placed on the federal
government to protect and aid the victims of trafficking without
penalty. These women and children are not prostitutes. They are
victims of human rights abuses and must be treated as such. Otherwise,
all of the clamor over illegal immigration in the U.S. is nothing
more than political hot air.
Source: The
Rutherford Institute
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