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In These Times, March 14, 2005
Trafficking in
Politics
Bush's
strong rhetoric on sex slavery masks policy
failures
Author : Eartha Melzer
GEORGE W. BUSH SEEMS TO TAKE ONE human rights
campaign seriously -- he decries human trafficking
as "modern slavery" and a "special
evil." Indeed, he used sex slavery to
mobilize his evangelical base during the 2004
campaign.
The evangelicals are not alone. In 2000, they
formed an uncommon coalition with feminist
groups to lobby for a new law combating human
trafficking. The resulting Trafficking Victims
Protection Act (TVPA) set up minimum standards
for all countries to meet in combating trafficking,
and created the Office to Monitor and Combat
Trafficking in Persons within the State Department.
But four years into the anti-trafficking program,
both evangelicals and feminists are disappointed
with the results. Commercial sexual exploitation
of women is on the rise globally, and in many
cases the United States is driving, not stopping,
the trend. Countries with the most severe trafficking
problems have been ignored, while others appear
to have been targeted for political reasons.
And the economic plight of women who sell sex
for money has been overshadowed by a sensationalized
rhetoric of sin and redemption.
A simplistic take on a complex problem
Regulating the global sex trade is no easy proposition.
Prostitution is legal, with various caveats,
in several countries, and international legal
experts have developed elaborate definitions
to distinguish between victims of coercion
and adults who willingly exchange sex for money.
The International Labour Organization, discussing
the booming sex trade in Asia, recognizes,
"In many cases, sex work is often the
only viable alternative for women in communities
coping with poverty, unemployment, failed marriages
and family obligations in nearly complete absence
of social welfare programs."
Bush, however, has eschewed the notion that sex
workers have needs or agency, instead lumping
together trafficking, prostitution and commercial
sex as offenses against the "moral law
that stands above nations." With the 2003
National Security Directive 22, Bush announced
a "zero tolerance" policy for trafficking,
including involvement in trafficking by U.S.
service members. The directive also required
that anti-trafficking funds be kept from groups
that do not take an abolitionist approach to
prostitution.
As with the administration's policies on illegal
drugs, family planning and AIDS, the U.S. policy
against trafficking does not focus on harm
reduction. Funding preference is given to groups
that forcibly remove women from prostitution.
That means leaving out some of the organizations
best situated to address problems faced by
sex workers, like the Sonagachi project in
India. This health project, for and by sex
workers, has been recognized by the United
Nations as a model program for stopping the
spread of HIV and protecting the rights of
people involved in the sex trade.
The Bush administration's absolutist approach
bears strong similarities to American moral
crusades of days past. In the early 20th century,
industrialization and immigration fueled sensational
stories of "defiled virgins," and
a crusade against prostitution resulted in
the 1910 passage of the White Slavery Traffic
Act, which banned transporting women across
state lines for "immoral purposes."
Nearly a century later, the media is rife with
accounts that similarly depend on public prurience
and stereotypes of women as victims. On January
25, 2004, the New York Times Magazine ran a
cover story by Peter Landesman titled "Sex
Slaves on Main Street: the Girls Next Door."
While this tale of large-scale trafficking
of women and girls into the United States was
quickly discredited, that didn't stop director
Roland Emmerich, the man who brought us Independence
Day, from optioning the film rights.
Double standards
Under TVPA, the Department of Justice (DOJ) has
set up Human Trafficking Task Forces in cities
around the country. A November 2004 DOJ press
release, announcing a $ 450,000 anti-trafficking
grant to the D.C. Metro Police Department's
"highly experienced" prostitution
unit, stated that the money would be used to
arrest prostitutes and "work up the chain
to apprehend traffickers."
Such an approach not only conflates human trafficking
and prostitution, but could further persecute
people working in the sex industry. Taina Bien-Aime,
executive director of the New York-based feminist
group Equality Now, explains that while TVPA
provides for visas for trafficked women, in
order to avoid prosecution and deportation
any undocumented immigrant must cooperate in
the prosecution of her trafficker. Obtaining
this cooperation may prove difficult because
the trafficked women are often from the same
village as the trafficker and many fear repercussions
to their families.
American prosecution of these crimes abroad seems
decidedly less aggressive. The State Department
has a mandate from Congress to issue annual
Trafficking in Persons (TIP) reports grading
countries on their progress on stopping trafficking.
"Tier 3" countries -- those judged
by the United States not to be making progress
-- face sanctions.
According to a source at the State Department,
most Tier 3 countries are the ones that have
poor relations with the U.S. government, such
as North Korea, Cuba and Venezuela. Venezuela's
ranking, for example, seems based more on its
refusal to recognize the U.S. program than
with the scope of trafficking there.
The selective attention to the seriousness of
some countries' trafficking has angered conservatives.
Gary Haugen is the director of International
Justice Mission (IJM), a Christian group that
has received millions of dollars in federal
funds to work on trafficking. IJM infiltrates
the sex trade in India and Thailand and conducts
brothel raids, placing sex workers in homes
for rescue and re-education.
In June 2002, Haugen told the Congressional Human
Rights Caucus that "the State Department
has rendered the standards of the act virtually
meaningless," by placing India and Thailand
in Tier 2. Although the sex trade is huge in
these countries, Haugen said, virtually no
one has been prosecuted for trafficking.
Adding injury to insult
Even worse, U.S. interventions around the world
are contributing to the trafficking and exploitation
of women. The State Department TIP report for
2003 noted that trafficking activities have
increased in Afghanistan and Iraq as a consequence
of instability brought on by armed conflict.
"As we have seen elsewhere," the report
stated, "the demand for prostitution often
increases with the presence of military troops,
expatriates and international personnel who
have access to disposable income."
On April 24, 2002, Ben Johnston, a helicopter
mechanic for DynCorp in Bosnia, testified to
Congress about DynCorp employees who were allegedly
buying women and girls to keep in their homes
as sex slaves. Yet, despite the president's
"zero tolerance" directive and the
development of laws that would hold contractors
responsible for involvement in sex trafficking,
DynCorp remains in good standing as a U.S.
contractor, and in 2003 was awarded a no-bid
contract to "re-establish police, justice
and prison functions in post-conflict Iraq."
In 2002, media reports detailed how "courtesy
patrol" units around U.S. bases in Korea
were directing soldiers and tourists to locations
where they could engage the services of sex
workers, mainly women from Russia and the Philippines
who were held captive and forced to have sex
with soldiers. South Korean authorities estimated
that their country's sex industry was worth
$ 22 billion a year and involved 330,000 women.
Congress called for an investigation and on September
21, 2004, the House Armed Services Committee
and the Commission on Security and Cooperation
in Europe held a forum titled "Enforcing
U.S. Policies Against Trafficking in Persons:
How is the U.S. Military Doing?"
The inspector general of the Defense Department,
Joseph E. Schmitz, a Bush appointee charged
with being the "eyes, ears and conscience
of the Defense Department" on trafficking
issues, failed to give specific information
about his investigation. Instead, he delivered
a paper at the hearing called "Examining
Sex Slavery Through the Fog of Moral Relativism,"
which read in part:
Whatever else one might say about sex slavery
in the 21st century, these recent proactive
measures taken by U.S. and Western leaders
reaffirm the "moral truth" that prostitution
and human trafficking fall within those "dissolute
and immoral practices" envisioned by our
Continental Congress when it prescribed a duty
to "guard against and suppress" such
practices through, inter alia, vigilance by
leaders in "inspecting the conduct of
all persons who are placed under their command."
At the same hearing, the duty of substantive
analysis fell to lawyer Martina Vanderberg,
a former researcher with Human Rights Watch.
In contrast to Schmitz's -- and Bush's -- bombastic
pronouncements, she testified that the loopholes
for contractors have not been closed, that
education programs have not yet yielded the
participation of soldiers in identifying traffickers
and that it is unclear how the zero tolerance
policy is being implemented.
<< In These Times -- 3/14/05 >>
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