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Launch of UNANIMA International Campaign to STOP THE DEMAND FOR TRAFFICKING
IN WOMEN AND CHILDREN 13 March 2008 –
  
Mercy Sister Deirdre Mullan poses a question to one of the speakers during
the launch.

Sixty women and men
from the United Nations community including government representatives and
NGOs and UNANIMA International board members attended the launch/reception
at the Church Centre across the street from the United Nations.
Jean O’Meara, SHCJ, and president of the UNANIMA board chaired the event
which featured Dorchen Leidholdt, co-founder and former executive director
of the Coalition against Trafficking in Women, Jeff Bradley, psychologist
and director of the AHIMSA Center in Boston and Clare Nolan, Sister of the
Good Shepherd, NGO representative and former social worker.
What follows is an excerpt from Clare’s comments which express clearly the
need for the campaign:
I am thrilled to see a
focused campaign on Demand… because it will both have an effect on improving
the lives of individual women and girls who are now victims of male demand
for prostituted sex and because it has the potential, if we each take this
campaign to heart, to alter, change, to transform our very social systems
so that no longer will we accept a society where patriarchal and economic
prerogatives create our acceptance that some women become a ready pool for
the demand for prostituted sex in any form – from the Emperors Club to the
brothels of Bangkok..
So a word from the
women and girls at the grassroots and why they also are excited about such a
campaign…
Here are the voices of
women from all geographic areas of the globe, survivors of trafficking, who
agreed to be interviewed for research being done by a member of my
organization –
I have pulled out what
they said their greatest fear was when asked – they said this about the men
who purchased them (not the persons who trafficked them):
What was your greatest
fear?
That I would be killed
by a customer,”
“That the customers
would get violent,”
“Getting AIDS and STDs,”
“That what they did to
others, they would do to me,”
“I was afraid most of
sadistic clients.”…
Some of the women who I
have visited in Thailand, Brussels, Lima Peru, (and most recently Iraqi
refugees women in the Mid East) are so socially un-empowered that they think
of being prostituted as simply their shameful fate in life. Others know
prostitution as the only economic option to feed their children. All of them
fear violence. And while some of them may call themselves sex workers, none
of them have pride or future-hope in this so-called work. Many resort to
drugs just to get through another night of being a receptacle to many
unknown persons. Many have no choices in a society where many forms of
gender violence assault them – trafficking and prostitution are merely
another form of gender violence. Are these the social institution we want
to tolerate in the 3rd millennium? The actress Emma Thompson said in a
current Newsweek article “As consumers, we need to think about what we buy,
where it comes from and under what conditions it's made” do we really want
to be consumers of other human beings even as we publicly support gender
equality and social justice?
Symposium: “Promising Practices and Public Private Partnerships: The Path
Forward to Combat Human Trafficking”.
On
March 25 board members, Kathleen Ries CSA and Anne-Marie Mack CBS, and
Louise attended this trafficking symposium in Washington sponsored by the
U.S. State Department and the Interfaith Centre for Corporate
Responsibility.
Central to the event was the sharing of examples by corporations such as
the Starwood[1]
chain of hotels which has responded to share-holder requests to adopt a Code
of Conduct which denounces the exploitation of trafficked persons and has
put in place practical implementation steps in its businesses. Other
speakers addressed ways in which NGO’s have partnered with legal, media and
employment businesses in counter-trafficking advertising, direct services to
exploited persons and in particular, to address the problem of sex tourism.
For example, ECPAT (End Child Prostitution and Trafficking) now works with
600 companies in 23 countries to counter the sexual exploitation of
children.
Information on powerful technology tools to track sex offenders was shared.
This has immense potential for building a data-base of traffickers and
victims of trafficking should there be political will and international
cooperation. Such tools could also be used proactively in our “Stop the
Demand for Trafficked Women and Girls” campaign.
Part of the Symposium was given to strategizing on ways combating human
trafficking could be advanced by partnerships of civil society and the State
with the Hospitality industry, Technology companies, through education of
Human Resource personnel and with the legal profession.
What’s
New?
High-level event on the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs)
- Recognizing the achievements, addressing the challenges and getting back
on track to achieve the MDGs by 2015
Permanent Forum on Indigenous Issues:
- 21 April - 2 May, 2008
Special theme: Climate change, bio-cultural diversity and livelihoods: the
stewardship role of indigenous peoples and new challenges
Commission
on Sustainable Development:
5-16 May 2008.
UNANIMA International delegation will include Claudette Bastien, snjm, and
Denise Girard, snjm, (Quebec, Canada) and Susan Schaad, snjm (California,
USA)
CAMPAIGN
Materials
UNANIMA International’s STOP THE DEMAND for Trafficking in Women and
Children materials are available. If anyone would like to order them please
fill in the order blank posted on the web site at
http://www.unanima-international.org/english/index.htm and send a
cheque or money order (if possible in US $) to
UNANIMA International
Attn: Catherine Ferguson
211 East 19th St., Rm 1207
New York, NY 10017
USA.
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