TURNING POINT

Slavery In Our Times

An actress learns human trafficking doesn't just happen 'over there.'

Mario Romuli / UN.GIFT
Cries for Help: Thompson at an exhibit illustrating the experiences of women sold into sex slavery
 

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When I was growing up in London, I walked past a massage parlor on the way to school every day. If my friends and I ever gave a thought to what went on behind its doors, we saw it as a bit of a giggle; it existed in a world away from our own.

Fast-forward 30 years to 2006, when I first met 19-year-old Elena through my work with the Helen Bamber Foundation, a U.K. charity that helps abuse victims. Elena's story was all too common but had a huge impact on me.

An intelligent girl with ambitions, Elena had been enticed to London from Moldova with a promise of a good job and a bright future. Once in the U.K., however, her passport was taken from her and she was kept in solitary confinement to break her will. She was warned that her family in Moldova would suffer harm unless she did what she was told. And then she was put to work as a sex slave, servicing a procession of men in the most appalling circumstances.

What made her story so personal for me was where she'd been imprisoned: the same massage parlor I'd once treated as a joke. It underlined an awful truth: that human trafficking is not just a problem for other communities or other people. It exists on our own doorsteps, and our lack of action shames us all.

It's hard to put an accurate figure on the full scale of this misery. But the International Labor Organization estimates that there are at least 2.5 million forced laborers who are victims of human trafficking at any one time. Their plight can be seen as the hidden side of globalization: a sickening business worth more than $30 billion a year.

It is a crime that scars every region and almost every country. Some 120 nations are routinely plundered by traffickers for their human raw materials, and more than 130 countries are known as destinations for their victims.

Like Elena, these victims may end up in the sex trade. Many others find themselves condemned as slave laborers, forced to work in domestic service, in hazardous factories or at grim sites like the cocoa plantations of West Africa. Thousands more, many just children, become unwilling conscripts in bitter wars. Nearly all suffer physical or sexual abuse, creating mental and physical scars they carry for the rest of their lives.

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Member Comments

  • Posted By: Nins @ 03/16/2008 5:59:52 PM

    God bless Emma Thompson, and God bless all enslaved people.

    Maybe Reverend Wright has a reason to be angry?

  • Posted By: distantsmoke @ 03/14/2008 3:15:42 AM

    I've always thought that the Congressional Black Caucus is particularly well placed to take public and moral stands against modern day slavery. I've even written to them about it. But they sit so quietly in the luxurious halls of Congress that most Americans don't even know they exist. Prehaps they are too busy trying to extort money from people who never owned slaves for modern African Americans who never were slaves.

    Write to your congressman. Tell them to take on something more important than whether or not athletes take steroids!!

  • Posted By: siibu @ 03/13/2008 12:38:46 PM

    Human trafficking is not far from any of us. It's just happening in the face of all of us. Policy makers, law implementors, and law enforcement people are the very people practicing human trafficking.
    If everyone will agree, on the television and other homes, all these people have house helps who wash, cook, clean, and other errands for their own children. This is a perfect child exploitation and even worse than human trafficking. I think this is where the problem lies. Let's start solving it from there. Thank you.
    Siibu Abdul-Karim, Ghana

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