I am VERY happy to announce to you all that the video that triggered my anger and inspiration for my posts on sex trafficking, namely "Sex trafficking in Cambodia: Stacey Dooley Investigates", is back on BBC iPlayer. Please do go on this link and check the video:
http://www.bbc.co.uk/iplayer/episode/b00vcwdd/Sex_Trafficking_in_Cambodia_Stacey_Dooley_Investigates/#recommendSource=tv_homepage&recommendId=dcafc175-4b7e-4411-a9f6-688d241bf00f.0
It's shocking and a real eye-opener. The harsh reality of some parts of our world.
Take care x
Monday, 15 November 2010
Thursday, 11 November 2010
If you are growing cannabis at home, STOP!
Having created a blog entitled “Illegal Trade”, how could the issue of drug trade not be discussed? Drugs is probably the first thing that comes to most people’s minds once they hear the phrase “illegal trade”; justifiably, indeed, since drugs are playing a crucial role not only in world economy, but also in our everyday recreational time that we spend with other indivi duals. Either we like it or not, or, even, either we know it or not, people around us are more likely than not to have tried some kind of drugs and to be doing drugs on regular basis. The purpose of this post is not to judge, but, rather, to give some interesting facts on cannabis trade within Britain, which came to my knowledge after my interest was triggered by a BBC iPlayer documentary, which unfortunately expired and is no longer available.
Like everyone, and before watching the documentary on BBC iPlayer, I could have never imagined the extent to which cannabis is being cultivated in Britain. Having watched films such as Johnny Depp’s “Blow” and “Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas” and having followed the news back in my country and in Europe in general, my knowledge extended only to the obvious facts: that cannabis is cultivated in certain developing regions, such as some Latin American and Asian countries. Children being forced to work in the production of cocaine, cannabis, and the long list goes on. Drugs illegally imported in developed countries and distributed and re-distributed from there by drug dealers. I knew that certain drug dealers would cultivate their own crop, but not that the profits of that crop could reach up to and more than £1 million!
This documentary was essentially about the raids that the UK police was doing in suspected cannabis factories. The method that the police was using to trace those factories was quite interesting, and it is proving to be quite efficient. Let me put it this way: the next time you see a helicopter up in the skies, do not automatically assume it is an experience day for couples. It could be looking to trace a cannabis factory, using infra-red heat detection devices. The main idea behind this detection system, is that the lamps used to provide light and heat to the cannabis plants within random rented houses in normal neighbourhoods, give out excessive heat, which may be detected through these devices. For more information on this relatively new method, please read this: http://www.guardian.co.uk/society/2007/mar/13/drugsandalcohol.drugs
The information that this article provides is similar to the information given regarding these devices in the documentary.
What impressed me the most is the fact that through this type of raids, so many cannabis factories had been uncovered, which, on the outside had seemed to be normal neighbourhood houses, except for the fact that their curtains always remained closed! Behind closed doors, the scenery reminded me of those Colombian landscapes that we see in movies, cultivating different varieties of cannabis. Those factories were operating in normal neighbourhoods, without anyone suspecting that next door, there was someone about to make hundreds of thousands or even million of pounds just by planting a few seeds and providing the right conditions for the plant to thrive!
For a very recent story on cannabis factory raids, go on http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-merseyside-11734940
More interesting facts about drug trade to follow shortly!
Take care x
Censorship Vs Setting the moral limits
“The Pedophile's Guide to Love and Pleasure: a Child-lover's Code of Conduct”: This is the title of a book being sold on Amazon only a few hours ago!
Whilst browsing through the news, doing my research for my next topic, the title “Amazon row over pedophile book” appeared under the Most Popular titles for the day on the BBC news website. Considering my sensitivity over child exploitation, it is hardly surprising I clicked on the story. Upon reading the article (http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-us-canada-11731928), my eyes almost popped out of their sockets!
Not only has Amazon allowed this book to be listed amongst the rest of its books, but they have also “explained” their allowing it to be listed as fair and legitimate since it “did not promote criminal acts but also avoided censorship”! Are they being serious? If this book is not an encouragement for pedophiles to continue torturing children, then what is? From the title, my wild guess is not only that this book is encouraging pedophiles, but that it is a guide to “young pedophiles”, who are new at the “job”, as well. Or, if its scope is broad enough, giving new ideas to those criminals looking to cause even more harm!
How dare they use the word “censorship” when people demand that the book be taken off the website? A website, which, ironically, has advertised a book that would have gone unnoticed otherwise! Have we forgotten under what conditions it was decided that censorship should not be legitimate? Censorship is what Hitler’s propaganda minister, Goebbels, did to the German press in the 1930s and 1940s; censorship is what led the world believe that the Soviet Union was powerful and thriving, when Stalin was sending millions of people to their death in Siberia and his people were dying in the streets of Stalingrad because of starvation and the cold; censorship is what is currently happening all over the world today, for example Iran. The difference is that, nowadays, we have learnt from the mistakes of the past, and anyone with common sense and a healthy mind would realise the difference between being morally conscious, preventing the advertisement of horrific crimes such as pedophilia, and censorship that leads to the blinding of the public opinion.
I applaud the individuals on Twitter that took the initiative to ask Amazon to take the book listing down. If it weren’t for them, thousands of new pedophiles would be encouraged to explore in practice their urges, after buying the specific book on Amazon. Let’s keep in mind that buying and selling is not simply an exchange of money; it is an exchange of opinions, which could have a critical impact on the world of tomorrow.
Let’s keep trade moral, so that our children do not have to grow in a world where anyone can be informed on the “How to’s” of a crime. Let’s raise them in a world, which will explain everything to them, and will help them distinguish right from wrong…
Take care x
Saturday, 6 November 2010
An inconclusive conclusion...
I am utterly speechless! And I thought I had made a beautiful discovery by describing to you Sweden's amazing achievement to wipe out prostitution! Once more, it has been proven that there is never one side to the coin. Soon Lee, in his comment below, very cleverly directed me to this link: http://www.thelocal.se/19102/20090427/
This article discusses how Sweden comes first in Europe in the number of reported cases of rape! I am shocked!
So, that is why states are so indecisive on the issue of the legalisation of prostitution: to legalise prostitution and encourage people to pay for sex, hence encouraging sex trafficking as well (see Netherlands, Thailand, etc, etc, etc) or to criminalise prostitution resulting in a decrease in sex trafficking and increase in rape cases (e.g. Sweden)? Or does rape have nothing to do with the legalisation of prostitution? Are they simply two problems that need to be tackled separately without assuming that as one decreases the other increases?
It seems like this discussion could go on forever. All arguments seem to have a counter-argument, and they are all valid! The problem with this issue is that prostitution has its passionate supporters due to its nature, but also its hateful critics. My research has shown me that the best way to slowly extinguish this "tumour" of society, its main victims being the vulnerable, is through welfare strategies that will ensure that the potential victims will never have to resort to prostitution or be sold and forced to succumb. This has been one of the main concerns in the work of UNICEF. Talking in 2000, the executive director of the organisation, Carol Bellamy, outlined the problem and acknowledged the efforts done by certain countries to fight against this problem. For a very interesting brief on her speech and more specific examples, please log onto http://www.unicef.org/newsline/00pr05.htm. The governments around the world should make education and elimination of poverty their priorities. Close inspections to poor forgotten areas, educating children – not only little boys, but also the girls – and providing families with the necessary tools to lead a better life HAVE to go to the top of the list. Corruption and blind eyes are no longer an option in certain parts of the world, but those in power do not seem to recognise this…
I was really hoping to get to the root of this problem, but it just does not seem possible! This issue could be a whole dissertation and it requires getting to the root of the problems of every individual nation. I do wish I could provide valid answers to all our questions, but, as always, the conclusion cannot be one-sided. Please do provide your comments, with any further points that I haven’t made or with any ideas!
Take care x
Wednesday, 3 November 2010
Eliminating prostitution and sex trafficking: something has actually worked!
So let me start by outlining a very successful initiative taken in Sweden in an attempt to reduce – hopefully eliminate – not only sex trafficking, but prostitution altogether.
Yesterday I was actually very pleasantly surprised to find out how well Sweden is getting on with extinguishing prostitution and, consequently, the illegal trafficking of women and children for the purposes of prostitution*. During the 1970’s, 1980’s and 1990’s – when prostitution was still legal in Sweden – everyone would have known of Sweden’s brothels and massage parlours; these are now, in their majority, things of the past. As for trafficking? Well, whilst Finland’s numbers reach up to 17,000 females being trafficked per year, Sweden’s comparative estimation lies somewhere between 200 and 400 – a negligible figure considering the statistics. Could there be hope?
Sweden’s 1999 policy has proved triumphantly successful and surprisingly simple: legislation concerning the violence against women, which “a) criminalizes the buying of sex and, b) decriminalizes the selling of sex”; short and sweet! The theory behind this legislation is the notion that prostitution is abuse of women and children in chauvinist society, in which men trade and exploit them. So long as it is legal for men to do this, gender equality within a state can never be attained. Having embraced this theory, Sweden treats the men who buy sex as criminals and the prostitutes as victims that need help to come out of the way of life they have been forced to follow.
Nevertheless, this was not the case from the beginning. During the first two years after the legislation was passed, minimal arrests had occurred and figures did not seem to be going down significantly. Until the State realised that it was the police force that was being inefficient, due to lack of understanding the true severity of the problem, as well as lack of training. Appropriate funding was spent tackling this inefficiency, and prostitution became a thing of the past for Sweden. If this has worked for Sweden, then why do other nations not follow this paradigm?
I have mentioned before how inefficient the Cambodian police authorities were in finding the brothel owners and closing the brothels down. Buying, forcing into prostitution and torturing under-aged girls are obviously against the national laws, but nothing effective is being done. Apart from inherent corruption within the authorities, another factor disrupting the work against prostitution that I can think of is lack of money; Cambodia is a desperately poor country and obviously the government cannot afford to spend as much as Sweden is spending on just one of its problems. In addition, the general Swedish public seems to be in support of the legislation, at an overwhelming 80%. The state has made the effort to educate its people, teaching them that prostitution is unacceptable and they should fight against it. Unfortunately, very few states can say that their people are against prostitution, and even fewer would educate against it or even think of doing it. Especially in developing countries or countries, which are used to accepting prostitution, getting the support of the public, especially the males, which are using the “services”, is practically impossible. Let’s not forget that not only is sex trafficking acceptable, but also, everyone – clients and brothel owners – are more than happy to pay extra for a very young girl. If, in their conscience, they can prostitute a child, they are, obviously, incapable of supporting a legislation against prostitution altogether, especially if it means criminalising themselves.
When a country can barely provide food and education to its people, how can it control prostitution? Of course, the reality of poverty and its wrecking effects have to be brought to the attention of the heads of the state and to national organisations, so that something IS actually done to save those children that are being sold and bought every day. The difference between countries such as Sweden (also Finland, Norway and Scotland seem to be ready to follow) and other countries lies in the fact that, in the case of the former, the government can somehow trust its public. The latter, however, have to FORCE their public to accept certain rules and ENFORCE them, rather than relying on them to abide.
All we can do now is hope that Sweden’s success on eliminating prostitution will persuade and encourage other states to follow its policies.
Take care x
* http://www.justicewomen.com/cj_sweden.html
Sex trafficking: thoughts...
Following the comments of my lovely course mate Vanessa below, I started thinking that my previous post was more emotional than practical. Raising awareness about certain problems in our world may be appraisable, but it cannot help practically the wrecked victims of certain situations. Rather than declaring our support, it’d be preferable to look into what is actually being done in the society and what we, as individuals or groups of individuals, can do from our insignificant side. Is motivation to help enough? Should I wait to “grow up” and become a powerful lawyer that can influence society or is it enough to be an unknown law student with good intentions? This dilemma has been in my mind ever since the previous post, hesitating to write the next one, since I have genuinely reached no conclusion. Usually writing my thoughts and findings down helps me put everything in order and new ideas and conclusions come naturally… Let’s see if it happens now, too… Wish me luck!
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