human trafficking

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By: Jordan Wasserman Human Trafficking

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Human Trafficking. By: Jordan Wasserman. Sold By: Patricia McCormick. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Human Trafficking

By: Jordan Wasserman

Human Trafficking

Page 2: Human Trafficking

Sold By: Patricia McCormick Sold is a

heartbreaking story of an Indian girl named Lakshmi who is sold into slavery, unknowingly, by her stepfather at the age of thirteen. She is brought to a place called Happiness House where she is forced to do unmentionable things with whomever. The woman in charge this so-called “Happiness House” says that she has to pay off a debt of 20,000 Rupes before she can leave. It takes years to pay it back as each man only pays 30 rupes (that’s equivalent to how much they pay there for a bottle of Coke).

Page 3: Human Trafficking

Statistics Each year 600,000 to 800,000

men, women, and children are trafficked each year

Of the 600,000 to 800,000, 70 percent female, and 50 percent are children.

Each year, an estimated 14,500 to 17,500 foreign nationals are trafficked into the United States.

The number of U.S. citizens trafficked within the country each year is even higher, with an estimated 200,000 American children at risk for trafficking into the sex industry.

Page 4: Human Trafficking

Effects of Human TraffickingThere are physical

and mental effects that a person faces after being trafficked.

Page 5: Human Trafficking

Physical SymptomsSleeping and eating

disordersSTD’s, HIV/AIDS, etc. Chronic back, hearing,

cardiovascular, and respiratory problems

Often, children and women may have had broken bones that are never set right, and can’t heal.

Page 6: Human Trafficking

Mental SymptomsFear and anxietyDepression, mood

changesGuilt and shamePosttraumatic Stress

DisorderTraumatic bonding

with traffickerDrug use is common,

and so is alcohol abuse.

Page 7: Human Trafficking

UnknowingIn the book I read, her

stepfather thought that he was giving her to a woman to be a maid in the city.

This is how most children and women are sucked into the human trafficking industry. They were promised jobs, but when they realize that they’re not there to be a maid or waitress or whatever it might be that they were promised, it’s too late.

Page 8: Human Trafficking

MariaIn this picture is Maria. A

man offered her a job as a waitress in Johanesburg. Eager to earn some money, she agreed to travel with him from her home country to South Africa. But when Maria arrived in Johanesburg, there was no waitressing job. Instead the man beat her and forced her to work as a prostitute.

Page 9: Human Trafficking

Helping HandsThere are tons of

government run agencies that help to end human trafficking.

Page 10: Human Trafficking

ECPAT One of the best known, and has

separate programs in different countries.

Stands for: End Child Prostitution, Child Pornography and Trafficking of Children For Sexual Purposes

EPCAT’s purpose is to nurture and harness the commitment underpinning partnerships to ensure a collective presence in response to address the problem of sexual exploitation of children.

In plain English, that means that they hold together partnerships between countries and other organizations to ensure that the sexual exploitation of children isn’t something that’s ignored.