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Human Sexual Trafficking


Definition

Human Sexual Trafficking is a form of slavery. It happens when human beings are sold and bought for the purposes of sexual exploitation. It includes people (mostly women and girls) being recruited, transported, transferred, harboured or received. These actions are accomplished by means of force, the threat of force, or other forms of coercion. It is always involuntary because even when consent is achieved, it is through some form of fraud, deception, abduction/kidnapping or abuse of power/vulnerability. Adapted from the United Nations Protocol to Prevent, Suppress and Punish Trafficking in Persons, 2000. Although there are numerous forms of human trafficking, The Salvation Army uses the term human sexual trafficking, because we focus on trafficking for the purpose of sexual exploitation.

Sample Stories
Trafficking victims are human beings with their own stories.
Click on the links to read Marta's story, Grace's story and Melanie's story. 
 
Extent of the Problem
Estimates range from a low of 700,000 to a high of 4 million people that are trafficked annually worldwide. The sale of human beings is run by international organized crime. Human trafficking is a $10 billion (USD) annual business. Profits from human trafficking fuel other criminal activities.
 
Trafficking in Canada
The R.C.M.P. estimates that 800 foreign women are bought into the Canadian sex trade each year by human traffickers. Another 2,200 newcomers to Canada are smuggled into the United States from Canada for work in brothels, sweatshops, domestic jobs and construction work. It is widely believed that only 1 in 10 victims in trafficking report to the police, so the numbers are likely much larger.
 
Who is Being Trafficked?
90% of people sexually trafficked are women and girls. Members of society who are most at risk of sexual trafficking are women, the poor, youth, widows/abandoned wives, orphans/abandoned children, and those with histories of (sexual) abuse.

 
Why it Happens
Pull factor: Demand for sex. There is a global marketplace made up of hundreds of thousands, if not millions, of brothels, bars, strip clubs, massage parlors, escort services, and street corners where (mostly) men purchase people for sexual acts.
Push factors: Poverty, high unemployment rates, domestic violence/childhood abuse, discrimination against women, desire for a better life and a way to help their families. These factors make women and girls more vulnerable to entry into the global sex trade.
 
Trafficking vs. Prostitution
Sometimes the terms prostitution and sexual trafficking are used interchangeably, but they are different. Trafficking requires an element of force, coercion, deception and exploitation (whereas this is not always the case for prostitution). People are also trafficked sexually for many different aspects of commercial sexual exploitation; not just prostitution. If prostitution/procuring becomes legalized in Canada, this will directly increase the size of the sex industry, as well as the demand for more prostitutes and others in the sex trade. These extra bodies will be supplied internationally, and trafficked into Canada. (Case example: Victoria, Australia: Prostitution was legalized in 1994. This led to a massive increase in the sex industry, and also the levels of sex trafficking into the country).

The Salvation Army's Response
The Salvation Army recognizes the inherent human dignity in each person, and has a long history of efforts to protect that human dignity; with a special emphasis on the most vulnerable members of our societies. The Salvation Army is passionate about ending Human Sexual Trafficking and ensuring that the human rights of trafficked persons are respected. 

In 2004, The Salvation Army identified Human Sexual Trafficking as an international priority. Since then, the Canada and Bermuda Territory has created an Anti-Trafficking Network, with representatives from around the country (and Bermuda). This Network seeks to make others in their region aware of Human Sexual Trafficking, and to empower others to do something about this issue.
 
Contact
For more information or if you suspect trafficking, please contact Dianna Bussey, chair of The Salvation Army Anti-Trafficking Network, at Dianna_Bussey@can.salvationarmy.org.