A few days ago I read an article in CNN.com about human trafficking cases taking place in Mexico. A Mexican federal judge has sentenced four people to a minimum of 16 ½ years each behind bars for human trafficking. One of the offenders was sentenced to 18 ½ years because he was also found guilty of possessing a firearm licensed exclusively to the military. Four women were rescued in Miami, where they had been forced to work as prostitutes. Their children had been held in Mexico, and if the women wanted to contact them, they had to send money to their handlers. After the offenders were caught, the children were sent to be with their mothers again.
The US State Department released its annual report on human trafficking in which countries are ranked in three tiers according to the number of cases of human trafficking. Mexico was put in the middle tier.
The report says that the most vulnerable people are children, women, indigenous people, and undocumented migrants. The situation is very complex because the number of investigations, prosecutions, convictions, and sentences is low; and the government funding to victim services is inadequate in comparison to the magnitude of the problem. About 27 million people are victims of human trafficking worldwide, and around 100000 of those victims are in the US.
Kite
We do not need to go very far to see those cases.Here, in Argentina, up to last week , the traffic of human organs topic was central in the news programmes, especially the ones from La Plata.There were rumours about some cases in the city but nobody reported them to the police. On the other hand, in Argentina thousand of people were forced to prostitute, some of them were rescued, luckily, but some are still missing. I think that laws should be changed in order to give the guilties severe sentences. Melman
ReplyDelete