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Victims and villains: anti-trafficking movement urged to tackle racial bias

by Christine Murray | Thomson Reuters Foundation
Thursday, 25 June 2020 17:41 GMT

FILE PHOTO: A shadow of a man wearing a protective face mask is cast on the wall at the premises of Pashupatinath Temple during the lockdown imposed by the government amid concerns about the spread of coronavirus disease (COVID-19), in Kathmandu, Nepal June 1, 2020. REUTERS/Navesh Chitrakar

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Black victims of trafficking too often face suspicion or criminalisation by authorities, experts said

By Christine Murray

MEXICO CITY, June 25 (Thomson Reuters Foundation) - Global protests about racism and police brutality should act as a wake-up call to the anti-human trafficking movement over the approach of law enforcement, treatment of Black victims and a lack of racial diversity, academics and activists said.

The legacy of 'white slave traffic' - a century-old Western narrative portraying white women as victims and foreign or Black men as criminals - affects anti-trafficking efforts in myriad ways today, particularly in criminal justice, researchers say.

Many human trafficking policymakers and non-profits - whether in the United States, Britain or Thailand - focus on securing convictions, longer sentences, police training and victim cooperation as leading solutions to the complex problem.

Yet advocates fear this comes at the expense of addressing broader underlying causes such as poverty, immigration policies or domestic violence. It also means relying on criminal justice systems that are biased against Black people, academics said.

"The way that law enforcement is addressing (human trafficking) right now is a microcosm of everything that the Black Lives Matter movement is talking about," said Vanessa Bouche, an Associate Professor at Texas Christian University.

Between 2005 and 2015, 57% of defendants in U.S. federal minor sex trafficking trials, a focus for prosecutors, were African-American, said Bouche, who built a case database. Yet only about 13% of the U.S. population is African-American.

On average, Black people convicted of sex trafficking minors are sentenced for 39 months longer than white people, she added.

And Black victims discovered by police on anti-trafficking raids are routinely treated with suspicion, said Bridgette Carr, director of the University of Michigan Law School's Human Trafficking Clinic, which gives free legal support to victims.

Trafficking victims are often arrested for crimes they had been forced to commit - from prostitution to dealing drugs.

"We know that Black victims ... are pushed more into being criminals and not being offered services," Carr said, adding that the racialized idea of "perfect victims" who always cooperate with police was damaging to anti-trafficking efforts.

Debbie Ariyo, who runs the British charity Africans Unite Against Child Abuse (AFRUCA), said Black trafficking victims were also often ignored or dismissed by authorities in Britain.

"Law enforcement agencies have failed to protect survivors due to a lack of knowledge and understanding of cultural practices that foster trafficking and exploitation," she wrote in a recent opinion piece for the Thomson Reuters Foundation.

A person walks through the financial district during rainy weather in London, Britain, September 23, 2018. Picture taken September 23, 2018. To match Exclusive BRITAIN-EU/CITY REUTERS/Henry Nicholls

'WHITE SLAVERY'

English and American laws and global agreements from the early 1900s referred to 'white slave traffic', focusing on sex trafficking of white women mainly by immigrants or Black people.

In Latin America today, the issue is still described in some parts as 'trata de blancas' or 'the trafficking of white women'.

"The racialized narratives have always been central to anti-trafficking narrative or storytelling," said Brian Donovan, a cultural and historical sociologist at the University of Kansas.

Similar rhetoric is now used by some anti-trafficking groups to portray women in the sex trade as "innocents" in need of rescue, which obscures the complex reality of sex work, he said.

Yet this legacy or the impact of a criminal justice focus on Black people are rarely discussed in anti-trafficking circles - be it by the feminist left or the conservative Christian right - according to academics and activists working on the issue.

Part of the problem is that the non-profits involved in the movement are also too white, said Ariyo of AFRUCA in Britain.

"It's not diverse in any way or form," she said, adding that many groups working with victims from Nigeria and Albania, for example, had no knowledge or understanding of those countries.

In addition to becoming more diverse, organizations should consider allying with groups looking at broader structural problems related to trafficking from poverty to prison reform and immigration to domestic violence, several researchers said.

About 40.3 million people globally are estimated by the United Nations' International Labour Organization (ILO) to be enslaved today, more than at any point in history.

Yet some researchers are concerned by the widespread use of the term 'modern slavery' - which encompasses sex trafficking, forced labor and forced marriages - for its association and reliance on comparisons with the trans-Atlantic slave trade.

The term undermines the work needed to address the racism that originated in slavery, said Jennifer Suchland, an Associate Professor at Ohio State University and author on trafficking.

"Anti-trafficking organizations are not seeing the ways in which we are complicit in the continued erasure of the legacy of slavery on the present," said Suchland.

Related stories:

Descendants of slaves in Brazil count their dead from COVID-19

U.S. black domestic workers fear losing homes after losing jobs

Calls for cooperation as online child sex abuse soars in Europe

(Reporting by Christine Murray; Editing by Kieran Guilbert. Please credit the Thomson Reuters Foundation, the charitable arm of Thomson Reuters, that covers the lives of people around the world who struggle to live freely or fairly. Visit http://news.trust.org)

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

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