UN and the sex trade

why is that where ever these “peace keepers” or “liberators” go, shame and misrey find it way???

Kosovo UN troops ‘fuel sex trade’

The girls are promised jobs but end up selling sex
The presence of peacekeepers in Kosovo is fuelling the sexual exploitation of women and encouraging trafficking, according to Amnesty International.
It claims UN and Nato troops in the region are using the trafficked women and girls for sex and some have been involved in trafficking itself.

Amnesty says girls as young as 11 from eastern European countries are being sold into the sex slavery.

A Nato spokesman said some details of the report seemed out of date.

Lieutenant Colonel Jim Moran said some policies had changed. Peacekeepers were “not allowed” off base in civilian clothing or to go to bars and nightclubs, he said.

“Each nation is responsible for the conduct of their soldiers, and if they find a soldier that is breaking the law, it is up to them to bring them to justice,” he added.

There has been no comment from the UN.

Trading houses

Amnesty’s report, entitled “So does that mean I have rights? Protecting the human rights of women and girls trafficked for forced prostitution in Kosovo,” was published on Thursday.

I was forced by the boss to serve international soldiers and police officers

Trafficked woman who spoke to Amnesty
It is based on interviews with women and girls who have been trafficked from countries such as Moldova, Bulgaria and the Ukraine to service Kosovo’s sex industry.

They are said to have been moved illegally across borders and sold in “trading houses,” where they are sometimes drugged and “broken in” before being sold from one trafficker to another for prices ranging from 50 to 3,500 euros ($60 - 4,200).

The report includes harrowing testimonies of abduction, deprivation of liberty and denial of freedom of movement, torture and ill-treatment, including psychological threats, beatings and rape.

Instead of getting a proper job the women and girls find themselves trapped, enslaved, forced into prostitution.

The report condemns the role of the international peacekeepers.

Slavery

It says that after 40,000 K-For troops and hundreds of Unmik personnel were sent to Kosovo in 1999, a “small-scale local market for prostitution was transformed into a large-scale industry based on trafficking run by organised criminal networks”.

Peacekeepers must be held accountable for their role in this trade in human misery

Kate Allen,
Amnesty International
The number of places in Kosovo where trafficked women and girls may be exploited, such as nightclubs, bars, restaurants, hotels and cafes, has increased from 18 in 1999 to more than 200 in 2003.

The report claims international personnel make up about 20% of the people using trafficked women and girls even though its members comprise only 2% of Kosovo’s population.

Amnesty International UK Director Kate Allen said:

"Women and girls as young as 11 are being sold into sexual slavery in Kosovo and international peacekeepers are not only failing to stop it they are actively fuelling this despicable trade by themselves paying for sex from trafficked women.

“It is time for countries to stop treating trafficking as a form of ‘illegal migration’ and see it as a particularly vicious form of human rights abuse.”

One woman told Amnesty International: “I was forced by the boss to serve international soldiers and police officers… I never had a chance of running away and leaving that miserable life, because I was observed every moment by a woman.”

Criminals

Another told how German soldiers were instructed by their superiors not to go with prostitutes, but went anyway.

“They told the pimp, that if someone would be coming, he should alert them,” she said. “After a while the pimp employed a guardian.”

Amnesty says that despite some positive measures by the authorities to combat trafficking, the women and girls are often still treated as criminals - prosecuted for being unlawfully in Kosovo, or charged with prostitution.

Amnesty International is calling on the Kosovo authorities, including Unmik, to:

implement measures to end the trafficking of women and girls to, from and within Kosovo for forced prostitution
ensure that measures are taken to protect the victims of trafficking
ensure that those trafficked have a right to redress and reparation for the human rights abuses they have suffered
Amnesty says Unmik’s own figures show that by the end of 2003, 10 of their police officers had been dismissed or repatriated in connection with allegations related to trafficking.

In the year and half to July 2003 some 22-27 K-For troops were suspected of offences relating to trafficking, the report says.

However, Kfor troops and UN personnel are immune from prosecution in Kosovo and those who have been dismissed relating to such offences have escaped any criminal proceedings in their home countries.

Ms Allen added: “The international community in Kosovo is now adding insult to injury by securing immunity from prosecution for its personnel and apparently hushing up their shameful part in the abuse of trafficked women and girls.”

The organisation called on the UN and Nato to implement measures to ensure that any personnel suspected of criminal offences associated with trafficking are brought to justice
BBC NEWS | Europe | Kosovo UN troops 'fuel sex trade'

Yes, by all means the liberators should not have interfered with the ethnic cleansing of Muslims.

and....

"The report claims international personnel make up about 20% of the people using trafficked women and girls even though its members comprise only 2% of Kosovo's population. "

Who do you think the other 80% are? Who constitutes the vast majority of this problem? If the 20% "international" proportion went away, would the problem solve itself?

Stop twisting facts to suit your political agenda...

so OG ur defending them cuz they'r in a minority?

[QUOTE]
*Originally posted by lussi: *
so OG ur defending them cuz they'r in a minority?
[/QUOTE]

Nope dude OhioGuy is trying to put things in persepective.

When you want to tash the "great Satan" that is all things western, atleast find something decent, dont resort to such lameass stuff...is what the man wants to say...

I fully agree...

^ so to hold the soldiers involved in human trafficking accountable is "lame ass stuff"?

"so OG ur defending them"

What an utterly stupid comment.

What I am doing is establishing cause and effect, as well as exploring culpability. This article seems to imply that 20% of the "abusers" are western, therefore they are responsible. It is a falacious arguement.

Nobody is commenting on the obvious immorality of what is going on, just wondering what logical leap got us to having "20%" having the moral obligation to solve the problem.

And let's not kid ourselves that Amnesty International is not a biased highly political organization.

Sex trafficing is rampant all over Eastern Erope, not just Kosovo. It is highly selective to focus on a few troops, when this is a much larger problem. Just some biased reporting.

Isn't there a 'special report' on this, the sex trade in general, coming up on CNN (International, at least)? or did I miss it? oh well.
[QUOTE]
Originally posted by Ohioguy: *
Sex trafficing is rampant all over Eastern Erope, not just Kosovo. It is highly selective to focus on a few troops, when this is a much larger problem. Just some biased reporting.
[/QUOTE]
Very true. This has been a problem for some time. Depending on who you talk to, it is getting worse.. I'd be inclined to believe it. But while it's terrible that it happens at all, this isn't *that
great of a problem. People are working on it.

But specifically on the Balkans, yep, the Nato kiddies have been having fun down there. But one reason I'd depart from OG's sound criticism is that the foreigners attached to military elements, that 20%, makes up a much larger proportion of the cash being infused into the trade (as consumers)--they pay more than the locals. That is a good reason to crack down on it in those areas because the troops do make the trade more profitable. But it would still be there regardless. It aint the oldest industry for nothin.
I'm not so sure about the statistics on troops actively participating in the trafficking, but every now & then stories bubble up through the press. I can't imagine that they are the main drivers of the trafficking operations though. But their consumerism is a problem.

btw, the same has been happening with Nato troops in the Baltic states, Romania and elsewhere, so it's not just the Balkans.

Spoon,

I have traded emails over the past few years with a jounalist named Preston Mendenhall. He periodically appears on MSNBC. His reporting is outstanding, as he was in Afghanistan before 9/11, and he typically is a one man show, researching reporting, and doing the sound, video and transmission all by himself.

He did a very complete expose of the Eastern European sex trade in June of 2001.

http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/3071965/

He specifically mentions Bosnia as one area of abuse, but he has included it as a part of a much larger problem, and without Amnesty spoonfeeding (no pun intended) him a line of political trash that imples that if not for the NATO/UN forces, the problem would not exist.

http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/3071976/