Revue 2010 De L'actualité Internationale De La Prostitution

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Revue 2010 De L'actualité Internationale De La Prostitution La revue de l’actualité internationale de la prostitution préparée par le CRIDES (Centre de Recherches Internationales et de Documentation sur l’Exploitation Sexuelle) 2 Sommaire - Présentation des activités de la Fondation SCELLES et du CRIDES ….. 3 - A retenir pour 2010……………………………………………………………….. 5 - L’actualité internationale de la prostitution 2010 Janvier 2010………………………………………………………………… 13 Février 2010……………………………………………………………….... 18 Mars 2010…………………………………………………………………….. 24 Avril 2010……………………………………………………………………... 32 Mai 2010………………………………………………………………………. 37 Juin 2010……………………………………………………………………... 42 Juillet 2010……………………………………………………………….….. 47 Août 2010………………………………………………...………………….. 51 Septembre 2010………………………………………………………..…… 54 Octobre 2010……………………………………………………………..…. 60 Novembre 2010……………………………………………………………... 65 Décembre 2010………………………………………………………….….. 70 - Liste des liens des journaux utilisés………………………………………….. 74 L’actualité iinternationalenternationale de la prostitution 2010 Préparée par le CRIDES 3 Toute personne doit pouvoir vivre sans avoir recours à la prostitution Reconnue d’utilité publique par décret du 20 décembre 1994, la Fondation Jean et Jeanne Scelles est engagée depuis plus de 15 ans dans la lutte contre l’exploitation sexuelle commerciale, conformément à la Convention de l’ONU du 2 décembre 1949 « pour la répression de la traite des êtres humains et de la prostitution d’autrui ». La Fondation Scelles a pour mission de mutualiser ses compétences et celles de ses partenaires afin de mieux connaître, comprendre et combattre l’exploitation sexuelle commerciale. Connaître, pour analyser le phénomène sous tous ses aspects (prostitution, tourisme sexuel, proxénétisme, pornographie, traite des êtres humains…) grâce à un Centre de recherches et d’analyses (le CRIDES), véritable carrefour de renseignements, de rencontres et d’échanges d’informations dans le monde. Comprendre, pour alimenter la réflexion et les prises de position grâce au développement de notre expertise en partenariat avec les associations de terrain et les experts nationaux et internationaux. Combattre, par des actions et recommandations destinées à mobiliser des décideurs politiques locaux, nationaux et européens ; par la sensibilisation auprès du grand public (médias, mise en scène d’événements telle que le « Human Shop »…) et auprès de publics ciblés telle qu’un portail d’actualités, un site internet pour les jeunes, une plateforme collaborative, une newsletter pour experts « Fondation Scelles Infos »…). Fondation SCELLES 14 rue Mondétour – 75001 Paris Tél. 01 40 26 04 45 – Fax. 01 40 26 04 58 - E-mail : [email protected] L’actualité iinternationalenternationale de la prostitution 2010 Préparée par le CRIDES 4 Le Centre de Recherches Internatiionalles et de Documentatiion sur ll’Exploiitatiion Sexuelllle (CRIIDES) Le CRIDES est un carrefour de renseignements, de rencontres et d’échanges d’informations sur la traite des êtres humains aux fins d’exploitation sexuelle dans le monde. Il est régulièrement consulté par des experts français et étrangers : associations, institutions, journalistes, juristes, chercheurs et personnes concernées par la défense des droits de l’Homme. Il a pour objectif : d’analyser ce phénomène sous tous ses aspects : prostitution, tourisme sexuel, proxénétisme, pornographie enfantine, traite d’êtres humains à des fins d’exploitation sexuelle commerciale…. de permettre la réflexion et les prises de position. d’informer tout public intéressé par ces questions. Le CRIDES est organisé autour de trois grands types d’activités : Documentation : Une médiathèque : plus de 350 livres, 400 films, reportages et émissions TV Un panorama de la presse bimensuel, « Infos Mail » Une base de données de plus de 8 000 documents : analyses, actes, études, rapports d’experts, recherche- actions, mémoires et thèses, articles de presse, rapports d’activités… Une sélection de plus de 1 000 études et rapport réalisés dans le monde sur la traite et l’exploitation sexuelle, téléchargeables via une base de données sur le « portail CRIDES » en surfant sur le site de la Fondation Scelles Un catalogue français recense les outils portant sur des actions de prévention, information et sensibilisation, assistance et protection, réinsertion, formation, coopération transnationale, coopération multidisciplinaire, répression, législation. Recherche et Analyses : Toutes les recherches du CRIDES sont accessibles et téléchargeables sur le portail CRIDES du site de la Fondation Scelles Des fiches thématiques déclinées en plus d’une vingtaine de sujets, à destination du grand public Des fiches géographiques, résultats d’études par la Fondation de pays cibles sur plusieurs continents Des « Cahiers de la Fondation », destinés aux experts, synthétisent les connaissances et analyses en abordant l’exploitation sexuelle commerciale selon un angle thématique spécifique. Echanges et partenariats : Disponible depuis 2008, la Plateforme collaborative du CRIDES (http://crides.fondationscelles.org ) véritable portail français/anglais de documentation contributif, proposant ainsi au grand public une grande partie de ses ressources accumulées au cours de ses 15 ans d'activité (catalogues d’outils et bonnes pratiques et de vidéos, études et publications sur l’exploitation sexuelle commerciale, calendrier d’événements à retenir…). Elle offre aussi à la communauté des chercheurs et des travailleurs sociaux un espace de travail collaboratif (ateliers de travail et forums). L'ambition de cette plateforme est de : mettre à la disposition du public les ressources documentaires du CRIDES concernant l'exploitation sexuelle, fournir aux acteurs sociaux, associatifs ou institutionnels, ainsi qu'aux chercheurs un espace de travail et de communication, créer l'infrastructure d'un réseau de lutte contre cette exploitation qui renforcera le travail de chacun par la collaboration de tous. Accès sur rendez-vous du lundi au vendredi de 9 h à 16 h - Tél. 01 40 26 04 45 L’actualité iinternationalenternationale de la prostitution 2010 Préparée par le CRIDES 5 A retenir pour 2010… Par Catherine Goldmann JANVIER 2010 - Une interview de Bernard Lemettre (Eglise catholique en France, du 25 janvier) - Plusieurs commentaires sur la dernière étude de Tampep (Transnational AIDS/STIprevention among Migrants Prostitutes in Europe Project) sur la traite des jeunes Roumaines (Times Online / Fox News, du 23 janvier) ; - De nouveaux commentaires sur l’ouverture des bordels du Nevada à la prostitution masculine (Google.com du 22 janvier, The Guardian Unlimited du 20 janvier) - Plusieurs commentaires sur « Doubles vies », l’enquête d’Hervé Latapie sur la prostitution homosexuelle à partir de témoignages de personnes prostituées et de clients (360 Degrés du 30 janvier / Rue89 du 27 janvier) - Un état des lieux de la prostitution en Suisse au moment où se tient la 1 ère plateforme de discussion intercantonale sur ce thème (Swiss Info, du 31 janvier) - Nouvelles polémiques sur la réouverture des maisons closes : interview de la députée Chantal Brunel (Elle.fr, du 29 janvier), points de vue de S. Prieur (Mouvement du Nid) et de Cadyne (Strass) sur le sujet (JDD, du 29 janvier). - Plusieurs commentaires à propos des dernières études sur le client publiées par le Home Office (Daily Record / Daily Mirror / Metro du 28 janvier) ; - Vancouver se prépare à un « pic de prostitution » à l’occasion des jeux olympiques d’hiver (The Gazette / UPI / The Province, 31 janvier et 1 er février) FEVRIER 2010 - L’identification d’un réseau de prostitution d’enfants qui recrutait leurs victimes sur Facebook en Indonésie (The Jakarta Globe, du 2 février) - La réponse de Danielle Bousquet, députée PS des Côtes d’Armor, aux déclarations de Chantal Brunel, députée UMP, appellant à la réouverture des maisons closes (Elle.fr, du 2 février) ; - Un dossier de critiques et de réactions (pour la plupart positives) au documentaire de Jean-Michel Carré (L’Humanité / Libération / Evene.fr… du 3 février) - Une étudiante néo-zélandaise vend sa virginité aux enchères sur internet (3 février) - L’affaire Pôle Emploi : le site Pôle Emploi propose une annonce pour un emploi de strip-teaseuse sur son site (Le Parisien / Le Point / TSR, du 5 février) ; - Un tableau de la prostitution en Suisse (Le Nouvelliste, 5 février) ; - Le démantèlement d’un réseau de prostitution d’adolescentes à Montpellier (Midi libre, du 8 février) - Un gros dossier sur la prostitution lyonnaise proposé par LyonCapitale.fr (du 11 février 2010) - Le débat autour de la prostitution des adolescents en Suisse (où la prostitution est autorisée dès 16 ans) autour du témoignage d’un jeune prostitué cocaïnomane (L’Express – L’Impartial du 8 février) - La campagne lancée par la Cimade sur la double peine des femmes étrangères (9 et 10 février) et, sur le même thème, la lettre ouverte de F. Héritier, Agnès B., M. Satrapi et F. Seligmann (Le Monde, du 9 février) - La réponse de Thierry Schaffhauser à l’article de Julie Bindel appelant à l’interdiction des publicités pour les salons de massages et agences d’escortes (The Guardian Unlimited, du 8 février) - Un dossier de Libération sur les transsexuel(le)s, avec une interview de Camille Cabral, du PASTT (du 19 février) ; - L’assassinat dans des conditions atroces d’une femme de 70 ans, prostituée à Paris dans le IXe arrondissement (JDD, du 20 février) ; - Le procès d’un proxénète bulgare à Toulouse (La Dépêche du Midi, du 20 février). - Le dossier que consacre France-Soir à la loi LSI et au délit de racolage à l’occasion
Recommended publications
  • Emancipating Modern Slaves: the Challenges of Combating the Sex
    Union College Union | Digital Works Honors Theses Student Work 6-2013 Emancipating Modern Slaves: The hC allenges of Combating the Sex Trade Rachel Mann Union College - Schenectady, NY Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalworks.union.edu/theses Part of the Feminist, Gender, and Sexuality Studies Commons, Inequality and Stratification Commons, and the Political Science Commons Recommended Citation Mann, Rachel, "Emancipating Modern Slaves: The hC allenges of Combating the Sex Trade" (2013). Honors Theses. 700. https://digitalworks.union.edu/theses/700 This Open Access is brought to you for free and open access by the Student Work at Union | Digital Works. It has been accepted for inclusion in Honors Theses by an authorized administrator of Union | Digital Works. For more information, please contact [email protected]. EMANCIPATING MODERN SLAVES: THE CHALLENGES OF COMBATING THE SEX TRADE By Rachel J. Mann * * * * * * * * * Submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for Honors in the Department of Political Science UNION COLLEGE June, 2013 ABSTRACT MANN, RACHEL Emancipating Modern Slaves: The Challenges of Combating the Sex Trade, June 2013 ADVISOR: Thomas Lobe The trafficking and enslavement of women and children for sexual exploitation affects millions of victims in every region of the world. Sex trafficking operates as a business, where women are treated as commodities within a global market for sex. Traffickers profit from a supply of vulnerable women, international demand for sex slavery, and a viable means of transporting victims. Globalization and the expansion of free market capitalism have increased these factors, leading to a dramatic increase in sex trafficking. Globalization has also brought new dimensions to the fight against sex trafficking.
    [Show full text]
  • Recasting Caste: Histories of Dalit Transnationalism and the Internationalization of Caste Discrimination
    Recasting Caste: Histories of Dalit Transnationalism and the Internationalization of Caste Discrimination by Purvi Mehta A dissertation submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy (Anthropology and History) in the University of Michigan 2013 Doctoral Committee: Associate Professor Farina Mir, Chair Professor Pamela Ballinger Emeritus Professor David W. Cohen Associate Professor Matthew Hull Professor Mrinalini Sinha Dedication For my sister, Prapti Mehta ii Acknowledgements I thank the dalit activists that generously shared their work with me. These activists – including those at the National Campaign for Dalit Human Rights, Navsarjan Trust, and the National Federation of Dalit Women – gave time and energy to support me and my research in India. Thank you. The research for this dissertation was conducting with funding from Rackham Graduate School, the Eisenberg Center for Historical Studies, the Institute for Research on Women and Gender, the Center for Comparative and International Studies, and the Nonprofit and Public Management Center. I thank these institutions for their support. I thank my dissertation committee at the University of Michigan for their years of guidance. My adviser, Farina Mir, supported every step of the process leading up to and including this dissertation. I thank her for her years of dedication and mentorship. Pamela Ballinger, David Cohen, Fernando Coronil, Matthew Hull, and Mrinalini Sinha posed challenging questions, offered analytical and conceptual clarity, and encouraged me to find my voice. I thank them for their intellectual generosity and commitment to me and my project. Diana Denney, Kathleen King, and Lorna Altstetter helped me navigate through graduate training.
    [Show full text]
  • Farley Prostitution, Sex Trade, COVID-19 Pandemic
    1 Prostitution, the Sex Trade, and the COVID-19 Pandemic by Melissa Farley [1] Logos - a journal of modern society & culture Spring 2020 Volume 19 #1 The COVID-19 pandemic has had immediate and severe impacts on women in the sex trade who are already among the most vulnerable women on the planet. Because of quarantines, social distancing, governments’ neglect of the poor, systemic racism in all walks of life including healthcare, failure to protect children from abuse, and the predation of sex buyers and pimps – the coronavirus pandemic threatens already-marginalized women’s ability to survive. Even before the pandemic, sex buyers and pimps inflicted more sexual violence on women in the sex trade than any other group of women who have been studied by researchers (Hunter, 1994; Farley, 2017). The greater the poverty, the greater the likelihood of violent exploitation in the sex trade, as noted 26 years ago by Dutch researcher Ine Vanwesenbeeck (1994). This article will discuss the impact of COVID-19 as it increases harms resulting from the poverty and violent exploitation of prostitution, an oppressive institution built on foundations of sexism and racism. Women in the sex trade are in harm’s way for many reasons including a lack of food, shelter, and healthcare, all of which increase their risk of contracting COVID19. Understanding what it’s like to be anxious about access to food and shelter is key to understanding the risks taken by people in prostitution. Knowing they were risking their lives, many women prostituted during the pandemic. “Poverty will kill us before the coronavirus,” said an Indian woman in prostitution (Dutt, 2020).
    [Show full text]
  • Global Social Work Responds To
    Getting to Zero Global Social Work Responds to Responds Work Global Social Social workers in all parts of the world have been responding to the unique challenges of HIV since the earliest days of the epidemic. HIV was, and remains, a social challenge as much as a biomedical challenge. Social work researchers and practitioners, laboratory scientists and medical practitioners, policy-makers and funders, together with people living with HIV, at risk of contracting HIV and affected by HIV, must work in close partnership with each other to develop and deliver effective, compassionate, accessible and appropriate HIV prevention, treatment, care and support services. In this publication, 18 contributions by social workers, social work researchers and academics document some of the innovative work they are doing so that those responses can be adapted in other places and communities around the world to contribute towards ending the AIDS epidemic by 2030. This landmark book represents a collaboration between the International Association of Schools of Social Work (IASSW), and Getting the Joint United Nations Programme on HIV/AIDS (UNAIDS) as they work together to achieve common goals of zero new HIV HIV infections, zero discrimination and zero AIDS-related deaths. to Zero “This book, a collaboration between UNAIDS, social work educators and Global Social Work researchers around the world, documents innovative social work approaches to Responds to HIV prevention, treatment, care and support. It also provides a valuable resource to social workers,
    [Show full text]
  • General Assembly GENERAL
    UNITED NATIONS A Distr. General Assembly GENERAL A/HRC/4/23/Add.1 30 May 2007 ENGLISH/FRENCH/ SPANISH HUMAN RIGHTS COUNCIL Fourth session* Agenda item 2 IMPLEMENTATION OF GENERAL ASSEMBLY RESOLUTION 60/251 OF 15 MARCH 2006 ENTITLED “HUMAN RIGHTS COUNCIL” Report of the Special Rapporteur on the human rights aspects of the victims of trafficking in persons, especially women and children, Sigma Huda Addendum ** Summary of cases transmitted to Governments and replies received * The present document, which carries the symbol number of the fourth session of the Human Rights Council, is scheduled for consideration by the fifth session of the Council. ** The report is being circulated in the languages of submission only, as it greatly exceeds the word limitations currently imposed by the relevant General Assembly resolutions. GE.07-12836 A/HRC/4/23/ Add.1 Page 2 Contents Paragraph Page Introduction…………………………………………………….......... 1 – 7 3 A Statistics…………………………………………………….. 5 B Communications sent and Government replies received... Argentina………………………………………………..................... 8 – 33 7 Bahrain……………………………………………………………… 34 – 37 11 Benin………………………………………………………………… 38 – 47 11 Brazil………………………………………………………………… 48 – 54 13 Bulgaria……………………………………………………………… 55 – 58 14 People’s Republic of China…………………………………………. 59 – 67 15 Cyprus……………………………………………………………….. 68 – 74 17 Democratic People’s Republic of Korea……………………………. 75 – 80 18 Ecuador……………………………………………………………… 81 – 91 19 Germany…………………………………………………………….. 92 – 95 21 Greece………………………………………………………………. 96 – 104 22 India………………………………………………………………….
    [Show full text]
  • TAIWAN (Tier 1) and Psychological Counseling Services to Approximately 30 Female Trafficking Victims in 2009
    Protection a domestic worker. In addition, they require employment During the year, the government made modest progress contracts be issued by the Ministry of Interior and in protecting trafficking victims, while demonstrating contain standardized regulations regarding the provision improved partnerships with NGOs and international of monthly paychecks, clothing, food, medicine, living TAIWAN organizations to identify and provide services to quarters, and time off. Beyond prosecuting clients and victimized women and children. As it did in Damascus brothel proprietors, the government took no specific during the previous reporting period, the government actions to reduce the demand for commercial sex acts. donated building space for a trafficking victims’ shelter Syria is not a party to the 2000 UN TIP Protocol. in Aleppo, which opened in January 2010. These two shelters, operated by local NGOs, offered legal, medical, TAIWAN (Tier 1) and psychological counseling services to approximately 30 female trafficking victims in 2009. The government Taiwan is a destination, and to a much lesser extent, continued to lack procedures for identifying potential source and transit territory for men, women, and children victims among vulnerable populations; as a result, subjected to trafficking in persons, specifically forced victims of trafficking may have been arrested and prostitution and forced labor. Most trafficking victims in charged with prostitution or violating immigration laws Taiwan are workers from Vietnam, Thailand, Indonesia, before being deported or punished. There were reports, and the Philippines, employed through recruitment however, that some women arrested on such charges agencies and brokers to perform low-skilled work in and subsequently identified as victims of trafficking Taiwan’s manufacturing industries and as home caregivers were referred to shelters; this is a positive development.
    [Show full text]
  • Caste Discrimination and Human Rights
    CASTE DISCRIMINATION AND HUMAN RIGHTS: A comprehensive compilation of how caste discrimination and similar forms of discrimination based on work and descent have been addressed by the UN treaty bodies, Universal Periodic Review, and the Special Procedures Prepared by the International Dalit Solidarity Network Ninth edition – February 2015 The International Dalit Solidarity Network Rosenørns Allé 12 DK-1634 Copenhagen V Denmark Email: [email protected] Website: www.idsn.org Find the most recently updated edition of this compilation online: www.idsn.org/UNcompilation 1 TABLE OF CONTENTS CASTE DISCRIMINATION AND HUMAN RIGHTS ...................................................... 6 INTRODUCTION .......................................................................................................................................................... 6 METHODOLOGY .......................................................................................................................................................... 8 REVIEW OF FINDINGS ................................................................................................................................................. 9 UN treaty bodies (1991-2014) ........................................................................................................................................ 9 Universal Periodic Review (2008-2014) ........................................................................................................................ 11 UN Special Procedures (2005-2014) ............................................................................................................................
    [Show full text]
  • T-Z/Special Cases
    rape. Following the passage of this statute, the Ministry at times required lobbying from NGOs or international of Interior dedicated significant resources to launching a organizations. Male-dominated police units continued specialized anti-trafficking directorate in June 2010, which to be insensitive to issues such as rape and sexual abuse is tasked with investigating cases, raising public awareness, – practices to which trafficking victims are typically cooperating with foreign entities, training law enforcement, subjected – discouraging many victims from coming and tracking and annually reporting on the government’s forward. The government neither encouraged victims to taiwan anti-trafficking efforts. The directorate opened an office in assist in investigations or prosecutions of their traffickers Damascus, hired over 200 staff members, and established nor provided foreign victims with legal alternatives to their working relationships with Interpol and IOM; the nature removal to countries in which they may face hardship or of its day-to-day activities is unknown. The directorate’s retribution. effectiveness in investigating and charging trafficking crimes, as well as officially identifying victims, was hindered by the government’s delay in issuing the Executive Prevention Order containing implementing procedures for Legislative During the past year, the government made modest Decree No. 3; prosecutions and victim protection were efforts to prevent trafficking. It conducted few campaigns unable to proceed without this formal step. to educate government officials and the general public about trafficking; most of the population has little or no The government provided limited information on its awareness of human trafficking and the issue remains investigation or prosecution of suspected trafficking taboo to discuss.
    [Show full text]
  • August 20131
    Responses to mixed migration in the Horn of Africa & Yemen August 20131 Responses to mixed migration in the Horn of Africa & Yemen: policies and assistance responses in a fast- changing context This is the third of a series of studies focusing on different aspects of mixed migration associated with the Horn of Africa and Yemen region. Acknowledgements The research and publication of this report was funded by the SDC – the Swiss Agency for Development and Cooperation. The lead researcher and writer was Mr Bram Frouws, an independent consultant. The text was developed using statistical data and information developed by the Regional Mixed Migration Secretariat (RMMS) and other listed references. The views and opinions of this report are entirely those of the RMMS unless otherwise referenced. Published: August 2013 The Regional Mixed Migration Secretariat (RMMS). Formed in 2011 and based in Nairobi, the overall objective of the RMMS is to support agencies, institutions and fora in the Horn of Africa and Yemen sub-region to improve the management of protection and assistance to people in mixed migration flows in the Horn of Africa and across the Gulf of Aden and Red Sea in Yemen. The co-founders and Steering Committee members for the RMMS include UNHCR, IOM, Danish Refugee Council (DRC), INTERSOS and the Yemen Mixed Migration Task Force. The RMMS is therefore a regional hub aiming to provide support and coordination, analysis and research, information, data management and advocacy. It acts as an independent agency, hosted by the DRC, to stimulate forward thinking and policy development in relation to mixed migration.
    [Show full text]
  • Sexual Exploitation: Prostitution and Organized Crime
    2 Sexual Exploitation: Prostitution and Organized Crime Sexual Exploitation: Prostitution and Organized Crime 3 Fondation SCELLES Under the Direction of Yves Charpenel Deputy General Prosecutor of the Supreme Court of France President of the Fondation Scelles Sexual Exploitation Prostitution and Organized Crime ECONOMICA 49, rue Héricart, 75015 Paris 4 Sexual Exploitation: Prostitution and Organized Crime « The proceeds from the sale of this book will be given directly to the Fondation Scelles » Translated from the original French Edition Exploitation sexuelle – Prostitution et crime organisé © Ed. Economica 2012 Translation copyright © Ed. ECONOMICA, 2012 All reproduction, translation, execution and adaptation rights are reserved for all countries Sexual Exploitation: Prostitution and Organized Crime 5 Excerpt from the Dictionary of the French Academy PROSTITUTION n. 13 th century, meaning of "debauchery"; 18 th century, the current meaning. From the Latin prostitutio , "prostitution, desecration." The act of having sexual relations in exchange for payment; activity consisting in practicing regularly such relations. The law does not prohibit prostitution, only soliciting and procuring. Entering into prostitution. A prostitution network. Clandestine, occasional prostitution . ANCIENT MEANING. Sacred prostitution , practiced by the female servants of the goddesses of love or fertility in certain temples and for the profit of these goddesses, in some countries of the Middle East and of the Mediterranean. The Aphrodite temple, in Corinth,
    [Show full text]
  • T-Z and Special Case (PDF)
    further endangering trafficking victims and other vulnerable between low-level police officers and traffickers, particularly TAIWAN populations that remained in the country. regarding the trafficking of women in prostitution; during the last year, there was no evidence that the government addressed complicity through investigations. :@90(;0,99(5205.)@@,(9 Protection The government made no discernible efforts to identify and protect victims of trafficking during the reporting period. By the end of the reporting period, IOM had identified at least 95 Filipina domestic workers believed to be trafficking victims trapped in Hama and Homs, cities experiencing extreme Recommendations for Syria: Implement the comprehensive violence at the hands of the government. While the Philippine anti-trafficking law through increased investigations and embassy attempted to negotiate with the employers of the prosecutions of trafficking offenders; provide training on domestic workers for their release, there were no reports that human trafficking to police, immigration officials, labor, and the Government of Syria assisted the embassy in these efforts social welfare officials, including those assigned to the anti- to identify and protect the workers, including possible victims trafficking directorate; ensure that the anti-trafficking of domestic servitude. In contrast with the previous reporting directorate is fully operational, continue to assign a significant period, the government did not refer any trafficking victims to number of female police officers to the directorate, and provide NGO-operated shelters. The government also failed to institute specific training on how to receive cases and interview potential any systematic procedures for the identification, interview, and trafficking victims with appropriate sensitivity; launch a referral of trafficking victims.
    [Show full text]
  • Characterizing the HIV/AIDS Epidemic in the Middle East and North Africa
    Public Disclosure Authorized Characterizing the Public Disclosure Authorized HIV/AIDS Epidemic in the Middle East Public Disclosure Authorized and North Africa TIME FOR STRATEGIC ACTION Public Disclosure Authorized Laith J. Abu-Raddad, Francisca Ayodeji Akala, Iris Semini, Gabriele Riedner, David Wilson, and Ousama Tawil Characterizing the HIV/AIDS Epidemic in the Middle East and North Africa Characterizing the HIV/AIDS Epidemic in the Middle East and North Africa TIME FOR STRATEGIC ACTION Laith J. Abu-Raddad, Francisca Ayodeji Akala, Iris Semini, Gabriele Riedner, David Wilson, and Ousama Tawil Washington, D.C. © 2010 The International Bank for Reconstruction and Development / The World Bank 1818 H Street NW Washington DC 20433 Telephone: 202-473-1000 Internet: www.worldbank.org E-mail: [email protected] All rights reserved 1 2 3 4 13 12 11 10 This volume is a product of the staff of the International Bank for Reconstruction and Development / The World Bank. The findings, interpretations, and conclusions expressed in this volume do not necessarily reflect the views of the Executive Directors of The World Bank or the governments they represent. The World Bank does not guarantee the accuracy of the data included in this work. The boundaries, colors, denominations, and other information shown on any map in this work do not imply any judgement on the part of The World Bank concerning the legal status of any territory or the endorsement or acceptance of such boundaries. Rights and Permissions The material in this publication is copyrighted. Copying and/or transmitting portions or all of this work without permission may be a violation of applicable law.
    [Show full text]