Malaysia to U.S.: Be friendlier to Muslims … by backing off on human trafficking

posted at 10:55 am on July 2, 2007 by Allahpundit

Cultural differences, buddy. Do you want the world to love us or don’t you?

Malaysia dismissed on Monday possible U.S. sanctions over human trafficking and warned Washington of alienating Muslims after it blacklisted mostly Islamic countries.

The U.S. last month ranked Muslim states — Bahrain, Kuwait, Iran, Malaysia, Oman, Saudi Arabia, Sudan, Syria and Qatar — as among the worst human trade offenders, and said they may face sanctions.

“We are not bothered about…the sanctions,” Foreign Minister Syed Hamid Albar said. “I don’t think we need to respond to that sort of pressure.”

“The U.S. really needs to be friendly to Muslim countries,” he told retired Malaysian diplomats. “This is not a good development as they have just appointed a special envoy to OIC.” Malaysia heads the 57-nation Organization of Islamic Conference.

Here’s the list of “Tier 3″ trafficking states per the State Department’s new report on the subject. They’re not all Islamic countries. Only most of them.

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Can you imagine what their Reparations tab’s gonna look like? No wonder the Prince is selling his Aspen compound.

Editor on July 2, 2007 at 11:06 AM

Because you can’t be too nice human traffickers.

terryannonline on July 2, 2007 at 11:07 AM

But they’re just doing jobs the Malay’s won’t do.

/sarc off

KelliD on July 2, 2007 at 11:08 AM

It’s not human trafficking; it’s filthy infidel trafficking. There’s a difference. Doesn’t State know that enslaving infidels is allowed in Dar al Harb?

Thomas the Wraith on July 2, 2007 at 11:12 AM

Who are we to question the practices of an independent and free nation?

/oy!!

sunny on July 2, 2007 at 11:14 AM

And…. hmmm… just where is the Liberal outrage???

Oh… yeah… Syria… Pelosi…
Cuba… Sicko Man…
Iran… want to talk…
Venezuela… Cindy and Belafonte…

interesting…

Romeo13 on July 2, 2007 at 11:20 AM

But…But…Saint Cindy said we are oppressed here by Bushitler & CO. How can this be?

/Liberal getting mugged by reality.

amerpundit on July 2, 2007 at 11:23 AM

…oh come on now, Mr. Foreign Minister. You’re just mad because Hollywood never credited you for the idea to kidnap and hold a scared, 20-something white girl in a well (simply a white girl in ‘Silence of the Lambs’, but you really knows she’s nothing but an infidel).

Now go on, Mr. Foreign Minister. It’s about time she put the lotion in the bucket.

…you dick.

flyawaybird on July 2, 2007 at 11:26 AM

Why is it that I think Islam is the single greatest threat to life on earth?

doriangrey on July 2, 2007 at 11:28 AM

What, no more US aid for slavers? We’re so intolerant.

NellE on July 2, 2007 at 11:31 AM

Cultural differences, buddy.

It’s the question of whether cultural superiority exists. Not whether one culture “feels” superior to another, but whether one culture can actually be superior to another.

In the context of universal values and rights, I say the answer is yes.

flipflop on July 2, 2007 at 11:35 AM

So why didn’t Hugo keep Cindy? Could it be that he could find no buyers?

IrishEyes on July 2, 2007 at 11:56 AM

Why is the U.S. not on that list? We have somewhere between 20-30 million Mexican slaves currently being bought and sold in this country. Day labor camps are nothing more than public slave auctions.

I guess only we’re allowed to do it.

Gregor on July 2, 2007 at 12:04 PM

..Gregor at 12:04 PM.. Your on the wrong web-site..Have you ever even heard of Michelle Malkin..and if so why would you say this..

Legions on July 2, 2007 at 12:28 PM

What is a few slaves among friends?

Shut up, Malaysia.

Stormy70 on July 2, 2007 at 12:28 PM

Why is the U.S. not on that list? We have somewhere between 20-30 million Mexican slaves currently being bought and sold in this country. Day labor camps are nothing more than public slave auctions.

I guess only we’re allowed to do it.

I guess that “free to come and go” part (as in open borders) is too difficult for you to grasp.

yubley on July 2, 2007 at 12:42 PM

Maybe they need their lettuce picked, and their border sanctions are too strict.

Hey, wait a minute, we strengthen the borders and then allow businesses to buy and sell the Mexican trade.

That way farmers can get their produce picked and compaines meat butchered, and lawns manicured, we impose a tax on the buy and sell, we maintain order. Business get labor, Congress gets taxes, we control the border. After 5 years they can apply for citizenship, the Dems get their votes. And the U.N. sanctions this type of free enterprise…there is no downside, besides that pesky slavery tag. We will call it amnesty.

right2bright on July 2, 2007 at 12:47 PM

Gregor on July 2, 2007 at 12:04 PM

Would it be rude to call your post STUPID? If so I won’t post it.

right2bright on July 2, 2007 at 12:50 PM

Please note that Muslims never directly reply to criticism but rather misdirect their replies with tu quoque rebuttals to muddy the encounter. Muslims do not take responsibility for their crimes. They do not own their behavior.

In this case, US sanctions over human trafficking are not directly addressed by the Malaysian official but rather spews a bogus argument about the US policy being discriminatory against Muslims. First, it’s simply a lie. Second, it’s hypocritical. Muslims are all about discriminating against other religions. They see nothing wrong with that. In fact, it’s evil to them to tolerate another religion. So when a Muslim bays about discrimination, he’s arguing a principle he himself rejects.

Tantor on July 2, 2007 at 12:50 PM

Gregor: “Why is the U.S. not on that list? We have somewhere between 20-30 million Mexican slaves currently being bought and sold in this country. Day labor camps are nothing more than public slave auctions. I guess only we’re allowed to do it.”

Gregor, you win today’s prize for How Stupid Can You Get. I recommend you try out this brilliant lefty rhetoric on Daily Kos where there is an enormous appetite for extremist drivel. If you can somehow tie George Bush in there as a Nazi Bushitler slavemaster and Karl Rove as his foreman, you might appeal to the slobbering unhinged of the Left. They eat that stuff up like cats eat their vomit.

Tantor on July 2, 2007 at 12:57 PM

Please note that Muslims never directly reply to criticism but rather misdirect their replies with tu quoque rebuttals to muddy the encounter. Muslims do not take responsibility for their crimes. They do not own their behavior.

This is very true, but maybe too broadly applied. For instance, I, as a Catholic of Irish descent, never felt compelled to “own” the behavior of the IRA.

flipflop on July 2, 2007 at 12:58 PM

flipflop: “This is very true, but maybe too broadly applied. For instance, I, as a Catholic of Irish descent, never felt compelled to “own” the behavior of the IRA.”

The Vatican does not post legends on the altar of St. Peter’s identifying England as Satan and calling for its death. Islam does identify America as Satan in most sacred rituals and monuments and calls for its death. Catholic priests do not finance, arm, and support IRA terror operations against England. Muslim clerics actively support Islamic terror.

Tantor on July 2, 2007 at 1:02 PM

Would it be rude to call your post STUPID? If so I won’t post it.

right2bright on July 2, 2007 at 12:50 PM

No. It would just be stupid.

Gregor on July 2, 2007 at 1:06 PM

Your on the wrong web-site..Have you ever even heard of Michelle Malkin..and if so why would you say this..

Legions on July 2, 2007 at 12:28 PM

Errr … huh? Is this your first day here? Please slap yourself out of your sleep.

Gregor on July 2, 2007 at 1:07 PM

I guess that “free to come and go” part (as in open borders) is too difficult for you to grasp.

yubley on July 2, 2007 at 12:42 PM

Yeah. Just slipped my mind. It’s so difficult to grasp.

Prostitution and Slavery

Illegal immigrants may also be trafficked. After the end of the legal international slave trade by the European nations and the United States in the early 19th century, the illegal importation of slaves has continued, albeit at much reduced levels. Although not as common as in Europe, Asia, Africa and Latin America, some women are undoubtedly smuggled into the Unted States and Canada[citation needed]. The so-called “white slave trade” referred to the smuggling of women, almost always under duress or fraud, for the purposes of forced prostitution. Now more generically called “sexual slavery” it continues to be a problem, particularly in Eastern Europe and the Middle East, though there has been an increase in the number of cases in the U.S. [9] [10] People may also be kidnapped or tricked into slavery to work as laborers, for example in factories. Those trafficked in this manner often face additional barriers to escaping slavery, since their status as illegal immigrants makes it difficult for them to gain access to help or services. For example Burmese women trafficked into Thailand and forced to work in factories or as prostitutes may not speak the language and may be vulnerable to abuse by police due to their illegal immigrant status.[12]

In the Dominican Republic, Haitian migrant workers are sold into slavery on Dominican Sugar plantations, including children. [13] [14]Some Haitian children have allegedly been forced to work as prostitutes in the Dominican sexual tourism industry. [15] Currently the Dominican sex trade ranks third in the world, only behind Thailand and the Philippines. [16]

Methods

Border crossing

Border control at sea by the U.S. Customs and Border ProtectionImmigrants from nations that do not have an automatic visa agreements, or who would not otherwise qualify for a visa, often cross the borders illegally in some areas like the U.S.-Mexico border, the Strait of Gibraltar, Fuerteventura and the Strait of Otranto. Because these methods are illegal, they are often dangerous. Would-be immigrants suffocate in shipping containers [11], boxcars [12], and trucks [13], sink in unseaworthy vessels [14], die of dehydration [15] or exposure during long walks without water[citation needed]. For example, across the US-Mexican border, the official estimate is that between 1998 and 2004 1,954 people died in illegal crossings.

The Snakeheads gang of Fujian, China, has been smuggling laborers into Pacific Rim nations for over a century, making Chinatowns frequent centers of illegal immigration. [16]

Smugglers, known in the US as “coyotes”, have been known to abuse or even kill [17] their customers in attempts to have the debt repaid. Sometimes immigrants are abandoned by their human traffickers if there are difficulties, often dying in the process. Others may be victims of intentional killing.

Gregor on July 2, 2007 at 1:16 PM

Gregor on July 2, 2007 at 1:16 PM

Oh yeah, Wikipedia the defining scholarly statements of fact. And you say coyotes is the same as slave traders? Tell that to some of our African-American friends whose grandparents were sold, traded, chained, beaten, raped and killed. How many Americans have been tried and convicted of slave trading in the past 50 years, 75 years, 100 years? Asians do Asians, Hispanics to Hispanics, what stats do you have supporting that Americans are involved in slave trade…besides Wikipedia

the illegal importation of slaves has continued, albeit at much reduced levels

That quote alone should have been the tell.

Show me some facts that Americans are doing this in any kind of numbers (if any) relating to the real slave nations.

And good for you, you know how to cut and past from the most unreliable source of information on the web. Next time read what you post.

right2bright on July 2, 2007 at 1:43 PM

Oh yeah, Wikipedia the defining scholarly statements of fact.

right2bright on July 2, 2007 at 1:43 PM

Oh yeah, right2bright the defining scholarly statements of fact.

Is it your contention that the following words render my claim that slavery takes place in the United States to be false?

“the illegal importation of slaves has continued, albeit at much reduced levels”

So, you simply ignore the first half of the sentence? Nice.

I could give you evidence all day long, but as with other conversations of yours on this blog in the past … nothing would ever be enough. You would simply continue telling me that I need to prove it. I could show you pictures, and you would continue to say prove it.

Even so, here’s just a few for you. You’ll ignore them anyway, and say it doesn’t prove anything. It’s all an illusion.

My apologies to HotAir for the length of the post, but not2bright demands hundreds of examples. I guess I’m supposed to post 20 million to be able to prove my original comment.

No, it’s not from Wikipedia either, but as is your nature, you’ll claim this group doesn’t count either.

Alaska
Seven Russian women were brought to Alaska in order to dance nude at the Crazy Horse strip club. The traffickers used false visas and convinced the women that they would be performing traditional folk dances. Upon arriving, however, the women — two of whom were only sixteen at the time — were forced to dance naked. The traffickers confiscated all their possessions, their passports, and their plane tickets — as well as the tips they made while dancing, claiming that the money would be used to pay for expenses. The traffickers also threatened the women with violence and forced them to live in squalid conditions. Four people were arrested, three of whom pleaded guilty to visa fraud and bringing minors into the state. Charges of kidnapping, forced labor, and conspiracy were dropped.
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Arkansas
Five people were arrested and tried on charges that they smuggled two Chinese women into the US. Using fake visas and a sham marriage, the smugglers allegedly conspired to make the women sex slaves for Little Rock businessman David Jewell Jones. Unfortunately, one of the women, worried that she would be deported if Jones was acquitted, embellished her testimony on the stand and the trial ended with a hung jury. The accused, however, have been re-indicted on marriage fraud charges.
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California
In 1999 Supawan Veerapol was found guilty of charges, including one of involuntary servitude. Veerapol, a 55-year old Thai socialite and restauranteur, kept three Thai 'maids' in her house. These women were forced to work 18 hours a day, seven days a week; they were paid an insignificant wage. Veerapol watched their every move, even censoring their mail and threatening to harm their families in Thailand if they left Veerapol's house. The 'maids' were forced to crawl on their hands and knees while serving food at Veerapol's parties. They were also denied medical attention; one woman testified that she had to pull her own tooth with a pair of pliers. In January 2000 an unrepentant Veerapol was sentenced to just over eight years in federal prison.
Law enforcement authorities made several arrests in San Francisco and several other California cities—including Los Angeles, Santa Monica, and Anaheim—in the summer of 2005 after an October raid in San Francisco uncovered 17 young Asian women working in a massage parlor in an alley way off Mission Street, just steps from some of the city’s biggest hotels; they were believed to have been trafficked into the country for sex and slave labor.
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Colorado
In August 2006, the Associated Press reported that Sarah Khonaizan, a 35 year-old woman living in Centennial, was sentenced to two months in jail for holding an Indonesian woman as a slave for four years. Khonaizan and her husband hid the woman’s passport and forced her to care for their family. According to testimony, the woman was paid less than $2 a day and slept on a mattress on the basement floor. In June 2006, Khonaizan’s husband was convicted of imprisoning and sexually abusing the 24 year-old woman. Khonaizan was charged with theft and ordered to pay $90,000 in restitution. A federal judge also sentenced her to five years’ probation and ordered $26,275 in restitution for harboring an illegal immigrant.
In February 2000 Michael Charles Smith, a 50-year old high school math teacher, was arrested on charges stemming from the accusation that he smuggled a number of undocumented Mexican boys into the United States in order to have sex with them. Further evidence claimed that Smith was part of a ring of pedophiles. Its members traveled to Acapulco to have sex with the city's street kids; they also trafficked in child pornography and smuggled Mexican teens across the border. Smith kept three such boys in his house, one for over a decade. Smith claimed the whole thing was a misunderstanding, pleaded guilty to a few lesser charges and was sentenced to just over two years in prison.
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District of Columbia
A number of slavery cases have been documented here in the nation's capital. Dora Mortey came from Ghana legally to work as a domestic servant for a World Bank official. Her employer, however, soon became known as 'The Creature.' Morety was forced to work 15 hours a day; she was told that if she left the house, she would be raped or kidnapped. Bangladeshi maid Shamela Begum claims she was enslaved and beaten by a UN official. And two Kenyan women have claim that they were imprisoned by a worker at the Kenyan embassy.
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Florida
In August 2006, Fernando Pascual, a 22 year-old man from Cape Coral, was sentenced to 10 years in prison for keeping a 13 year-old girl as his sex slave and housekeeper. The girl was brought to Cape Coral after being sold in Guatemala. Pascual’s sister and brother-in-law were also given prison sentences for their roles in harboring the young girl.
The Cadena family, from Veracruz, Mexico, smuggled at least 22 young women from Mexico to the United States and then forced them into prostitution. The women — some of them as young as 14 — were lured by promises of good-paying jobs. Instead, they found themselves as sex slaves in trailer park brothels in Florida and South Carolina. They were kept in deplorable conditions and regularly beaten. If a woman got pregnant, she was forced to have an abortion. The brothels' clients paid $20 for sex. For each transaction, $3 was subtracted from the $2000 to $3000 'smuggling fee' that these women ostensibly owed their captors. After a series of raids and arrests, family ringleader Rogerio Cadena pleaded guilty to a number of charges. He faces up to 15 years in prison.
In October 2003, authorities uncovered a case of slavery in Cape Coral, Florida involving a twelve year-old Guatemalan girl who was sold by her parents and smuggled into the U.S, where she cooked, cleaned, and worked as a sex slave. The girl was repeatedly raped and beaten so badly that she lost her first child due. Her story was reported at the hospital while she was pregnant with her second child. She took refuge in a neighbor’s house, but her report was ignored for a year and a half.
In March 2005 the Coalition of Immokalee Workers pressured Yum!, a company selling agricultural goods to businesses such as Taco Bell to increase worker’ wages. Workers were given 40 cents per 32 pound bucket of tomatoes. These wages are the same as they were 30 years ago. Many workers were incarcerated, and beaten. The CIW was able to free 1,000 workers by forcing an increase in wages and rewriting the terms of slavery in Yum!’s supplier code of conduct.
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Georgia
Smugglers lured up to 1,000 young women — some as young as 13 — from Southeast Asia to Atlanta, with the promise of good-paying factory jobs. Instead, the women were forced to pay off their enormous 'travel expenses' by working as prostitutes. The women lived in heavily guarded compounds, which ensured that the women would not leave the brothel. The razor wire and high walls also hid the squalor in which the women were forced to live. The prostitution ring was finally busted in 1999.
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Hawaii
In 2004, a man in Waipahu, Hawaii was accused of smuggling seven men from Tonga, a small island in the Pacific, to Hawaii. The men, who were forced to work for his landscaping business, lived in shack on a pig farm. The man argued they had come voluntarily with hopes of bettering their lives and sending money back to poverty-stricken families. Yet the victims received pay only occasionally and were frequently beaten. A jury found the man guilty of 34 counts—including involuntary servitude, forced labor, alien harboring, alien smuggling, and unlawful use of documents.
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Illinois
In 1995 Alexander Mishulovich lured five women from Latvia with the promise of high-paying jobs. Upon arriving in Chicago, they were instead forced to dance in a topless bar. Virtually all of the proceeds they made were kept by Mishulovich. The women were forced to live in a single bedroom apartment; they were beaten and sexually abused. In 1998 the FBI arrested four of his henchmen, but Mishulovich remains a fugitive. Recently, Chicago police have looked into a similar scheme involving a number of women who were smuggled from China into the city and then forced to work off their $60, 000 'travel fee' as prostitutes.
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Massachusetts
For four long months in 1992, Vasantha Gedara was kept as a slave just a few subway stops from downtown Boston. Gedara left her native Sri Lanka because she was promised a decent-paying domestic job in the US. Her captors — 30-year old graduate student Talal Alzanki and his wife Abair — picked her up at the airport, immediately confiscated her passport, and took her to their apartment. She was forced to constantly clean the apartment, working 13-15 hours a day. Gedara had to sleep in a hallway and she was fed only bread and water; she was even banned from sitting on the apartment's furniture. The Alzankis beat Gedara, and told her that she would be shot if she left the house. Gedara was eventually rescued by a nurse who was tending for the Alzankis' child. Soon thereafter, the Alzankis were arrested. Talil's defense — that he was under a great deal of stress and that Gedara was lying — fell on deaf ears. The jury found him guilty and he was sentenced to a year in prison.
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Maryland
Rene and Margarida Bonetti kept Hilda Dos Santos, a 65-year old illiterate Brazilian woman, as an unpaid housekeeper for 15 years. She was not only denied a wage, but also medical treatment and even food — Rene kept a lock on the house refrigerator. Dos Santos was regularly beaten; Margarida once poured scalding soup on her. She was saved from her fate only after neighbors took Dos Santos to the hospital for treatment a stomach tumor that had grown to the size of a soccer ball. Rene was arrested, but Margarida has apparently fled to Brazil. Despite a brazen defense, in which he claimed that Dos Santos was a costly and horrible housekeeper, Bonetti was convicted in August 2000. He was sentenced to 6½ years of prison and forced to pay Dos Santos over $100,000.
In Silver Spring, Maryland, a Cameroonian woman was exposed for keeping an 11 year-old Cameroonian girl as her domestic slave. The young girl was forced to cook, clean, and care for the woman’s children. She was also frequently beaten with various items, including a high-heeled shoe and a broomstick. Though the woman’s attorney argued using domestic servants like this is accepted in Cameroon, she was sentenced to over 17 years in prison.
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Michigan
Joseph and Evelyn Djoumessi invited a young girl from their native Cameroon to live in their Michigan home. She was promised a better life in America, an opportunity to get a good education. Instead, the Djoumessis forged adoption papers in order to hide the girl’s real status — she was not a boarder or an exchange student, but a slave. She was forced to clean the house and look after the Djoumessis' three children; she was rarely allowed to leave the house. She was beaten several times and repeatedly raped by Joseph. The girl was eventually rescued by a neighbor and the Djoumessis were arrested.
Two men were discovered smuggling women from the Ukraine outside Detroit in February 2005. The women had been promised jobs as waitresses. Instead, they were locked in the basement of a home the men rented in the neighborhood of Livonia, beaten, raped and forced to work at a near by strip club. The women worked 12 hours a day, 6 days a week and received none of the money they made. The men claimed the women were simply working off the thousands of dollars they owed them for visas and work papers.
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Minnesota
In September 2000, five people were indicted for running an extensive smuggling and prostitution ring. The group smuggled women from Asia into the US, and then forced them to work off their smuggling fee as prostitutes. These arrests — which involved the execution of thirteen search warrants in three states — were the culmination of 'Operation Jade Blade,' a two-year federal investigation of this problem.
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New Hampshire
Andrew and David were offered high paying jobs for Bradley Tree Company in New Hampshire, but when they arrived from Jamaica, their passports were confiscated. In Linchfield, New Hampshire they were repeated threatened and beaten, forced to live in a shed, given very little money, yet required to pay $50 per week for rent. Their “employers” are currently serving five years in a federal prison. Over 200 other cases of slavery are said to have been reported in New England in the past four years.
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New Jersey
Noris Elvira and Ana Luz Rosales-Martinez admitted to illegally smuggling dozens of Honduran women, some as young as 14, into the United States. The women were forced to work in bars to pay back smuggling fees — some debts were as high as $20,000. By dancing and drinking with male patrons at bars in Union City and Guttenberg, the women earned $5 an hour plus tips to pay back the smuggling debt. Prostitution was encouraged, and the women were beaten if they were disobedient. One woman was forced to ingest abortion pills after the traffickers found out she was pregnant.
In search of more money for herself and her family, Marjina left her child and traveled half the earth: from her native Bangladesh, to Dubai to work in a factory, and then on to New Jersey to work as a housekeeper. But there she only found misery and pain — soon after arriving in the US, Marjina realized that she was a domestic slave. Her masters forced her to work 18-20 hours a day, seven days a week; she was forced to shovel snow while wearing sandals. She was denied medical treatment and telephone calls home. Marjina was told that if she left the house, she would be arrested. She managed to escape, but eventually found herself working for an equally brutal family. Fortunately, Marjina also escaped from that house, thanks to a kindly busdriver. She is suing the two families for back wages; they deny all the accusations.
In Hudson County, New Jersey in 2005, federal agents discovered a group of girls and women from Honduras who were kept in crowded apartments and forced to dance, drink alcohol, and have sex with male customers at local bars to pay back thousands of dollars in human smuggling fees. The young, undocumented women—some as young as fourteen—were from poor, rural villages in Honduras and had been promised legitimate jobs as waitresses in restaurants in New Jersey. Instead, they were raped, forced to take abortion-inducing pills, and repeatedly subjected to physical abuse and threats of deportation or harm to their families in Honduras if they did not comply with their smuggler’s demands. They were paid approximately $240 for 48 hours of work a week but were required to pay back nearly all of it to the ring for their astronomical smuggling fees. Federal Agents finally indicted 10 people, all alleged members of a ring operating in the US and Honduras.
Four girls between 14 and 18 years-old were promised marriage and happiness in America. Instead, they found themselves forced into prostitution in brothels in Plainfield, New Jersey. The girls each came from poverty and minimal education and were easily lured by opportunity in the U.S. Local and federal authorities eventually found the women and broke up the sex ring in March of 2002.
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New Mexico
In September 2000, five people were indicted for running an extensive smuggling and prostitution ring. The group smuggled women from Asia into the US, and then forced them to work off their smuggling fee as prostitutes. These arrest — which involved the execution of thirteen search warrants in three states — were the culmination of 'Operation Jade Blade,' a two-year federal investigation of this problem.
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New York
Beatrice, a girl of thirteen, was recruited from Nigeria to live with an American family, to help with the housework, and to attend school. Upon her arrival in to the U.S., however, Beatrice found herself enslaved: locked in a suburban home, working for up to twenty hours a day, and denied education. Her masters — Prosper and Ifeoma Udogwu — regularly beat her while forcing her to hold her hands above her head. In 1998, after being beaten for over an hour, Beatrice screamed so loudly that neighbors called the police and she was finally discovered.
Between 1993 and 1996, the Paoletti family, headed by Adriana Paoletti Lemus, smuggled 100 deaf-mute Mexicans to New York City, where they were forced to sell trinkets on New York’s streets and subways. The workers handed people keychains with tags reading “$1. I am deaf.” The Paoletti family, most of whom were also deaf, made over $1 million from the operation. The workers were housed in Queens, 10 people sharing a room. Those who did not meet the $600-a-week quota and those who tried to escape were shocked with a stun gun. The operation was discovered after several of the workers reported their situation to the police. Lemus and 19 others were charged. Lemus eventually pled guilty and was sentenced to 14 years in prison and ordered to pay $1 million to her victims.
Three men plead guilty to charges of operating a human trafficking ring in New York City. The men admitted to having smuggled poverty-stricken women and girls from Mexico and forcing them into prostitution since 1991. The girls were physically abused and received none of their payment; instead, the $25 to $35 they received from customers was split among the three men and prostitution ringleaders. Authorities began pursuing the case in 2003, but the men did not plead guilty until April of 2005.
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North Carolina
Charlotte, N.C. — The Charlotte Observer reported that in 2004 police shut down two brothels located in houses in northeast Charlotte, North Carolina. The brothels held young immigrant women from Latin America as sex slaves, giving them only half of what they earned from dozens of men each night. They were locked in rooms during the day, and fear of being beaten prevented them from running away. Because most of these women were illegal immigrants, they were reluctant to report the crimes to authorities. Police reported many of these women were traded between pimps from near by cities such as Raleigh and Greensboro for as little as $130 each. Often these woman were too scared and confused by the constant movement to know what city they were currently in. Francisco Romero Pina, who operated the brothels in Charlotte, was arrested on charges related to weapons and fraud, but not for human trafficking because the women were too frightened to testify against him. Click here to read the article.
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South Carolina
The Cadena family, from Veracruz, Mexico, smuggled at least 22 young women from Mexico to the United States and then forced them into prostitution. The women — some of them as young as 14 — were lured by promises of good-paying jobs. Instead, they found themselves as sex slaves in trailer park brothels in Florida and South Carolina. They were kept in deplorable conditions and regularly beaten. If a woman got pregnant, she was forced to have an abortion. The brothels' clients paid $20 for sex. For each transaction, $3 was subtracted from the $2000 to $3000 'smuggling fee' that these women ostensibly owed their captors. After a series of raids and arrests, family ringleader Rogerio Cadena pleaded guilty to a number of charges. He faces up to 15 years in prison.
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Texas
In the summer of 2000, federal agents charged seven people with smuggling women into the US and forcing them into prostitution. The young women, from Thailand and China, were taken to Houston and required to pay off a $40,000 'transportation fee.' The women were not allowed to write home or use the phone; they essentially lived in the brothel. Five people pleaded guilty to a number of charges.
In 2005 a couple in Mission, Texas was charged with bringing two undocumented immigrant women across the border from Mexico with the promise of a good job. Instead, they were used as slaves at the daycare the couple runs and at the couple’s home. The victims were forced to work 1,300 hours with no pay and were constantly threatened and harassed. The couple was charged with human trafficking.
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Virginia
Two Indonesian men living in northern Virginia plead guilty to plotting to traffic Indonesian women and girls into the U.S. The men admitted to planning to smuggle women and girls, ages 15 to 23, and force them to work as prostitutes and nude dancers. They were sentenced in July 2005 to counts of sex trafficking, immigration fraud, ID document fraud and money laundering.
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Washington
In Lynnwood, the FBI accused a Washington couple of using a Kenyan woman as a modern-day slave. The couple allegedly locked the woman in their home, forced her to work 15 hours a day, and paid her between $70 and $180 a month, instead of the $500 she was promised. The story was reported by the Seattle Post-Intelligencer in 2005.

Gregor on July 2, 2007 at 2:05 PM

..Gregor..how does a well educated person grow up without any common sense..?? Tell me in 500 hundred words or less, you’re obviously going to know..

Legions on July 2, 2007 at 2:15 PM

Tell that to some of our African-American friends whose grandparents were sold, traded, chained, beaten, raped and killed.

right2bright on July 2, 2007 at 1:43 PM

You mean, like these guys?

I can put you in touch with Ted Hayes, if you would like to speak directly with someone who fits the profile you requested. He’ll be more than happy to fill you in on any details you might desire.

Gregor on July 2, 2007 at 2:17 PM

Gregor..how does a well educated person grow up without any common sense..?? Tell me in 500 hundred words or less

Legions on July 2, 2007 at 2:15 PM

Simple.

“You have to believe in something so strongly that you don’t acknowledge another’s point of view.”

That’s working out pretty good for you and not2bright so far.

Gregor on July 2, 2007 at 2:20 PM

When the other “point of view” is idiotic what are we to do??

Legions on July 2, 2007 at 2:25 PM

Legions, honestly … do you have anything to say? It’s ironic to have someone such as yourself attacking me without offering anything of substance, AND … managing to butcher the English language (your, you’re)at the same time.

So far, here is all you’ve added to this conversation:

Your on the wrong web-site..Have you ever even heard of Michelle Malkin..and if so why would you say this..

Legions on July 2, 2007 at 12:28 PM

how does a well educated person grow up without any common sense..?? Tell me in 500 hundred words or less

Legions on July 2, 2007 at 2:15 PM

Do you have anything to say of value at all?

Gregor on July 2, 2007 at 2:31 PM

Gregor,

Do you get that trafficking in slaves is illegal in the US while it is legal or winked at in many Muslim countries? That’s the whole point of the this thread. Your argument boils down to finding anecdotes of trafficking in the US and generalizing those to be proof of a policy of trafficking in the US. It’s a dopey argument. By contrast, the Muslim governments are in cahoots with the trafficking in their countries.

It’s pretty obvious to everyone that you are trying to make propaganda points against America in typical lefty fashion but do you think anyone outside the lefty extremists are dumb enough to buy your argument? And really, if you have to stretch the truth so far out of shape to slander America, dontcha think the truth may not be on your side?

Tantor on July 2, 2007 at 2:34 PM

NEWS FLASH:

Gregor proves beyond a reasonable doubt that crime still takes place, even in the U.S.A.!

Although not as common as in Europe, Asia, Africa and Latin (South)America

Damn, and we are getting our butt kicked by Antartica and Australia in the quest to be the “nicest” continent.

Fatal on July 2, 2007 at 2:43 PM

It’s pretty obvious to everyone that you are trying to make propaganda points against America in typical lefty fashion but do you think anyone outside the lefty extremists are dumb enough to buy your argument? And really, if you have to stretch the truth so far out of shape to slander America, dontcha think the truth may not be on your side?

Tantor on July 2, 2007 at 2:34 PM

LOL! OMG! Are you serious?! Have you read ANY of my previous posts on this blog? Have you bothered to follow the link attached to my name? CLUELESS! You first accuse me of being a lefty, and then attempt to suggest that I’m anti-American (not that they’re not the same thing)?

My point was not to slam this country. My point was to slam the administration’s ridiculously hypocritical argument in the face of the total refusal to secure our borders and stop companies from hiring illegal aliens. The current administration consists of slave owners! They are bought and sold by the corporations who feed off human trafficking.

It’s hypocrisy at it’s worst.

I accept your apology.

Gregor on July 2, 2007 at 2:43 PM

..Gregor..Here’s the difference Gregor. Yes, we do have a human trafficing problem here in the US. OK I’m with you on that..and I’ll give you credit for stating it.. We are however trying to address the issue. Your above pc on the Texas para. shows the feds trying their best to catch these people. This is my last posting, keep on fighting, just if you could give us some credit for trying to stop this and not put us in with countrys that condone it. Hope all my I’s are dotted and t’s crossed. Gezzz. And try not to attack us. We are the only 20% left of the population that actually gives a dam anymore, the other 80% are who your hopfully upset with..

Legions on July 2, 2007 at 2:50 PM

In Gregor’s defense, I fail to see how something that has to go underground to continue happening…isn’t happening. Human trafficking/slavery still exists in the US (as well as US allies like South Korea), we just don’t get to look it up in the Yellow Pages.

On the other hand, though, it’s not fair to equate these examples with the vast majority of illegal immigrants who can leave any time they want to. People may be paying them ‘slave wages’ but nobody’s forcing them to do the work and nobody is preventing them from going home.

And I suspect we’re not on the list because it’s a State Department list…we’re the ones who wrote it, and we’re not about to sanction ourselves. It’s not even the State Department’s purview, really.

James on July 2, 2007 at 2:51 PM

We are the only 20% left of the population that actually gives a dam anymore, the other 80% are who your hopfully upset with..

Legions on July 2, 2007 at 2:50 PM

It’s actually the other way around.

It’s the 20% I’d prefer to deport.

Gregor on July 2, 2007 at 2:55 PM

..Gregor..you would also have to deport yourself..

Legions on July 2, 2007 at 3:11 PM

Gregor..you would also have to deport yourself..

Legions on July 2, 2007 at 3:11 PM

You’re just not catching on, are you? Try clicking on my name. You know? The one that’s highlighted blue, indicating that it’s linked. If you think I’m anti-American, pro-amnesty, or anti-border enforcement after that … I’m not sure you can be helped.

Gregor on July 2, 2007 at 3:14 PM

Gregor,

What I find funny about the long set of examples you posted is that they are all examples of law enforcement catching and punishing persons who engage in human trafficing. Not only is it illegal here, but we try very hard to stop it.

That is simply not the case in those countries on the list where it is at least ignored, and often probably sanctioned, by the state.

I would also point out that Hispanic illegal immigrants are, by and large, free to return home to Mexico, Guatemala, wherever they come from. They have, for the most part, paid to get here so they can hold a job, send home money, etc. My understanding is that they pre-pay the coyotes to get them here. The coyotes are not under contract to provide workers for a particular business. Once the illegals are over the border, they are on their own to find a place to live, get a job, etc. They are free to come and go, get and lose jobs, etc. They owe no further payments to the people that got them here. These people are not in any meaningful way indentured servants or slaves when they get here. I suspect the same cannot be said for many Chinese, Korean, etc., persons; but they are also much fewer in number.

So, I think that your argument that the US is a major practitioner of human trafficing is not really apt. I think that the clear meaning of the term ‘human trafficing’ is what we used to call slavery – persons who are removed from their homes, forcibly taken to another location, and then held against their will to perform some task. That simply does not describe the 90% or so of illegal immigrants here in the US from south of the border.

No doubt that many of the illegals here descend into lives that are unpleasant and difficult, but they did, by and large, exercise free will to come here and exercise free will to stay here. That’s just not slavery.

BananaSlug on July 2, 2007 at 4:12 PM

Sorry, my grammar could have been a bit better in that post, but I think you’ll get my point.

BananaSlug on July 2, 2007 at 4:14 PM

Gregor: Think about how you express yourself. Your initial post here was not even remotely like your later clarification.

I can’t see how to read your initial post except as a blanket condemnation of the US as a “slave state” and an equivocation between activities considered despicable crimes in the US and deliberate policies of other nations.

Which is how everyone else read it.

Which means you need to consider who made the error.

Merovign on July 2, 2007 at 5:11 PM

BananaSlug on July 2, 2007 at 4:12 PM

I guess I’m supposed to offer pictures of those who ‘aren’t caught.’

If they’re arrested for slavery, then it really isn’t happening.

Have you been to a day labor camp? I would bet that every one of those arguing with me have never been to the border to see the rape zones where those “free” migrants are tortured and raped in exchange for the “freedom” to come and go as they please, and have never stood and watched what goes on at a day labor camp in the “hiring process.”

Frosty Woolridge writes:

President George Bush, a man who has never soiled his hands with a hard day’s work for a day’s pay in his life, promotes illegal alien migration by saying, “They do work that Americans won’t do.” What he really means is–corporations welcome illegal aliens so they can work for slave wages which aids his corporate friends to help buy more Lear Jets and drive Rolls Royces along with a third home in Aspen, Colorado. What’s he’s really saying is that Americans can’t earn a decent living at such wages, so it’s okay to have millions of illegal aliens living 20 to a trailer and suffering inhumane conditions in ghettoes forming across the USA. They are called ‘colonias’ or ‘new neighborhoods’. These are our new slave class.

Of course, if you doubt all of this is an effort to import slave labor, you might have missed THIS.

Quick, answer the following three questions as if directed toward the United States Government:

1. Are there private agencies or individuals working in your country engaged in hiring migrant workers for forwarding to other countries? If so, are there any laws regulating such agencies or individuals? Could you describe those laws?

2. Do you know if there is any illegal or clandestine traffic of irregular migrant workers in your country, either by individuals, corporations or national or foreign organizations that conduct such activities? If so, how did these persons or organizations work to develop the illegal or clandestine traffic of migrant workers?

3. Has your country taken measures to prevent, eliminate or punish legally (civil or criminal) any persons, organizations or companies that organize, assist, participate or work in the illegal or clandestine traffic of migrant workers? If so, could you describe what these measures or penalties consist of? Could you reveal any court or administrative proceedings carried out for this purpose?

The answers, if you’re being honest, would be …

Yes
Yes
No

Interesting, being that these are the questions aimed at most of the governments on the list that this thread relates to in order to gage their response to such things as human trafficking. The survey is conducted by the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights.

Gregor on July 2, 2007 at 5:37 PM

Think about how you express yourself. Your initial post here was not even remotely like your later clarification.

I can’t see how to read your initial post except as a blanket condemnation of the US as a “slave state” and an equivocation between activities considered despicable crimes in the US and deliberate policies of other nations.

Merovign on July 2, 2007 at 5:11 PM

You mean, this?

We have somewhere between 20-30 million Mexican slaves currently being bought and sold in this country. Day labor camps are nothing more than public slave auctions.

Gregor on July 2, 2007 at 12:04 PM

You’re right. Absolutely no way anyone could possibly understand that I was referring to illegal aliens,lack of border security, and lack of enforcement. What was I thinking?

Which is how everyone else read it.

Which means you need to consider who made the error.

Merovign on July 2, 2007 at 5:11 PM

“Everyone else?”

You mean … three people?

Gregor on July 2, 2007 at 5:42 PM

Gregor on July 2, 2007 at 2:05 PM

Yes I googled the same as you. Read my post,

Show me some facts that Americans are doing this in any kind of numbers (if any) relating to the real slave nations.

Get it, now you are the one who can’t read. Naturally we have these things happen. We have men doing goats, we have pedophiles, we have all kinds of perverted people, we even have people posting incredibly long and boring google cut and pastes, as if they knew what they were pasting.

Our economy is no where based on slavery, in proportion to countrys like Malayasia, or several other African countries.

You point out a hundred, maybe you could find a thousand to fit your slave definition (although some were more fetish than slave). But we are talking about tens of thousands, we are talking about a culture. You are claiming that the U.S., and its police (generic police) has a similiar culture to slavery as Malayasia or some of the other slave nations. Well good luck on argueing that point, it is foolish to argue with you because you take minsor incidents and blow them out of proportion. Taking an immigrant and making them your houseslave does not make a nation tolerant or make them immersed in the slave trade. You may be the only person on earth that thinks the U.S. in heavily involved in slave trade.

Asians do Asians, Hispanics to Hispanics, what stats do you have supporting that Americans are involved in slave trade

Guess you missed this also, you point out a dozen examples, and most were race on race. That is Illegals forcing Illegals, on of the sad sidelights of illegal immigration, being taken advantage of.

right2bright on July 2, 2007 at 6:02 PM

Gregor on July 2, 2007 at 2:05 PM

Yes I googled the same as you. Read my post,

Show me some facts that Americans are doing this in any kind of numbers (if any) relating to the real slave nations.

Get it, now you are the one who can’t read. Naturally we have these things happen. We have men doing goats, we have pedophiles, we have all kinds of perverted people, we even have people posting incredibly long and boring google cut and pastes, as if they knew what they were pasting.

Our economy is no where based on slavery, in proportion to countrys like Malayasia, or several other African countries.

You point out a hundred, maybe you could find a thousand to fit your slave definition (although some were more fetish than slave). But we are talking about tens of thousands, we are talking about a culture. You are claiming that the U.S., and its police (generic police) has a similiar culture to slavery as Malayasia or some of the other slave nations. Well good luck on argueing that point, it is foolish to argue with you because you take minsor incidents and blow them out of proportion. Taking an immigrant and making them your houseslave does not make a nation tolerant or make them immersed in the slave trade. You may be the only person on earth that thinks the U.S. in heavily involved in slave trade.

Asians do Asians, Hispanics to Hispanics, what stats do you have supporting that Americans are involved in slave trade

Guess you missed this also, you point out a dozen examples, and most were race on race. That is Illegals forcing Illegals, on of the sad sidelights of illegal immigration, being taken advantage of.

right2bright on July 2, 2007 at 6:02 PM

Hit the wrong button, let me sum it up this way.

You wasted a lot of cut and paste. Once again I urge you to read and understand what you are posting.

right2bright on July 2, 2007 at 6:03 PM

And before anyone responds to my next-to-last post by suggesting that the third question should be answered yes, simply because ICE is running around arresting people, or because we have laws in place to combat these crimes …

Don’t forget what happens after the arrests are made.

Yeah, and that should answer the embarrassing suggestion made by Legions on July 2, 2007 at 12:28 PM in what must have been his first post ever on HotAir.

Gregor on July 2, 2007 at 6:05 PM

right2bright on July 2, 2007 at 6:02 PM

You are claiming that the U.S., and its police (generic police) has a similiar culture to slavery as Malayasia or some of the other slave nations.

Really? I am? Funny. I don’t recall suggesting that. Can you please point out where I wrote that, or suggested it?

it is foolish to argue with you because you take minsor incidents and blow them out of proportion.

You just did exactly what you accuse me of doing.

you point out a dozen examples, and most were race on race. That is Illegals forcing Illegals, on of the sad sidelights of illegal immigration, being taken advantage of.

right2bright on July 2, 2007 at 6:02 PM

I guess in your mind … any race but your own is not American, so shouldn’t be counted in U.S. stats as it relates to our government’s efforts to fight it? Is that it? Or are you somehow saying that there can be no slavery if both the slave and slave owner are the same race, or both illegal?

Bizarre.

Gregor on July 2, 2007 at 6:17 PM

BananaSlug on July 2, 2007 at 4:12 PM

Good post, you would think Gregor would run and hide after that lashing and education.
But he never does, we just get to laugh at him as he tries to waddle his way out of his “cut and paste” hole.

right2bright on July 2, 2007 at 6:22 PM

..right2bright..BananaSlug..good work guys.. and my best post was at 2:25..

Legions on July 2, 2007 at 6:35 PM

Gregor on July 2, 2007 at 6:17 PM
Really? I am? Funny. I don’t recall suggesting that. Can you please point out where I wrote that, or suggested it?

Here let me explain it to you. This is why I say it is important for you to read and understand what you post.

Malaysia dismissed on Monday possible U.S. sanctions over human trafficking and warned Washington of alienating Muslims after it blacklisted mostly Islamic countries.

this is at the top of the page, in which this blog is revolving…OK, Now I will type real slow so you understand.

You say:”Why is the U.S. not on that list? We have somewhere between 20-30 million Mexican slaves currently being bought and sold in this country. Day labor camps are nothing more than public slave auctions. I guess only we’re allowed to do it”
Which is tantamount to saying we allow it. Then you make to long and boring posts of cut and paste from Wikipedia to underline your contention that slavery is alive and well in America.

Now you can see how I understood your posts to believe that the U.S. is in the slave trade. You claim 20 million slaves, that could not happen without authorities in the know.

See how it comes together now.

both the slave and slave owner are the same race, or both illegal?
Bizarre.
Gregor on July 2, 2007 at 6:17 PM

Once again, please read and understand my posts. The point I was making that most of the “slave” trade you cut and pasted was illegal on illegal and that that was one of the unfortunate side effects of illegal immigration…you didn’t read that?

I really don’t want to discuss this anymore, you just are not real sharp on understanding what people write. But then you have never really ever made sense to me.

Have a nice evening.

right2bright on July 2, 2007 at 6:40 PM

Once again, please read and understand my posts. The point I was making that most of the “slave” trade you cut and pasted was illegal on illegal and that that was one of the unfortunate side effects of illegal immigration…you didn’t read that?

right2bright on July 2, 2007 at 6:40 PM

You also added … “

That is Illegals forcing Illegals”

I rest my case.

I repeat …

“I guess in your mind … any race but your own is not American, so shouldn’t be counted in U.S. stats as it relates to our government’s efforts to fight it? Is that it? Or are you somehow saying that there can be no slavery if both the slave and slave owner are the same race, or both illegal?”

Seek help

Gregor on July 2, 2007 at 6:50 PM

Gregor: “LOL! OMG! Are you serious?! Have you read ANY of my previous posts on this blog? Have you bothered to follow the link attached to my name? CLUELESS!”

Ridicule, hysterical indignation, and outrage that you have somehow been misunderstood are the stuff of demagogues. I am not impressed.

Gregor: “You first accuse me of being a lefty, and then attempt to suggest that I’m anti-American (not that they’re not the same thing)?”

Actually, very often lefty and anti-American are the same thing. For example, in your case.

Gregor: “My point was not to slam this country.”

Actually, it quite clearly was to slam America. You are fleeing your position because it’s indefensible.

Gregor: “My point was to slam the administration’s ridiculously hypocritical argument in the face of the total refusal to secure our borders and stop companies from hiring illegal aliens.”

And now you are fleeing your original charge that America deals in human trafficking to hop to a new topic you hope you can defend. Your original point was simply to make wild slander against America.

Gregor: “The current administration consists of slave owners! They are bought and sold by the corporations who feed off human trafficking.”

Your assertion is mindless and baseless slander against America born of a treasonous and dishonest heart.

Gregor: ‘It’s hypocrisy at it’s worst.”

Your statement is anti-American rhetoric at its silliest and most venomous.

Gregor: “I accept your apology.”

What an arrogant self-righteous little turd you are. You sound like a dopey sophomore sitting in a room with a Che poster looking for an identity, trying on a pose as a radical. Scat!

Tantor on July 3, 2007 at 1:47 PM