ATTENTION: OUR USA IS ANGRY OVER MANY RESIDENTS OF OTHER COUNTRIES USING OUR COUNTRY FOR HUMAN TRAFFICKING: BRINGING WOMEN AND CHILDREN TO USA TO USE FOR HARD LABOR, BUT FOR MOSTLY AS SEX SLAVES:
FROM THE SITE:
http://www.humantrafficking.org/countries/united_states_of_america
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
United States of America
To report an instance of suspected trafficking, please call the HOTLINE: 1.888.3737.888
2007 U.S. Department of State Trafficking in Persons Report
Attorney General’s Annual Report to Congress on U.S. Government Activities to Combat Trafficking in Persons Fiscal Year 2006 (May 2007)
2006 US Department of State Human Rights Report (Released March 2007) - Includes reporting on human trafficking
Assessment of U.S. Government Efforts to Combat Trafficking in Persons September 2006 (Multi-Department Report)
Report on Activities to Combat Human Trafficking: Fiscal Years 2001 - 2005 (Department of Justice)
The United States of America is principally a transit and destination country for trafficking in persons. It is estimated that 14,500 to 17,500 people, primarily women and children, are trafficked to the U.S. annually. 1 The U.S. Government is strongly committed to combating trafficking in persons at home and abroad. The Trafficking Victims Protection Act of 2000, enhances pre-existing criminal penalties, affords new protections to trafficking victims and makes available certain benefits and services to victims of severe forms of trafficking. It also establishes a Cabinet-level federal interagency task force and establishes a federal program to provide services to trafficking victims. The U.S. Government recognizes the need to sustain and further enhance efforts in order to achieve the goals and objectives of the Act.
The U.S. Department of State began monitoring trafficking in persons in 1994, when the issue began to be covered in the Department’s Annual Country Reports on Human Rights Practices. Originally, coverage focused on trafficking of women and girls for sexual purposes. The report coverage has broadened over the years, and U.S. embassies worldwide now routinely monitor and report on cases of trafficking in men, women, and children for all forms of forced labor, including agriculture, domestic service, construction work, and sweatshops, as well as trafficking for commercial sexual exploitation.
Internationally, the U.S. has initiated many anti-trafficking and development programs to assist countries to combat this ever-growing phenomenon. Mandated by the TVPA in 2000, the Office to Monitor and Combat Trafficking was created in the State Department (G/TIP Office). The G/TIP Office has provided millions of dollars in grants to organizations all over the world to implement programs in order to combat trafficking. These programs include disseminating information on the dangers of trafficking, strengthening the capacity of non-governmental organizations to protect those groups from abuse and violence, and outreach and economic opportunity programs for those most at risk of being trafficked. The U.S. has assisted countries to enact anti-trafficking legislation, trained law enforcement officials, prosecutors, border guards and judicial officers on detecting, investigating, and prosecuting traffickers, and protecting victims and provided start-up equipment for new anti-trafficking police units. The www.HumanTrafficking.org Web site for East Asia/Pacific countries is a response to a recommendation of participants at the Asian Regional Initiative Against Trafficking (ARIAT) meeting in 2000.
Nationally, the US government is committed to prosecuting traffickers and assisting persons who have been identified as victims of trafficking.
In November 2003, the US Congress reauthorized the Trafficking Victims Protection Act of 2000.
The Trafficking Victims Protection Reauthorization Act of 2003 provides resources and initiatives to assist the 18,000 to 20,000 victims of human trafficking who are trafficked into the United States every year.
The Trafficking Victims Protection Reauthorization Act of 2005 was signed into law on January 2006.
See Best Practices for the United States.
1 US Department of State Trafficking in Persons Report 2006
Resources related to the issue of human trafficking
State Department Global Issues: Human Trafficking
State Department: Trafficking in Persons Report 2006
State Department: Human Rights Reports
Justice Department: Reports on Human Trafficking
The U.S. Government's International Anti-Trafficking Programs Fiscal Year 2005
Related pages on this site [view all]
U.S. Department of State Releases 2008 Trafficking in Persons Report
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
THINK ABOUT THIS: ISNT THIS WHAT CPS IS DOING WITH OUR CHILDREN? CPS EMPLOYEES TAKE OUR CHILDREN, BRING THEM TO FOSTER HOMES FOR GOVERNMENT MONEY, WHICH IS NOT SHARED WITH THE VERY CHILDREN USED BY CPS TO COLLECT MONEY FROM OUR GOVERNMENT AS BONUS INCENTIVES....!!
OUR COUNTRY IS RUN BY HYPROCRITES!!
I SAY LET'S ALL CALL THAT 800 NUMBER TO REPORT YOUR LOCAL CPS OFFICE FOR TRAFFICKING OUR CHILDEN FOR GOVERNMENT FUNDS!
CHECK OUT THIS SITE! AN OLD LAW HAD BEEN RE-ENTERED INTO LAW IN 2000, THEN IN 2006 UPDATED!!
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
THIS SITE: HUMANTRAFFICKING.ORG THEIR PURPOSE:
How does this Web site help?
The purpose of this Web site is to bring Government and NGOs in the East Asia and Pacific together to cooperate and learn from each other’s experiences in their efforts to combat human trafficking. This Web site has country-specific information such as national laws and action plans and contact information on useful governmental agencies. It also has a description of NGO activities in different countries and their contact information.
Why this Web site?
In the Asian Regional Initiative Against Trafficking (ARIAT) meeting in 2000, and in other international initiatives, the participants proposed to promote cooperation and partnership among their governments, NGOs, international organizations, private sector, and civil society organizations in prevention, protection, reintegration and prosecution aspects of trafficking in persons. It was suggested that countries should build regional cooperation networks, including cooperation through the Internet, to combat the issue of human trafficking. As a result of the unanimous recommendation of the ARIAT meeting, this Web site is supported by the United States of America Department of State.
The HumanTrafficking.org project is being implemented by the Academy for Educational Development with funding provided by the U.S. State Department.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
LET'S GET TOGETHER! LET'S CALL THAT 800 NUMBER AND REPORT CPS OFFICES ALL OVER OUR US OF A TO REPORT CPS EMPLOYEES FOR USING OUR CHILDREN THE SAME WAY CHILDREN IN OTHER COUNTRIES ARE BEING BROUGHT HERE: AS SLAVES AND LABORERS...
USED TO MAKE MONEY MONEY MONEY!!!!!
LET'S MAKE CPS ACCOUNTABLE AS THE MONEY HUNGRY BASTARDS THEY TRULY ARE! IF OUR COUNTRY CAN PASS LAW TO PROHIBIT THE TAKING AND DISTRIBUTION OF CHILDREN FROM OTHER COUNTRIES (AND BROUGHT HERE TO BE USED TO GAIN MONEY), THEN WHY CANT OUR COUNTRY ENFORCE THIS LAW AND HOLD ACCOUNTABLE THE USA RESIDENTS WHO ABUSE THIS LAW BY USING NATURAL BORN CITIZENS: OUR CHILDREN???
LISA: myspace.com/njgrandma4justice njgrandma4justice@yahoo.com
myspace.com/rosiegroup
Tags:
Share
You need to be a member of Children Need Both Parents to add comments!
Join this Ning Network