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Global Alliance Against Traffic in Women

Human Rights
at home, abroad and on the way...

GAATW Logo

Global Alliance Against Traffic in Women

Human Rights
at home, abroad and on the way...

Events and News

Recognise Rights intro

RECOGNISE RIGHTS
Trafficking is a human story that emerges as more and more people seek to leave their home for new opportunities and are taken advantage of in the process. As individuals who have suffered severe human rights violations such as slavery, deprivation of liberty, rape, assault, fraud and other related crimes, trafficked persons must be protected and given full respect for their human rights by all governments.

Despite widespread efforts to address and prevent human trafficking, the rights of migrant and trafficked women are still being violated. In fact, many anti-trafficking policies have led to negative consequences for the very people they are intended to help.
 
GAATW began the Recognise Rights campaign in 2008 to advocate for the protection and recognition of the rights of trafficked and migrant women. This is done through advocacy and awareness raising at international, national and local levels to highlight 11 recommendations that call for specific policy change that will help to build a stronger human rights-based approach to trafficking.

Show your support - click here to sign on to the Recognise Rights petition!

For more information or to learn how to become involved, click on the pictures below.

BACKGROUND

In September 2007, GAATW released a report entitled Collateral Damage: the Impact of Anti-Trafficking Measures on Human Rights Around the World. The Report, an in-depth study of eight countries, showed that all the countries had made significant efforts to stop or reduce human trafficking. These included passing legislation, the formation of specialist police and prosecutorial units, and spending hundreds of millions of dollars on anti-trafficking measures. Despite these measures to prevent trafficking in persons, the findings showed that anti-trafficking efforts were not necessarily improving the protection of the rights of trafficked persons, and in some cases lead to even more human rights abuses.

 

DETENTION IN THE NAME OF TRAFFICKING
1. Trafficked persons, or people suspected of being trafficked are routinely being held in detention without their consent. For example, in Bosnia and Herzegovina a case was documented in which a brothel was raided and the women were taken to a shelter ‘for their protection’, although they said they had not been trafficked. The authorities took their passports and refused to allow them a chance to collect their possessions before locking them into a closed shelter (they were not permitted to leave). The women refused assistance as trafficked women because they did not feel they had been trafficked, but nevertheless they were detained for two months before the shelter wrote to the authorities that they should be released.

 

NO ACCESS TO LEGAL JUSTICE
2. In 2007, a seafood factory in Thailand which had been known for several years to have been severely abusing its workers was raided. The NGOs involved were given only half a day to screen 288 workers and decide if they were trafficked, legal or undocumented migrants. Those identified as trafficked were put into a shelter. There was no provision in the anti-trafficking law to assist male victims of trafficking, so those young men were deported. Workers who did not have legal papers were also immediately deported, although they had suffered the same conditions as the others. The employers were not charged with trafficking, but rather sheltering illegal immigrants; they were fined just over $2000 USD and received no jail sentence.

 

NO COMPENSATION
3. The emphasis on prosecuting traffickers means that trafficked men, women and children are not given an opportunity to make other claims for example for unpaid wages or for compensation for pain and suffering – compensation which would allow them to start a new life. In a case in Thailand in 2000, a brothel was raided and all women over 18 were taken to a police cell where they received no information or support. Those guessed to be under-18 were put into a closed shelter and not permitted to leave. No case for compensation for lost wages was made and there was no enquiry into working conditions.

 

RECOGNISE RIGHTS
Based on this Report, GAATW member organisations decided that the Alliance should seek to follow up the 11 recommendations of the Report. In 2008, the GAATW International Secretariat launched a campaign for a more human-rights based approach to anti-trafficking - it was called Recognise Rights! The objective of Recognise Rights is to increase the protection and recognition of the rights of trafficked and migrant women, through the long-term promotion of, and advocacy on the recommendations.Click here to see the 11 recommendations.
Throughout 2008, Recognise Rights focused on increasing awareness about the findings and recommendations highlighted in Collateral Damage among member organisations and allies, as well as at international, regional and national meetings and conferences. Key events include the campaign launch at the UN.GIFT conference in Austria, the ‘First’ Latin American and Caribbean Congress on Trafficking in Argentina, the Freedom Network Conference in the USA, the World Social Forum on Migration in Spain, and during the civil society events of the Global Forum on Migration and Development in the Philippines. These activities have lead to an increase in dialogue on the negative impacts of anti-trafficking policy at many levels.

In 2009, GAATW-IS aims to increase advocacy and activities to continue our advocacy and awareness raising on these recommendations. Projects for 2009 include:
- Focusing on the recommendation for Non-Conditional Assistance, including developing a report on how countries are addressing this issue and identifying recommendations.
- Joining forces with GAATW's advocacy team to lobby for a formal Review Mechanism of the United Nations Convention against Transnational Organised Crime and its Protocols (UNTOC), specifically the Human Trafficking Protocol, which is necessary to help assess the impact of anti-trafficking measures and better involve civil society in finding solutions that improve the human rights protection for trafficked and migrant persons.
- Continuing to focus on specific recommendations highlighted by GAATW members and the Collateral Damage report, including ensuring access to justice for trafficked persons and access to compensation, more opportunities for people to migrate for work legally, and protection for all workers (including migrant workers) to organise and join a union to help protect their labour rights.
- Launch the Recognise Rights Art Action - a global action to help visualise the change we want to see regarding the human rights recognition and protection for trafficked and migrant people.

CAMPAIGN ACTIONS

This was raised by one of our member organizations in Argentina, in order to address the recently passed EU Return Directive that imposes excessive detention periods and 5-year re-entry bans for undocumented migrants throughout the European Union. Many of our member organizations are mobilizing around this recent Directive.

The Directive puts trafficked persons at risk of being deported without proper investigation into their situations, and lengthy re-entry bans will increase the vulnerability of women seeking to migrate again as they have to seek illegal routes.

We are currently planning a regional and global strategy which will be launched in August.


Join Us!

If you only take two steps to start recognising the rights of trafficked and migrant women, make sure you:

1. Sign the online petition
2. Find out more about protecting human rights for trafficked persons

If you want to get a little more invovled, then take another step:
3. Hold a campaign event - like a panel discussion - in your community to raise awareness about trafficking in your country and discuss the 'Recognise Rights' recommendations, or
4. Lobby your government to provide human rights protection (ask us how!), or
5. Encourage friends, family, colleagues, neighbours to sign the petition