Thursday, August 4, 2011

Should human trafficking victims be allowed to remain anonymous?

Mexico changes constitution to combat human trafficking
Mexican President Felipe Calderon, shown on June 23, gave Congress 180 days to approve a new human trafficking law.

Mexico changes constitution to combat human trafficking

Mexico's president approved several changes to the country's constitution Wednesday aimed at cracking down on human trafficking.

President Felipe Calderon announced two of the changes - one that requires those accused of human trafficking to be imprisoned during trials, and one that guarantees anonymity of victims who denounce the crime.

"It is important that they can give their testimony to the authorities and to society without being at risk," he said.

Calderon gave Mexico's Congress 180 days to approve a new nationwide human trafficking law that will reform and streamline how authorities handle such cases across the country.

"There are thousands and thousands of cases, in a society that is still unaware of the seriousness of this crime," he said. "We have to break through this curtain ... that is hiding from the Mexicans a criminal reality that is in front of us."

With increasing frequency, he said, criminal organizations that ship and sell drugs and weapons have added human trafficking to their repertoire.

In addition to Calderon's speech, Wednesday's presentation included a video testimony from an anonymous woman who recounted how a man lured her into a vicious human trafficking network over the internet.

The man was in his 30s, she said, and she was in high school. He made her an offer she felt she couldn't refuse - work as an event promoter with a daily salary of 700 pesos (about $60), with food and transportation included. When she arrived in the affluent city of Monterrey, Nuevo Leon, the reality was very different, she said.

"He made me take drugs, and prostitute myself. There were no honest friendships for anyone. Only money was important," she recalled. "Out of fear I would obey the drug traffickers."

Earlier this year a report from Mexico City's human rights commission estimated that 10,000 women were victims of human trafficking in Mexico's capital, but there were only 40 investigations of the crime and three convictions in the city in 2010.

The discrepancy is an "alarming figure" that shows a need to improve laws and policies, according to the commission, which called the phenomenon a "new form of slavery."

On Wednesday, Calderon asked lawmakers and citizens alike to take action.

"We have to create a unified front to end human trafficking in Mexico," he said. "This front is not limited to police or officials, this front starts in the streets, in the neighborhoods and in the communities."

– CNN's Rey Rodriguez and CNNMexico.com contributed to this report.

1 comment:

  1. In an effort to increase identification and prosecution of human trafficking cases, Mexico's constitution now allows for human trafficking victims who denounce the crime to remain anonymous. It will be interesting to see what impact this approach will have within Mexico, currently the number of investigations and convictions there is extremely low. (Bridgette Carr)

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