They are in different countries but share the same hell. Maria
is one of 14 women lured from Mexico to Seattle, Washington, with
the promise of a job, then held by force in a brothel and required
to sexually service men 12 hours a day. Anna is a young mother from
the Ukraine who left her husband and children there to take a job
as a housecleaner in Italy, where she was put in a barred, guarded
house and forced into prostitution. Nadia is an 11-year-old girl in
Africa, kidnapped and forced to have sex with a militiaman daily,
with a machete ever ready nearby should she refuse. All three women
are part of horrific sex slavery that has drawn the attention of
officials in countries around the globe. It is not rare; officials
say it is increasing, at least partly due to the billions of
dollars it brings in for organized crime. The U.S. State Department
estimates 800,000 victims, mostly women and children, are
trafficked for sex trade across nations each year and millions more
are trafficked within countries - including the U.S., Britain,
Spain, and the Netherlands. As a "Seattle Times" reporter explained
when Maria's case hit the news there, the reality is that sex
slaves for the most part are young women and teenaged girls who
come from almost every one of the world's poorer countries and end
up in almost every country where there is a combination of sexual
demand and money. But they are also in undeveloped Africa, in
prisons internationally, locked in forced marriages, or sold to men
by parents.
In this book, Parrot and Cummings outline the scope and growth
of the sex slave market today and explain the history with various
elements - including economic, political, cultural, and religious -
that make this trade difficult to fully expose, quell, combat, and
shut down. We hear from girls and women around the world describing
how sexual enslavement has tortured them physically, emotionally,
and spiritually, whether they suffer at the hands of prison guards
in Turkey, criminals in Washington, or buyers dealing with parents
who sell their daughters for the sex slave trade in Greece,
Belgium, or France. The authors also describe national and
international efforts and legislation passed or in design to stop
sex slavery. Successful countries and regions are spotlighted. Then
Parrot and Cummings point out actions still needed to stop the sex
slavery trade.
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