Tuesday, December 17, 2013

Great News: PAL flights from Manila to Saudi Arabia

Filipinos elated over home flights



RIYADH: RODOLFO C. ESTIMO JR. | ARAB NEWS STAFF
Published — Saturday 7 December 2013
Last update 7 December 2013 1:21 pm
Overseas Filipino workers (OFWs) in the Kingdom have expressed happiness over the resumption of Philippine Airlines (PAL) flights to Saudi Arabia.

“The sight of PAL aircraft taking off and touching down at Saudi airports evokes pride among Filipinos,” said Eduard R. Rodriguez, a member of the Eastern Tennis Lawn Association (ELTA) in Alkhobar.

PAL launched non-stop flights from Manila to Dammam and from Dammam to Manila on Tuesday.
Dionisio B. Tabuco Jr., a Filipino community leader in Buraidah in Qassim, said: “I was saddened when PAL ceased operations in Saudi Arabia some years back. I was forced to take other aircraft in going home for my annual vacation.”
He said that “flying on your own flag carrier makes you feel at home because most of the crew members are Filipino.”

“The flight stewardesses put on a smile when they ask if you need anything. Moreover, most of the passengers are fellow Filipinos,” he said.

In Riyadh, Benny M. Quiambao, a community leader, said OFWs are generally happy over the resumption of PAL flights.
“I keep my fingers crossed that it will continue flying to serve hundreds of thousands of Filipinos in Saudi Arabia,” he said.

In Jeddah, Ed M. Catimbang, a community leader, said: “I am happy that PAL flies to Saudi Arabia again to serve hundreds of thousands of Filipinos. It makes us feel proud that we have our own flag carrier to serve us.”

Some OFWs have however said that while they are happy that PAL is back in operation, “it should improve its services to make Filipinos really feel that they're better off taking the country's official flag carrier.”

“PAL's top management should have public service in mind and not only profitability. It should not abruptly stop operations when it starts losing money,” they said.

PAL had originally stopped flying to Saudi Arabia because it was allegedly “losing money from flight operations to the Kingdom.”

Wednesday, November 6, 2013

Sting operation using virtual Filipina girl snags thousands of sexual predators....

Published time: November 04, 2013 22:39

Edited time: November 05, 2013 08:20
Screenshot from YouTube user sweetie
Screenshot from YouTube user sweetie.

The girl, known as ‘Sweetie,’ was created by Terre des Hommes Netherlands as a way for the organization to notify the public about how frequently children in developing countries are victimized. The group said it has turned over the identities of the perpetrators willing to pay for sex with Sweetie over to law enforcement.Over 1,000 pedophiles around the world have been caught soliciting online sex with a 10-year-old Filipina girl that they did not know was the computer generated product of an anti-exploitation sting, a Dutch human rights group has said.
They were ready to pay Sweetie for sexual acts in front of her webcam,” Albert Jaap van Santbrink told AFP in The Hague on Monday.
Sweetie was only real in that she existed in an internet chat room for ten weeks. Launched from Amsterdam, she attracted more than 20,000 sexual predators from 71 countries who asked for sex performances.
Santbrik said the men were from all walks of life and came from a variety of professional situations. They were “fathers, musicians, an architect,” he told AFP.
Our worst-case scenario is that the same will happen with this phenomenon as with child pornography, which is now a multi-billion dollar industry in the hands of criminal gangs.”
One man identified only by his screen name, “Older4Young,” said he was a 35-year-old father of two from Atlanta, Georgia in the US. He offered Sweetie $10 to undress on camera.
Turn on your cam,” he wrote. “I’m horny.”
Posing as Sweetie, Tres des Hommes workers said they never made first contact in the chat room, but instead waited for predators to begin a conversation with the girl. Activist Hans Guyt said it is more necessary than ever to trick predators into soliciting children online because the problem is only getting worse and rendering international borders irrelevant.
We identified ourselves as 10-year-old Filipino girls. We did not solicit anything unless it was offered to us,” he said.
Sexual crimes end in arrest most often when the victim comes forward. Yet when the victim is a child, and under the control of an adult who is selling that child for profit, law enforcement is forced to get creative.
The biggest problem is that the police don’t take action until child victims file reports, but children almost never report these crimes,” Guyt continued. “The predator won’t come forward. The victim won’t come forward. This requires a new way of policing.”

Sunday, November 3, 2013

Sex Slaves recount months of bondage-Runaway Filipinas forced to serve 30 customers a day


kuwait-filipinasLorna, Felly and Rowena never stopped believing that the day would come when their sex slavery ends and they will be released from physical abuse, suicidal thoughts and “taking care of” 30 customers a day.
The three-month entrapment started when the three Filipina domestic workers ran away from their kafeels, two of them trusting a fellow Filipina, who sold Loran and Felly to a Pakistani pimp who in turn locked them in a flat in Jleeb Al-Shoyoukh and asked them to “take care of 30 customers per day”. Rowena was taken to the brothel after the Pakistani driver of the taxi she flagged on the road called the pimp in Jleeb and dropped her straight to him. Rowena wanted to get to the embassy to escape abuse from her male employer.
The Pakistani pimp preyed on the women by exploiting their fear that they were runaway maids and that death for the three meant leaving their children in the Philippines orphans and without any financial support. Baited by promises of jobs in a mall in Kuwait, the three women believed their compatriot and instead of landing their dream jobs as salesladies, they were locked in a brothel in Jleeb. The three women were captives to the pimp and a whole gang including their female Sri Lankan madam.
Incarcerated and abused
The flat in Jleeb Al-Shuyoukh was worse than a jail for these three women who say that there are other girls trapped in Kuwait going through the same frightening experience – no hygiene coupled with physical and mental abuse. After running away, the three women who while talking with this reporter looked terrified and emotionally unstable, described days and nights of nightmarish existence during their captivity ordeal.
The trust factor
Lorna, 26, from Sultan Kudarat in southern Philippines said she felt encouraged to leave her sponsor because the recruiter was a Filipina. “I was very tired of working as a domestic helper. So, I did not feel fear at all,” she said, recalling that she left her sponsor’s house on June 19, 2012.” Lorna said her friend convinced her to leave. “When she called me, she said that there was a better job waiting for me. I believed her and I got into a car provided by her,” she said. The car took her to Jleeb Al-Shuyoukh. Ironically calling it a safe house, the girl said she met two other Filipinas there. “At first we were all excited. The next day, another Filipina joined us. So the fear subsided especially when they told us we’ll all be okay. The whole night we were talking about our plans and dreams. We even celebrated that night,” she said holding tightly to her scarf that was flowing loosely above her trembling lips that could hardly mutter a word.
But their joy was short-lived. Their Filipina friend who had recruited them disappeared in the night. The next day each of them were called by a Pakistani handler who explained to them the real nature of their job. “I was shocked and protested sharply. But the beating and torturing started. They said I only have three choices – to be sold to another pimp, to be killed or to stay and follow their orders.” The Pakistani handler told us that this was our job since we were all sold to them for KD 350 each by our Pinay friend. “I was very angry because of all the people we trusted, she betrayed us. Before she left that night, she told us she’ll be gone for a while to process our documents for our new job in the mall. But she never returned,” she said.
Since she had no choice, Lorna was then brought to another flat in Jleeb to work as a sex slave. She never got any money for her 10-hour workday. “I told the Pakistani handler that I don’t need the job. He was furious and started beating me. I was hit with a metal bar on my backside. He told me that if I do not do as he said, they’ll kill me. At that time I just wanted to live for my two kids. So I agreed. I was locked inside a room they took my cellphone away and I was totally blocked out.”
Her first work day commenced on the following day. Customers waited in a line, literally. “I had about 30 customers a day, and on slow days, I would have 20. They were mostly Bangladeshis and Indians. I was told by customers that they were paying KD 8-10. But I did not receive a single fils,” she said, adding that the money went to the Pakistani handler. “I endured the pain because I wanted to live for my kids,” she cried.
Lorna was enraged at her Filipina recruiter whom she thought was a friend. “I kept on praying to God everyday to help us. I had lost hope, but my faith was telling me to continue fighting. I was crying daily,” she said. The blessed day finally came when she and another sex slave managed to escape.
The escape
The Sri Lankan madam who was watching them at that time had an argument with her boyfriend inside the kitchen. “She forgot the key in the main door so we were able to escape and locked them inside the house and immediately proceeded to the embassy,” she recalled. “We asked the help of the embassy officers to save the rest of the Filipinas in the brothel. The good thing is that they rescued two of them, but I know there are three more Filipinas who are held captive at another place.”
The three women hope that there will be payback for their Filipina compatriot who made them endure all the suffering. “I want the Filipina pimp and the Pakistani handler to be prosecuted. I know the Filipina is still operating and recruiting other Filipinas through Facebook. If I see them, I don’t know what I will do to them. They destroyed my life, my dreams, my family and my whole life. I will never forgive them till justice is served – let them pay for this. I hope she’ll experience the same hell that we lived,” she raged.
Felly, 32, from Saranggani, Philippines, shares the same story. Felly, who worked with the Filipina pimp, was first recruited as a mall saleslady. “I was working with her for the same sponsor. After she left, we stayed in touch,” Felly says. She told the Filipina brokered ‘the job’ for a cashier in a mall. She accompanied Felly to the ‘safe house’ where two Pakistanis were holding other Filipinas. “We went to the place together. At that time I needed money because my father was very sick and I had many financial obligations. So when I heard about this good opportunity, I grabbed it. I ran away from my sponsor on June 4, 2013. I was happy at that time because I saw two more of my friends there,” she recalled. “It was just the four of us there,” she said.
Her happiness quickly turned into fear when the Pakistani interviewer in the “safe house” asked her to remove her clothes. “I was shocked and asked why? He then said my job will be to entertain men. I was shocked to hear that I was going to be a prostitute, so I protested. Then the beating started. I was slapped a million times. I wanted to leave, but they said I will die before I leave the place,” she said. Her new “job” started immediately and till the day she managed to run away, she had no time off or any money.
“The men were paying KD 8-10 to the Pakistani pimp. I never got anything,” she said through sobs. “I want the Filipina to pay for what she did to us. I want her arrested and incarcerated. My dreams are shattered because of her,” she cried. “My message to all Filipinas in Kuwait is no matter what anyone tells you to convince you to leave your kafeel’s house, do not listen. You will only have two choices – either you’ll be killed or become a sex slave like us,” she warned.
Rowena, 26, from Quezon City, Philippines, was also held captive in the same brothel. She was there since Dec 2012 until she was rescued in Aug 2013. She left her sponsor because the male sponsor had attempted to rape her three times. “The last time he tried to rape me, I ran away and called my recruitment agency. They told me to go to their office. But the taxi driver who was supposed to take me to the agency sold me to a Pakistani pimp in Jleeb. I had flagged the taxi on the highway. The taxi driver was a Pakistani too. He called somebody, then brought me to Jleeb,” she said.
When she arrived, there were three other Filipinas. “After a few days, the Pakistani talked to me and told me about the nature of my job. I wanted to escape. I pleaded to be spared but they wouldn’t listen. They tortured me and beat me hard. They said if I do not work for them as a prostitute, I will be sold to other pimps or they’ll kill me,” she said, still shaking recalling the threats of the man. “I did not want to be killed for my only son, so I worked for them. Before they sent me any customers, they raped me first,” she said. “Even when I was bleeding, I was forced to work. I rested one month because I kept on bleeding,” she recounted.
For all the months of captivity, Rowena was once given KD 50 which she urgently needed to send to her family for the funeral of a family member. “They were using me every day. I used to get up to 30 customers a day. I never received any money,” Rowena cried.
By Ben Garcia
Source: 

Sunday, October 13, 2013

Fake companies sponsor 80% of illegal expatriates....

Operation CleanUp--End of the road for Illegals?

labor3_0.jpg

Thursday, October 10, 2013

Qatar must act urgently to resolve labor rights.....


image
Overcrowding and “unbelievably bad” conditions such as flooded bathrooms, dilapidated kitchens and workers sharing beds and/or sleeping on the floor are among some of observations labor activists made during visits to accommodation sites in Qatar this week.
"It was not a pretty sight," said Atle Høie, international secretary of Norway-based trade union Fellesforbundet. Høie was one of 16 members of the Building and Wood Workers’ International who were in Qatar this week to investigate the living and working conditions of migrant workers.
BWI officials, comprised of delegates from nine European nations and two Asian ones, were invited to the country by Qatar’s National Human Rights Committee (QNHRC), which also organized many parts of the visit.
However, Høie and some of his colleagues also met with migrant laborers on their own and toured several labor camps, the specific locations of which he told Doha News he could not recall.
The visit comes as Qatar is in the international spotlight because it is hosting the 2022 World Cup tournament.
Rights groups are using the games to keep pressure on the country to improve its labor record, especially because some 1 million more construction workers are expected to move here in the coming years to work on World Cup-related projects, such as new football stadiums.
'Disturbing evidence'
Living conditions in many of these camps were unhygienic, and some workers told the team that they wished they never left their home country due to their “sufferings” in Qatar.
After spending three days visiting construction sites and labor camps in and around Doha -– and being denied access to some – the group held a press conference this afternoon at the Best Western Hotel Doha to release its findings.
While noting that some projects had adequate health and safety provisions, BWI officials said that they observed “disturbing evidence of wrong practices” and a general “climate of fear” among migrant workers that keeps them from coming forward with complaints of mistreatment.
In a statement, BWI officials said:
"One worker in a slave-like situation is one too many. This is not acceptable and the plans and reforms presented by the authorities lack the urgency needed in this situation."
Workers with complaints who were interviewed by the team said:
  • Their passports were being withheld;
  • Promises of wages, work hours and living conditions were unmet;
  • They were in constant debt to recruiters and moneylenders;
  • They lived in crowded and squalid camps; and
  • They lacked a constructive mechanism for filing labour disputes and complaints because of the complexity of the Qatari justice system.
Turned away from Lusail
BWI officials also said they were denied access to the light-rail construction site in Lusail on Wednesday despite receiving prior authorization from one of the companies involved in the project.
According to BWI general secretary Ambet Yuson, the site manager contacted his supervisors and then told the delegates they required government authorization to visit the site.
Yuson said his team was able to visit the Msheireb construction site for an hour Thursday, two days after they first attempted to tour the project.
He said he was generally pleased with what he saw, noting that many health and safety measures were in place. But with only a “limited” amount of time at Msheireb, Yuson added he still had questions, such as learning about the composition of the project’s health and safety committee.
Speaking to reporters after BWI’s press conference, QNHRC chairman Dr. Ali Bin Samikh Al-Marri criticized BWI for telling Doha News that delegates were previously not able to enter Msheireb.
Speaking in Arabic through a translator, Al-Marri said correspondence confirming that BWI members would be allowed to access the site had been exchanged well in advance and that the visit was delayed to ensure safety measures to protect the visitors could be put in place.
He also emphasized his willingness to engage in dialogue with international bodies such as BWI:
“I hope that we will work quietly but effectively … on human rights, away from the backdrop of propaganda.”
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Several BWI members publicly thanked the Qatari government for allowing them to conduct their inspections, noting some countries would not have permitted their visit.
Additionally, they highlighted the good working conditions at the Sidra Medical and Research Center construction project and an under-construction plant at Qatalum, a joint venture between Qatar Petroleum and Hydro Aluminium of Norway.
Høie said he was also encouraged by his meetings with the undersecretary of labor and members of the Qatar Foundation where they discussed standards for recruiting as well as living and working conditions.
"Most of the policy initiatives looked good,” he said, adding that enforcing and implementing the rules continues to be a problem. Beefing up the number of labor inspectors – there are reportedly only 150 for the entire country – would be an important step, he said.
Upon returning to Geneva, BWI officials will prepare a formal report and submit it to the International Labour Organization, a UN agency, FIFA officials, major global construction firms and international human rights organizations.
Yuson said he hoped to return to Qatar next year to conduct another round of inspections.


Read more: http://dohanews.co/tagged/human-rights#ixzz2hLhbeIBD

Saturday, August 3, 2013

IJM Cebu Helps Rescue Two Teens Who Took Jobs as Nannies, Instead Trafficked into the Sex Trade

Mon, 07/29/2013

Tags: Rescue Sex Trafficking Southeast Asia

IJM social worker sits with sex trafficking survivors last weekend during rescue.
An IJM social worker, on the right, sits with the two sex trafficking survivors. She stayed with them to help them feel more comfortable and understand that the police and others were there to help them.


CEBU, THE PHILIPPINES – Two friends who left their tiny island home to be nannies together were rescued last weekend from the small, shabby resort where they were instead trafficked into the sex trade. The teens, 15 and 17, had been trapped on an island more than a day's journey from their home. Without money or their own phones, they had no way of calling home for help.

An IJM social worker, on the right, sits with the two sex trafficking survivors. She stayed with them to help them feel more comfortable and understand that the police and others were there to help them.

After several months, the 15-year-old managed to get a hold of a cell phone. She called her mother, frantic for help. She shared how she and her friend had been transported to an island far from their home: They had travelled overnight on a boat, then had been driven for hours in a van. When they finally arrived, there were not good jobs waiting for them. Instead, the girls were sold for sex.

Sending Rescue

Her mother promised to get her daughter help right away. She immediately sought help from local authorities, who helped her file a police report. The local police unit called Cebu's regional anti-trafficking law enforcement unit—a specialized force within the Philippine National Police that has been trained by IJM on anti-trafficking techniques.

The specialized anti-trafficking police coordinated with IJM Cebu and local police to plan a rescue operation as soon as possible. The rescue team quickly travelled together to the small resort, where they found the 15-year-old girl and her friend.

The two friends had never separated. They said they had first been brought to a bar where they were locked in a room, , literally imprisoned. They had then been abused at three different bars before finally ending up in this dingy resort, where they were forced to serve customers.

"These girls were the perfect target for traffickers," explained IJM Cebu attorney Lucille Dejito. She said the girls told her how they had managed to escape from the first bar where they had been imprisoned. But in their "freedom," they had nowhere to go – and were quickly re-trafficked. Lucille added: "Just try to imagine it: You are hours from home. You don't know the local language. You don't know anybody. You don't have anything. You are literally just trying to survive. "

Going Home

On July 21, freedom finally began for the girls. The Cebu regional anti-trafficking police escorted them to a plane. An IJM social worker was waiting for them at the airport when they landed. She went with the two girls to a temporary shelter for sex trafficking survivors, and she will continue to follow up with them and help them get the long-term aftercare they need.

The IJM staff on the operation commended the Cebu unit for responding so quickly and working with other local police to rescue the girls and arrest the bar owner, who was taken into custody that night. According to Lucille, "This kind of collaboration is critical between the local law enforcement—the first responders and often the ones to get the call for help—and the specialized unit within the Philippine National Police that is trained on how and what to do in a sex trafficking case."

Monday, July 29, 2013

FBI arrests 150 in 3 days in sex-trafficking sweep...


WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The FBI arrested 150 people across the United States on charges of holding children against their will for prostitution, a three-day weekend sweep that officials on Monday called the largest-ever operation against child sex-trafficking.

The suspects, whom the FBI referred to as "pimps," were arrested in 76 U.S. cities and are expected to face state and federal charges related to sex crimes and human trafficking, FBI and U.S. Justice Department officials said at a news conference.

FBI agents and local police recovered 105 children during the operation at truck stops, motels, casinos and other places where they were forced to work as prostitutes, officials said.
Of the 150 suspects, 18 were arrested by agents based in Detroit, 17 by agents from San Francisco and 13 by Oklahoma City agents, the FBI said.

The FBI said the suspects were not part of the same operation. It said some belonged to organized crime while others acted alone. The bureau did not immediately release a list of the suspects.
The FBI typically does not investigate adult prostitution, leaving it as a state and local matter, but in recent years it has made child prostitution a priority in a program the FBI calls Operation Cross Country. The program includes highway billboards asking people to call the FBI with tips.
About 1,350 people have been convicted as part of the program and at least 10 of them were sentenced to life in prison, officials said.

The latest sweep was the seventh and largest under Operation Cross Country, they said.
Children who are most vulnerable to being exploited for sex crimes are between 13 and 16 years old without strong ties to family members, officials said.
"We are trying to take this crime out of the shadows and put a spotlight on it," said FBI Assistant Director Ronald Hosko.

(Reporting by David Ingram; Editing by Howard Goller and Bill Trott)

Source:  http://news.yahoo.com/fbi-says-arrested-150-three-days-child-prostitution-154521080.html

Friday, July 26, 2013

ILO: Pinoy nurses prone to recruitment abuses

Posted at 07/27/2013 12:46 AM | Updated as of 07/27/2013 12:46 AM
 
MANILA, Philippines - Not only Filipino domestic helpers, but even Filipino nurses and other health workers are prone to recruitment abuses, the International Labor Organization (ILO) said Friday.
Citing recent studies, ILO said skilled and educated foreign healthcare workers, including Filipinos, are vulnerable to recruitment violations.

“While going through the recruitment process, foreign nurses experienced modification of contracts without their consent, withholding of contracts as well as other immigration documents by recruiters,” the ILO noted.

ILO said many foreign healthcare workers are not familiar with the positions they were recruited for and their alien workplace prior to arriving at their destination.
According to the ILO, demand for registered Filipino nurses has been increasing since 1997, with the highest deployment recorded in 2011.

ILO said the Philippines posted the second highest deployment peak in 2001, with most of the nurses recruited for the United Kingdom.

With the recent decline in the recruitment of Filipino healthcare professionals in Europe and North America, the deployment had shifted in recent years to countries in the Middle East.
The Philippine government reported an average of 12,000 Filipino nurses leaving the country annually to seek employment with higher wages.

While migrant healthcare workers from developing countries are contributing to the healthcare sector of developed countries, ILO said the migration of professionals and skilled workers from developing countries has negatively affected the development potentials of the countries of origin.
ILO said the phenomenon called “brain drain” of highly skilled nurses and even doctors who opted to work as nurses abroad had been observed in the past decade.

The migration of healthcare professionals had an impact on the achievement of health-related Millennium Development Goals (MDGs), which relies on the national healthcare system built on sufficient, quality and competent health professionals.

To address the problem, the ILO, with $3-million funding support from the European Union, is implementing a program called “Promoting Decent Work Across Borders: A Project for Migrant Health Professionals and Skilled Workers.”
ILO said the project seeks to better understand schemes in line with circular migration of health professionals.

With the project, ILO hopes to promote approaches to migration that benefit the migrant workers, the source and destination countries within a rights-based framework for better labor migration management.

The project focuses its activities on three Asian countries with significant outflows of health professionals and skilled workers – the Philippines, India and Vietnam.

Source: http://www.abs-cbnnews.com/global-filipino/07/26/13/ilo-pinoy-nurses-prone-recruitment-abuses

Monday, July 22, 2013

Returning OFW's urged to venture into agri-business.


Posted at 07/22/2013 3:27 PM | Updated as of 07/22/2013 3:27 PM
MANILA – Returning overseas Filipino workers affected by the crisis in Europe and in the Middle East are encouraged to try agri-business.

"OFWs wanting to engage in agribusiness can tap the government's entrepreneurial assistance fund under the National Reintegration Program for OFWs which include training and capability-building, as well as business capital loans ranging from P300,000 to P2 million from the P2 billion Reintegration Loan Fund offered by the Land Bank of the Philippines and guaranteed by the Overseas Workers Welfare Administration," Labor and Employment Secretary Rosalinda Baldoz said.
The loan carries an interest of only 7.5 percent per year and has a repayment term of five years extendible to seven years.

Baldoz said that under the partnership with the Department of Agriculture, returning OFWs can choose among the 37 agribusiness modules it has developed.
"These 'ready-to-roll' modules already contain detailed information on needed capital, location of business, market, cost, and rate of return on investment. It is an irresistible offer. The OFW can be in agribusiness in no time if they accept the offer, which comes with a complete array of technical services from agriculture experts," said Baldoz, adding that agribusiness is a priority area under the National Reintegration Program for OFWs.

The agribusiness modules are for agri-crops, including livestock production (20 investment opportunities); fishery (4); processed fruits (3); and meat processing (10 investment opportunities).

"What makes this program different is that no less than the Secretary Alcala has pledged to deliver all possible technical assistance to OFW-investors for free. On the part of the DOLE, we are ready with our enterprise development training and other reintegration services, even with start-up capital," Baldoz emphasized.

http://www.abs-cbnnews.com/global-filipino/07/22/13/returning-ofws-urged-venture-agri-business

Friday, July 19, 2013

Pinoy caregiver gets life for rape, murder in Israel.

Posted at 07/19/2013 1:05 PM | Updated as of 07/19/2013 1:05 PM
MANILA - A Filipino caregiver was sentenced to life imprisonment for raping and killing the wife of his patient in Israel.

According to a report by ynetnews.com, the Lod District Court handed down the sentence against Ranel Amour for the September 2011 incident in Kfar Saba.

Prior to the crime, the live-in caregiver allegedly touched the victim who was sleeping beside her husband in September 2011. The victim threatened to call the cops but the suspect begged her from doing so.

He later discovered that his patient's wife had requested for his replacement from his manpower agency. The report added that Amour committed the crime three days later.
The report also described the suspect as wheelchair-bound as he was paralyzed after jumping from a window after committing the crime.

Source: http://www.abs-cbnnews.com/global-filipino/07/19/13/pinoy-caregiver-gets-life-rape-murder-israel-report

Thursday, July 18, 2013

Cyber-sex trafficking: Negros Oriental, Philippines

Cyber-sex trafficking: A 21st century scourge

By Sunshine de Leon, for CNN
updated 7:58 AM EDT, Thu July 18, 2013
"Andrea" was lured to work in a cyber-sex den after her cousin had promised a baby-sitting job in the city.

STORY HIGHLIGHTS
  • Andrea, 14, was lured away from her home by the promise of a well-paid job in the city
  • She was instead caught up in a new form of sexual exploitation -- cyber-sex trafficking
  • Here she was expected to perform sexual acts for customers via a Web-cam
  • Widespread poverty, an established sex trade and Internet access fuel the industry
Negros Oriental, Philippines (CNN) -- Andrea was 14 years old the first time a voice over the Internet told her to take off her clothes.
"I was so embarrassed because I don't want others to see my private parts," she said. "The customer told me to remove my blouse and to show him my breasts."
She was in a home in Negros Oriental, a province known for its scenic beaches, tourism and diving. But she would know none of that beauty. Nor would she know the life she'd been promised.
Andrea, which is not her real name, said she had been lured away from her rural, mountain village in the Philippines by a cousin who said he would give her a well-paid job as a babysitter in the city. She thought she was leaving her impoverished life for an opportunity to earn money to finish high school. Instead, she became another victim caught up in the newest but no less sinister world of sexual exploitation -- cyber-sex trafficking.
Misled

After arriving at the two-story house in Negros Oriental -- located in the central Visayas region of the Philippines -- Andrea found that her new home would become both workplace and prison. She was shocked by what she saw.

"The windows were covered so it was dark. There was a computer and a camera where naked girls would say words to seduce their mainly foreign customers."
She said customers would ask the girls to perform sexually with each other.

For the next few months, Andrea said she was one of seven girls, between age 13 and 18, who spent day and night satisfying the sexual fantasies of men around the world. Paying $56 per minute, male customers typed their instructions onto a computer and then watched via a live camera as the girls performed sexual acts. She said the girls were often forced to watch the men they served on screens.
Police threat
Andrea dreamed of returning home but her employer, an uncle, slept downstairs and kept the front door locked. "I was told if I tried to escape, the police would put me in jail. I believed it. I was very innocent -- I grew up without TV and had never left my village before," she explained.
Convinced that earning enough money to finish her education was the only way to help her family out of poverty, Andrea forced herself to work. But "doing whatever the customer asked" eventually took its toll. "I wanted to cry but I could not. I wanted to cover myself with a blanket. I had goose bumps because of the shame. I would feel like I was floating," she recalled.
Andrea's story is only one of many playing out every day in a nation where the conditions -- widespread poverty, an established sex trade, a predominantly English-speaking, technically-literate population and widespread Internet access -- have made it easy for crimes like this to flourish.
Difficult to stop
Jo Alforque, Advocacy Officer with End Child Prostitution, Child Pornography and Trafficking of Children for Sexual Purposes (ECPAT Philippines), an NGO working to combat child sexual exploitation, explained that because cyber-sex dens can be located anywhere -- from Internet cafes to private homes and offices -- they are extremely difficult to identify. Anyone who has a computer, internet and a Web cam can be in business.
Whether part of large international criminal syndicates or smaller operations, their independent nature and lack of coordinated structure make it easy for cyber-sex operations to remain hidden, she said.
According to Andrey Sawchenko, National Director at the International Justice Mission Philippines, the private nature of the technology allows the crime to take place in a venue that law enforcement can't easily access -- and that makes it harder to gather evidence against perpetrators.
Although no official statistics exist, Ruby Ramores, a former Executive at the Inter-Agency Council Against Trafficking (IACAT), believes tens of thousands of women are involved in the industry and that most of the girls are recruited by friends, family -- sometimes even by their parents. Poverty can often drive parents to sell the services of their children, she said.
Family pressure
I was told if I tried to escape, the police would put me in jail. I believed it. I was very innocent -- I grew up without TV and had never left my village before.
Andrea
Delia (not her real name) now aged nine, said she was just 7 years old when her mother made her undress in front of their computer at home. "I stood there naked. That's all I wanted to do, not the other things, like when mama said to spread my legs, I didn't want to," she recalled. "I would be scared of my mother. Because before I didn't know what she was doing was bad, I only knew later on."
Rescued after three years when her father found out about her mother's cyber-sex operation, Delia is now under the care of a government-run temporary shelter for abused young girls and spoke to CNN in the company of her social worker.
According to Ramores, parents who submit their children to cyber-sex -- especially the ones from rural areas -- think this is something that won't violate their children in the way that traditional sex crimes do because it is just a camera and just the body being shown, and there is no touching with anyone else. "So, it's a better option than being pushed to prostitution which has physical interaction," she said.
Social workers say the families don't understand the effect of the work on their children. They are thinking, instead, about money and survival.
Government action
Cyber-sex trafficking may have largely operated under the radar in the past, but there are signs that the Philippines government is focusing more on the issue.
In 2011, the Philippines successfully prosecuted its first case of cyber-sex trafficking against two Swedish nationals and three Filipinos. Although there have been more than 100 convictions under the country's Anti-Trafficking in Persons law of 2003, this was the first case that specifically punished someone for cyber-sex operations.
"It gives a strong message to the traffickers: 'We know you are out there now and we are going to get you,'" said Ramores. It also serves as a wake-up call for Filipinos in a country where law enforcement and the public have been largely unaware of the problem.
The government has initiated a nationwide advocacy and media campaign that focuses on awareness of this new face of commercial sexual exploitation. This includes training seminars held to teach those on the front lines -- law enforcement, prosecutors, government agencies, and NGOs -- to combat these crimes.
Public appeal
The Philippines Congress has also passed the Expanded Anti-Trafficking in Persons Act, which increases funding to government agencies, provides greater protection to victims and is designed to strengthen the prosecution of those engaged in human trafficking.
Ramores says it's essential for the public to have a new context in which to interpret any suspicious behavior: "Unless there will be whistle-blowers, we won't be able to catch them. We need people to be aware and to cooperate with us in order for us to track these kinds of crimes."
Andrea was rescued after being held for three months, when one of the other girls escaped and told the authorities. She is now a star witness in a case against her abusers, but she said she has received death threats and that has prevented the case from progressing. "I want them to be punished but I have moved far away to Manila because I am scared for my life," she said.
Scars of abuse
Milet Paguio, a social worker working with commercially exploited children in the Philippines, said that many rescued girls, who have often spent years in the cyber-dens, are often uncooperative with rescuers and confused at first. They fear they will be the ones punished, and in the cases when family members are being accused, the girls often want to protect them. The crime may be a virtual one but the emotional scars are very real.
I would be scared of my mother. Because before I didn't know what she was doing was bad, I only knew later on.
Delia
"They have low self-esteem, don't respect themselves, and for those who spent a long time in the dens -- they often behave in a way that is very flirty ... when they see men, they sometimes cannot control themselves," she said.
In many ways, cyber-sex trafficking appears to be the perfect 21st century crime. Technology has made it easier to access and exploit the vulnerable, operate illegal activities across borders and more difficult to discover the identities of those who are behind the crime.
Information technology evolves quickly and in the Philippines, perpetrators often have more financial and technological resources than those trying to catch them.
According to Sawchenko, close cooperation with international law enforcement authorities -- providing training to local police and working together to catch those involved in both countries -- has made a vital difference.
Sawchenko points to an increase in the number of victims being rescued and an increase in the number of cases being filed against perpetrators in recent years, as an example.
Global issue
Eric Mcloughlin, Deputy Attache at U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement, a Homeland Security Investigations agency (HSI), is among those working with authorities in the Philippines to fight cyber-crimes. "Because of the nature of the Internet and cyber-crimes, criminals feel it's easier to operate with anonymity behind these virtual barriers," he said. "It's a challenge for law enforcement to identify them and make sure they are held accountable.
"In addition to cyber-operations being more complex criminal syndicates, there are also many mom and pop shops -- if you take one down there could be several on the same street who are doing the same acts that might not have connections to each other."
Even customers abroad are not safe -- officials in the Philippines are working with U.S. domestic agencies to identify offenders.
Recently, CNN reported that the testimony of three girls in the Philippines helped convict a Pennsylvania man who had been involved in a cyber-den. He has been sentenced to 12 years in a U.S. federal prison for child pornography.
"Rescuing victims is a priority but if we don't continue to investigate the ones purchasing their services, we are only doing half the job," said McLaughlin.
"Catching those running the cyber-dens is the first step of what could be a big domino effect with lots of challenges. If we go to digital analysis and the forensics of hard drives, we can find that they were communicating with thousands of customers around the world -- this involves different jurisdictions and we need evidence to go after all those individuals."
Andrea, now 20 and in college, hopes to become a social worker so she can help victims. She offered advice from her own experience: "If you want to find a job, know everything about the recruiter, the kind of job and the payment. Don't be blinded by the money. You can find a decent job, just don't give up. And do not trust people so easily -- just because someone is your family it does not mean they are good."