Kuwait Times

‘Sisters’ help women sex-trafficked from China flee from US

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NEW YORK: Susan Liu canvasses the streets in front of massage parlors in New York City once a month. Her goal: to befriend the women who work there, many of whom she believes are being sex trafficked. Liu is the director of women’s services at Garden of Hope, an organizati­on that provides trafficked women in massage parlors with counseling and access to lawyers. “Many people do not know the background of these women, who are so brave to come over the ocean to a new place to find ways to support their families,” she said. “It’s about looking for a better life, just like any immigrant or any citizen in any country.”

Liu is part of a growing number of advocates finding innovative ways to overcome cultural and language barriers to help trafficked women forced to sell sex in more than 9,000 massage parlors across the United States. The anti-slavery group Polaris estimates that trafficker­s make $2.5 billion a year from the trade, which mainly involves women from China and Korea working behind storefront­s along highways and in strip malls, and living in fear of deportatio­n. After escort services, it is the second most common type of traffickin­g reported to the charity’s national hotline, which received almost 14,000 calls last year.

Many of the women are illegal immigrants who are recruited by trafficker­s promising legitimate jobs and later asked to perform sex acts, campaigner­s say. They speak little or no English and often face pressure to repay debts and support their families, according to advocates, who said it is hard to help the women because they are kept quiet with threats and moved among locations every few weeks. “The response to American-born pimp-controlled victims isn’t going to be the same as foreign-born victims who don’t just have different vulnerabil­ities, but also different cultural background­s,” said Rochelle Keyhan, a director at Polaris.

As discussing sex is taboo in China and domestic violence is not taken seriously, victims are more likely to talk about labor exploitati­on than reveal sexual abuse, she said. Websites like Rubmaps.com, where men review massage parlors that offer sexual services, are helping to fuel the crime but identifyin­g trafficker­s and their victims is difficult, police and campaigner­s say. Globally, human traffickin­g earns profits of roughly $150 billion a year for trafficker­s, according to the Internatio­nal Labour Organizati­on. That figure includes profits from sexual exploitati­on and forced labor.

Beaten up Trafficked women in massage parlors are often assaulted by their customers but they feel helpless because they fear the police and cannot speak English, advocates say. “What we were hearing from those women is when they said ‘no’, the customers would beat them up, they would rape them, they would try to strangle some of our clients,” said Lori Cohen, director of Sanctuary for Families, a support group.

One survivor recalled finding a massage parlor job online, and being told that she would not have to offer “full service” - meaning intercours­e - or other sexual services. “When I started working, I was asked to compensate for the fees lost if I refused to provide ‘full service’ to the customer,” the woman, who declined to give her name, told the Thomson Reuters Foundation. “I have been beaten up by customers ... I had also been threatened by a customer with a knife before when I refused to provide ‘full service’.”

Still, she said that she was afraid of losing the job because she did not have a work permit, needed to repay the agent who applied for her tourist visa, and support her son. —Reuters

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