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CHINA: Human Trafficking Report: Unveiling Shadowy World of the Industry

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#AceNewsRoom With β€˜Kindness & Wisdom’ Mar.20, 2022 @acenewsservices

Ace News Room Cutting Floor 20/03/2022

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https://www.abc.net.au/news/2022-03-20/xuzhou-chained-mother-china-reveals-human-trafficking-problem/100908110

#AceNewsDesk says according to a ABC News Report: How a TikTok video of a woman chained up in a backyard shed sparked worldwide debate about China’s shadowy human trafficking industry

A woman with chains around her neck looks to camera while a man grips the collar of her coat
The video, showing a woman chained to the wall of a backyard shed in rural China, has been viewed 2 billion times.(Supplied)none

Mary was so scared to watch the TikTok video her friends were talking about that she muted the sound. 

It was a 2-minute clip that showed a pale, gaunt, middle-aged woman in a thin, pink sweater chained to the wall by her neck, rambling to the man who was filming the video. 

“I was heartbroken, shocked and scared,” said Mary, a Chinese citizen living in Melbourne who asked to remain anonymous due to safety concerns.

She had read on Chinese social media that the woman in the video was a mother of eight living in a rural town in Jiangsu province, south-east China.

Like many others, Mary assumed the chained woman was a victim of human trafficking.

She had been told many stories about women and girls in China being sold to rural villages for forced marriage and childbirth. 

According to a United Nations report, China recorded 208 human trafficking victims in 2017, six times more than in Australia. About 70 per cent of victims were identified as women. 

Yet many human trafficking advocates believe the actual case number could be much higher.

A Chinese government-affiliated social institute released a white paper on China’s missing population in 2020 which stated that the number was closer to 1 million. 

“To be frank, human trafficking has a long history in China, so at first when many of us knew about the video, our reaction was, ‘Oh, it’s just another case’,” Mary said.

But it was more than that. As the “chained mother” video went viral, it sparked an online movement demanding government intervention, and a much broader discussion about China’s murky history of human trafficking. 

‘This is totally nonsense’

Three women walk down a street with a chain attached to one in a white dress. They all wear masks
Activists took their protests to the streets of Shanghai. (Supplied: Free Chinese Feminists)none

The local county government released its first statement on January 30, claiming the woman, who was called Xiaohuamei, had been adopted by her husband’s father while she was begging on the street. 

That statement also claimed that Xiaohuamei’s marriage to her husband was legal, and that she had been chained up because she suffered from mental illness and might “attack people”.

Mary was infuriated by the statement.

“This is totally nonsense. How come this is not involved with human trafficking?” she said.

The local village government and its city government later released another three statements, all denying Xiaohuamei was a victim of human trafficking.

They revealed more details, including that she had been taken to Jiangsu from Yunnan in south-west China by a woman surnamed Sang, upon the request of her own mother, for “mental health treatment” and “a good marriage”.

But many social media users were not convinced by the statements.

“Taking Xiaohuamei to Jiangsu for treatment and a good marriage? This sounds exactly like human trafficking,” one wrote on Weibo. 

It did little to prevent the outcry from escalatingDuring the Winter Olympics in Beijing, the video reached more than 2 billion views, despite new censorship rules implemented by Chinese social media platforms during this time.

The video also inspired a rare wave of activism, with many women using Weibo to share their experiences of sexual harassment, while university students gave out flyers and used AirDrop to call for public attention on the case. 

A row of bikes with baskets on the front, all which have had paper flyers placed into them
Photos circulated on Chinese social media showing flyers about Xiaohuamei being distributed on the streets of Hangzhou.(Supplied: Free Chinese Feminists)none

Chinese women living overseas also took action.

Emma, who lives in the United States, launched a petition on the Free Chinese Feminists Facebook page, calling for the Chinese government to undertake a thorough investigation. 

She collected signatures from Chinese women in Australia, the US, Europe and Japan. 

“We have seen many people in China taking action to call for more attention to the chained mother incident and, although we live overseas, we still want to do something,” Emma said. 

“As women, we have seen how little efforts that governments and authorities have taken in countering sexual violence and human trafficking.

“We hope that the calls not only could rescue Xiaohuamei from the current situation, but also help women and children who are still suffering from human trafficking.”

Citizen Daily CN, an Instagram account which posts memes of Chinese current affairs, also organised a group of volunteers to translate information about Xiaohuamei from Chinese to English, in the hopes of capturing international attention. 

“Chinese people also care about human rights and rule of law, but Chinese people don’t have room to speak out under the repression of an authoritarian government,” the group said in a statement.

On February 27, the fifth official statement was issued by Jiangsu municipal government, admitting that Xiaohuamei was indeed a victim of human trafficking.

It said her husband and the woman surnamed Sang, who had taken her to Jiangsu, were under investigation. 

Chinese state media later reported a dozen local officials had been fired for failing in their responsibilities to investigate the case.

China’s shadowy human trafficking industry 

A man, a child and a woman walk down a street holding hands. They are approaching a stone lion
The tragedy of the chained mother has drawn international attention to China’s long history of human trafficking of women and children. (AP: Ng Han Guan)none

Long-time human trafficking advocate Sylvia Yu Friedman said Xiaohuamei’s experience is “quite prevalent” in China. 

The government’s latest statistics show there are 35 million more men than women in China, and the gender gap is much wider in rural villages. 

According to Ms Yu Friedman, the long-term gender imbalance caused by China’s one-child policy created a market for bride trafficking, particularly in rural areas.

An Asian woman wearing a sweater with a red trim and blue and white pattern
Sylvia Yu Friedman said the expectation of having many children in rural China also contributes to the human trafficking market. (Supplied)none

She added that the huge economic disparity between urban and rural China also contributed to the shadow industry. 

“If you are in Beijing or Shanghai, it’s very different from being in a small rural town in China, where [people] may not be educated, they are very poor,” she said.

“They can make a lot of money by selling a woman. Each woman is worth about $35,000, and that’s a lot of money.” 

Women in neighbouring countries are also at risk, according to Yaqiu Wang, senior China researcher at Human Rights Watch (HRW). 

A 2019 report by HRW found that bride-trafficking businesses were bringing women in from northern Myanmar to sell to Chinese families for between $US3,000 and $US13,000 ($4,000 to $17,700).

Ms Wang said Chinese police tended not to investigate or punish human traffickers, especially when it came to international trafficking.

“[The police] actually treat the [trafficked] women as the law breakers who broke the immigration law to enter China illegally,” she said. 

The 2021 United States Trafficking in Persons report identifies China as among 11 governments with a documented “policy or pattern” of human trafficking.

It noted the government’s continued mass detention and forced labour of 1 million Uyghurs, ethnic Kazakhs, ethnic Kyrgyz and other Muslims in the Xinjiang region as well as “coerced repatriation and internment” of other religious and ethnic minorities living overseas.

Professor Susan Tiefenbrun, a human trafficking researcher from Thomas Jefferson School of Law, said China did not have specific laws againsthuman trafficking, which made it difficult for some women to seek help.

“America is not completely absent from this problem [of human trafficking],” she said.

“But here, and in European countries, it’s much easier to get help for these girls because there are laws, specific laws.” 

The culture of not intervening in family affairs also means governments and authorities are reluctant to act on these crimes in rural China, according to international human trafficking expert Matthew Friedman.

He added that local governments may not even know how to act on human trafficking.

“If law enforcement hears that there’s a trafficking victim, they often need help to know what to do, because they don’t really have a solution,” he said. 

Will China take more action on human trafficking?

A group of men sitting in China's National People's Congress, as two women in red pour tea.
Sustained, palpable anger across China prompted an unusually strong government response at the annual session of China’s rubber-stamp legislature. (AP: Sam McNeil)none

Since the final official statement on Xiaohuamei from the Jiangsu government, China has started to silence online criticism.

Academics and journalists have been told not to speak out on the issue, while social media posts about her case have been deleted. 

However, experts say much more discussion has been allowed to grow around this case than other controversial issues in China, such as tennis star Peng Shuai’s troubling relationship with a powerful official, Zhang Gaoli.

Kecheng Fang, assistant professor of media and communications at the Chinese University of Hong Kong, said this was because what happened to Xiaohuamei was more of a local scandal, with less connection to Beijing.

“It has nothing to do with the central government or high-ranking officials,” he said.

“So I can understand why there’s such a room of discussion allowed for discussion on this topic.” 

However, he said, the ongoing online discussion about Xiaohuamei has caught Beijing’s attention.

“Because a lot of foreign media covered this, this has become an important issue,” he said. 

On March 2, Beijing announced that it would launch a year-long campaign to tackle human trafficking of women and children β€” a move seen as Beijing’s response to the “chained mother” scandal.

Mr Friedman said the campaign could be helpful in tackling China’s widespread problem.

“When the Chinese government decides to take on an issue like this, they can be very effective at addressing the problem,” he said.

But Mary worries this will mean the end of the investigation into what happened to Xiaohuamei. Regardless, she plans to follow the case. 

“I will never forget her and her experience, never,” she said.

#AceNewsDesk report ………..Published: Mar.20: 2022:

Editor says …Sterling Publishing & Media Service Agency is not responsible for the content of external site or from any reports, posts or links, and can also be found here on Telegram: https://t.me/acenewsdaily all of our posts from Twitter can be found here: https://acetwitternews.wordpress.com/ and all wordpress and live posts and links here: https://acenewsroom.wordpress.com/ and thanks for following as always appreciate every like, reblog or retweet and free help and guidance tips on your PC software or need help & guidance from our experts AcePCHelp.WordPress.Com

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LONDON: Husband & Wife Jailed for 20yrs for Human Trafficking Romanian Women

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#AceNewsRoom With β€˜Kindness & Wisdom’ Mar.11, 2022 @acenewsservices

Ace News Room Cutting Floor 11/03/2022

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#AceDailyNews says according to a MET Report: Husband and wife jailed for a total of 20 years after trafficking Romanian women to London for sexual exploitation: Published: 11 March 2022 14:00

Stock image

A husband and wife duo have been jailed at SouthwarkΒ CrownΒ Court today after being convicted of a series of offences including rape and controlling prostitution for gainΒ involving Romanian women who had been trafficked into the UK.

Detective Sergeant Chris Weatherstone from the Met’s Specialist Crime Command, said:

” This lengthy and complex investigation over several years has dismantled an organised crime group (OCG) who were exploiting women in London for their own financial gain.

β€œIndividuals are often reticent or too afraid to come forward in modern slavery investigations, so it is our job to build a prosecution and dismantle OCGs like this with whatever evidence we can. The bravery and courage of the victims in this case to provide evidence against the OCG, helped ensure they were convicted and brought to justice. 

β€œAnyone considering exploiting other human beings for financial gain should expect to face the same level of expert investigation and prosecution.”

The pair were found guilty at the same court following a six-week trial:

Nicusor Gheorghe, 34 (06.02.88) of Cecil Avenue, Barking, was sentenced to 15 years’ imprisonment after being convicted of:

– Two counts of rape.
– Eight counts of human trafficking.
– One count of trafficking into the UK for sexual exploitation.
– Ten counts of controlling prostitution for gain.
– One count of removing criminal property from England, Wales, Scotland or Northern Ireland.

Rodica Gheorghe, 33 (21.09.88), his wife of the same address, was sentenced to five years’ imprisonment for the following:

– Two counts of human trafficking.
– Eight counts of controlling prostitution for gain.
– One count of removing criminal property from England, Wales, Scotland or Northern Ireland.

Detectives from the Met’s Specialist Crime Command began investigating the couple after intelligence was received from the Romanian police, who had intercepted phone calls from 2018. 

Met detectives began an extensive operation to discover what activities the Gheorghes were conducting in London. Further to this, officers travelled to Romania to obtain accounts from the victims who had returned there.

At 05:00hrs on Tuesday, 26 March 2019 officers executed a warrant at an address identified as a brothel in Cecil Avenue, Barking. In one locked room they found seven women. Nicusor Gheorghe was found on the ground floor. 14 phones were seized from the property which, when analysed,  confirmed they had been used to arrange sexual services. 

A second warrant was executed simultaneously at a property in Albert Road, Ilford, which had also been used as a brothel by the Gheorghes. Statements were taken from women and contact continued with them until the trial this year.

Rodica Gheroghe was in Romania at the time of her husband’s arrest. She was detained in Romania and extradited to the UK on a European Arrest Warrant on 13 June 2019, where she was arrested by Met officers.

The court heard how the Gheorghes were a husband and wife team from Romania, who over a nine year period had been involved in the running of sexual services from various addresses in London.

The women who worked in the addresses were mainly of Romanian origin who had travelled from Romania to the UK with the help of the Gheorghes. The Gheorghes would then arrange accommodation for the women and advertise the victim’s sexual services on adult websites.

Ten female victims, aged between 18 and 37 at the time of the offending, were brought to the UK between 2010 and 2019. All the victims explained to officers how they engaged in prostitution for various reasons. They all reported how they needed financial help and felt they had little choice. Some of the women went on to say they did not freely engage in this work and were actively forced by the couple to do so.

The first victim, a women in her late teens, had been friends with the family for years. She had no money of her own and was living with her parents. One day Nicusor Gheorghe invited her for a coffee and offered to take her to London where he could find her work as a waitress. He purchased a ticket for her and they travelled to Ilford via London Victoria. 

The following day he informed her the restaurant work was no longer available and he had found her alternative work, having sex with men for money. She declined to do this, but with no money she was unable to return to her family and days later started as a sex worker.

He drove her to a house where other young women were providing sexual services in different bedrooms. The victim was made to see 10 to 15 men a night. She was told how much to charge them and then half of the money was given to a woman at the brothel. The money she had left was then split with Nicusor Gheorghe, giving her around Β£20 from the Β£500 plus she had earned in a week. At the end of each shift she was driven back to a single room in Ilford.

Nicusor Gheorghe came to the victim’s room one evening and raped her. He did this more than once, telling her that her family would suffer if she did not do as she was told.

She was finally able to move out of the flat when one evening she met a man to whom she told her story. He helped her to return to Romania, but this was nearly four years later.

Following Nicusor Gheorghe’s financial, born out of exploiting the victim, he went on to operate brothels himself, assisted by his wife, Rodica Gheorghe.

Another victim, aged in her 20’s, travelled from Romania to Italy to work in a restaurant. When she arrived the only work available was sex work. She had a young child who had been put into care in Romania and needed to earn money in order to regain custody of him. Due to her low earnings she was put in touch with Nicusor Gheorghe. He purchased a ticket for to travel from Pisa to Stansted where he picked her up and drove her to a house in Barking, which was being run as a brothel.

Here she spoke with the husband and wife team and they informed her she would not be allowed to keep her earnings, but insisted on a fifty-fifty split. She found she had to work every day between 14:00hrs and 06:00hrs. She was expected to pay Β£1,000 a week for advertising costs and much more on food and rent.

If the women fell asleep during their hours of work, they were fined Β£50 by the Gheorghes. The activities of the women working at the brothel were managed by Rodica Gheorghe. A close watch was kept on the women. If they wanted to leave the house Nicusor Gheorghe would drive them in his car. They were not allowed to leave the house during ‘working hours’.

The pair tried to hide their part in trafficking by paying a third party to book the women’s flights for them.

Investigations showed between April 2010 and January 2019 Nicusor Gheorghe had transferred Β£84,000 and Rodica Gheorghe some Β£71,000 out of the UK. These funds, which were obtained from the sexual exploitation of others, were sent to others abroad to build property and buy businesses in Romania.

Detective Constable Lore Hancock, from the Met’s Specialist Crime Command, said: β€œI am a Romanian national who joined the Met as I always wanted to be part of the Human Trafficking and Modern Slavery Unit. It pains me to see how many Romanian females are pushed into prostitution due to poverty and lack of education.

β€œI hope that through my ability to speak their language and understand their culture and customs, I can build a trusting relationship with them, thus preventing them from becoming repeat victims.

β€œI have been in regular contact with the victims of this case for over two years. Together, with the amazing help and support from International Justice Mission (NGO), we have managed to offer practical help and support, from counselling to social care, housing and even skills courses. It was very emotional hearing the relief in their voices when I told them the verdict.”

Throughout the Covid pandemic our officers have continued to work across London to identify people involved in Modern Slavery and Human Trafficking, including forced labour and sexual exploitation. We play a role in protecting and supporting hundreds of victims each year.

We need help from the public as they have an important role to play in recognising and reporting modern slavery. If you suspect someone may be a victim of modern slavery, report it. You will always be taken seriously and protection and support is available.

Often those affected do not see themselves as potential victims of sexual exploitation and many will have been coerced into this life to make money for an organised crime network. 

We believe there are victims of modern slavery in every borough across London and the public may encounter them every day, possibly without realising. As well as being sexually exploited, victims have been found working in construction, domestic servitude, agriculture, cannabis factories and in places you use yourself, such as car washes, barbers and nail bars.

Victims are often told the police and authorities in the UK are not to be trusted and with limited English are unable to seek help, even if they want to.

If you suspect that you, or someone you have come into contact with, may be a victim of modern slavery or trafficking and require support, please call The Salvation Army’s 24 hour confidential referral helpline on 0800 808 3733. This is the best way to get support to anyone you suspect might be a victim

You can also report a suspicion or seek advice through the Modern Slavery Helpline confidentially on 08000 121 700. This is open 24 hours a day, 365 days a year.

You can also report to the police online at www.met.police.uk or by calling 101, in case of an emergency dial 999. Alternatively, you can contact the independent charity Crimestoppers anonymously on 0800 555 111 or online at crimestoppers-uk.org.

Editor says …Sterling Publishing & Media Service Agency is not responsible for the content of external site or from any reports, posts or links, and can also be found here on Telegram: https://t.me/acenewsdaily all of our posts from Twitter can be found here: https://acetwitternews.wordpress.com/ and all wordpress and live posts and links here: https://acenewsroom.wordpress.com/ and thanks for following as always appreciate every like, reblog or retweet and free help and guidance tips on your PC software or need help & guidance from our experts AcePCHelp.WordPress.Com

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(FLORIDA) JUST IN: Nineteen-year-old Gisela Medina, who is accused of sex trafficking minors in connection with Minnesota GOP donor Anton β€œTony” Lazzaro, is expected to make her first appearance Monday #AceNewsDesk report

#AceDailyNews says that Gisela Medina To Make Federal Court Appearance On Sex Trafficking Allegations according to WCCCO-TV St. Thomas GOP Chair Gisela Castro Medina Arrested In Florida On Sex Trafficking Charges ….developing story …

August: 16, 2021 at 12:15 pm

Medina was arrested in the Sunshine State on Thursday, and Okaloosa County jail records show she’s facing charges of conspiracy to commit sex trafficking of minors, sex trafficking of a minor and obstruction. A weekend statement from Minnesota College Republicans said that Medina was arrested alongside Lazzaro. The organization said it is β€œabsolutely disgusted” by her actions. 

Medina, of St. Paul, was recently elected the chair of the College Republicans at the University of St. Thomas. She has since been removed from that position. 

Lazzaro, a major fundraiser for the Minnesota GOP, was also arrested last week in Minneapolis on sex trafficking charges. The 30-year-old is facing a federal indictment for allegedly recruiting six minors to engage in commercial sex acts. Lazzaro’s attorney says he is being falsely accused. 

Lazzaro was initially scheduled to appear Monday in federal court. It’s yet unclear when he’ll make his first appearance. 

Medina and Lazzaro appear to be connected by a company called Minnesota Property Management. Lazzaro is the registered agent, and Medina works there, according to her social media pages. 

Meanwhile, Jennifer Carnahan, the chair of the Minnesota GOP, is facing calls to resign over her ties to Lazzaro, with whom she appears to have had a close relationship. Over the weekend, an increasing number of party lawmakers, activists and leaders called for her to step down and for changes to be made in the organization. 

Among the people calling for Carnahan’s resignation is Sen. Karin Housley (Stillwater). β€œThis is a horrible time for the Minnesota GOP,” she told WCCO-TV over the phone. β€œIt’s completely embarrassing, and the executive board needs to do something so we can move forward.” 

Housley and other Republicans are also calling for an independent audit of the party’s finances and an investigation into what Carnahan knew of Lazzaro’s alleged crimes. 

On Sunday, Carnahan resisted the calls for her to step down, saying in a lengthy Facebook post that she is being defamed and that there is a coup taking place against her. 

Lazzaro is deeply involved in Minnesota GOP politics and has donated tens of thousands of dollars to Republican candidates and causes. In recent year, Carnahan hosted a podcast with Lazzaro. 

In her recent statements, Carnahan, who is married to U.S. Rep. Jim Hagedorn (R – 1st District), did not detail her relationship with Lazzaro. Yet she called the allegations against him β€œdisgusting” and β€œabhorrent,” saying they warrant punishment to the full extent of the law.

The Minnesota GOP executive board met Sunday night, but an official says they adjourned without discussing Carnahan’s future or her ties to Lazzaro. The board did pass motions to conduct a financial audit of the party and rid the organization of non-disclosure agreements. 

The party’s next meeting is scheduled for Thursday night.

#AceNewsDesk report ………Published: Aug.17: 2021:

Editor says …Sterling Publishing & Media Service Agency is not responsible for the content of external site or from any reports, posts or links, and can also be found here on Telegram: https://t.me/acenewsdaily all of our posts fromTwitter can be found here: https://acetwitternews.wordpress.com/ and all wordpress and live posts and links here: https://acenewsroom.wordpress.com/and thanks for following as always appreciate every like, reblog or retweet and free help and guidance tips on your PC software or need help & guidance from our experts AcePCHelp.WordPress.Com