More Humans Than Drugs Trafficked In Europe

by Amanda Kloer · 2009-04-15 12:00:00 UTC
Topics:

For the first time, a recent report from the European Commission says that "the current scale of human trafficking outweighs the smuggling and spreading of drugs."  This report sadly gives human cargo status as the most trafficked commodity in Europe- more than illegal drugs or arms.

Why has human trafficking outstripped illegal drug and arms smuggling as the raison d'être for international organized crime rings, pimps, and criminal entrepreneurs?  The simplified answer is this: you can sell a gun once. You can sell an ounce of cocaine once.  You can sell a woman in prostitution over and over again.  You can exploit the labor of an enslaved fruit picker day after day.  In other words, human trafficking is more profitable for many criminals, so they have traded in their old cargo for human cargo.

But the simplified answer is never the whole story.  As criminals become aware of the profitability of human trafficking, governments are also becoming aware of how to combat it.  Many have developed better border controls and immigration policies to prevent trafficking into or out of their country.  This didn't make the traffickers stop- it just made them look a little closer to home, begin trafficking within country instead of between.  And law enforcement are raiding workplaces, brothels, and recruiting sites, traffickers are increasingly selling their victims online, advertising through new technologies and media.

The fact is that trafficking is growing and changing.  And the traffickers are not going to sit back and wait while we get our act together.  We need to get ahead and stay of the creative criminals, or human trafficking as an industry will continue to grow.

Image from simianuprising.com

Amanda Kloer is a Change.org Editor and has been a full-time abolitionist in several capacities for seven years. Follow her on Twitter @endhumantraffic
PREVIOUS STORY:
Employee Free Choice Act Would Aid Exploited Workers
NEXT STORY:
Today is National Human Trafficking Awareness Day, how are you going to take action?

COMMENTS (10)

    Comment Policy

    · All fields are required to comment.

    [X]

    Comments on Change.org are meant for further exploration and evaluation of the campaign on Change.org. To that end, we welcome constructive comments. However, we reserve the right to delete comments which, as determined solely in our discretion: (1) are offensive, abusive, or off-topic; (2) include content solely intended to personally attack the campaign creator, (3) are designed to subvert or hijack comment threads rather than contribute to them; and/or (4) violate our terms of service and/or privacy policy. Repeat offenders may be permanently removed from the site at our discretion. Please also be advised that: (A) we do not actively curate and/or monitor in any manner whatsoever the comments made on the Change.org platform, and (B) the creator of each campaign on Change.org may remove any comment at her/his/its discretion.