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Our Partners Speak Out

"Thousands of girls are being kidnapped from their homes and forced to work as sex slaves each year. Our campaign is opening a hot-line, informing Uzbek girls and women of risk of accepting one of the 'dream' jobs offered to them in other countries. These people offering the jobs aren't their friends, they just want to use them for money. We want girls who are trying to come home to know we can help them. At our hot-line center, a specially trained operator will give free and anonymous information on the telephone. In the last few months, we have received more that 1000 calls, among which are calls from parents and relatives, whose daughters or wives were kidnapped and forced to work as slaves. Most of these callers don't even know if their daughters, wives, girlfriends are alive or dead." Nodira Karimova, Director and Founder of Anti-Trafficking Support Center for Girls - Tashkent, Uzbekistan

Nodira Karimova, Director and Founder of Anti-Trafficking Support Center for Girl's in Uzbekistan spoke with Andrea Powell, Director of FAIR Fund about her experiences as a women's rights activist. Below, she discusses the desperate situation of girls in Uzbekistan, and why trafficking is such a big problem.

AP: What inspired you in starting your organization?
NK: I have worked with a lot of different organizations dealing with women's issues. I was always worried about the fact that women in lower economic classes were ignored and did not know about the help they could be offered by these groups. The government and social services did not pay attention to poor women. But, they are the ones that need the assistance the most. It was my observation that these women and girls don't ask for help because they have been taught there is no hope for their situation. They see so many hungry, poor people around them, and eventually they give up on a good future. It is my hope that my organization can really bring hope back to lives of these women and their children through real solutions.

AP: What personal and professional problems did you have while starting your organization?
NK: A lot of my family and professional friends did not understand why I wanted to start my own nonprofit organization. They were worried that I was trying to solve a problem (trafficking) that was never going to get any better. They thought that it was impossible to help girls who 'don't want to help themselves.' But, I talked to them and eventually they started to help me. My biggest supporters were actually my husband and my father. They told me to not be impatient, and to really trust my inner voice. This was very important for me because I was pretty impatient in the beginning. I wanted to save every girl possible, but first I had to build a structure to do that.

AP: Why do you think trafficking is such a big issue in your country?
NK: I think that for a long time, Uzbek people and the government hid the problem. We are a secretive society that does not like to share their problems with the world. A good Uzbek woman had to be first a daughter, than a wife, and finally a good mother. The girls who went abroad were not considered to be good girls. People thought any girl who would do this are just doing it be a prostitute. They did not realize the true deception of the traffickers. Most of these girls need the money - that is why they agree to go. For a long time, no one here really sat back and wondered about how these girls get abroad. No one asked what the problems were that a girl was so desperate to agree to go with a stranger to a foreign country. People just kept closing their eyes, and every time they opened them, the problem was bigger. I decided that we needed a hot line for people to call and ask us questions. A lot of girls call us about their offers to work abroad. And, a lot of families call us because they want to find their daughters. I think that any one can look at our country and see that we are at a crossroads. The economy, patriarchal views of the woman, corruption - it all leads to a fertile ground for girls to be kidnapped into slavery.

AP: Do you think your government is dealing wit the problem of trafficking in an adequate way?
NK: If we compare the trafficking situation from one year ago, to the present one than we can be sure the situation has improved a little. I think that the latest US Department of State's report, "Trafficking in Persons", released this summer has made an influence on my countries attitude to trafficking prevention and prosecution of offenders. Our country was classified as 'Tier 3", which means we are one of the worst countries for trafficking. Before this report was released, our country didn't really tackle these issues seriously. But, now we are already busting trafficking rings that have been in existence for a long time. I really hope that our government will make relevant conclusions and direct all its efforts in preventing this human tragedy.

AP: What has been the response of the girls you speak to when you tell them about trafficking?
NK: When we held the seminars for the schoolgirls in Tashkent, the girls were really skeptical in the beginning. They only knew very little about the problem, and they were certain that good girls would not be caught in that situation. We told them about the real picture. They learned about the ways that a girl can be tricked into thinking that the job is teaching languages, selling clothes, or translating. We also told them that really poor girls are often the most vulnerable because they are afraid of living on the streets. After these talks, they started to understand why a girl would go abroad. This is very important because girls who go are often thought of as 'bad women' or 'sluts.' They were really shocked about the beatings, forced sex, and even deaths of the girls who are trafficked. They didn't know about any of this even thought the problem is very big in our country. The more that these girls know about the problem, the better they can handle dangerous situations or false job offers. These seminars can save their lives.

AP: What are your future goals for yourself and your organization?
NK: First of all we are going to expand the "Information Campaign For Anti-trafficking" all over the country. For the past year we have gained a lot of partners and support from organizations like FAIR Fund. . This shows that our work is being recognized, and that we are becoming stronger. The Information Campaign will include establishing more hot-line call centers in our three branch offices is °Ăin Termez, Jizzak and Syrdarya and highlighting the trafficking issue through collaboration with the local press in these regions.

More coming soon!

Mission

The Campus Coalition Against Trafficking is a student grassroots movement to stop modern-day slavery. CCAT student members and affiliates seek to raise awareness and change perceptions about human trafficking, advocate for strong anti-trafficking laws, and build the anti-trafficking movement. CCAT’s sponsor, Fair Fund, seeks to empower students to act, encourage creative activism, unify student efforts, and work to build a peer-to-peer student network.

The Campus Coalition Against Trafficking is fighting on the frontlines of the anti-trafficking movement. Our main goal is to raise awareness about human trafficking, advocating for strong anti-trafficking laws, fundraising for anti-trafficking organizations, and building that grassroots movement to stop modern-day slavery. We are supported by other student groups, professors, researchers, local non-governmental organizations, government officials, and other anti-trafficking activists.

To Join the Campus Coalition Against Trafficking

Go to: www.ccatcoalition.org---------- -----------

Contact: Ashley Mills at ashley (at) fairfund.org or (202) 265-1505


Coming Attraction- TRADE, in theaters September 21, 2007

Kevin Kline plays a Texas cop who finds out that he may have had a daughter who was trafficked some years ago. While investigating, he meets a young boy from Mexico City, played by Cesar Ramos, whose 13-year-old sister, played by Paulina Gaitan, has been kidnapped. The two go on a quest to the young Mexican girl and befriend Jovovich, a young Russian woman misled into traveling to the U.S. to become a nanny. The film captures the real horrors of international trafficking in a provacative way. CCAT will be hosting a campaign to promote “Trade”, and the anti-trafficking movement across the country. Pamphlets, flyers, and merchandise will be distributed at participating theaters to raise awareness and increase CCAT’s name recognition

Get involved! Ask your friends, family, and peers to attend the movie and help with flyer/merchandise distribution. And, contact CCAT@fairfund.org to help.


Approach and Program Activities

CCAT uses a grassroots approach to catalyze social change and channel the passion and energy of students and youth. We value solidarity with student leaders and organizations and strive to work in a spirit of partnership with other initiatives, including women’s rights, human rights, labor rights, and peace organizations. Our program seeks to build emerging leaders who appreciate the interconnectedness of many global social justice and human rights issues.

Program Activities: Through its efforts, CCAT programs engage in the following activities:

  • Facilitating cross-sectoral training workshops, lectures, and readings for students that discuss human trafficking, women’s rights, labor rights, human rights, intl. migration policies, sexual exploitation, civil society, and beyond.
  • Catalyzing the creation of anti-trafficking campus student groups and offering suggestions for their activities.
  • Fostering inter-campus peer-to-peer dialogues between anti-trafficking student groups, as well as with student groups focusing on other social justice issues.
  • Linking interested students with internship opportunities in a wide variety of agencies, including established anti-trafficking agencies and other types of agencies that work on social justice issues.
  • Convening national events and workshops that are open to CCAT members across the nation.
  • Providing a core CCAT training manual with topics that will include, but are not limited to: tools for organizing an anti-trafficking awareness-raising event, identifying victims of trafficking, and conducting research.
  • Conducting research to identify what student activities are occurring around the country related to trafficking and what professors are teaching about trafficking in their college classes.

CCAT History

Understanding that student action is a critical component to any comprehensive social movement, FAIR Fund and Polaris Project joined together with 20 students in January 2005 to form the Campus Coalition Against Trafficking. The first launch conference, held in October 2005 at the Georgetown University Law School campus was supported in part by the Georgetown Law School Students Against Trafficking.

By Spring 2006, the Campus Coalition Against Trafficking had student and student group members from 81 schools and 12 countries. In April 2006, CCAT co-sponsored, together with the Northwestern University’s Human Rights Conference Series, the first national student conference addressing human trafficking where 200 students from 92 schools attended. In 2006, supported by the Yahoo Employee Foundation, CCAT offered 12 universities and 15 students the chance to realize their creative ideas to raise awareness, promote anti-trafficking conferences, and advocate for better or new state anti-trafficking legislation in their state.

CCAT students have represented the student anti-trafficking movement in national and international conferences including the annual Freedom Network conference.

CCAT’s current sponsor is FAIR Fund and Polaris Project remains an active supporter of student’s actions against trafficking and CCAT’s mission and goals. In 2007 and 2008, CCAT will grow to reach international students and to increase campus support for ending human trafficking, a form of modern day slavery.


Our Supporters

The Campus Coalition Against Trafficking has been supported by the Yahoo Employee Foundation, Starbucks, Safeway, and Kinkos.

 

 


 

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