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January 13, 2006
DoD human trafficking rules tighten
by Sgt. Sara Wood
American Forces Press Service
Harsher punishments for Defense Department personnel who participate in human trafficking or support the industry by patronizing prostitutes are part of a bill signed into law Tuesday by President Bush.
"Human trafficking is an offense against human dignity, a crime in which human beings, many of them teenagers and young children, are bought and sold and often sexually abused by violent criminals," Bush said at the White House before signing the bill. "Our nation is determined to fight and end this modern form of slavery."
The Trafficking Victims Protection Reauthorization Act of 2005 amends the military manual for courtsmartial, making the punishment for using a prostitute the same as that for being a prostitute, said John Awtrey, director of law enforcement policy and support for the undersecretary of defense for personnel and readiness.
Under the new act, any service member convicted of patronizing a prostitute can receive a dishonorable discharge, forfeiture of all pay and allowances and one year of confinement.
Prostitution is being targeted because it is the main fuel for the human trafficking industry, Awtrey said. Human trafficking is the illegal practice of procuring human beings for unpaid work in physically abusive settings and locations from which they are not allowed to leave.
Whether people realize it or not, most women involved in prostitution are there against their will, he said, and supporting that industry -- even by going to a strip club or bar that allows prostitution -- supports the worldwide human trafficking industry.
"If you spend money there, you're giving money to the traffickers, and traffickers are criminals," he said.
Many people don't understand the human trafficking industry, so DoD has established a new training program to clarify what it is and what the implications are of becoming involved, said Robert Wisher, DoD's director of advanced distributive learning.
The training was developed early last year and can be taken in a classroom or online, Wisher said. The training covers four basic areas:
* U.S. and DoD policy on human trafficking;
* The origins of the trafficking phenomenon;
* Detection of trafficking; and
* Legal provisions of trafficking.
The overall goal of the training is to change people's attitudes about prostitution and human trafficking and make them realize the victims side of the story, Wisher said.
"We change attitudes through gripping stories based on actual accounts of what the victims go through," he said.
The training is mandatory for all service members, DoD civilian employees and contractors who are going overseas, Wisher said. Later this year, it will become mandatory for all military members and DoD civilians, he said.
DoD also is developing a separate training module for commanders about what to do when incidences of human trafficking are reported and a module for investigators about how to handle the reports, Wisher said.
Human trafficking became an important issue for DoD because of the many military units that are stationed overseas in countries where human trafficking is rampant, such as Korea, Awtrey said.
"Our primary focus is overseas because of the number of units and personnel that are in countries that are high-demand destinations for trafficked women in the sex exploitation industry," he said. "We want to educate people on what it is so they know what to stay away from or what to report."
It is too early to judge the ultimate success of the training program, Wisher said, but he said he already is receiving positive feedback from service members who said the training opened their eyes to the problem of human trafficking.
Human trafficking is the third-largest source of money for international organized crime and occurs internationally and within the United States, Wisher said.
www.dcmilitary.com/army/pen...44-1.html
----------------------------
This is gonna be interesting... If they want women out of the sex industry, they really got to give the right job-training (a job which pays the bills) and do something against poverty.
Fighting ht and not poverty, somehow may not work... Anway, some people don't even get paid when they give sex (or call it time) for money. That sucks!
I am interested to see what these issues bring up. Anyway, I am glad the authorities take human trafficking serious. If a few John's suffer a bit - that maybe worth it to get the message across. Only a caring John is a good John, lol. Who knows how many of them are utter jerks? Poor gals out there.
What interests me how the sexual healing community (the great tantrics) will deal with that? They want prostitution legalized so they can heal all of us from our sexual dysfunction and raise our awareness (and kundalini – as if they can do that really…). That’s all well and good if they can do just that… I am all for it. Heal ME, please ??? I don’t like to pay money for that and would want my insurance to pay for it. I like trained sexual healers anyway better. Anyway, those little sexual healers are the most benign folks out there often (and have a spiritual inclination, which sometimes comes across as somewhat overblown – too full of themselves at times-, but well they are cute and nobody is perfect. Somehow, I think that many of these naïve healers have not thought matters through in regards to the legalization of prostitution and how it could legalize pimping and invite trafficking (a trick will get cheaper and cheaper, and the market dictates the price). I would be fine if there would be NO EXPLOITATION and no madams, pimps, etc. (co-ops structures would be fine with me, no BOSS..., who wants that anyway?)… Plus the kids need to pay their taxes. I wish they would all take a concrete stand against human trafficking (it would look good for their cause…). Otherwise, those little healers really come across as rather self-serving “healers.” There are a lot of issues to deal with before prostitutio can be legalized with minimal dysfunctions left.
www.dcmilitary.com/army/pen...44-1.html
We will see what kind of issues come up.
DoD human trafficking rules tighten
by Sgt. Sara Wood
American Forces Press Service
Harsher punishments for Defense Department personnel who participate in human trafficking or support the industry by patronizing prostitutes are part of a bill signed into law Tuesday by President Bush.
"Human trafficking is an offense against human dignity, a crime in which human beings, many of them teenagers and young children, are bought and sold and often sexually abused by violent criminals," Bush said at the White House before signing the bill. "Our nation is determined to fight and end this modern form of slavery."
The Trafficking Victims Protection Reauthorization Act of 2005 amends the military manual for courtsmartial, making the punishment for using a prostitute the same as that for being a prostitute, said John Awtrey, director of law enforcement policy and support for the undersecretary of defense for personnel and readiness.
Under the new act, any service member convicted of patronizing a prostitute can receive a dishonorable discharge, forfeiture of all pay and allowances and one year of confinement.
Prostitution is being targeted because it is the main fuel for the human trafficking industry, Awtrey said. Human trafficking is the illegal practice of procuring human beings for unpaid work in physically abusive settings and locations from which they are not allowed to leave.
Whether people realize it or not, most women involved in prostitution are there against their will, he said, and supporting that industry -- even by going to a strip club or bar that allows prostitution -- supports the worldwide human trafficking industry.
"If you spend money there, you're giving money to the traffickers, and traffickers are criminals," he said.
Many people don't understand the human trafficking industry, so DoD has established a new training program to clarify what it is and what the implications are of becoming involved, said Robert Wisher, DoD's director of advanced distributive learning.
The training was developed early last year and can be taken in a classroom or online, Wisher said. The training covers four basic areas:
* U.S. and DoD policy on human trafficking;
* The origins of the trafficking phenomenon;
* Detection of trafficking; and
* Legal provisions of trafficking.
The overall goal of the training is to change people's attitudes about prostitution and human trafficking and make them realize the victims side of the story, Wisher said.
"We change attitudes through gripping stories based on actual accounts of what the victims go through," he said.
The training is mandatory for all service members, DoD civilian employees and contractors who are going overseas, Wisher said. Later this year, it will become mandatory for all military members and DoD civilians, he said.
DoD also is developing a separate training module for commanders about what to do when incidences of human trafficking are reported and a module for investigators about how to handle the reports, Wisher said.
Human trafficking became an important issue for DoD because of the many military units that are stationed overseas in countries where human trafficking is rampant, such as Korea, Awtrey said.
"Our primary focus is overseas because of the number of units and personnel that are in countries that are high-demand destinations for trafficked women in the sex exploitation industry," he said. "We want to educate people on what it is so they know what to stay away from or what to report."
It is too early to judge the ultimate success of the training program, Wisher said, but he said he already is receiving positive feedback from service members who said the training opened their eyes to the problem of human trafficking.
Human trafficking is the third-largest source of money for international organized crime and occurs internationally and within the United States, Wisher said.
www.dcmilitary.com/army/pen...44-1.html
----------------------------
This is gonna be interesting... If they want women out of the sex industry, they really got to give the right job-training (a job which pays the bills) and do something against poverty.
Fighting ht and not poverty, somehow may not work... Anway, some people don't even get paid when they give sex (or call it time) for money. That sucks!
I am interested to see what these issues bring up. Anyway, I am glad the authorities take human trafficking serious. If a few John's suffer a bit - that maybe worth it to get the message across. Only a caring John is a good John, lol. Who knows how many of them are utter jerks? Poor gals out there.
What interests me how the sexual healing community (the great tantrics) will deal with that? They want prostitution legalized so they can heal all of us from our sexual dysfunction and raise our awareness (and kundalini – as if they can do that really…). That’s all well and good if they can do just that… I am all for it. Heal ME, please ??? I don’t like to pay money for that and would want my insurance to pay for it. I like trained sexual healers anyway better. Anyway, those little sexual healers are the most benign folks out there often (and have a spiritual inclination, which sometimes comes across as somewhat overblown – too full of themselves at times-, but well they are cute and nobody is perfect. Somehow, I think that many of these naïve healers have not thought matters through in regards to the legalization of prostitution and how it could legalize pimping and invite trafficking (a trick will get cheaper and cheaper, and the market dictates the price). I would be fine if there would be NO EXPLOITATION and no madams, pimps, etc. (co-ops structures would be fine with me, no BOSS..., who wants that anyway?)… Plus the kids need to pay their taxes. I wish they would all take a concrete stand against human trafficking (it would look good for their cause…). Otherwise, those little healers really come across as rather self-serving “healers.” There are a lot of issues to deal with before prostitutio can be legalized with minimal dysfunctions left.
www.dcmilitary.com/army/pen...44-1.html
We will see what kind of issues come up.
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Re: They may even go as far as Strip-Clubs...
Fri, January 13, 2006 - 10:17 PMWhy limit it to just Federal employees? Come on. Is this sufficient to address anything significant?
These people must think the general population were born yesterday.
