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7 February 2010 By
Stephen Lendman
In November 1989, the UN
General Assembly adopted the Convention on the Rights
of the Child, recognizing "that in all countries in
the world, there are children living in exceptionally
difficult conditions, and that such children need
special consideration." Then in May 2000, the General
Assembly adopted an Optional Protocol to the
Convention on the Rights of the Child on the sale of
children, child prostitution and child pornography.
In 1990, the UN Commission
on Human Rights appointed a Special Rapporteur on the
sale of children, child prostitution and child
pornography with a mandate to investigate the problem
and submit reports to the General Assembly.
Today, Gulnara Shahinian
holds the post, and on June 10, 2009 addressed Haiti's
Restaveks, a century-old system under which
impoverished families, mostly rural and unable to
adequately provide for their children, send them to
live with wealthier or less poor ones in return for
food, shelter, education, and a better life in return
for tasks performed as servants - de facto slaves
subjected to verbal and physical abuse.
Some as young as three are
beaten, forced to do anything asked, request nothing,
speak only when spoken to, display no emotion, and
receive none of the benefits parents expected, just
exploitation and mistreatment that's often severe. Too
often it's from relatives as poor families often send
their children to live with those better able to
provide care, yet they seldom do.
Haiti's poor also use them
to help with domestic and other chores, and some work
for homeless families under the worst of conditions,
including nothing to eat for days, harder work,
greater abuse, at times whippings leaving scars,
getting attacked by rats in their sleep or street
predators any time, and being easy prey for kidnappers
who seize them for prostitution or forced labor,
internally or abroad.
On July 10, 2009, Shahinian
released a report titled, "Promotion and Protection of
all Human Rights, Civil, Political, Economic, Social
and Cultural Rights, including the Right to
Development" covering contemporary forms of slavery
that affect adults and children.
She called it a global
issue in traditional and emerging forms that haven't
been sufficiently addressed. She also found that where
laws on forced labor exist, enforcement is limited,
and "very few policies and programmes....address
bonded labour." They should given its scale worldwide,
affecting an estimated 27 million people
conservatively and very likely many more as much of
the problem is unreported.
In March 2009, this writer
addressed it in an article titled, "Modern Slavery in
America." It's disturbing and pervasive despite US
laws prohibiting all forms of human trafficking
through statutes created or strengthened by the 2000
Victims of Trafficking and Violence Protection Act (VTVPA)
providing for imprisonment for up to 20 years or
longer as well as other penalties. Other laws were
also enacted, including the 2003 Protect Act to end
child exploitation.
Yet slavery exists in
different forms, affecting farm workers, domestic
help, factory and other sweatshop labor, restaurant
and hotel work, guest workers on US military bases in
Iraq, Afghanistan and elsewhere, and most of all for
prostitution and sex services that exploit children as
well as adults.
The International Labor
Organization (ILO) defines forced labor as follows:
"....all work or service
which is exacted from any person under the menace of
any penalty and for which said person has not offered
himself (or herself) voluntarily."
Forced child labor is:
"(a) all forms of slavery
or practices similar to slavery, such as the sale and
trafficking of children, debt bondage and serfdom and
forced or compulsory labor, including forced or
compulsory recruitment of children for use in armed
conflict;
(b) the use, procuring or
offering of a child for prostitution, for the
production of pornography or for pornographic
performances;
(c) the use, procuring or
offering of a child for illicit activities, in
particular for the production and trafficking of drugs
as defined in the relevant international treaties;
(and)
(d) work which, by its
nature or the circumstances in which it is carried
out, is likely to harm the health, safety or morals of
children."
The Free the Slaves.net's
definition is being "forced to work without pay under
threat of violence and unable to walk away."
Article 4 of the Universal
Declaration of Human Rights states:
"No one shall be held in
slavery or servitude; slavery and the slave trade
shall be prohibited in all their forms."
If sweatshop wage slavery
is included, the problem is far greater, affecting
many hundreds of millions of exploited workers
globally, including a 2004 UNICEF estimate of about
218 million children performing labor (other than
domestic), some as young as five, many in forced
bondage, the majority doing hazardous work, and
governments doing little or nothing to protect them.
On December 29, 1994, Haiti
ratified the UN Convention on the Rights of the Child.
Under its provisions, authorities issue reports on the
problem as required, but little else. Until he was
ousted, however, President Jean-Bertrand Aristide
addressed it. He created a special Haitian National
Police child protection unit, and in 2003, got a new
law passed prohibiting child domestic labor, mostly as
Restaveks. Other legislation also passed banning
trafficking in persons, a longstanding problem
affecting adults as well.
Except for measures under
Aristide, Haiti did little before or after his tenure
to curb the problem, claiming a lack of resources.
Instead, it established a hotline for children and
others to report abuses, has a minimal staff, gets
about 200 requests a year, visits homes for
educational purposes, advises violators to stop their
practices, occasionally removes abused children, but
barely addresses the problem Shahinian called
tantamount to slavery and condemned.
After a nine-day visit in
early June, she said Haiti's Restavek system:
"deprives children of their
family environment and violates their most basis
rights such as the rights to education, health and
food as well as subjecting them to multiple forms of
abuse including economic exploitation, sexual violence
and corporal punishment, violating their fundamental
right to protection from all forms of violence."
She condemned professional
recruiters who exploit children for financial gain and
called for establishing a National Commission to
eliminate the problem. She recommended registering all
of them, providing alternative income generating
programs for poor families, compulsory free primary
education, and training for government officials to
address the issue. Under the current Preval
government, practically nothing has been done so far.
In June 2009, the US State
Department Trafficking in Persons Report called Haiti
a:
"Special Case for the
fourth consecutive year as the new government formed
in September 2008 has not yet been able to address the
significant challenges facing the country, including
human trafficking."
Urging its government "to
take immediate action to address its serious
trafficking-in-persons problems," it was silent about
America's role in ousting Aristide and the fascist
regime it installed. In collusion with Haitian elites,
the result has been rampant oppression, sham
elections, destruction of the majority democratic
opposition, jails overflowing with political
prisoners, and ending the beneficial political,
economic and social changes Haitians briefly enjoyed.
Now the State Department
calls Haiti a:
"source, transit, and
destination country for men, women, and children
trafficked for the purposes of forced labor and sexual
exploitation. Haitian women, men, and children are
trafficked into the Dominican Republic, The Bahamas,
the United States, Europe, Canada, and Jamaica for
exploitation in domestic service, agriculture, and
construction....Several NGOs noted a sharp increase in
the number of Haitian children trafficked for sex and
labor to the Dominican Republic and The Bahamas during
2008," the majority being Restaveks, including those
trafficked internally.
Dismissed and runaway
Restaveks comprise "a significant proportion of the
large number of street children, who frequently are
forced to work in prostitution or street crime by
violent criminal gangs. Women and girls from the
Dominican Republic are trafficked into Haiti for
commercial sexual exploitation."
Some Haitians in the
Dominican Republic, The Bahamas and America become
virtual slaves as forced labor on sugar-cane
plantations, in agriculture and construction. To a
large degree, America bears major responsibility, yet
is silent and initiates no change.
The Restavek Foundation
Founder Jean-Robert Cadet
was once one himself, "endur(ing) years of physical
and emotional abuse as a domestic slave until he
received access to education -first in Haiti and later
in the United States."
He now addresses the
problem on his web site (restavekfreedom.org) and by
speaking at colleges and universities throughout
America and to government organizations globally. He
also uses his foundation to help trapped children,
providing them opportunities for education, paying for
their tuition, uniforms and books, feeding them once
a day, monitoring their health and well-being, and
restoring their dignity.
His mission is to end
Haitian child slavery and give hope to those enslaved.
The Restavek Foundation "invest(s) in Haiti so that
Haiti will allow us to invest in the children" -
through a network of over 500 advocates across the
country acting as a "voice for the voiceless."
In the aftermath of Haiti's
quake, the Foundation is providing food and other
essentials to areas not reached by others. They need
help and ask for donations on their web site.
Post-Quake Child Trafficking
On February 1, New York
Times writer Ginger Thompson headlined, "Case Stokes
Haiti's Fear for Children, and Itself," reporting
that, on January 29, 10 Americans were detained at the
Dominican border for illegally trying to spirit 33
children from the country.
"The 10 Americans, the
authorities said, had crossed the line." Haitian Prime
Minister Jean-Max Bellerive called them "kidnappers
(who) knew what they were doing was wrong." National
Judicial Police chief, Frantz Thermilus, said: "What
surprises me is that these people would never do
something like this in their own country." He's wrong
as the US is beset with adult and child trafficking,
and the problem is global.
Affiliated with two
Idaho-based Baptist churches, the excuse given rings
hollow, saying that: "God wanted us to come here to
help children, we are convinced of that. Our hearts
were in the right place."
They were headed for a
Dominican Republic orphanage, existing only on paper,
later to be "adopted" by US Evangelical Christian
families. When stopped at the border, Haitian agents
found them packed inside a bus. None had passports,
and no documents authorized their transfer.
SOS Children's Villages ran
the Port-au-Prince orphanage where they were
temporarily placed. Its regional director, Patricia
Vargas, told Agence France Presse that "The majority
of these children have families. Some of the older
ones said their parents are alive, and some gave an
address and phone number." One eight-year child said
"I am not an orphan. I still have my parents." The
Haitian Social Ministry confirmed that so did others.
On January 30, SOS Villages was asked to help under
the circumstances.
Its officials accused the
Idaho group of taking "children under false pretenses.
The allegations have to be thoroughly investigated but
the Haitian police consider this incident as organized
child trafficking."
Laura Silsby heads the
groups as CEO of a Boise-based online shopping web
site called personalshopper.com. Last November, it
filed papers with Idaho authorities to establish the
New Life Children's Refuge, ostensibly as an NGO. As
part of their "Haitian Orphan Rescue Mission," they
plan a Dominican Republic orphanage for up to 200
children, earmarked for US adoptions, conversion to
Evangelical Christianity, and apparent extremist
indoctrination, given Silsby's admission that Sarah
Palin and the Manhattan Initiative are two of her
favorites, the latter a right-wing Evangelical group
opposed to abortion and gay marriage.
Although one scheme was
stopped, UNICEF says, pre and post-quake, documented
evidence shows many Haitian child abductions,
including from hospitals, orphanages, and the street
where so many are vulnerable.
The agency explained that
pre-quake, Haiti had about 380,000 orphaned children.
The number now is incalculable, but the message is
clear. Many are on their own own to find food, shelter
and medical care, making them vulnerable to
traffickers for profit and exploitation.
In 2000, the UN adopted the
Convention against Transnational Organized Crime, then
in 2003, its Protocol to Prevent, Suppress and Punish
Trafficking in Persons, especially Women and Children.
Under its provisions, trafficking is illegal, defined
as:
"Trafficking in persons
(by) the recruitment, transportation, transfer,
harboring or receipt of persons, by means of the
threat or use of force or other forms of coercion, of
abduction, of fraud, of deception, of the abuse of
power or of a position of vulnerability or of the
giving or receiving of payments or benefits to achieve
the consent of a person having control over another
person, for the purpose of exploitation."
Exploitation is defined,
"at a minimum," to include "prostitution of others or
other forms of sexual exploitation, forced labour or
services, slavery or practices similar to slavery,
servitude or the removal of organs."
Anyone under 18 is
considered a child, and State Parties are called on to
adopt laws or other measures "to establish criminal
offences" under the Convention. Haiti hasn't done so,
leaving its children vulnerable to trafficking and
other abuses.
Pan American Development Foundation (PADF)
Report on Child Trafficking in Haiti
In November 2009, PADF
published a report titled, "Lost Childhoods in Haiti:
Quantifying Child Trafficking, Restaveks & Victims of
Violence." It's a disturbing picture of "extremely
poor children who are sent to other homes to work as
unpaid domestic servants," and end up being beaten,
sexually assaulted, and exploited by host families.
Later, in their teens, "they are commonly tossed to
the streets to fend for themselves and become victims
of other types of abuses" because Haitian labor laws
require employers to pay domestic workers over aged
15.
PADF studied the problem
through "the largest field survey on human rights
violations, with an emphasis on child trafficking,
abuse and violence." It conducted 1,458 personal
interviews in troubled urban neighborhoods in
Port-au-Prince, Cap-Haitien, Gonaives, Saint-Marc and
Petit-Goave and learned the following:
-- children are moving from
impoverished households to less poor ones;
-- in urban areas, an
estimated 225,000 children are Restaveks, two-thirds
of them girls;
-- the impoverished Cite
Soleil Port-au-Prince neighborhood had the highest
percentage of Restavek children - 44%;
-- families in the southern
peninsula communities of Les Cayes, Jacmel, Jeremie
and Leogane supply the most Restaveks to
Port-au-Prince;
-- some children sent to
host families for education aren't classified as
Restaveks, but perform similar duties;
-- more than 7% of urban
households report incidents of rape, murder,
kidnapping, or gang involvement, but the true number
is likely higher as many incidents go unreported; and
--Port-au-Prince households
had over double the amount in other cities (16%).
Over 30% of surveyed
households have Restavek children, affecting 16% of
all children and 22% of them treated that way.
Overall, study findings show Restaveks aren't solely a
rural phenomenon given the high proportion of urban
households with them.
The majority of urban ones
were born in rural Haiti, but urban households
comprise the largest recruitment destination. All
regions supply them, the most important being southern
peninsula rural areas. In addition, many households
take in children as school borders, the vast majority
treated like Restaveks without the label, and some
families with them also send their own children to
live with host families in return for services
performed.
Kinship is a prime and more
socially acceptable recruiting source. However, family
ties may camouflage poor treatment when children are
away during the school year. They traditionally do
household chores at home, but as Restaveks far more in
an abusive environment.
PADF cited other issues,
including:
-- growing numbers of
street children forced to beg to survive;
-- young women (including
underage adolescents) recruited for prostitution;
-- Restavek cross-border
trafficking to the Dominican Republic, including for
sex;
-- kidnappings to sell
children and women into bondage; and
-- violence in urban
neighborhoods, including organized murder, rape, other
physical assaults, and kidnappings committed by the
Haitian National Police, UN MINUSTAH peacekeepers,
other armed "authorities," and politically partisan
gangs.
PADF Summary of Key Findings
An "astonishing high
percentage" of surveyed children live with host
families - 32% and 30% of surveyed households had
Restaveks present. Other findings included:
-- 16% of all surveyed
children were placed as Restaveks, and 22% were
treated that way, including 44% in Cite Soleil;
-- two-thirds of Restaveks
are girls;
-- poverty is the root
cause of Restavek placements;
-- a significant minority
of Restavek households placed their own children with
host families; yet kinship ties don't shield them from
abusive treatment, even for those sent only for the
school year;
-- "the magnitude of the
intra-urban movement of children
within....metropolitan area(s) is (a) significant new
development;"
-- most urban Restaveks
were born in rural areas, but in Port-au-Prince, other
households are the largest single source; thus
Restavek recruitment no longer can be viewed solely as
a rural to urban phenomenon;
-- other victimization
forms include rape, murder, kidnapping, and
cross-border trafficking; and
-- most abused victims
don't seek help from authorities because little is
available, including in court.
Public Policy and Haitian Law
Haitian law doesn't
specifically prohibit trafficking internally or
cross-border, so seeking judicial redress is futile,
and the police child protection unit doesn't pursue
these cases because statutory restrictions don't
exist.
Nonetheless, in March 2009,
the Haitian parliament ratified (but doesn't enforce)
the UN Convention against Transnational Organized
Crime and its protocols on human trafficking and
smuggling. The parliament is also considering a human
trafficking law, but real social change was never
before achieved, except under Aristide. Haitians have
been oppressed for over 500 years. The current
government has done nothing to change things, and now
can't under occupation.
A Final Comment
Given their overwhelming
hardships, the last thing Haitians needed was the
January 12 quake (the most destructive in the region
in 170 years), affecting Port-au-Prince, surrounding
areas, and other parts of the country, devastating the
capital, killing many thousands, injuring many more,
and disrupting the lives of three million or more
people, adding to their crushing burden.
Many tens of thousands lost
everything left stranded on their own, given the lack
of essential aid most still aren't getting. Everything
is in shambles. Rubble is everywhere. The National
Cathedral, Palace of Justice, and Supreme Court
collapsed. So did hotels, other municipal buildings,
business structures, schools and hospitals.
People still wander the
streets dazed, searching for loved ones. The National
Palace was heavily damaged, now under US control as a
command center. So was UN headquarters, and many of
its employees remain missing. In the wealthy
Petionville neighborhood, a hospital, ministry
building and private homes collapsed. So did other
buildings across the capital and in rural communities
like Leogane. Jacmel in the southeast also sustained
major damage.
The Parliament collapsed.
So did public buildings and hospitals, and those
functioning are packed with victims or others queued
outside waiting for treatment. The World Food Program
(WFP) reached only 100,000 people as of January 31. On
February 2, targeted vaccinations will begin that,
according to the world's foremost authority, Dr. Viera
Scheibner, will exacerbate, not lessen the
communicable disease problem as vaccines often cause
the diseases they're designed to prevent.
Enough food, clean drinking
water and medical care remain urgent problems, the US
occupation force doing nothing to help and actually
obstructing aid deliveries by restricting incoming
humanitarian flights and letting supplies stack up
undelivered at the airport it controls. As a result,
vital shipments are reaching a fraction of the
millions who need them.
In its latest February 1
report, OCHA said hundreds of thousands of displaced
Haitians need shelter provisions. Poor sanitation
greatly increases the risk of communicable diseases
and remains a huge challenge, and virtually all
essential needs are in short supply.
It added:
"Preliminary results from
Port-au-Prince found that 93 percent of people
surveyed said there was no adequate lighting; 93
percent said there were no latrines for women and men;
41 percent said the level of security was acceptable
and 29 percent said it was very poor. The preliminary
findings confirm that food, water, sanitation, health
and shelter are the areas with the most urgent needs."
Before the tragedy, most
Haitians had no running water, electricity,
sanitation, or other public services leaving them on
their own, virtually out of luck, and now out of it
entirely with relief expected only for the privileged,
not them beyond lip service and bare essentials, way
short of what's needed.
It's an old story for some
of the most abused, exploited, and neglected people
anywhere, mostly by their powerful northern neighbor
allied with Haitian economic elites; names like Acra,
Apaid, Baussan, Biglo, Boulos, Brandt, Coles, Kouri,
Loukas, Madsen, Mevs, Nadal, Sada, Vital, Vorbes, and
other influential bourgeoisie interests exploiting
their own people for profit.
Hundreds of thousands
around the country are still coping with the damage
that summer 2008 storms caused leaving them without
food, clean water, other essentials, and around 70,000
homes destroyed. Gonaives, Haiti's third largest city
became uninhabitable. Most of Haiti's livestock and
food crops were destroyed as well as farm tools and
seeds for replanting. Irrigation systems were
demolished, and buildings throughout the country
collapsed or were damaged, many severely. Now this,
affecting Port-au-Prince and surrounding areas with
the overall toll yet to be assessed.
For poor Haitians, it's
already known. Decimated by unimaginable hardships and
depravation, they're on their own and out of luck
because of the callous disregard for their lives and
well-being - and their country now occupied for the
duration.
Stephen Lendman is a
Research Associate of the Centre for Research on
Globalization. He lives in Chicago and can be reached
at
lendmanstephen@sbcglobal.net. Also visit his blog
site at sjlendman.blogspot.com and listen to the
Lendman News Hour on RepublicBroadcasting.org Monday -
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