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Trafficked: The Terrifying True Story of a British Girl Forced into the Sex Trade

Page 24

by Sophie Hayes


  Our aims are therefore to help create communities in which it’s more difficult for traffickers to operate and to hide themselves and their victims and, as well as raising awareness of trafficking, there are a myriad ways of doing that. One of the things we’re currently working on with other agencies is putting together training for teachers so that they can talk to children about grooming and pimping, and make them aware of the need to protect themselves and their friends.

  There are always likely to be signs that someone has been trafficked from a community. For example, as was the case for Sophie, they might have rented a flat but not be living in it and/or have suddenly and uncharacteristically left a job without contacting their work colleagues, friends or members of their family. And in the community they’ve been trafficked into, they might be the unhappy-looking foreign girl who moves into a flat with a man, and who comes and goes at odd times of the day and night.

  Of course, as well as being alert to the tell-tale signs of trafficking, anyone who suspects that someone in their community has been trafficked needs to know what to do about it. So something else that concerns us at STOP THE TRAFFIK is who might see what’s happening and who might be the right person to step in and intervene in a way that’s appropriate in a particular case, because what would work for one person might be completely the wrong thing to do for another.

  For example, in some countries you wouldn’t go to the police, because they don’t have the training to deal with the issues involved – perhaps they don’t understand trafficking or they haven’t established a victim-centred approach. In the UK, however, you can contact your local police station or Human Trafficking Centre, or any of the services listed below. And you don’t need to be afraid of getting it wrong: the police won’t mind if it turns out that you’ve made a mistake.

  STOP THE TRAFFIK works closely with the police in several countries, as well as with the United Nations and the Serious Organised Crime Agency (SOCA) in the UK. One of the things we need in order to be able to make it harder for traffickers to function is community information. No one can be truly invisible. Even people who have been trafficked for domestic servitude and who rarely set foot outside the place where they work must sometimes be seen by someone.

  People know what’s going on in their community and there’s always someone who knows who’s responsible when a serious crime is committed. Which is why, by raising awareness of trafficking, we hope that we’ll be able to encourage people to realise that they need to release the information they have and help us to protect those who are vulnerable.

  Sophie’s life was taken away from her almost overnight, and what she experienced during the next six months could have destroyed her. But although what happened to her will be with her for ever, her recovery has been extraordinary. After an ordeal like Sophie’s, many people would want to stay close to home, where they feel safer. But Sophie chose to move to another city and into a house with flatmates she didn’t know. It was a choice that had nothing to do with escaping – she has a loving mother, family and friends; it was all about creating something new. And that’s exactly what she’s managed so successfully to achieve.

  It was very hard for Sophie for the first year or two after she came home. But she finally feels safer. Her networks are stronger, the man who trafficked her has been in prison (so she knows he isn’t invincible after all), she has a very good job and she’s worked hard to develop some great new friendships. And now that she’s tasted life again, she won’t give it up easily.

  If we can all work together, perhaps more men, women and children who’ve been trafficked will be able to feel the same.

  Bex Keer

  STOP THE TRAFFIK

  STOP THE TRAFFIK

  Men, women and children are being exploited by force or by trickery all around the world. They are victims of human trafficking, a global crime by means of which criminals earn vast amounts of money from abusing the human rights of vulnerable individuals. Every community in the world is affected, whether people are being trafficked from, through or into that community, or whether the goods and services available in that community are produced using the forced labour of human-trafficking victims.

  Due to the nature of this crime, it is very difficult to obtain reliable, up-to-date information about how many people are affected.

  The International Labour Organization estimates that there are at least 12.3 million people in forced labour worldwide. Of these, approximately 2.5 million are victims of human trafficking and half are under the age of eighteen. 43 per cent of victims are trafficked for commercial sexual exploitation, of which 98 per cent are female. 32 per cent of victims are trafficked for economic exploitation, of which 56 per cent are female. The remaining 25 per cent of victims are exploited in more than one way: for domestic servitude, street crime, drug cultivation, benefit fraud, forced marriage or other forms of abuse.

  The nature of trafficking also varies from region to region. For example, 90 per cent of all human trafficking in the Middle East is for economic exploitation, but in Europe only 25 per cent is for this purpose.

  People are trafficked for profit. It is estimated that the global profits generated from the work of the world’s 2.5 million forced labourers who have been trafficked amount to US$31.6 billion per year. This represents an annual average of US$13,000 per victim. Profits from trafficking are far higher in industrial countries than in non-industrial countries, rivalling those of major global companies. Spending on efforts to tackle human trafficking by governments and charities pales by comparison, however, which is why local communities have such a key role to play.

  More information about human trafficking can be found on the website www.stopthetraffik.org.

  Simon Chorley

  UK Coordinator

  STOP THE TRAFFIK

  Contact Details

  Sophie Hayes Foundation

  www.sophiehayesfoundation.org

  The Sophie Hayes Foundation works to increase awareness and raise funds to assist the NGOs that work so hard to combat human trafficking and to support survivors of this terrible crime.

  Police emergency – 999 If you think someone is in imminent danger, you must call 999. Do not try to intervene yourself.

  CrimeStoppers – 0800 555 111 If you want to report something anonymously.

  Salvation Army – 020 7367 4500 If you are a victim in need of support.

  UK Human Trafficking Centre

  Telephone: 0114 2523891

  For advice and information.

  STOP THE TRAFFIK

  Telephone: +44 (0)207 921 4258

  Email: info@stopthetraffik.org

  Website: www.stopthetraffik.org

  For information about community action and resources. This is also a good first port of call for anyone who wants information and advice.

  William Wilberforce Trust

  Telephone: +44 (0)207 052 0336

  Email: info@williamwilberforcetrust.org.uk

  Website: www.williamwilberforcetrust.org.uk

  Provides frontline practical support for women coming out of situations of trafficking. Through the volunteer-led project it equips and empowers these women to choose their futures, free from abuse, and to use their voices to change society and bring hope to other women who have gone through similar experiences.

  Acknowledgements

  For the first couple of years after I came home it felt as though I were living in purgatory. One man took away years of my life when I was young and should have been happy. I know I can never reclaim the years I’ve lost, but I can make sure that they become the foundation of a new life – for me and, I hope, for other people too. Everyone deserves freedom and basic human rights, and although he stole my freedom, I am going to do everything in my power to fight back and make a difference.*

  The hardest part about writing my story has been the fact that, for me, it isn’t just a story. It was my life – and something reminds me of it in some way every day so that I see images
in my head of what happened, like a film playing over and over again. But instead of making me weaker, that reinforces the strength other people have helped to give me. I remember that I am strong and that I will not let him beat me, and this gives me the inspiration and motivation I need to be able to do what I can to try to help prevent similar crimes being perpetrated against others.

  The amazing people who have protected and guided me since I returned to the UK have saved my life. They are the ones who have made it possible for my book to be written, and I want to thank them with all my heart.

  It devastates me knowing what my mum had to endure. I lived through what happened, but she can only imagine it, and I’m not sure which is worse. My family have been my world; they have supported me and have never treated me any differently as a result of what happened. My mum and my stepdad are my guardian angels, not least because they rescued me from a fate that I don’t even want to think about.

  I was very fortunate to make contact with STOP THE TRAFFIK. Bex, particularly, became my lifeline when I thought I was going to drown; she has become my friend and my inspiration, and I will never be able to thank her properly for what she’s done for me. I am also indebted to Ruth, Simon and the rest of the team at STOP THE TRAFFIK, who have become my extended family, and to the friends who have helped me to see things differently by showing me that there are amazing people in the world and by giving me hope that one day I might find someone who loves me for who I am. My friends have helped me to open my eyes, and for that – and many other things – I thank them.

  I am also grateful to Robin – not only for what he’s done for me, but for what he does every day for so many other people – and to everyone who works with him in the battle against human trafficking and tries to make a difference.

  And I want to thank all the people involved in making my book a reality – my publisher, HarperCollins, Jane, my wonderful writer, and my agent.

  Thank you to all the people who have helped and supported me, and thank you for reading my story.

  Copyright

  HarperCollinsPublishers

  77–85 Fulham Palace Road,

  Hammersmith, London W6 8JB

  www.harpercollins.co.uk

  First published by HarperCollinsPublishers 2012

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  TRAFFICKED. © Sophie Hayes 2012. All rights reserved under International and Pan-American Copyright Conventions. By payment of the required fees, you have been granted the nonexclusive, nontransferable right to access and read the text of this e-book on-screen. No part of this text may be reproduced, transmitted, downloaded, decompiled, reverse-engineered, or stored in or introduced into any information storage and retrieval system, in any form or by any means, whether electronic or mechanical, now known or hereinafter invented, without the express written permission of HarperCollins e-books.

  Sophie Hayes asserts the moral right to be identified as the author of this work

  A catalogue record of this book is available from the British Library

  ISBN 978-0-00-743888-4

  EPub Edition © NOVEMBER 2011 ISBN: 978-0-00-743954-6

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  * I have recently set up the Sophie Hayes Foundation (www.sophiehayesfoundation.org) in the hope of being able to help increase awareness and raise funds to assist the NGOs that work so hard to combat human trafficking and to support survivors of this terrible crime.

  If you’ve got a story to tell, or just want to make contact with someone who might be able to understand how you feel, then please do write to me via the website. I would love to be able to include some ‘survivors’ stories’ on it, so that other people can see that, however long and dark the tunnel may be, there can be light at the end of it.

 

 

 


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