Trafficking worldwide and in Albania

A trafficked girl (right)
receives counselling at
The Hearth's shelter
© Anti-Slavery International
 

What is trafficking?
Trafficking is the fastest growing form of slavery today. Traffickers use violence, coercion and deception to take people away from their homes and families, and force them to work against their will. People are trafficked into domestic work, prostitution, farm labour, factory work, and other exploitative labour.

A recent United States Government report estimates 800,000-900,000 people are trafficked across borders worldwide each year. Research indicates at a minimum, hundreds of women and children are trafficked into the United Kingdom every year. People are lured by promises of well-paid work, education, or marriage; opportunities unattainable at home due to poverty, discrimination or war.

People who migrate in search of work are often forced by restrictive and complicated immigration laws to rely upon third parties to help them travel. If they are lucky, the person or agency is honest, if not they find themselves in the hands of a trafficker, whose only interest is to move them to an unfamiliar location and make money by exploiting them.

Once the person arrives at their destination, they discover the promised job does not exist, but they still have to pay back money for travel, which can be as much as US$40,000. This is inflated by interest and charges for accommodation and food. When the trafficked person is paid a fraction of what they were promised, or nothing at all, it is impossible for them to pay the debt.

Traffickers may use violence, torture, rape and intimidation to control their victims. Threats against friends and family, further force the victims to comply with their demands. To make escape more difficult travel documents and passports are often taken away, and traffickers tell victims that police are involved or that they will arrest and deport them to ensure they are too afraid to escape.

Human trafficking is not new, but is rapidly increasing. Easy profits made from exploitation, growing deprivation and marginalisation, discrimination against women, restrictive migration laws, lack of information and insufficient penalties against traffickers have contributed to its increase. The United Nations estimates trafficking in people generates US$7 billion per year.


Trafficking in Albania

The trafficking of women and children became a major issue in Albania from the 1990s. After almost 50 years of communist rule, Albania's transition to democracy brought massive social and economic upheaval in which criminal networks thrived. Gangs used Albania's geographical position as a gateway into Western Europe, for the trafficking of drugs, weapons and people.

High levels of unemployment and severe rural poverty, as well as the traditionally low status of women, have contributed to an explosion in the trafficking of girls and women from Albania to countries such as Belgium, France, Greece, Italy and the UK. Most are from rural areas where families are largely ignorant of the dangers their daughters face. Although some, driven by poverty and lack of opportunity, are complicit in the girls' exploitation, as is seen from Adriana's experience:

When Adriana was 15 her father forced her to marry Driton. After the wedding, they went to Greece. While staying with Driton's friends, she overheard them talking about work she was expected to do; she realised it was prostitution. That night she challenged Driton, when she refused, he threatened and beat her until she gave in.

They flew to Paris using false documents. Driton forced her to work as a prostitute and beat her regularly. Adriana called her parents and, too ashamed to tell the truth, she told them she was unemployed and couldn't send money. Her father told her not to bother lying, he knew what she was doing as he had arranged it. Adriana later discovered he sold her for two million leke (US$16,600). Adriana escaped, but was caught by police and returned to Albania. She is now in The Hearth's shelter and works in a textile factory, but she does not earn enough to live independently.

There has been little support for the trafficked women returned to Albania until recently. The Hearth set up the first shelter for trafficked Albanian girls and women in 2001, and there are now other shelters in the capital Tirana as well. Women face many challenges in trying to reintegrate into society. They are socially excluded due to the stigma attached to prostitution in much of Albania. They face an ongoing threat from their traffickers who have lost their "investment", so shelters have to maintain maximum security to ensure the women's safety. High levels of unemployment continue to make it difficult for women to find work to support themselves.

The Government has been slow act. Corrupt local officials often colluded with traffickers, or at least ignored their activities. The Government was not convinced trafficking was a genuine problem and Vera Lesko and other campaigners' work was also frustrated by authorities' concern that admitting to the problem would damage Albania's reputation.

The Government, however, has become increasingly receptive to Vera Lesko and other anti-trafficking campaigners, as well as to international pressure. In 2001, a national strategy was developed and a central anti-trafficking unit was established in the Ministry of Order, with local offices throughout the country.

The problem of trafficking into prostitution reached its peak in the mid to late-1990s and the number of victims is reported to have fallen recently. This is in part due to aggressive government policy, including the stricter policing of the coast between Albania and Italy. But trafficking remains a serious problem.

Relevant laws against human trafficking

Trafficking in human beings is a criminal offence. In January 2001, the Albanian parliament introduced sentences of five to 15 years for trafficking for prostitution. Corruption and lack of government protection for victims has made it difficult for cases to be brought to trial and successfully prosecuted.

Vera Lesko & The Hearth