Sex Trafficking Victims: Disposable or Human

During his swearing-in ceremony at the United States State Department this week, Ambassador Mark Lagon, the new head of the Office to Combat Trafficking in Persons (TIP), declared, “It is never negotiable to treat people as less than human, as property.” Secretary of State Condoleeza Rice expressed her commitment to anti-trafficking efforts and pledged support for Ambassador Lagon as he seeks to end the practice of treating people as less-than-human.

The TIP office and hundreds of United States non-governmental organizations (NGOs), including Concerned Women for America (CWA), are working to end modern day slavery –– the world-wide practice of treating people as disposable commercial commodities. Thanks to the vision of President George W. Bush, the United States is leading the way in ending this scourge on humanity. In fact, as the ambassador noted, “A movement of faith-based groups, feminists, government officials, legislators, international agencies and brave individual advocates have closed ranks” to end trafficking. Ambassador Lagon’s remarks provided a passionate summary: “Around the world, as a function of U.S. Government leadership, there has been a real paradigm shift in awareness about human trafficking, and a sensitivity that victims are just that –– victims, not criminals or illegal aliens.”

Ambassador Lagon enumerated the variety of situations where human beings are bought and sold as commercial commodities:

“Brick kiln slave laborers in India or China are not disposable; they are people. Central American girls sexually consumed by predatory tourists are not disposable; they are people. South Asian domestic servants abused in the Persian Gulf are not disposable; they are people. Child soldiers in Burma and Uganda are not disposable; they are people. American citizens exploited in prostitution in Las Vegas are not disposable; they are people.”

We have all heard the catchy song lyrics about “what happens in Mexico” staying in Mexico or the advertisements about “what happens in Vegas” staying in Vegas. Ambassador Lagon addressed that fallacy. “What ‘happens’ in these places does not ‘stay’ in these places. It is a stain on humanity. Every time a woman, a girl, a foreign migrant is treated as less than human, the loss of dignity for one is a loss of dignity for us all.”

It was gratifying to hear the ambassador directly address the problems of American popular culture in glamorizing the “ho” and “pimp.” He said, “It’s high time we treat pimps as exploiters rather than hip urban rebels. When a pimp insists his name or symbol be tattooed on his ‘girls’ he is branding them like cattle –– dehumanizing them, treating them like property.”