https://www.elpasotimes.com/story/news/crime/2016/08/07/human-trafficking-among-mexicos-lucrative-crimes/88270930/Human trafficking among Mexico's lucrative crimes
Lorena Figueroa, El Paso Times Published 4:28 p.m. MT Aug. 7, 2016 | Updated 11:13 p.m. MT Aug. 7, 2016
JUAREZ — After drug trafficking, human trafficking in México is the illicit activity that generates the most money for criminal groups, according to a high-ranked official of the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime.
“It gives organized crime more revenue than human smuggling and gun trafficking,” said Mariana Alegret Cendejas, regional officer of International Cooperation of the UNODC, at a conference designed to prevent and combat human trafficking.
Considered a form of modern slavery, human trafficking involves the use of force, fraud or coercion to obtain some type of labor, involuntary servitude or commercial sex. It differs from human smuggling, which centers on the illegal importation of people into a country, officials said.
Mexican and U.S. officials, as well as representatives from area organizations, gathered in Juárez last week to learn about human trafficking and share information on how to fight it. The week-long conference was organized by the Inter-institutional Committee against Human Trafficking, which comprises representatives from the three levels of government and nonprofit groups.
Human trafficking generates more than $2.4 billion in revenues worldwide, Alegret Cendejas said, citing findings from the Global Report on Trafficking in Person 2014, the most recent report the UNODC has published. The report, released every two years, is based on the findings of 128 countries, including Mexico.
Alegret Cendejas said she did not have specific numbers for México.
However, it is estimated that human trafficking earns criminal groups about $42 million every year, according to a recent news report by Excelsior, a national Mexican newspaper.
The vast majority of human trafficking survivors are Mexican nationals, according to the report. Figures show that 352 of the 755 victims reported between 2010-13 were from Mexico. The rest of the victims were from countries from Central America, Western Europe, South and Eastern Asia, Alegret Cendejas said.
“In Mexico, domestic human trafficking is more prevalent because it mostly happens within the victims’ close circles,” she explained.
According to the report, a growing trend is forced labor, which experts said is difficult to identify and report despite accounting for 48 percent of all human trafficking cases in Mexico.
Forced labor is mostly seen in farms, construction sites, and mining and manufacturing plants, Alegret Cenejdas said.
Another trend that is growing at “alarming rates” is the number of children trafficked, she said.
In 2013, there were 107 children reported as victims of trafficking, compared to 51 in 2010, according to the report. More than half of those children were girls.
“Children who have access to Internet are the most vulnerable to fall victims of trafficking, aside from the indigenous, disabled and returned migrants,” Alegret Cendejas said.
She said that children are easily lured to become domestic servants or sexual slaves. Young girls, for example, are commonly persuaded by boyfriends to get into the world of commercial sex, she added.
Alegret Cendejas urged the Mexican government to implement policies to protect vulnerable groups from human trafficking through campaigns directed to each particular group.
Meanwhile, UNODC is working with Mexico to create an awareness campaign, expected to be launched in early 2017, she said.
The agency is also working with Mexican law enforcement agencies to give them more tools to fight human trafficking.
Mexico is one of the few countries that has a federal anti-trafficking law. The law prohibits all forms of human trafficking, prescribing penalties of up to 30 years.
“The result of this law has been a better understanding of the problem and an increase in reported human trafficking cases,” Wilfrido Campbell Saavedra, head of the National Institute of Migration in Chihuahua, said in a previous interview. The institute coordinates the committee that organized the conference.
He said there have been only 19 convictions in the state of Chihuahua since 2004. There have been no convictions in new cases or arrests so far in 2016, he added.
In Mexico, 86 traffickers were convicted, including some for forced labor, in 2015, according to the U.S. Department of State's Trafficking in Persons 2016 report.
They received sentences ranging from 15 to 58 years in prison, the report said, which was based on news reports.
That number, however, is only a fraction of the 578 individuals prosecuted in 2015 in Mexico, the report said.
A factor behind the low rate of human-trafficking arrests and convictions is the complex relationship between a victim and the perpetrator, which can hamper the victim's ability to seek help, officials said.
Lorena Figueroa may be reached at 546-6129; lfigueroa@elpasotimes.com; @LFigueroaEPT on Twitter.