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Be a ‘Force Multiplier’ in the Fight Against Human
Trafficking
Within
a global struggle to combat a problem of epidemic proportions,
Flight Attendants can play a key role in the fight against human
trafficking. In a recent meeting between AFA International
President Veda Shook and Department of Homeland Security (DHS)
Secretary Janet Napolitano concerning aviation security issues,
Secretary Napolitano invited AFA to participate in an initiative
to involve aviation employees in the fight against human
trafficking. The DHS Customs and Border Protection’s “Blue
Lightning” initiative provides a voluntary mechanism to identify
potential human trafficking victims and to notify federal
authorities for front line workers at U.S. commercial airlines
that operate U.S.-bound international routes.
“We like to talk about ‘boots on the ground’,” said Customs and
Border Protection (CBP) Acting Commissioner David V. Aguilar.
“Flight Attendants and airline employees will be the ‘boots in
the air’ fighting human trafficking.” Human trafficking is a
modern-day form of slavery. It is defined as:
• the recruitment, harboring, transport, provision or obtaining
of a person by force, fraud, or coercion for the purpose of
involuntary servitude, peonage, debt bondage, or slavery; or
• Sex trafficking, in which a commercial sex act is induced by
force fraud or coercion—or the person induced to perform such
acts is under age 18.
It is estimated that at least 12.3 million adults and children
are enslaved around the world and that 56 percent are women and
girls. The International Labor Organization (ILO) estimated that
in 2005, 980,000 to 1,225,000 boys and girls were in forced
labor situations as a result of trafficking. In 2000, Congress
passed the Victims of Trafficking and Violence Protection Act,
which launched a large-scale effort by the U.S. government to
fight human trafficking.
In
2010, Secretary Napolitano launched the
Blue Campaign – a first-of-its-kind initiative to coordinate
and enhance the Department’s anti-human trafficking efforts. The
components of the Department of Homeland Security combat human
trafficking through a variety of programs, and the Blue Campaign
coordinates and unites this work.
The ‘Blue Lightning Initiative’ is coordinated as part of the
Blue Campaign by CBP in collaboration with the Department of
Transportation. The key to the success of this initiative,
however, is the participation of the frontline workers in the
airline industry.
As Flight Attendants, we are uniquely positioned to identify
human traffickers and assist their victims. Flight crews are
skilled observers, and with the appropriate training, they can
be the frontline against trafficking, according to CBP.
Indicators of human trafficking can include: physical control of
travel documents of an adult traveler by a co-traveler;
restricting the movement and social interaction of an adult
traveler by a co-traveler; an adult traveler who is unclear on
details of his/her final destination or point of contact; or a
child traveler who appears to be accompanied by someone claiming
to be the parent or guardian who is in fact not related to the
child. Blue Lightning will roll out a training program in 2012
tailored for Flight Attendants who do U.S.-bound international
flying, which will be available through AFA and participating
airlines.
In-flight notification gives authorities time to investigate and
formulate an appropriate response, which may include
coordination with other federal agencies. With the appropriate
training, Flight Attendants can become a ‘force multiplier’ in
the fight against trafficking.
To Learn More About Human Trafficking
• Go to:
www.dhs.gov/humantrafficking
• Take the DHS
General Awareness Training
To Report Human Trafficking*
If you suspect a case of human trafficking:
• Call toll-free (866) 347-2423 from anywhere in the U.S.,
Mexico, and Canada.
• Call (802) 872-6199 (not toll-free) from any country in the
world.
• Report the tip online at
www.ice.gov/tips.
• Follow your airline’s reporting policy and procedure,
including using cockpit communications or other methods as part
of the Blue Lightning Initiative.
* Please identify your tip as a Blue Lightning Initiative (BLI)
report.
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