Work in Canada 🇨🇦 secret has been revealed, they are human trafficking for sex, (SEX), don’t be a victim.
A new report examining the national human trafficking corridor also reveals surprising statistics on the victim population.
The study was published by the Canadian Anti-Human Trafficking Center (CCEHT) and found that there are human trafficking corridors in nearby provinces. There are also obvious exceptions in Yukon, the Northwest Territories and Nunavut, where human trafficking and demand exist, but limited transportation infrastructure affects the rapid movement of traffickers.
Trafficking corridors are some of the main routes traveled by millions of Canadians every day, both provincial and within provinces. Some of them include Ontario Highway 401, from Montreal to Windsor, passing through several densely populated areas, such as the Greater Toronto area, and the corridor between Calgary, Edmonton, Fort McMurry and the prairie. The report found Alberta traffickers and people outside the province, namely Ontario and Quebec. These corridors are used in North Ke Province. It found a growing trend in this particular corridor that most of the victims are from Quebec, with little or no English. This is regarded as another way to control the victim.
Canada's West Coast Circuit between Quebec and Alberta is the most commonly identified route reported by respondents. Victims often fly from Montreal to Calgary, where they work near the airport or the city center, or move along the provincial corridor between Calgary and Fort McMurry. In the east, the corridor between Halifax, Nova Scotia and Moncton, New Brunswick, is well known. Strip clubs can operate legally in New Brunswick, but not in Nova Scotia.
The victims are often Canadians.
Although intercontinental human trafficking is widespread, many people may not realize that a large proportion of victims in Canada are Canadian girls and women, not victims from other countries. The report found that 84% of the participants in the study were Canadians between the ages of 18 and 19-24. That didn't even scratch the surface.
CCEHT spokesman Benita Hans Raj told Yahoo that this accounts for only 5% to 10% of the country's overall crisis.
Hans Raj explained that trafficking begins when potential victims are seduced to establish and build trust-building relationships with their boyfriends. This relationship finally went through the stage of manipulation into sex trafficking.
She said, "most of these women are ordinary Canadian girls who really believe that they have something to do with their boyfriends who ultimately manipulate them until they become their Romeo pimps."
Some key characteristics identified among survivors of sex trafficking include previous or present participation in child welfare systems, experiences of poverty, homelessness or housing instability, history of drug abuse or addiction, and history of trauma, abuse and/or domestic or sexual violence.
2 comments:
This is so real, don’t let us to be victim ooo
Make God they guide us ooo, it’s not just easy to live a meaningful life, without money
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