SG/SM/12559

Survivors of Human Trafficking ‘Champions of Truth and Justice,’ Secretary-General Tells Headquarters Event on Heeding Voice of Victims of Human Trafficking

22 October 2009
Secretary-GeneralSG/SM/12559
Department of Public Information • News and Media Division • New York

Survivors of Human Trafficking ‘Champions of Truth and Justice’, Secretary-General

 

Tells Headquarters Event on Heeding Voice of Victims of Human Trafficking

 


Following is the text of UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon’s remarks at the Headquarters special event: “Giving Voice to Victims and Survivors of Human Trafficking”, today, 22 October:


I thank the Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights for making today’s event possible.


Above all, I am grateful to the people who have suffered from trafficking and who are here with us today to speak of their experiences and to speak out about these horrible crimes.  They are much more than victims or even survivors ‑‑ they are champions of truth and justice.  I salute their resilience and courage.


Today’s event focuses on their voices.  Their testimony and ideas will shed a powerful light on this problem; a light that will expose terrible abuses and illuminate our way forward as we join forces to end this crime.


Human trafficking injures, traumatizes and kills individuals.  It devastates families and threatens global security.


And it involves abhorrent practices, including debt bondage, forced labour, torture, organ removal, sexual exploitation and slavery-like conditions.


Traffickers deny victims their fundamental rights, including freedom of movement and freedom from abuse, as well as access to heath, education and a decent living.


Our fight against human trafficking is guided by three “P”s:  prevention; protection; and prosecution.


We must also empower victims.  They need support systems, information and education. They need viable ways to earn a living.


They also need criminal justice systems to pursue traffickers, and subject them to serious penalties.  Conviction rates in most countries are microscopic compared to the scope of the problem.  But when States help victims, the victims can help States break up trafficking networks.


Human trafficking touches on many issues, from health and human rights to development and peace and security.  Our response must be equally broad, and must tackle this challenge at its roots.


We must also recognize that the global economic crisis is making the problem worse.  Jobs and food are getting scarcer.  Social exclusion is on the rise, making minorities and women especially vulnerable.  As people leave their homes, pushed by difficult conditions and pulled by hopes for a better life elsewhere, we must remain vigilant.


The stories we will hear today highlight the importance of a rights-based response to human trafficking.


Let us heed this call to action.


Let us recall the words of the UN Protocol to Prevent, Suppress and Punish Trafficking in Persons, which calls for parties to “alleviate the factors that make persons, especially women and children, vulnerable to trafficking, such as poverty, underdevelopment and lack of equal opportunity”.


I look forward to working more closely with all of you in saving individuals from traffickers and rescuing whole societies from this crime.


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For information media • not an official record
For information media. Not an official record.