By Avaaz
Amita was a sweet 9 year old girl. One day, she was kidnapped, taken to a city far away and forced to have sex with dozens of men per day. 5 terror-filled years later, she died from a beating at age 14.
Millions of women and girls are abducted, terrorised and sold for rape every year. The rape traders are running their brutal businesses in the shadows in our communities across the world, but if we join forces with investigators and experts we can expose the criminals, break rape trade rings and free women and children!
Every minute this problem continues is too long. We can't bring Amita back, but every minute, two more Amitas are sold into horror. Let's stop it now -- donate at
https://secure.avaaz.org/en/fight_rape_trade/
Comments
Re: Fight the rape trade
check out CNN on rape video game:
http://www.cnn.com/video/
Wow - $400,000 donated in the last two days!
Wow - $400,000 donated in the last two days! If enough of us come together, we can stop this horror. Read below and join the fight:
Dear friends,
Millions of women and girls are sold for rape every year -- 2 every minute. We can save these young girls from horror.
Amita's story is about the worst nightmare imaginable, but millions of women and girls are traded for rape every year -- one of the most evil problems in our world today. The best way to tackle it is to expose the rape traders and kill their profits. In January Avaaz members voted to make this a top priority this year, so we're beginning work across the world with expert teams, local campaigners and investigators to shut down these brutal and shadowy businesses.
Every minute this problem continues is too long. We can't bring Amita back, but every minute, two more Amitas are sold into horror. Let's stop it now -- click to donate:
https://secure.avaaz.org/en/fight_rape_trade/?vl
In the annual Avaaz poll, almost 90% of our community voted for tackling the rape trade as a top campaigning priority for 2010. Here are the actions we are developing:
* Supporting a team of expert sting operators to pose as sex customers, working with local law enforcement to expose the rape trade one location at a time, breaking trafficking rings, freeing the women and girls and hurting the profits of the rape traders.
* Publicly shaming complicit officials and politicians in countries where official corruption is part of the rape trade. The ads would name and shame individuals and campaign for their removal and reform.
* Running a global day of action outside slave houses - exposing locations across the world where trade victims are being sold and raped This shocking violence is often going on just down the road from our homes and schools.
* Lobbying elected leaders to make this issue a priority and use the full resources of our governments to stop it, including passing better legislation to protect and provide for the women caught in the rape trade.
* Partnering with sex work activists, who have deep understanding of the business, to expose the violence and take on the traffickers.
* Tracking key trade routes and blocking ships carrying kidnapped girls and women in key transit ports.
* Going after rape traders directly by publicly exposing them with WANTED billboards in their communities.
https://secure.avaaz.org/en/fight_rape_trade/?vl
Avaaz emails like this one have generated millions for other causes like Burma, climate change and Haiti. That's what it will take to stop this trade. It's not about how much we give, but how many of us do. Right now, a girl's life is being transformed into an unimaginable horror, and we can do something to stop it:
https://secure.avaaz.org/en/fight_rape_trade/?vl
In the time it took to read this email, we've lost another 4 girls. There's no time to waste.
With hope and determination,
Alice, Raluca, Ricken, Graziela, Paula, Paul, Benjamin, Pascal, Milena and the entire Avaaz team.
More Information:
BBC on modern slavery:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/in_depth/world/slavery/default.stm
Source for statistics and more information about human trafficking at UN Office on Drugs and Crime:
http://www.unodc.org/unodc/en/human-trafficking/what-is-human-traffickin...
FBI's work on human trafficking:
http://www.fbi.gov/hq/cid/civilrights/slavery.htm
Council of Europe Convention on Action against Trafficking in Human Beings:
http://conventions.coe.int/Treaty/Commun/QueVoulezVous.asp?NT=197&CM=1&C...