The guy should be arrested for his confession alone. It sounds very real and true, he is a compulsive liar, I am sure he twisted things around. However, one thing is for sure, he is responsible for her death and or not reporting her medical problem and disposing of her. How could Aruba just let a killer walk around, it makes the country look bad in my eyes. If they won't re arrest him because he is an arubian native and they feel like they can protect him and stood by him because they felt he was innocent at first. Then when he makes this confession they act like its no big deal and its not true and he was tying to impress the driver? Are you serious? This would never happen in USA.
Please will somebody out there give Natalee Holloway justice and get this guy behind bars, or take justice in your own hands and toss him in the ocean, left to die.
They would sit up & take notice if the American people woulv've boycotted Aruba, 'but' the Americans will never stick by Americans, you got Hindu's, Jewish,Chinese, Mexicans, every nationality, 'but' Americans. We always sell out to the higest bidder. Is'nt it strange that the Mexicans can close down work places for hours & the illegals can jam the streets without the fear of getting arrested & we can't stick behind an american woman trying to get support for a murdered daughter.
The three questions asked by Amber P. Amber makes excellent points. Questions that hit at the centre. :
........................................ ..............
1)"If it was Nelson Obuder's decision not to re-arrest Joran Van der Slooth, was Obuder's decision any way based on the fact that his father was and still maybe a Judge in training? If not, can you prove his father did not have any political influence in this case on his son's behalf?"
........................................ ..............
2) "How did the Aruban Government come up with the decision that Joran Van der Slooth may be mentally ill? Even so, mentally ill people do commit some of the most horrible of crimes. However, Joran Van der Slooth then bragged about them to a reporter and his comments were recorded for all to see! It may be indeed be the case that he was just saying these things to show off. However he did not have to go into SO MUCH DETAIL about what happened! Is it not true that only the person who really did the crime would only know so much detail about what really happened, as he stated in his video tape?"
........................................ ..............
3) "Many people feel that the Aruban Government should investigate the Aruban Police Force for corruption. The way they handled the case appears to be grossly inadequate! It seems to many that the Aruban Police did not to properly investigate the case starting from the day the crime was committed. It also appears to many that they deliberately delayed their investigation until it was too late to get any physical evidence, and many feel they did that on purpose, so Van der Slooth would go free!"
Information for question three
........................................ ..............
The Dutch judges from Curacao also share culpability in ignoring these statements by the three suspects. One in particular was Judge Robert “Bob” Smid who is reported to be a friend of Paulus Van Der Sloot, and had even stayed at his home while visiting the island. On August 30, 2005 Judge Smid issued a ruling that Joran should be held another 30 days, flew back to Curacao and immediately faxed in a reversal of his ruling. Two and a half weeks later Joran Van Der Sloot and the Kalpoe brothers were all released from giving further testimony in the case.
........................................ ..............
On September 3, 2005 Joran Van der Sloot was released from police custody and fled to Holland. Drawing on an obscure Dutch judgement in another case, the judge ruled that Joran’s schoolwork was apparently more important than giving any further testimony in the Natalee Holloway case, even though he and the Kalpoe brothers disagree on key points about what happened the night Natalee disappeared.
Aruban Court of Appeals Rules that Joran van der Sloot Won't Be Re-Arrested after His Taped Confession
........................................ .............
By Siobhan Morrissey
Originally posted Friday February 15, 2008 11:55 AM EST People Magazine
........................................ ..............
Joran van der Sloot won't be rearrested in the disappearance of Natalee Holloway – despite what appeared to be his recent confession to the crime.
........................................ ............
An Aruban court of appeal ruled late Thursday that while van der Sloot remains the prime suspect, he could not be rearrested solely on the confession, which was secretly taped inside a vehicle rigged with hidden cameras and recording devices.
........................................ .............
The court found the Dutch student's statements could not be corroborated. Because he has given so many different versions of what happened the night Natalee disappeared nearly three years ago, it's hard to tell what really happened, the court says.
........................................ .............
"Considering the possibility of a serious personality disorder – as voiced by the prosecution – combined with a personal history of untrue statements and remarks, which even according to the suspect himself are frequently false, the Court of Appeal has reasons for doubt regarding the incriminating character of the 'car-statement,'" the court stated.
........................................ ..............
Van der Sloot told a "friend" (who secretly recorded him for a Dutch TV show) that the Alabama teen went into convulsions and died on the beach the night she disappeared in May 2005. Then, van der Sloot said, someone dumped her at sea
The three questions asked by Amber P. mentioned in the post below are the following, I wish I could put them in seperate paragraphs for easier reading, but Amber makes excellent points. Questions that hit at the centre. I suggest cutting them and pasting them so they don't all run togethor and think about what she says:
1)"If it was Nelson Obuder's decision not to re-arrest Joran Van der Slooth, was Obuder's decision any way based on the fact that his father was and still maybe a Judge in training? If not, can you prove his father did not have any political influence in this case on his son's behalf?"
2) "How did the Aruban Government come up with the decision that Joran Van der Slooth may be mentally ill? Even so, mentally ill people do commit some of the most horrible of crimes. However, Joran Van der Slooth then bragged about them to a reporter and his comments were recorded for all to see! It may be indeed be the case that he was just saying these things to show off. However he did not have to go into SO MUCH DETAIL about what happened! Is it not true that only the person who really did the crime would only know so much detail about what really happened, as he stated in his video tape?"
3) "Many people feel that the Aruban Government should investigate the Aruban Police Force for corruption. The way they handled the case appears to be grossly inadequate! It seems to many that the Aruban Police did not to properly investigate the case starting from the day the crime was committed. It also appears to many that they deliberately delayed their investigation until it was too late to get any physical evidence, and many feel they did that on purpose, so Van der Slooth would go free!"
Information for question three
........................................ ..............
The Dutch judges from Curacao also share culpability in ignoring these statements by the three suspects. One in particular was Judge Robert “Bob” Smid who is reported to be a friend of Paulus Van Der Sloot, and had even stayed at his home while visiting the island. On August 30, 2005 Judge Smid issued a ruling that Joran should be held another 30 days, flew back to Curacao and immediately faxed in a reversal of his ruling. Two and a half weeks later Joran Van Der Sloot and the Kalpoe brothers were all released from giving further testimony in the case.
........................................ ..............
On September 3, 2005 Joran Van der Sloot was released from police custody and fled to Holland. Drawing on an obscure Dutch judgement in another case, the judge ruled that Joran’s schoolwork was apparently more important than giving any further testimony in the Natalee Holloway case, even though he and the Kalpoe brothers disagree on key points about what happened the night Natalee disappeared.
How do we get justice for Natalee Holloway now? Joran ver de Sloots confession was front page news all around the world, not just the United States. The decision not to re-arrest Joran was front page news around the world. Aruba's press release was put out by a low level policeman. But high profile decisions that are going to be reported on are not made by a lowly policeman, they are made at the very top. In this case it seems more than obvious that the decision not to prosecute Joran was made by Aruba's Prime Minister, Nelson Obuder. You can't let him get away with that. It is still possible, I believe, to have Joran arrested and tried. But Aruba has drawn it's line in cement -- the answer is no. If you want to change that then you are going to have to hold Nelson Obuder accountable. You have to attack him for the decision in your radio talk shows, your letters to the editor and in places like YouChoose.Net. If you want to see Joran ver de Sloot convicted for the murder of Natalee Holloway, Americans will have to make Nelson Obuder's name stink worse than if fifty skunks decided to let fly all at the same time. Amber P. hit the nail right square on it's head. She stated three questions that Nelson Obuder should be made to answer, in essence three ways of attacking him. That's my viewpoint from here in Canada. But Amber P. is correct and she is an American. Three vital points about Obuder's decsion need to be challenged. Obuder can not possibly answer those three points. If Americans want justice for Natalee you are going to have to kick up the volume so loud that the speakers on the stereo risk being blown apart. And you have to make it abundantly clear that you want Obuder's head on a platter if Joran ver de Sloot is not arrested, tried and convicted for Natalee Holloway's murder.
First Google now is now on Yahoo! My other thread shows up on Google. But this thread hasn't got enough supporters to be in the "Popular" campaign and I only created it the day before yesterday. But it shows up on Yahoo! when you search Natalee Holloway Boycott, fifth from the top:
Boycott Aruba for Natalee Holloway | YouChoose
... and they only way to get Natalee Holloway Justice is to boycott Aruba ... Forum Discussion for Boycott Aruba for Natalee Holloway. Post your comment here! ... www.youchoose.net/campaig n/boycott_aruba... - 45k - Cached
YouChoose.Net somebody must be looking at your site. How could a thread from inside a Website be listed in Yahoo!'s data base?
Oh yeah,, I think that both Google and Yahoo are against you now... would it be because they are careful that you don't steal their article and change them to benefit your own personal anger? I wonder!!!!!
Davis Re Keeping the Boycott Alive and Nelson Obuder: His address in Aruba is at the bottome of this post. I'll try and confirm it tomorrow. But if I can suggest a more effective method is to e-mail the editor of you local newspaper, Fox News, ABC News, NBC News, CBS News, CNN News, Time Magazine, all the media you can think of. I suspect the American people would love a name and face to direct American's anger over what happened to Natalee. That is what I intend to do and start posting links to America media tomorrow. For example, Fox News -- in my e-mail I'm going to ask why they haven't confronted Nelson Obuder -- the man how made the decison to quash the arrest of Natalee's murderer. I'll make the point that a decision of that kind could have only been made by the Prime Minister himself, Nelson Obuder. I'll ask Fox News what the American State Department is planning to do about Obuder's decision. Along with that I am going to include one of MK C posts and one of VanG's posts that slander Beth Twitty and their urls, especially MK C's one about Beth. Fox News I'm sure will be glad to get a new angle to follow up. I thought that would be the best way to keep the boycott alive -- give the American people a name and a face to direct their anger at. It's a good idea to write Aruba, but I'm afraid that all well get back is MC K, but more polite. But what would be the effect if Fox News received 200 letters and/or e-mails complaining about Nelson Obuder? Here is the address I found.
Nelson Obuder Prime Minister of Aruba, Parlamento di Aruba, Oranjestad, Aruba
Regarding "600,000 Reasons to Boycott Aruba" I typed the quotes myself from a report that the United Nations wrote on Human Trafficking. The quotes are accurate. There is no URL except to order the report. I tripled checked the parts I quoted and the parts I didn't put in quotes are my own synopsis of the rest of the chapter. I thought that would be obvious that the parts not in quotes are my synopsis. If you want something from a URL, do a search on drug trafficking and Aruba. You will find URL from U.S. law enforcement agencies that states Aruba is one of the major transit point for drug trafficking. But I'll leave that for someone else.
HERE IS THE ORIGANAL POST: FROM THE US DEPARTMENT OF STATE! (NOT from the United Nations Task Force etc etc.. Like LIAR Wesley S have said...
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PLEASE, Read and compare! YOU can notice all the changes LIAR Wesley S has done. YOU See AMericans... HE uses this site to lie. HE still think you are not smart enough. HE is playing with your emotions. Are we going to let him continue doing that?
.
OH... AND HERE IS THE WEBSITE LINK FOR THAT ARTICLE. I ENCOURAGE YOU TO PRINT BOTH AND COMPARE WHERE THE LIAR HAS MADE SO MANY CHANGES.... (isn't that illegal, by the way) This website exist. It is a wonder that he says that he obtained this info by order and then typed in the info him self. While it is the same info the website gave, only that Wesley made a few changes to it. But before I showed this link, he said that he COPIED PASTED the information from a website. In other sites, people are already beginning to see what a liar he has become to benefit his own sick anger and personal vangance. YOu see, when Wesley was 13, he was abused by either his father or mother. He was turtured, beaten, adn so many sad things happened to him, and this happened in his home in Canada. ANd nothing was done for him to get justice. So, he uses this case to look for his own justice.
. http://www.state.gov/r/pa /ei/rls/38790.h...
.
.
The U.S. Government adopted a strong position against legalized prostitution in a December 2002 National Security Presidential Directive based on evidence that prostitution is inherently harmful and dehumanizing, and fuels trafficking in persons, a form of modern-day slavery.
Prostitution and related activities—including pimping and patronizing or maintaining brothels—fuel the growth of modern-day slavery by providing a façade behind which traffickers for sexual exploitation operate.
Where prostitution is legalized or tolerated, there is a greater demand for human trafficking victims and nearly always an increase in the number of women and children trafficked into commercial sex slavery.
Of the estimated 600,000 to 800,000 people trafficked across international borders annually, 80 percent of victims are female, and up to 50 percent are minors. Hundreds of thousands of these women and children are used in prostitution each year.
WOMEN AND CHILDREN WANT TO ESCAPE PROSTITUTION
The vast majority of women in prostitution don’t want to be there. Few seek it out or choose it, and most are desperate to leave it. A 2003 study first published in the scientific Journal of Trauma Practice found that 89 percent of women in prostitution want to escape.[1] And children are also trapped in prostitution—despite the fact that international covenants and protocols impose upon state parties an obligation to criminalize the commercial sexual exploitation of children.
PROSTITUTION IS INHERENTLY HARMFUL
Few activities are as brutal and damaging to people as prostitution. Field research in nine countries concluded that 60-75 percent of women in prostitution were raped, 70-95 percent were physically assaulted, and 68 percent met the criteria for post traumatic stress disorder in the same range as treatment-seeking combat veterans[2] and victims of state-organized torture.[3] Beyond this shocking abuse, the public health implications of prostitution are devastating and include a myriad of serious and fatal diseases, including HIV/AIDS.
A path-breaking, five-country academic study concluded that research on prostitution has overlooked "[t]he burden of physical injuries and illnesses that women in the sex industry sustain from the violence inflicted on them, or from their significantly higher rates of hepatitis B, higher risks of cervical cancer, fertility complications, and psychological trauma."[4]
STATE ATTEMPTS TO REGULATE PROSTITUTION
State attempts to regulate prostitution by introducing medical check-ups or licenses don’t address the core problem: the routine abuse and violence that form the prostitution experience and brutally victimize those caught in its netherworld. Prostitution leaves women and children physically, mentally, emotionally, and spiritually devastated. Recovery takes years, even decades—often, the damage can never be undone.
PROSTITUTION CREATES A SAFE HAVEN FOR CRIMINALS
Legalization of prostitution expands the market for commercial sex, opening markets for criminal enterprises and creating a safe haven for criminals who traffic people into prostitution. Organized crime networks do not register with the government, do not pay taxes, and do not protect prostitutes. Legalization simply makes it easier for them to blend in with a purportedly regulated sex sector and makes it more difficult for prosecutors to identify and punish those who are trafficking people.
The Swedish Government has found that much of the vast profit generated by the global prostitution industry goes into the pockets of human traffickers. The Swedish Government said, "International trafficking in human beings could not flourish but for the existence of local prostitution markets where men are willing and able to buy and sell women and children for sexual exploitation."[5]
To fight human trafficking and promote equality for women, Sweden has aggressively prosecuted customers, pimps, and brothel owners since 1999. As a result, two years after the new policy, there was a 50 percent decrease in women prostituting and a 75 percent decrease in men buying sex. Trafficking for the purposes of sexual exploitation decreased as well.[6] In contrast, where prostitution has been legalized or tolerated, there is an increase in the demand for sex slaves[7] and the number of victimized foreign women—many likely victims of human trafficking.[8]
Grant-making implications of the U.S. government policy
As a result of the prostitution-trafficking link, the U.S. government concluded that no U.S. grant funds should be awarded to foreign non-governmental organizations that support legal state-regulated prostitution. Prostitution is not the oldest profession, but the oldest form of oppression.
600,000 REASONS TO BOYCOTT ARUBA
Re: Nelson Obuder, to the people who have e-mailed me about this post, Nelson Obuder is the Prime Minister of Aruba and Fredis Refenjol is the Governor of Aruba. The power to pass laws, I believe, belongs to Nelson Obuder and the Parliament of Aruba, Fredis Refenjol is mostly a figurehead, a representative of the Queen of the Netherlands. The Minister of Justice is Rudy Croes. But in answer to your questions "Nelson Obuder" is likely the name you are looking for.
The following is an exerpt on the United Nations, not the United States but the United Nations' Task Force on Human Trafficking. The following comes from the section that deals with countries where prostitution is legal. Prostitution in Netherlands is legal. The same task force deals with other countries where prostitution has been legalized besides the Netherlands. he United Nations investigation has found in it's own words, that legalized prostitution in the Netherlands is "a facade" for human trafficking and uses Aruba as a transit point. Since this website doesn't allow for bolding of titles, I've changed them to capital letters, where you see capital letters, it is a new section. Also note that the United Nations report does not say Aruba is doing anything illegal, but instead Aruba considers whatever happens as being legal because it is legal within their own borders. Note the United Nations' conclusion about this attitude in the last paragraph. It is from this where the "sex slave" theory about Natalee's disappearance originated. Not from some conspiracy theory, but the United Nations. We now know that Natalee was murdered and this post has nothing to do with her. Words within parentheses are mine. The report is about human trafficking and prostitution and is an excerpt from a much larger report. The words in parentheses are there to show that the report is referring to the relationship between human trafficking and LEGALIZED prostitution.
"Legalized Prostitution in the Netherlands and Aruba—including pimping and patronizing or maintaining brothels—fuel the growth of modern-day slavery by providing a façade behind which traffickers for sexual exploitation operate."
(My own note on the preceding paragraph. They do not use the word illegal but "facade" prostitution under Aruban law is not illegal.)
"Legalized Prostitution creates a safe haven for criminals who participate in illegal prostitution in South and Central America. Legalized prostitution in the Netherlands has made Aruba the main transit destination for the trafficking of women and children for sexual exploitation from South and Central America." (from South America to Aruba then to the Netherlands from the Netherlands to other countries in Europe)
"According to the United States State Department, the Aruban justice system acts as a facilitator for this trade by impeding families and others (other nations) attempts to locate missing persons."
"Where prostitution is legalized or tolerated, there is a greater demand for human trafficking victims and nearly always an increase in the number of women and children trafficked into commercial sex slavery."
It is estimated that between 600,000 to 800,000 women and children are trafficked for legal and illegal prostitution from (through) Aruba each year. Of these 600,000 to 800,000 it is estimated that this number includes hundreds of thousands of women and children who are sold into illegal prostitution. Of those sold into illegal prostitution 80 percent of victims are female.
(Note: the following deals prostitution of children who are under the age of consent in their home country. The forced prostitution occurs in the country where they have been transported to, so again, under Aruban laws, no law has been broken) "Fifty percent of chidren illegly trafficked to other countries from South and Central America are trafficked through Aruba (to the Netherlands and from the Netherlands to other countries) Legalized prostitution results in far more underground illegal trafficking than where prostitution is illegal.
PROSTITUTION IS INHERENTLY HARMFUL
Few activities are as brutal and damaging to people as prostitution. Field research in nine South and Central American countries concluded that 60-75 percent of women in prostitution were raped, 70-95 percent were physically assaulted, and 68 percent met the criteria for post traumatic stress disorder in the same range as treatment-seeking combat veterans and victims of state-organized torture. Beyond this shocking abuse, the public health implications of prostitution are devastating and include a myriad of serious and fatal diseases, including HIV/AIDS.
The burden of physical injuries and illnesses that women in the sex industry sustain from the violence inflicted on them, or from their significantly higher rates of hepatitis B, higher risks of cervical cancer, fertility complications, and psychological trauma."
STATE REGULATION TO PROTECT PROSTITUTES
(The Netherlands prides itself on it's regulations that safeguard prostitution)
"State attempts where prostitution is legal to regulate health problems and protect women from violence by introducing medical check-ups or licenses are often a façade that hides the core problem: the routine abuse and violence that form the prostitution experience involves brutal violence to silence those who wish to escape. Prostitution leaves women and children physically, mentally, emotionally, and spiritually devastated. Recovery takes years, even decades—often, the damage can never be undone.
Legalization of prostitution expands the market for commercial sex, opening markets for criminal enterprises and creating a safe haven for criminals who traffic people into prostitution. Organized crime networks do not need to register with governments, do not pay taxes (on human trafficking), and do not protect prostitutes.
"LEGALIZATION
Legalization simply makes it easier for them (human traffickers) to blend in with a purportedly regulated sex sector and makes it more difficult for prosecutors (from the victims countries) to identify and punish those who are trafficking people."
This is me again: Yes Aruba argues that nothing illegal happens and under their laws, technically to themselve it doesn't, but I still maintain that Aruba and Arubans live off the human misery of others. Arubans can disagree with me all they like, I admit I have an attitude towards that country. Others can draw their own conclusions. Boycott Aruba.
600,000 REASONS TO BOYCOTT ARUBA
Re: Nelson Obuder, to the people who have e-mailed me about this post, Nelson Obuder is the Prime Minister of Aruba and Fredis Refenjol is the Governor of Aruba. The power to pass laws, I believe, belongs to Nelson Obuder and the Parliament of Aruba, Fredis Refenjol is mostly a figurehead, a representative of the Queen of the Netherlands. The Minister of Justice is Rudy Croes. But in answer to your questions "Nelson Obuder" is likely the name you are looking for.
The following is an exerpt on the United Nations, not the United States but the United Nations' Task Force on Human Trafficking. The following comes from the section that deals with countries where prostitution is legal. Prostitution in Netherlands is legal. The same task force deals with other countries where prostitution has been legalized besides the Netherlands. he United Nations investigation has found in it's own words, that legalized prostitution in the Netherlands is "a facade" for human trafficking and uses Aruba as a transit point. Since this website doesn't allow for bolding of titles, I've changed them to capital letters, where you see capital letters, it is a new section. Also note that the United Nations report does not say Aruba is doing anything illegal, but instead Aruba considers whatever happens as being legal because it is legal within their own borders. Note the United Nations' conclusion about this attitude in the last paragraph. It is from this where the "sex slave" theory about Natalee's disappearance originated. Not from some conspiracy theory, but the United Nations. We now know that Natalee was murdered and this post has nothing to do with her. Words within parentheses are mine. The report is about human trafficking and prostitution and is an excerpt from a much larger report. The words in parentheses are there to show that the report is referring to the relationship between human trafficking and LEGALIZED prostitution.
"Legalized Prostitution in the Netherlands and Aruba—including pimping and patronizing or maintaining brothels—fuel the growth of modern-day slavery by providing a façade behind which traffickers for sexual exploitation operate."
(My own note on the preceding paragraph. They do not use the word illegal but "facade" prostitution under Aruban law is not illegal.)
"Legalized Prostitution creates a safe haven for criminals who participate in illegal prostitution in South and Central America. Legalized prostitution in the Netherlands has made Aruba the main transit destination for the trafficking of women and children for sexual exploitation from South and Central America." (from South America to Aruba then to the Netherlands from the Netherlands to other countries in Europe)
"According to the United States State Department, the Aruban justice system acts as a facilitator for this trade by impeding families and others (other nations) attempts to locate missing persons."
"Where prostitution is legalized or tolerated, there is a greater demand for human trafficking victims and nearly always an increase in the number of women and children trafficked into commercial sex slavery."
It is estimated that between 600,000 to 800,000 women and children are trafficked for legal and illegal prostitution from (through) Aruba each year. Of these 600,000 to 800,000 it is estimated that this number includes hundreds of thousands of women and children who are sold into illegal prostitution. Of those sold into illegal prostitution 80 percent of victims are female.
(Note: the following deals prostitution of children who are under the age of consent in their home country. The forced prostitution occurs in the country where they have been transported to, so again, under Aruban laws, no law has been broken) "Fifty percent of chidren illegly trafficked to other countries from South and Central America are trafficked through Aruba (to the Netherlands and from the Netherlands to other countries) Legalized prostitution results in far more underground illegal trafficking than where prostitution is illegal.
PROSTITUTION IS INHERENTLY HARMFUL
Few activities are as brutal and damaging to people as prostitution. Field research in nine South and Central American countries concluded that 60-75 percent of women in prostitution were raped, 70-95 percent were physically assaulted, and 68 percent met the criteria for post traumatic stress disorder in the same range as treatment-seeking combat veterans and victims of state-organized torture. Beyond this shocking abuse, the public health implications of prostitution are devastating and include a myriad of serious and fatal diseases, including HIV/AIDS.
The burden of physical injuries and illnesses that women in the sex industry sustain from the violence inflicted on them, or from their significantly higher rates of hepatitis B, higher risks of cervical cancer, fertility complications, and psychological trauma."
STATE REGULATION TO PROTECT PROSTITUTES
(The Netherlands prides itself on it's regulations that safeguard prostitution)
"State attempts where prostitution is legal to regulate health problems and protect women from violence by introducing medical check-ups or licenses are often a façade that hides the core problem: the routine abuse and violence that form the prostitution experience involves brutal violence to silence those who wish to escape. Prostitution leaves women and children physically, mentally, emotionally, and spiritually devastated. Recovery takes years, even decades—often, the damage can never be undone.
Legalization of prostitution expands the market for commercial sex, opening markets for criminal enterprises and creating a safe haven for criminals who traffic people into prostitution. Organized crime networks do not need to register with governments, do not pay taxes (on human trafficking), and do not protect prostitutes.
"LEGALIZATION
Legalization simply makes it easier for them (human traffickers) to blend in with a purportedly regulated sex sector and makes it more difficult for prosecutors (from the victims countries) to identify and punish those who are trafficking people."
This is me again: Yes Aruba argues that nothing illegal happens and under their laws, technically to themselve it doesn't, but I still maintain that Aruba and Arubans live off the human misery of others. Arubans can disagree with me all they like, I admit I have an attitude towards that country. Others can draw their own conclusions. Boycott Aruba.
600,000 REASONS TO BOYCOTT ARUBA
Re: Nelson Obuder, to the people who have e-mailed me about this post, Nelson Obuder is the Prime Minister of Aruba and Fredis Refenjol is the Governor of Aruba. The power to pass laws, I believe, belongs to Nelson Obuder and the Parliament of Aruba, Fredis Refenjol is mostly a figurehead, a representative of the Queen of the Netherlands. The Minister of Justice is Rudy Croes. But in answer to your questions "Nelson Obuder" is likely the name you are looking for.
The following is an exerpt on the United Nations, not the United States but the United Nations' Task Force on Human Trafficking. The following comes from the section that deals with countries where prostitution is legal. Prostitution in Netherlands is legal. The same task force deals with other countries where prostitution has been legalized besides the Netherlands. he United Nations investigation has found in it's own words, that legalized prostitution in the Netherlands is "a facade" for human trafficking and uses Aruba as a transit point. Since this website doesn't allow for bolding of titles, I've changed them to capital letters, where you see capital letters, it is a new section. Also note that the United Nations report does not say Aruba is doing anything illegal, but instead Aruba considers whatever happens as being legal because it is legal within their own borders. Note the United Nations' conclusion about this attitude in the last paragraph. It is from this where the "sex slave" theory about Natalee's disappearance originated. Not from some conspiracy theory, but the United Nations. We now know that Natalee was murdered and this post has nothing to do with her. Words within parentheses are mine. The report is about human trafficking and prostitution and is an excerpt from a much larger report. The words in parentheses are there to show that the report is referring to the relationship between human trafficking and LEGALIZED prostitution.
"Legalized Prostitution in the Netherlands and Aruba—including pimping and patronizing or maintaining brothels—fuel the growth of modern-day slavery by providing a façade behind which traffickers for sexual exploitation operate."
(My own note on the preceding paragraph. They do not use the word illegal but "facade" prostitution under Aruban law is not illegal.)
"Legalized Prostitution creates a safe haven for criminals who participate in illegal prostitution in South and Central America. Legalized prostitution in the Netherlands has made Aruba the main transit destination for the trafficking of women and children for sexual exploitation from South and Central America." (from South America to Aruba then to the Netherlands from the Netherlands to other countries in Europe)
"According to the United States State Department, the Aruban justice system acts as a facilitator for this trade by impeding families and others (other nations) attempts to locate missing persons."
"Where prostitution is legalized or tolerated, there is a greater demand for human trafficking victims and nearly always an increase in the number of women and children trafficked into commercial sex slavery."
It is estimated that between 600,000 to 800,000 women and children are trafficked for legal and illegal prostitution from (through) Aruba each year. Of these 600,000 to 800,000 it is estimated that this number includes hundreds of thousands of women and children who are sold into illegal prostitution. Of those sold into illegal prostitution 80 percent of victims are female.
(Note: the following deals prostitution of children who are under the age of consent in their home country. The forced prostitution occurs in the country where they have been transported to, so again, under Aruban laws, no law has been broken) "Fifty percent of chidren illegly trafficked to other countries from South and Central America are trafficked through Aruba (to the Netherlands and from the Netherlands to other countries) Legalized prostitution results in far more underground illegal trafficking than where prostitution is illegal.
PROSTITUTION IS INHERENTLY HARMFUL
Few activities are as brutal and damaging to people as prostitution. Field research in nine South and Central American countries concluded that 60-75 percent of women in prostitution were raped, 70-95 percent were physically assaulted, and 68 percent met the criteria for post traumatic stress disorder in the same range as treatment-seeking combat veterans and victims of state-organized torture. Beyond this shocking abuse, the public health implications of prostitution are devastating and include a myriad of serious and fatal diseases, including HIV/AIDS.
The burden of physical injuries and illnesses that women in the sex industry sustain from the violence inflicted on them, or from their significantly higher rates of hepatitis B, higher risks of cervical cancer, fertility complications, and psychological trauma."
STATE REGULATION TO PROTECT PROSTITUTES
(The Netherlands prides itself on it's regulations that safeguard prostitution)
"State attempts where prostitution is legal to regulate health problems and protect women from violence by introducing medical check-ups or licenses are often a façade that hides the core problem: the routine abuse and violence that form the prostitution experience involves brutal violence to silence those who wish to escape. Prostitution leaves women and children physically, mentally, emotionally, and spiritually devastated. Recovery takes years, even decades—often, the damage can never be undone.
Legalization of prostitution expands the market for commercial sex, opening markets for criminal enterprises and creating a safe haven for criminals who traffic people into prostitution. Organized crime networks do not need to register with governments, do not pay taxes (on human trafficking), and do not protect prostitutes.
"LEGALIZATION
Legalization simply makes it easier for them (human traffickers) to blend in with a purportedly regulated sex sector and makes it more difficult for prosecutors (from the victims countries) to identify and punish those who are trafficking people."
This is me again: Yes Aruba argues that nothing illegal happens and under their laws, technically to themselve it doesn't, but I still maintain that Aruba and Arubans live off the human misery of others. Arubans can disagree with me all they like, I admit I have an attitude towards that country. Others can draw their own conclusions. Boycott Aruba.
600,000 REASONS TO BOYCOTT ARUBA
Re: Nelson Obuder, to the people who have e-mailed me about this post, Nelson Obuder is the Prime Minister of Aruba and Fredis Refenjol is the Governor of Aruba. The power to pass laws, I believe, belongs to Nelson Obuder and the Parliament of Aruba, Fredis Refenjol is mostly a figurehead, a representative of the Queen of the Netherlands. The Minister of Justice is Rudy Croes. But in answer to your questions "Nelson Obuder" is likely the name you are looking for.
The following is an exerpt on the United Nations, not the United States but the United Nations' Task Force on Human Trafficking. The following comes from the section that deals with countries where prostitution is legal. Prostitution in Netherlands is legal. The same task force deals with other countries where prostitution has been legalized besides the Netherlands. he United Nations investigation has found in it's own words, that legalized prostitution in the Netherlands is "a facade" for human trafficking and uses Aruba as a transit point. Since this website doesn't allow for bolding of titles, I've changed them to capital letters, where you see capital letters, it is a new section. Also note that the United Nations report does not say Aruba is doing anything illegal, but instead Aruba considers whatever happens as being legal because it is legal within their own borders. Note the United Nations' conclusion about this attitude in the last paragraph. It is from this where the "sex slave" theory about Natalee's disappearance originated. Not from some conspiracy theory, but the United Nations. We now know that Natalee was murdered and this post has nothing to do with her. Words within parentheses are mine. The report is about human trafficking and prostitution and is an excerpt from a much larger report. The words in parentheses are there to show that the report is referring to the relationship between human trafficking and LEGALIZED prostitution.
"Legalized Prostitution in the Netherlands and Aruba—including pimping and patronizing or maintaining brothels—fuel the growth of modern-day slavery by providing a façade behind which traffickers for sexual exploitation operate."
(My own note on the preceding paragraph. They do not use the word illegal but "facade" prostitution under Aruban law is not illegal.)
"Legalized Prostitution creates a safe haven for criminals who participate in illegal prostitution in South and Central America. Legalized prostitution in the Netherlands has made Aruba the main transit destination for the trafficking of women and children for sexual exploitation from South and Central America." (from South America to Aruba then to the Netherlands from the Netherlands to other countries in Europe)
"According to the United States State Department, the Aruban justice system acts as a facilitator for this trade by impeding families and others (other nations) attempts to locate missing persons."
"Where prostitution is legalized or tolerated, there is a greater demand for human trafficking victims and nearly always an increase in the number of women and children trafficked into commercial sex slavery."
It is estimated that between 600,000 to 800,000 women and children are trafficked for legal and illegal prostitution from (through) Aruba each year. Of these 600,000 to 800,000 it is estimated that this number includes hundreds of thousands of women and children who are sold into illegal prostitution. Of those sold into illegal prostitution 80 percent of victims are female.
(Note: the following deals prostitution of children who are under the age of consent in their home country. The forced prostitution occurs in the country where they have been transported to, so again, under Aruban laws, no law has been broken) "Fifty percent of chidren illegly trafficked to other countries from South and Central America are trafficked through Aruba (to the Netherlands and from the Netherlands to other countries) Legalized prostitution results in far more underground illegal trafficking than where prostitution is illegal.
PROSTITUTION IS INHERENTLY HARMFUL
Few activities are as brutal and damaging to people as prostitution. Field research in nine South and Central American countries concluded that 60-75 percent of women in prostitution were raped, 70-95 percent were physically assaulted, and 68 percent met the criteria for post traumatic stress disorder in the same range as treatment-seeking combat veterans and victims of state-organized torture. Beyond this shocking abuse, the public health implications of prostitution are devastating and include a myriad of serious and fatal diseases, including HIV/AIDS.
The burden of physical injuries and illnesses that women in the sex industry sustain from the violence inflicted on them, or from their significantly higher rates of hepatitis B, higher risks of cervical cancer, fertility complications, and psychological trauma."
STATE REGULATION TO PROTECT PROSTITUTES
(The Netherlands prides itself on it's regulations that safeguard prostitution)
"State attempts where prostitution is legal to regulate health problems and protect women from violence by introducing medical check-ups or licenses are often a façade that hides the core problem: the routine abuse and violence that form the prostitution experience involves brutal violence to silence those who wish to escape. Prostitution leaves women and children physically, mentally, emotionally, and spiritually devastated. Recovery takes years, even decades—often, the damage can never be undone.
Legalization of prostitution expands the market for commercial sex, opening markets for criminal enterprises and creating a safe haven for criminals who traffic people into prostitution. Organized crime networks do not need to register with governments, do not pay taxes (on human trafficking), and do not protect prostitutes.
"LEGALIZATION
Legalization simply makes it easier for them (human traffickers) to blend in with a purportedly regulated sex sector and makes it more difficult for prosecutors (from the victims countries) to identify and punish those who are trafficking people."
This is me again: Yes Aruba argues that nothing illegal happens and under their laws, technically to themselve it doesn't, but I still maintain that Aruba and Arubans live off the human misery of others. Arubans can disagree with me all they like, I admit I have an attitude towards that country. Others can draw their own conclusions. Boycott Aruba.
600,000 REASONS TO BOYCOTT ARUBA
Re: Nelson Obuder, to the people who have e-mailed me about this post, Nelson Obuder is the Prime Minister of Aruba and Fredis Refenjol is the Governor of Aruba. The power to pass laws, I believe, belongs to Nelson Obuder and the Parliament of Aruba, Fredis Refenjol is mostly a figurehead, a representative of the Queen of the Netherlands. The Minister of Justice is Rudy Croes. But in answer to your questions "Nelson Obuder" is likely the name you are looking for.
The following is an exerpt on the United Nations, not the United States but the United Nations' Task Force on Human Trafficking. The following comes from the section that deals with countries where prostitution is legal. Prostitution in Netherlands is legal. The same task force deals with other countries where prostitution has been legalized besides the Netherlands. he United Nations investigation has found in it's own words, that legalized prostitution in the Netherlands is "a facade" for human trafficking and uses Aruba as a transit point. Since this website doesn't allow for bolding of titles, I've changed them to capital letters, where you see capital letters, it is a new section. Also note that the United Nations report does not say Aruba is doing anything illegal, but instead Aruba considers whatever happens as being legal because it is legal within their own borders. Note the United Nations' conclusion about this attitude in the last paragraph. It is from this where the "sex slave" theory about Natalee's disappearance originated. Not from some conspiracy theory, but the United Nations. We now know that Natalee was murdered and this post has nothing to do with her. Words within parentheses are mine. The report is about human trafficking and prostitution and is an excerpt from a much larger report. The words in parentheses are there to show that the report is referring to the relationship between human trafficking and LEGALIZED prostitution.
"Legalized Prostitution in the Netherlands and Aruba—including pimping and patronizing or maintaining brothels—fuel the growth of modern-day slavery by providing a façade behind which traffickers for sexual exploitation operate."
(My own note on the preceding paragraph. They do not use the word illegal but "facade" prostitution under Aruban law is not illegal.)
"Legalized Prostitution creates a safe haven for criminals who participate in illegal prostitution in South and Central America. Legalized prostitution in the Netherlands has made Aruba the main transit destination for the trafficking of women and children for sexual exploitation from South and Central America." (from South America to Aruba then to the Netherlands from the Netherlands to other countries in Europe)
"According to the United States State Department, the Aruban justice system acts as a facilitator for this trade by impeding families and others (other nations) attempts to locate missing persons."
"Where prostitution is legalized or tolerated, there is a greater demand for human trafficking victims and nearly always an increase in the number of women and children trafficked into commercial sex slavery."
It is estimated that between 600,000 to 800,000 women and children are trafficked for legal and illegal prostitution from (through) Aruba each year. Of these 600,000 to 800,000 it is estimated that this number includes hundreds of thousands of women and children who are sold into illegal prostitution. Of those sold into illegal prostitution 80 percent of victims are female.
(Note: the following deals prostitution of children who are under the age of consent in their home country. The forced prostitution occurs in the country where they have been transported to, so again, under Aruban laws, no law has been broken) "Fifty percent of chidren illegly trafficked to other countries from South and Central America are trafficked through Aruba (to the Netherlands and from the Netherlands to other countries) Legalized prostitution results in far more underground illegal trafficking than where prostitution is illegal.
PROSTITUTION IS INHERENTLY HARMFUL
Few activities are as brutal and damaging to people as prostitution. Field research in nine South and Central American countries concluded that 60-75 percent of women in prostitution were raped, 70-95 percent were physically assaulted, and 68 percent met the criteria for post traumatic stress disorder in the same range as treatment-seeking combat veterans and victims of state-organized torture. Beyond this shocking abuse, the public health implications of prostitution are devastating and include a myriad of serious and fatal diseases, including HIV/AIDS.
The burden of physical injuries and illnesses that women in the sex industry sustain from the violence inflicted on them, or from their significantly higher rates of hepatitis B, higher risks of cervical cancer, fertility complications, and psychological trauma."
STATE REGULATION TO PROTECT PROSTITUTES
(The Netherlands prides itself on it's regulations that safeguard prostitution)
"State attempts where prostitution is legal to regulate health problems and protect women from violence by introducing medical check-ups or licenses are often a façade that hides the core problem: the routine abuse and violence that form the prostitution experience involves brutal violence to silence those who wish to escape. Prostitution leaves women and children physically, mentally, emotionally, and spiritually devastated. Recovery takes years, even decades—often, the damage can never be undone.
Legalization of prostitution expands the market for commercial sex, opening markets for criminal enterprises and creating a safe haven for criminals who traffic people into prostitution. Organized crime networks do not need to register with governments, do not pay taxes (on human trafficking), and do not protect prostitutes.
"LEGALIZATION
Legalization simply makes it easier for them (human traffickers) to blend in with a purportedly regulated sex sector and makes it more difficult for prosecutors (from the victims countries) to identify and punish those who are trafficking people."
This is me again: Yes Aruba argues that nothing illegal happens and under their laws, technically to themselve it doesn't, but I still maintain that Aruba and Arubans live off the human misery of others. Arubans can disagree with me all they like, I admit I have an attitude towards that country. Others can draw their own conclusions. Boycott Aruba.
600,000 REASONS TO BOYCOTT ARUBA
Re: Nelson Obuder, to the people who have e-mailed me about this post, Nelson Obuder is the Prime Minister of Aruba and Fredis Refenjol is the Governor of Aruba. The power to pass laws, I believe, belongs to Nelson Obuder and the Parliament of Aruba, Fredis Refenjol is mostly a figurehead, a representative of the Queen of the Netherlands. The Minister of Justice is Rudy Croes. But in answer to your questions "Nelson Obuder" is likely the name you are looking for.
The following is an exerpt on the United Nations, not the United States but the United Nations' Task Force on Human Trafficking. The following comes from the section that deals with countries where prostitution is legal. Prostitution in Netherlands is legal. The same task force deals with other countries where prostitution has been legalized besides the Netherlands. he United Nations investigation has found in it's own words, that legalized prostitution in the Netherlands is "a facade" for human trafficking and uses Aruba as a transit point. Since this website doesn't allow for bolding of titles, I've changed them to capital letters, where you see capital letters, it is a new section. Also note that the United Nations report does not say Aruba is doing anything illegal, but instead Aruba considers whatever happens as being legal because it is legal within their own borders. Note the United Nations' conclusion about this attitude in the last paragraph. It is from this where the "sex slave" theory about Natalee's disappearance originated. Not from some conspiracy theory, but the United Nations. We now know that Natalee was murdered and this post has nothing to do with her. Words within parentheses are mine. The report is about human trafficking and prostitution and is an excerpt from a much larger report. The words in parentheses are there to show that the report is referring to the relationship between human trafficking and LEGALIZED prostitution.
"Legalized Prostitution in the Netherlands and Aruba—including pimping and patronizing or maintaining brothels—fuel the growth of modern-day slavery by providing a façade behind which traffickers for sexual exploitation operate."
(My own note on the preceding paragraph. They do not use the word illegal but "facade" prostitution under Aruban law is not illegal.)
"Legalized Prostitution creates a safe haven for criminals who participate in illegal prostitution in South and Central America. Legalized prostitution in the Netherlands has made Aruba the main transit destination for the trafficking of women and children for sexual exploitation from South and Central America." (from South America to Aruba then to the Netherlands from the Netherlands to other countries in Europe)
"According to the United States State Department, the Aruban justice system acts as a facilitator for this trade by impeding families and others (other nations) attempts to locate missing persons."
"Where prostitution is legalized or tolerated, there is a greater demand for human trafficking victims and nearly always an increase in the number of women and children trafficked into commercial sex slavery."
It is estimated that between 600,000 to 800,000 women and children are trafficked for legal and illegal prostitution from (through) Aruba each year. Of these 600,000 to 800,000 it is estimated that this number includes hundreds of thousands of women and children who are sold into illegal prostitution. Of those sold into illegal prostitution 80 percent of victims are female.
(Note: the following deals prostitution of children who are under the age of consent in their home country. The forced prostitution occurs in the country where they have been transported to, so again, under Aruban laws, no law has been broken) "Fifty percent of chidren illegly trafficked to other countries from South and Central America are trafficked through Aruba (to the Netherlands and from the Netherlands to other countries) Legalized prostitution results in far more underground illegal trafficking than where prostitution is illegal.
PROSTITUTION IS INHERENTLY HARMFUL
Few activities are as brutal and damaging to people as prostitution. Field research in nine South and Central American countries concluded that 60-75 percent of women in prostitution were raped, 70-95 percent were physically assaulted, and 68 percent met the criteria for post traumatic stress disorder in the same range as treatment-seeking combat veterans and victims of state-organized torture. Beyond this shocking abuse, the public health implications of prostitution are devastating and include a myriad of serious and fatal diseases, including HIV/AIDS.
The burden of physical injuries and illnesses that women in the sex industry sustain from the violence inflicted on them, or from their significantly higher rates of hepatitis B, higher risks of cervical cancer, fertility complications, and psychological trauma."
STATE REGULATION TO PROTECT PROSTITUTES
(The Netherlands prides itself on it's regulations that safeguard prostitution)
"State attempts where prostitution is legal to regulate health problems and protect women from violence by introducing medical check-ups or licenses are often a façade that hides the core problem: the routine abuse and violence that form the prostitution experience involves brutal violence to silence those who wish to escape. Prostitution leaves women and children physically, mentally, emotionally, and spiritually devastated. Recovery takes years, even decades—often, the damage can never be undone.
Legalization of prostitution expands the market for commercial sex, opening markets for criminal enterprises and creating a safe haven for criminals who traffic people into prostitution. Organized crime networks do not need to register with governments, do not pay taxes (on human trafficking), and do not protect prostitutes.
"LEGALIZATION
Legalization simply makes it easier for them (human traffickers) to blend in with a purportedly regulated sex sector and makes it more difficult for prosecutors (from the victims countries) to identify and punish those who are trafficking people."
This is me again: Yes Aruba argues that nothing illegal happens and under their laws, technically to themselve it doesn't, but I still maintain that Aruba and Arubans live off the human misery of others. Arubans can disagree with me all they like, I admit I have an attitude towards that country. Others can draw their own conclusions. Boycott Aruba.
600,000 REASONS TO BOYCOTT ARUBA
Re: Nelson Obuder, to the people who have e-mailed me about this post, Nelson Obuder is the Prime Minister of Aruba and Fredis Refenjol is the Governor of Aruba. The power to pass laws, I believe, belongs to Nelson Obuder and the Parliament of Aruba, Fredis Refenjol is mostly a figurehead, a representative of the Queen of the Netherlands. The Minister of Justice is Rudy Croes. But in answer to your questions "Nelson Obuder" is likely the name you are looking for.
The following is an exerpt on the United Nations, not the United States but the United Nations' Task Force on Human Trafficking. The following comes from the section that deals with countries where prostitution is legal. Prostitution in Netherlands is legal. The same task force deals with other countries where prostitution has been legalized besides the Netherlands. he United Nations investigation has found in it's own words, that legalized prostitution in the Netherlands is "a facade" for human trafficking and uses Aruba as a transit point. Since this website doesn't allow for bolding of titles, I've changed them to capital letters, where you see capital letters, it is a new section. Also note that the United Nations report does not say Aruba is doing anything illegal, but instead Aruba considers whatever happens as being legal because it is legal within their own borders. Note the United Nations' conclusion about this attitude in the last paragraph. It is from this where the "sex slave" theory about Natalee's disappearance originated. Not from some conspiracy theory, but the United Nations. We now know that Natalee was murdered and this post has nothing to do with her. Words within parentheses are mine. The report is about human trafficking and prostitution and is an excerpt from a much larger report. The words in parentheses are there to show that the report is referring to the relationship between human trafficking and LEGALIZED prostitution.
"Legalized Prostitution in the Netherlands and Aruba—including pimping and patronizing or maintaining brothels—fuel the growth of modern-day slavery by providing a façade behind which traffickers for sexual exploitation operate."
(My own note on the preceding paragraph. They do not use the word illegal but "facade" prostitution under Aruban law is not illegal.)
"Legalized Prostitution creates a safe haven for criminals who participate in illegal prostitution in South and Central America. Legalized prostitution in the Netherlands has made Aruba the main transit destination for the trafficking of women and children for sexual exploitation from South and Central America." (from South America to Aruba then to the Netherlands from the Netherlands to other countries in Europe)
"According to the United States State Department, the Aruban justice system acts as a facilitator for this trade by impeding families and others (other nations) attempts to locate missing persons."
"Where prostitution is legalized or tolerated, there is a greater demand for human trafficking victims and nearly always an increase in the number of women and children trafficked into commercial sex slavery."
It is estimated that between 600,000 to 800,000 women and children are trafficked for legal and illegal prostitution from (through) Aruba each year. Of these 600,000 to 800,000 it is estimated that this number includes hundreds of thousands of women and children who are sold into illegal prostitution. Of those sold into illegal prostitution 80 percent of victims are female.
(Note: the following deals prostitution of children who are under the age of consent in their home country. The forced prostitution occurs in the country where they have been transported to, so again, under Aruban laws, no law has been broken) "Fifty percent of chidren illegly trafficked to other countries from South and Central America are trafficked through Aruba (to the Netherlands and from the Netherlands to other countries) Legalized prostitution results in far more underground illegal trafficking than where prostitution is illegal.
PROSTITUTION IS INHERENTLY HARMFUL
Few activities are as brutal and damaging to people as prostitution. Field research in nine South and Central American countries concluded that 60-75 percent of women in prostitution were raped, 70-95 percent were physically assaulted, and 68 percent met the criteria for post traumatic stress disorder in the same range as treatment-seeking combat veterans and victims of state-organized torture. Beyond this shocking abuse, the public health implications of prostitution are devastating and include a myriad of serious and fatal diseases, including HIV/AIDS.
The burden of physical injuries and illnesses that women in the sex industry sustain from the violence inflicted on them, or from their significantly higher rates of hepatitis B, higher risks of cervical cancer, fertility complications, and psychological trauma."
STATE REGULATION TO PROTECT PROSTITUTES
(The Netherlands prides itself on it's regulations that safeguard prostitution)
"State attempts where prostitution is legal to regulate health problems and protect women from violence by introducing medical check-ups or licenses are often a façade that hides the core problem: the routine abuse and violence that form the prostitution experience involves brutal violence to silence those who wish to escape. Prostitution leaves women and children physically, mentally, emotionally, and spiritually devastated. Recovery takes years, even decades—often, the damage can never be undone.
Legalization of prostitution expands the market for commercial sex, opening markets for criminal enterprises and creating a safe haven for criminals who traffic people into prostitution. Organized crime networks do not need to register with governments, do not pay taxes (on human trafficking), and do not protect prostitutes.
"LEGALIZATION
Legalization simply makes it easier for them (human traffickers) to blend in with a purportedly regulated sex sector and makes it more difficult for prosecutors (from the victims countries) to identify and punish those who are trafficking people."
This is me again: Yes Aruba argues that nothing illegal happens and under their laws, technically to themselve it doesn't, but I still maintain that Aruba and Arubans live off the human misery of others. Arubans can disagree with me all they like, I admit I have an attitude towards that country. Others can draw their own conclusions. Boycott Aruba.
600,000 REASONS TO BOYCOTT ARUBA
Re: Nelson Obuder, to the people who have e-mailed me about this post, Nelson Obuder is the Prime Minister of Aruba and Fredis Refenjol is the Governor of Aruba. The power to pass laws, I believe, belongs to Nelson Obuder and the Parliament of Aruba, Fredis Refenjol is mostly a figurehead, a representative of the Queen of the Netherlands. The Minister of Justice is Rudy Croes. But in answer to your questions "Nelson Obuder" is likely the name you are looking for.
The following is an exerpt on the United Nations, not the United States but the United Nations' Task Force on Human Trafficking. The following comes from the section that deals with countries where prostitution is legal. Prostitution in Netherlands is legal. The same task force deals with other countries where prostitution has been legalized besides the Netherlands. he United Nations investigation has found in it's own words, that legalized prostitution in the Netherlands is "a facade" for human trafficking and uses Aruba as a transit point. Since this website doesn't allow for bolding of titles, I've changed them to capital letters, where you see capital letters, it is a new section. Also note that the United Nations report does not say Aruba is doing anything illegal, but instead Aruba considers whatever happens as being legal because it is legal within their own borders. Note the United Nations' conclusion about this attitude in the last paragraph. It is from this where the "sex slave" theory about Natalee's disappearance originated. Not from some conspiracy theory, but the United Nations. We now know that Natalee was murdered and this post has nothing to do with her. Words within parentheses are mine. The report is about human trafficking and prostitution and is an excerpt from a much larger report. The words in parentheses are there to show that the report is referring to the relationship between human trafficking and LEGALIZED prostitution.
"Legalized Prostitution in the Netherlands and Aruba—including pimping and patronizing or maintaining brothels—fuel the growth of modern-day slavery by providing a façade behind which traffickers for sexual exploitation operate."
(My own note on the preceding paragraph. They do not use the word illegal but "facade" prostitution under Aruban law is not illegal.)
"Legalized Prostitution creates a safe haven for criminals who participate in illegal prostitution in South and Central America. Legalized prostitution in the Netherlands has made Aruba the main transit destination for the trafficking of women and children for sexual exploitation from South and Central America." (from South America to Aruba then to the Netherlands from the Netherlands to other countries in Europe)
"According to the United States State Department, the Aruban justice system acts as a facilitator for this trade by impeding families and others (other nations) attempts to locate missing persons."
"Where prostitution is legalized or tolerated, there is a greater demand for human trafficking victims and nearly always an increase in the number of women and children trafficked into commercial sex slavery."
It is estimated that between 600,000 to 800,000 women and children are trafficked for legal and illegal prostitution from (through) Aruba each year. Of these 600,000 to 800,000 it is estimated that this number includes hundreds of thousands of women and children who are sold into illegal prostitution. Of those sold into illegal prostitution 80 percent of victims are female.
(Note: the following deals prostitution of children who are under the age of consent in their home country. The forced prostitution occurs in the country where they have been transported to, so again, under Aruban laws, no law has been broken) "Fifty percent of chidren illegly trafficked to other countries from South and Central America are trafficked through Aruba (to the Netherlands and from the Netherlands to other countries) Legalized prostitution results in far more underground illegal trafficking than where prostitution is illegal.
PROSTITUTION IS INHERENTLY HARMFUL
Few activities are as brutal and damaging to people as prostitution. Field research in nine South and Central American countries concluded that 60-75 percent of women in prostitution were raped, 70-95 percent were physically assaulted, and 68 percent met the criteria for post traumatic stress disorder in the same range as treatment-seeking combat veterans and victims of state-organized torture. Beyond this shocking abuse, the public health implications of prostitution are devastating and include a myriad of serious and fatal diseases, including HIV/AIDS.
The burden of physical injuries and illnesses that women in the sex industry sustain from the violence inflicted on them, or from their significantly higher rates of hepatitis B, higher risks of cervical cancer, fertility complications, and psychological trauma."
STATE REGULATION TO PROTECT PROSTITUTES
(The Netherlands prides itself on it's regulations that safeguard prostitution)
"State attempts where prostitution is legal to regulate health problems and protect women from violence by introducing medical check-ups or licenses are often a façade that hides the core problem: the routine abuse and violence that form the prostitution experience involves brutal violence to silence those who wish to escape. Prostitution leaves women and children physically, mentally, emotionally, and spiritually devastated. Recovery takes years, even decades—often, the damage can never be undone.
Legalization of prostitution expands the market for commercial sex, opening markets for criminal enterprises and creating a safe haven for criminals who traffic people into prostitution. Organized crime networks do not need to register with governments, do not pay taxes (on human trafficking), and do not protect prostitutes.
"LEGALIZATION
Legalization simply makes it easier for them (human traffickers) to blend in with a purportedly regulated sex sector and makes it more difficult for prosecutors (from the victims countries) to identify and punish those who are trafficking people."
This is me again: Yes Aruba argues that nothing illegal happens and under their laws, technically to themselve it doesn't, but I still maintain that Aruba and Arubans live off the human misery of others. Arubans can disagree with me all they like, I admit I have an attitude towards that country. Others can draw their own conclusions. Boycott Aruba.
600,000 REASONS TO BOYCOTT ARUBA
Re: Nelson Obuder, to the people who have e-mailed me about this post, Nelson Obuder is the Prime Minister of Aruba and Fredis Refenjol is the Governor of Aruba. The power to pass laws, I believe, belongs to Nelson Obuder and the Parliament of Aruba, Fredis Refenjol is mostly a figurehead, a representative of the Queen of the Netherlands. The Minister of Justice is Rudy Croes. But in answer to your questions "Nelson Obuder" is likely the name you are looking for.
The following is an exerpt on the United Nations, not the United States but the United Nations' Task Force on Human Trafficking. The following comes from the section that deals with countries where prostitution is legal. Prostitution in Netherlands is legal. The same task force deals with other countries where prostitution has been legalized besides the Netherlands. he United Nations investigation has found in it's own words, that legalized prostitution in the Netherlands is "a facade" for human trafficking and uses Aruba as a transit point. Since this website doesn't allow for bolding of titles, I've changed them to capital letters, where you see capital letters, it is a new section. Also note that the United Nations report does not say Aruba is doing anything illegal, but instead Aruba considers whatever happens as being legal because it is legal within their own borders. Note the United Nations' conclusion about this attitude in the last paragraph. It is from this where the "sex slave" theory about Natalee's disappearance originated. Not from some conspiracy theory, but the United Nations. We now know that Natalee was murdered and this post has nothing to do with her. Words within parentheses are mine. The report is about human trafficking and prostitution and is an excerpt from a much larger report. The words in parentheses are there to show that the report is referring to the relationship between human trafficking and LEGALIZED prostitution.
"Legalized Prostitution in the Netherlands and Aruba—including pimping and patronizing or maintaining brothels—fuel the growth of modern-day slavery by providing a façade behind which traffickers for sexual exploitation operate."
(My own note on the preceding paragraph. They do not use the word illegal but "facade" prostitution under Aruban law is not illegal.)
"Legalized Prostitution creates a safe haven for criminals who participate in illegal prostitution in South and Central America. Legalized prostitution in the Netherlands has made Aruba the main transit destination for the trafficking of women and children for sexual exploitation from South and Central America." (from South America to Aruba then to the Netherlands from the Netherlands to other countries in Europe)
"According to the United States State Department, the Aruban justice system acts as a facilitator for this trade by impeding families and others (other nations) attempts to locate missing persons."
"Where prostitution is legalized or tolerated, there is a greater demand for human trafficking victims and nearly always an increase in the number of women and children trafficked into commercial sex slavery."
It is estimated that between 600,000 to 800,000 women and children are trafficked for legal and illegal prostitution from (through) Aruba each year. Of these 600,000 to 800,000 it is estimated that this number includes hundreds of thousands of women and children who are sold into illegal prostitution. Of those sold into illegal prostitution 80 percent of victims are female.
(Note: the following deals prostitution of children who are under the age of consent in their home country. The forced prostitution occurs in the country where they have been transported to, so again, under Aruban laws, no law has been broken) "Fifty percent of chidren illegly trafficked to other countries from South and Central America are trafficked through Aruba (to the Netherlands and from the Netherlands to other countries) Legalized prostitution results in far more underground illegal trafficking than where prostitution is illegal.
PROSTITUTION IS INHERENTLY HARMFUL
Few activities are as brutal and damaging to people as prostitution. Field research in nine South and Central American countries concluded that 60-75 percent of women in prostitution were raped, 70-95 percent were physically assaulted, and 68 percent met the criteria for post traumatic stress disorder in the same range as treatment-seeking combat veterans and victims of state-organized torture. Beyond this shocking abuse, the public health implications of prostitution are devastating and include a myriad of serious and fatal diseases, including HIV/AIDS.
The burden of physical injuries and illnesses that women in the sex industry sustain from the violence inflicted on them, or from their significantly higher rates of hepatitis B, higher risks of cervical cancer, fertility complications, and psychological trauma."
STATE REGULATION TO PROTECT PROSTITUTES
(The Netherlands prides itself on it's regulations that safeguard prostitution)
"State attempts where prostitution is legal to regulate health problems and protect women from violence by introducing medical check-ups or licenses are often a façade that hides the core problem: the routine abuse and violence that form the prostitution experience involves brutal violence to silence those who wish to escape. Prostitution leaves women and children physically, mentally, emotionally, and spiritually devastated. Recovery takes years, even decades—often, the damage can never be undone.
Legalization of prostitution expands the market for commercial sex, opening markets for criminal enterprises and creating a safe haven for criminals who traffic people into prostitution. Organized crime networks do not need to register with governments, do not pay taxes (on human trafficking), and do not protect prostitutes.
"LEGALIZATION
Legalization simply makes it easier for them (human traffickers) to blend in with a purportedly regulated sex sector and makes it more difficult for prosecutors (from the victims countries) to identify and punish those who are trafficking people."
This is me again: Yes Aruba argues that nothing illegal happens and under their laws, technically to themselve it doesn't, but I still maintain that Aruba and Arubans live off the human misery of others. Arubans can disagree with me all they like, I admit I have an attitude towards that country. Others can draw their own conclusions. Boycott Aruba.
600,000 REASONS TO BOYCOTT ARUBA
Re: Nelson Obuder, to the people who have e-mailed me about this post, Nelson Obuder is the Prime Minister of Aruba and Fredis Refenjol is the Governor of Aruba. The power to pass laws, I believe, belongs to Nelson Obuder and the Parliament of Aruba, Fredis Refenjol is mostly a figurehead, a representative of the Queen of the Netherlands. The Minister of Justice is Rudy Croes. But in answer to your questions "Nelson Obuder" is likely the name you are looking for.
The following is an exerpt on the United Nations, not the United States but the United Nations' Task Force on Human Trafficking. The following comes from the section that deals with countries where prostitution is legal. Prostitution in Netherlands is legal. The same task force deals with other countries where prostitution has been legalized besides the Netherlands. he United Nations investigation has found in it's own words, that legalized prostitution in the Netherlands is "a facade" for human trafficking and uses Aruba as a transit point. Since this website doesn't allow for bolding of titles, I've changed them to capital letters, where you see capital letters, it is a new section. Also note that the United Nations report does not say Aruba is doing anything illegal, but instead Aruba considers whatever happens as being legal because it is legal within their own borders. Note the United Nations' conclusion about this attitude in the last paragraph. It is from this where the "sex slave" theory about Natalee's disappearance originated. Not from some conspiracy theory, but the United Nations. We now know that Natalee was murdered and this post has nothing to do with her. Words within parentheses are mine. The report is about human trafficking and prostitution and is an excerpt from a much larger report. The words in parentheses are there to show that the report is referring to the relationship between human trafficking and LEGALIZED prostitution.
"Legalized Prostitution in the Netherlands and Aruba—including pimping and patronizing or maintaining brothels—fuel the growth of modern-day slavery by providing a façade behind which traffickers for sexual exploitation operate."
(My own note on the preceding paragraph. They do not use the word illegal but "facade" prostitution under Aruban law is not illegal.)
"Legalized Prostitution creates a safe haven for criminals who participate in illegal prostitution in South and Central America. Legalized prostitution in the Netherlands has made Aruba the main transit destination for the trafficking of women and children for sexual exploitation from South and Central America." (from South America to Aruba then to the Netherlands from the Netherlands to other countries in Europe)
"According to the United States State Department, the Aruban justice system acts as a facilitator for this trade by impeding families and others (other nations) attempts to locate missing persons."
"Where prostitution is legalized or tolerated, there is a greater demand for human trafficking victims and nearly always an increase in the number of women and children trafficked into commercial sex slavery."
It is estimated that between 600,000 to 800,000 women and children are trafficked for legal and illegal prostitution from (through) Aruba each year. Of these 600,000 to 800,000 it is estimated that this number includes hundreds of thousands of women and children who are sold into illegal prostitution. Of those sold into illegal prostitution 80 percent of victims are female.
(Note: the following deals prostitution of children who are under the age of consent in their home country. The forced prostitution occurs in the country where they have been transported to, so again, under Aruban laws, no law has been broken) "Fifty percent of chidren illegly trafficked to other countries from South and Central America are trafficked through Aruba (to the Netherlands and from the Netherlands to other countries) Legalized prostitution results in far more underground illegal trafficking than where prostitution is illegal.
PROSTITUTION IS INHERENTLY HARMFUL
Few activities are as brutal and damaging to people as prostitution. Field research in nine South and Central American countries concluded that 60-75 percent of women in prostitution were raped, 70-95 percent were physically assaulted, and 68 percent met the criteria for post traumatic stress disorder in the same range as treatment-seeking combat veterans and victims of state-organized torture. Beyond this shocking abuse, the public health implications of prostitution are devastating and include a myriad of serious and fatal diseases, including HIV/AIDS.
The burden of physical injuries and illnesses that women in the sex industry sustain from the violence inflicted on them, or from their significantly higher rates of hepatitis B, higher risks of cervical cancer, fertility complications, and psychological trauma."
STATE REGULATION TO PROTECT PROSTITUTES
(The Netherlands prides itself on it's regulations that safeguard prostitution)
"State attempts where prostitution is legal to regulate health problems and protect women from violence by introducing medical check-ups or licenses are often a façade that hides the core problem: the routine abuse and violence that form the prostitution experience involves brutal violence to silence those who wish to escape. Prostitution leaves women and children physically, mentally, emotionally, and spiritually devastated. Recovery takes years, even decades—often, the damage can never be undone.
Legalization of prostitution expands the market for commercial sex, opening markets for criminal enterprises and creating a safe haven for criminals who traffic people into prostitution. Organized crime networks do not need to register with governments, do not pay taxes (on human trafficking), and do not protect prostitutes.
"LEGALIZATION
Legalization simply makes it easier for them (human traffickers) to blend in with a purportedly regulated sex sector and makes it more difficult for prosecutors (from the victims countries) to identify and punish those who are trafficking people."
This is me again: Yes Aruba argues that nothing illegal happens and under their laws, technically to themselve it doesn't, but I still maintain that Aruba and Arubans live off the human misery of others. Arubans can disagree with me all they like, I admit I have an attitude towards that country. Others can draw their own conclusions. Boycott Aruba.
HERE IS THE ORIGANAL POST: FROM THE US DEPARTMENT OF STATE! (NOT from the United Nations Task Force etc etc.. Like LIAR Wesley S have said...
.
PLEASE, Read and compare! YOU can notice all the changes LIAR Wesley S has done. YOU See AMericans... HE uses this site to lie. HE still think you are not smart enough. HE is playing with your emotions. Are we going to let him continue doing that?
.
OH... AND HERE IS THE WEBSITE LINK FOR THAT ARTICLE. I ENCOURAGE YOU TO PRINT BOTH AND COMPARE WHERE THE LIAR HAS MADE SO MANY CHANGES.... (isn't that illegal, by the way)
. http://www.state.gov/r/pa /ei/rls/38790.h...
.
.
The U.S. Government adopted a strong position against legalized prostitution in a December 2002 National Security Presidential Directive based on evidence that prostitution is inherently harmful and dehumanizing, and fuels trafficking in persons, a form of modern-day slavery.
Prostitution and related activities—including pimping and patronizing or maintaining brothels—fuel the growth of modern-day slavery by providing a façade behind which traffickers for sexual exploitation operate.
Where prostitution is legalized or tolerated, there is a greater demand for human trafficking victims and nearly always an increase in the number of women and children trafficked into commercial sex slavery.
Of the estimated 600,000 to 800,000 people trafficked across international borders annually, 80 percent of victims are female, and up to 50 percent are minors. Hundreds of thousands of these women and children are used in prostitution each year.
WOMEN AND CHILDREN WANT TO ESCAPE PROSTITUTION
The vast majority of women in prostitution don’t want to be there. Few seek it out or choose it, and most are desperate to leave it. A 2003 study first published in the scientific Journal of Trauma Practice found that 89 percent of women in prostitution want to escape.[1] And children are also trapped in prostitution—despite the fact that international covenants and protocols impose upon state parties an obligation to criminalize the commercial sexual exploitation of children.
PROSTITUTION IS INHERENTLY HARMFUL
Few activities are as brutal and damaging to people as prostitution. Field research in nine countries concluded that 60-75 percent of women in prostitution were raped, 70-95 percent were physically assaulted, and 68 percent met the criteria for post traumatic stress disorder in the same range as treatment-seeking combat veterans[2] and victims of state-organized torture.[3] Beyond this shocking abuse, the public health implications of prostitution are devastating and include a myriad of serious and fatal diseases, including HIV/AIDS.
A path-breaking, five-country academic study concluded that research on prostitution has overlooked "[t]he burden of physical injuries and illnesses that women in the sex industry sustain from the violence inflicted on them, or from their significantly higher rates of hepatitis B, higher risks of cervical cancer, fertility complications, and psychological trauma."[4]
STATE ATTEMPTS TO REGULATE PROSTITUTION
State attempts to regulate prostitution by introducing medical check-ups or licenses don’t address the core problem: the routine abuse and violence that form the prostitution experience and brutally victimize those caught in its netherworld. Prostitution leaves women and children physically, mentally, emotionally, and spiritually devastated. Recovery takes years, even decades—often, the damage can never be undone.
PROSTITUTION CREATES A SAFE HAVEN FOR CRIMINALS
Legalization of prostitution expands the market for commercial sex, opening markets for criminal enterprises and creating a safe haven for criminals who traffic people into prostitution. Organized crime networks do not register with the government, do not pay taxes, and do not protect prostitutes. Legalization simply makes it easier for them to blend in with a purportedly regulated sex sector and makes it more difficult for prosecutors to identify and punish those who are trafficking people.
The Swedish Government has found that much of the vast profit generated by the global prostitution industry goes into the pockets of human traffickers. The Swedish Government said, "International trafficking in human beings could not flourish but for the existence of local prostitution markets where men are willing and able to buy and sell women and children for sexual exploitation."[5]
To fight human trafficking and promote equality for women, Sweden has aggressively prosecuted customers, pimps, and brothel owners since 1999. As a result, two years after the new policy, there was a 50 percent decrease in women prostituting and a 75 percent decrease in men buying sex. Trafficking for the purposes of sexual exploitation decreased as well.[6] In contrast, where prostitution has been legalized or tolerated, there is an increase in the demand for sex slaves[7] and the number of victimized foreign women—many likely victims of human trafficking.[8]
Grant-making implications of the U.S. government policy
As a result of the prostitution-trafficking link, the U.S. government concluded that no U.S. grant funds should be awarded to foreign non-governmental organizations that support legal state-regulated prostitution. Prostitution is not the oldest profession, but the oldest form of oppression
HERE IS THE ORIGANAL POST: FROM THE US DEPARTMENT OF STATE! (NOT from the United Nations Task Force etc etc.. Like LIAR Wesley S have said...
.
PLEASE, Read and compare! YOU can notice all the changes LIAR Wesley S has done. YOU See AMericans... HE uses this site to lie. HE still think you are not smart enough. HE is playing with your emotions. Are we going to let him continue doing that?
.
OH... AND HERE IS THE WEBSITE LINK FOR THAT ARTICLE. I ENCOURAGE YOU TO PRINT BOTH AND COMPARE WHERE THE LIAR HAS MADE SO MANY CHANGES.... (isn't that illegal, by the way)
. http://www.state.gov/r/pa /ei/rls/38790.h...
.
.
The U.S. Government adopted a strong position against legalized prostitution in a December 2002 National Security Presidential Directive based on evidence that prostitution is inherently harmful and dehumanizing, and fuels trafficking in persons, a form of modern-day slavery.
Prostitution and related activities—including pimping and patronizing or maintaining brothels—fuel the growth of modern-day slavery by providing a façade behind which traffickers for sexual exploitation operate.
Where prostitution is legalized or tolerated, there is a greater demand for human trafficking victims and nearly always an increase in the number of women and children trafficked into commercial sex slavery.
Of the estimated 600,000 to 800,000 people trafficked across international borders annually, 80 percent of victims are female, and up to 50 percent are minors. Hundreds of thousands of these women and children are used in prostitution each year.
WOMEN AND CHILDREN WANT TO ESCAPE PROSTITUTION
The vast majority of women in prostitution don’t want to be there. Few seek it out or choose it, and most are desperate to leave it. A 2003 study first published in the scientific Journal of Trauma Practice found that 89 percent of women in prostitution want to escape.[1] And children are also trapped in prostitution—despite the fact that international covenants and protocols impose upon state parties an obligation to criminalize the commercial sexual exploitation of children.
PROSTITUTION IS INHERENTLY HARMFUL
Few activities are as brutal and damaging to people as prostitution. Field research in nine countries concluded that 60-75 percent of women in prostitution were raped, 70-95 percent were physically assaulted, and 68 percent met the criteria for post traumatic stress disorder in the same range as treatment-seeking combat veterans[2] and victims of state-organized torture.[3] Beyond this shocking abuse, the public health implications of prostitution are devastating and include a myriad of serious and fatal diseases, including HIV/AIDS.
A path-breaking, five-country academic study concluded that research on prostitution has overlooked "[t]he burden of physical injuries and illnesses that women in the sex industry sustain from the violence inflicted on them, or from their significantly higher rates of hepatitis B, higher risks of cervical cancer, fertility complications, and psychological trauma."[4]
STATE ATTEMPTS TO REGULATE PROSTITUTION
State attempts to regulate prostitution by introducing medical check-ups or licenses don’t address the core problem: the routine abuse and violence that form the prostitution experience and brutally victimize those caught in its netherworld. Prostitution leaves women and children physically, mentally, emotionally, and spiritually devastated. Recovery takes years, even decades—often, the damage can never be undone.
PROSTITUTION CREATES A SAFE HAVEN FOR CRIMINALS
Legalization of prostitution expands the market for commercial sex, opening markets for criminal enterprises and creating a safe haven for criminals who traffic people into prostitution. Organized crime networks do not register with the government, do not pay taxes, and do not protect prostitutes. Legalization simply makes it easier for them to blend in with a purportedly regulated sex sector and makes it more difficult for prosecutors to identify and punish those who are trafficking people.
The Swedish Government has found that much of the vast profit generated by the global prostitution industry goes into the pockets of human traffickers. The Swedish Government said, "International trafficking in human beings could not flourish but for the existence of local prostitution markets where men are willing and able to buy and sell women and children for sexual exploitation."[5]
To fight human trafficking and promote equality for women, Sweden has aggressively prosecuted customers, pimps, and brothel owners since 1999. As a result, two years after the new policy, there was a 50 percent decrease in women prostituting and a 75 percent decrease in men buying sex. Trafficking for the purposes of sexual exploitation decreased as well.[6] In contrast, where prostitution has been legalized or tolerated, there is an increase in the demand for sex slaves[7] and the number of victimized foreign women—many likely victims of human trafficking.[8]
Grant-making implications of the U.S. government policy
As a result of the prostitution-trafficking link, the U.S. government concluded that no U.S. grant funds should be awarded to foreign non-governmental organizations that support legal state-regulated prostitution. Prostitution is not the oldest profession, but the oldest form of oppression
HERE IS THE ORIGANAL POST: FROM THE US DEPARTMENT OF STATE! (NOT from the United Nations Task Force etc etc.. Like LIAR Wesley S have said...
.
PLEASE, Read and compare! YOU can notice all the changes LIAR Wesley S has done. YOU See AMericans... HE uses this site to lie. HE still think you are not smart enough. HE is playing with your emotions. Are we going to let him continue doing that?
.
OH... AND HERE IS THE WEBSITE LINK FOR THAT ARTICLE. I ENCOURAGE YOU TO PRINT BOTH AND COMPARE WHERE THE LIAR HAS MADE SO MANY CHANGES.... (isn't that illegal, by the way)
. http://www.state.gov/r/pa /ei/rls/38790.h...
.
.
The U.S. Government adopted a strong position against legalized prostitution in a December 2002 National Security Presidential Directive based on evidence that prostitution is inherently harmful and dehumanizing, and fuels trafficking in persons, a form of modern-day slavery.
Prostitution and related activities—including pimping and patronizing or maintaining brothels—fuel the growth of modern-day slavery by providing a façade behind which traffickers for sexual exploitation operate.
Where prostitution is legalized or tolerated, there is a greater demand for human trafficking victims and nearly always an increase in the number of women and children trafficked into commercial sex slavery.
Of the estimated 600,000 to 800,000 people trafficked across international borders annually, 80 percent of victims are female, and up to 50 percent are minors. Hundreds of thousands of these women and children are used in prostitution each year.
WOMEN AND CHILDREN WANT TO ESCAPE PROSTITUTION
The vast majority of women in prostitution don’t want to be there. Few seek it out or choose it, and most are desperate to leave it. A 2003 study first published in the scientific Journal of Trauma Practice found that 89 percent of women in prostitution want to escape.[1] And children are also trapped in prostitution—despite the fact that international covenants and protocols impose upon state parties an obligation to criminalize the commercial sexual exploitation of children.
PROSTITUTION IS INHERENTLY HARMFUL
Few activities are as brutal and damaging to people as prostitution. Field research in nine countries concluded that 60-75 percent of women in prostitution were raped, 70-95 percent were physically assaulted, and 68 percent met the criteria for post traumatic stress disorder in the same range as treatment-seeking combat veterans[2] and victims of state-organized torture.[3] Beyond this shocking abuse, the public health implications of prostitution are devastating and include a myriad of serious and fatal diseases, including HIV/AIDS.
A path-breaking, five-country academic study concluded that research on prostitution has overlooked "[t]he burden of physical injuries and illnesses that women in the sex industry sustain from the violence inflicted on them, or from their significantly higher rates of hepatitis B, higher risks of cervical cancer, fertility complications, and psychological trauma."[4]
STATE ATTEMPTS TO REGULATE PROSTITUTION
State attempts to regulate prostitution by introducing medical check-ups or licenses don’t address the core problem: the routine abuse and violence that form the prostitution experience and brutally victimize those caught in its netherworld. Prostitution leaves women and children physically, mentally, emotionally, and spiritually devastated. Recovery takes years, even decades—often, the damage can never be undone.
PROSTITUTION CREATES A SAFE HAVEN FOR CRIMINALS
Legalization of prostitution expands the market for commercial sex, opening markets for criminal enterprises and creating a safe haven for criminals who traffic people into prostitution. Organized crime networks do not register with the government, do not pay taxes, and do not protect prostitutes. Legalization simply makes it easier for them to blend in with a purportedly regulated sex sector and makes it more difficult for prosecutors to identify and punish those who are trafficking people.
The Swedish Government has found that much of the vast profit generated by the global prostitution industry goes into the pockets of human traffickers. The Swedish Government said, "International trafficking in human beings could not flourish but for the existence of local prostitution markets where men are willing and able to buy and sell women and children for sexual exploitation."[5]
To fight human trafficking and promote equality for women, Sweden has aggressively prosecuted customers, pimps, and brothel owners since 1999. As a result, two years after the new policy, there was a 50 percent decrease in women prostituting and a 75 percent decrease in men buying sex. Trafficking for the purposes of sexual exploitation decreased as well.[6] In contrast, where prostitution has been legalized or tolerated, there is an increase in the demand for sex slaves[7] and the number of victimized foreign women—many likely victims of human trafficking.[8]
Grant-making implications of the U.S. government policy
As a result of the prostitution-trafficking link, the U.S. government concluded that no U.S. grant funds should be awarded to foreign non-governmental organizations that support legal state-regulated prostitution. Prostitution is not the oldest profession, but the oldest form of oppression
HERE IS THE ORIGANAL POST: FROM THE US DEPARTMENT OF STATE! (NOT from the United Nations Task Force etc etc.. Like LIAR Wesley S have said...
.
PLEASE, Read and compare! YOU can notice all the changes LIAR Wesley S has done. YOU See AMericans... HE uses this site to lie. HE still think you are not smart enough. HE is playing with your emotions. Are we going to let him continue doing that?
.
OH... AND HERE IS THE WEBSITE LINK FOR THAT ARTICLE. I ENCOURAGE YOU TO PRINT BOTH AND COMPARE WHERE THE LIAR HAS MADE SO MANY CHANGES.... (isn't that illegal, by the way)
. http://www.state.gov/r/pa /ei/rls/38790.h...
.
.
The U.S. Government adopted a strong position against legalized prostitution in a December 2002 National Security Presidential Directive based on evidence that prostitution is inherently harmful and dehumanizing, and fuels trafficking in persons, a form of modern-day slavery.
Prostitution and related activities—including pimping and patronizing or maintaining brothels—fuel the growth of modern-day slavery by providing a façade behind which traffickers for sexual exploitation operate.
Where prostitution is legalized or tolerated, there is a greater demand for human trafficking victims and nearly always an increase in the number of women and children trafficked into commercial sex slavery.
Of the estimated 600,000 to 800,000 people trafficked across international borders annually, 80 percent of victims are female, and up to 50 percent are minors. Hundreds of thousands of these women and children are used in prostitution each year.
WOMEN AND CHILDREN WANT TO ESCAPE PROSTITUTION
The vast majority of women in prostitution don’t want to be there. Few seek it out or choose it, and most are desperate to leave it. A 2003 study first published in the scientific Journal of Trauma Practice found that 89 percent of women in prostitution want to escape.[1] And children are also trapped in prostitution—despite the fact that international covenants and protocols impose upon state parties an obligation to criminalize the commercial sexual exploitation of children.
PROSTITUTION IS INHERENTLY HARMFUL
Few activities are as brutal and damaging to people as prostitution. Field research in nine countries concluded that 60-75 percent of women in prostitution were raped, 70-95 percent were physically assaulted, and 68 percent met the criteria for post traumatic stress disorder in the same range as treatment-seeking combat veterans[2] and victims of state-organized torture.[3] Beyond this shocking abuse, the public health implications of prostitution are devastating and include a myriad of serious and fatal diseases, including HIV/AIDS.
A path-breaking, five-country academic study concluded that research on prostitution has overlooked "[t]he burden of physical injuries and illnesses that women in the sex industry sustain from the violence inflicted on them, or from their significantly higher rates of hepatitis B, higher risks of cervical cancer, fertility complications, and psychological trauma."[4]
STATE ATTEMPTS TO REGULATE PROSTITUTION
State attempts to regulate prostitution by introducing medical check-ups or licenses don’t address the core problem: the routine abuse and violence that form the prostitution experience and brutally victimize those caught in its netherworld. Prostitution leaves women and children physically, mentally, emotionally, and spiritually devastated. Recovery takes years, even decades—often, the damage can never be undone.
PROSTITUTION CREATES A SAFE HAVEN FOR CRIMINALS
Legalization of prostitution expands the market for commercial sex, opening markets for criminal enterprises and creating a safe haven for criminals who traffic people into prostitution. Organized crime networks do not register with the government, do not pay taxes, and do not protect prostitutes. Legalization simply makes it easier for them to blend in with a purportedly regulated sex sector and makes it more difficult for prosecutors to identify and punish those who are trafficking people.
The Swedish Government has found that much of the vast profit generated by the global prostitution industry goes into the pockets of human traffickers. The Swedish Government said, "International trafficking in human beings could not flourish but for the existence of local prostitution markets where men are willing and able to buy and sell women and children for sexual exploitation."[5]
To fight human trafficking and promote equality for women, Sweden has aggressively prosecuted customers, pimps, and brothel owners since 1999. As a result, two years after the new policy, there was a 50 percent decrease in women prostituting and a 75 percent decrease in men buying sex. Trafficking for the purposes of sexual exploitation decreased as well.[6] In contrast, where prostitution has been legalized or tolerated, there is an increase in the demand for sex slaves[7] and the number of victimized foreign women—many likely victims of human trafficking.[8]
Grant-making implications of the U.S. government policy
As a result of the prostitution-trafficking link, the U.S. government concluded that no U.S. grant funds should be awarded to foreign non-governmental organizations that support legal state-regulated prostitution. Prostitution is not the oldest profession, but the oldest form of oppression
HERE IS THE ORIGANAL POST: FROM THE US DEPARTMENT OF STATE! (NOT from the United Nations Task Force etc etc.. Like LIAR Wesley S have said...
.
PLEASE, Read and compare! YOU can notice all the changes LIAR Wesley S has done. YOU See AMericans... HE uses this site to lie. HE still think you are not smart enough. HE is playing with your emotions. Are we going to let him continue doing that?
.
OH... AND HERE IS THE WEBSITE LINK FOR THAT ARTICLE. I ENCOURAGE YOU TO PRINT BOTH AND COMPARE WHERE THE LIAR HAS MADE SO MANY CHANGES.... (isn't that illegal, by the way)
. http://www.state.gov/r/pa /ei/rls/38790.h...
.
.
The U.S. Government adopted a strong position against legalized prostitution in a December 2002 National Security Presidential Directive based on evidence that prostitution is inherently harmful and dehumanizing, and fuels trafficking in persons, a form of modern-day slavery.
Prostitution and related activities—including pimping and patronizing or maintaining brothels—fuel the growth of modern-day slavery by providing a façade behind which traffickers for sexual exploitation operate.
Where prostitution is legalized or tolerated, there is a greater demand for human trafficking victims and nearly always an increase in the number of women and children trafficked into commercial sex slavery.
Of the estimated 600,000 to 800,000 people trafficked across international borders annually, 80 percent of victims are female, and up to 50 percent are minors. Hundreds of thousands of these women and children are used in prostitution each year.
WOMEN AND CHILDREN WANT TO ESCAPE PROSTITUTION
The vast majority of women in prostitution don’t want to be there. Few seek it out or choose it, and most are desperate to leave it. A 2003 study first published in the scientific Journal of Trauma Practice found that 89 percent of women in prostitution want to escape.[1] And children are also trapped in prostitution—despite the fact that international covenants and protocols impose upon state parties an obligation to criminalize the commercial sexual exploitation of children.
PROSTITUTION IS INHERENTLY HARMFUL
Few activities are as brutal and damaging to people as prostitution. Field research in nine countries concluded that 60-75 percent of women in prostitution were raped, 70-95 percent were physically assaulted, and 68 percent met the criteria for post traumatic stress disorder in the same range as treatment-seeking combat veterans[2] and victims of state-organized torture.[3] Beyond this shocking abuse, the public health implications of prostitution are devastating and include a myriad of serious and fatal diseases, including HIV/AIDS.
A path-breaking, five-country academic study concluded that research on prostitution has overlooked "[t]he burden of physical injuries and illnesses that women in the sex industry sustain from the violence inflicted on them, or from their significantly higher rates of hepatitis B, higher risks of cervical cancer, fertility complications, and psychological trauma."[4]
STATE ATTEMPTS TO REGULATE PROSTITUTION
State attempts to regulate prostitution by introducing medical check-ups or licenses don’t address the core problem: the routine abuse and violence that form the prostitution experience and brutally victimize those caught in its netherworld. Prostitution leaves women and children physically, mentally, emotionally, and spiritually devastated. Recovery takes years, even decades—often, the damage can never be undone.
PROSTITUTION CREATES A SAFE HAVEN FOR CRIMINALS
Legalization of prostitution expands the market for commercial sex, opening markets for criminal enterprises and creating a safe haven for criminals who traffic people into prostitution. Organized crime networks do not register with the government, do not pay taxes, and do not protect prostitutes. Legalization simply makes it easier for them to blend in with a purportedly regulated sex sector and makes it more difficult for prosecutors to identify and punish those who are trafficking people.
The Swedish Government has found that much of the vast profit generated by the global prostitution industry goes into the pockets of human traffickers. The Swedish Government said, "International trafficking in human beings could not flourish but for the existence of local prostitution markets where men are willing and able to buy and sell women and children for sexual exploitation."[5]
To fight human trafficking and promote equality for women, Sweden has aggressively prosecuted customers, pimps, and brothel owners since 1999. As a result, two years after the new policy, there was a 50 percent decrease in women prostituting and a 75 percent decrease in men buying sex. Trafficking for the purposes of sexual exploitation decreased as well.[6] In contrast, where prostitution has been legalized or tolerated, there is an increase in the demand for sex slaves[7] and the number of victimized foreign women—many likely victims of human trafficking.[8]
Grant-making implications of the U.S. government policy
As a result of the prostitution-trafficking link, the U.S. government concluded that no U.S. grant funds should be awarded to foreign non-governmental organizations that support legal state-regulated prostitution. Prostitution is not the oldest profession, but the oldest form of oppression
HERE IS THE ORIGANAL POST: FROM THE US DEPARTMENT OF STATE! (NOT from the United Nations Task Force etc etc.. Like LIAR Wesley S have said...
.
PLEASE, Read and compare! YOU can notice all the changes LIAR Wesley S has done. YOU See AMericans... HE uses this site to lie. HE still think you are not smart enough. HE is playing with your emotions. Are we going to let him continue doing that?
.
OH... AND HERE IS THE WEBSITE LINK FOR THAT ARTICLE. I ENCOURAGE YOU TO PRINT BOTH AND COMPARE WHERE THE LIAR HAS MADE SO MANY CHANGES.... (isn't that illegal, by the way)
. http://www.state.gov/r/pa /ei/rls/38790.h...
.
.
The U.S. Government adopted a strong position against legalized prostitution in a December 2002 National Security Presidential Directive based on evidence that prostitution is inherently harmful and dehumanizing, and fuels trafficking in persons, a form of modern-day slavery.
Prostitution and related activities—including pimping and patronizing or maintaining brothels—fuel the growth of modern-day slavery by providing a façade behind which traffickers for sexual exploitation operate.
Where prostitution is legalized or tolerated, there is a greater demand for human trafficking victims and nearly always an increase in the number of women and children trafficked into commercial sex slavery.
Of the estimated 600,000 to 800,000 people trafficked across international borders annually, 80 percent of victims are female, and up to 50 percent are minors. Hundreds of thousands of these women and children are used in prostitution each year.
WOMEN AND CHILDREN WANT TO ESCAPE PROSTITUTION
The vast majority of women in prostitution don’t want to be there. Few seek it out or choose it, and most are desperate to leave it. A 2003 study first published in the scientific Journal of Trauma Practice found that 89 percent of women in prostitution want to escape.[1] And children are also trapped in prostitution—despite the fact that international covenants and protocols impose upon state parties an obligation to criminalize the commercial sexual exploitation of children.
PROSTITUTION IS INHERENTLY HARMFUL
Few activities are as brutal and damaging to people as prostitution. Field research in nine countries concluded that 60-75 percent of women in prostitution were raped, 70-95 percent were physically assaulted, and 68 percent met the criteria for post traumatic stress disorder in the same range as treatment-seeking combat veterans[2] and victims of state-organized torture.[3] Beyond this shocking abuse, the public health implications of prostitution are devastating and include a myriad of serious and fatal diseases, including HIV/AIDS.
A path-breaking, five-country academic study concluded that research on prostitution has overlooked "[t]he burden of physical injuries and illnesses that women in the sex industry sustain from the violence inflicted on them, or from their significantly higher rates of hepatitis B, higher risks of cervical cancer, fertility complications, and psychological trauma."[4]
STATE ATTEMPTS TO REGULATE PROSTITUTION
State attempts to regulate prostitution by introducing medical check-ups or licenses don’t address the core problem: the routine abuse and violence that form the prostitution experience and brutally victimize those caught in its netherworld. Prostitution leaves women and children physically, mentally, emotionally, and spiritually devastated. Recovery takes years, even decades—often, the damage can never be undone.
PROSTITUTION CREATES A SAFE HAVEN FOR CRIMINALS
Legalization of prostitution expands the market for commercial sex, opening markets for criminal enterprises and creating a safe haven for criminals who traffic people into prostitution. Organized crime networks do not register with the government, do not pay taxes, and do not protect prostitutes. Legalization simply makes it easier for them to blend in with a purportedly regulated sex sector and makes it more difficult for prosecutors to identify and punish those who are trafficking people.
The Swedish Government has found that much of the vast profit generated by the global prostitution industry goes into the pockets of human traffickers. The Swedish Government said, "International trafficking in human beings could not flourish but for the existence of local prostitution markets where men are willing and able to buy and sell women and children for sexual exploitation."[5]
To fight human trafficking and promote equality for women, Sweden has aggressively prosecuted customers, pimps, and brothel owners since 1999. As a result, two years after the new policy, there was a 50 percent decrease in women prostituting and a 75 percent decrease in men buying sex. Trafficking for the purposes of sexual exploitation decreased as well.[6] In contrast, where prostitution has been legalized or tolerated, there is an increase in the demand for sex slaves[7] and the number of victimized foreign women—many likely victims of human trafficking.[8]
Grant-making implications of the U.S. government policy
As a result of the prostitution-trafficking link, the U.S. government concluded that no U.S. grant funds should be awarded to foreign non-governmental organizations that support legal state-regulated prostitution. Prostitution is not the oldest profession, but the oldest form of oppression
The guy should be arrested for his confession alone. It sounds very real and true, he is a compulsive liar, I am sure he twisted things around. However, one thing is for sure, he is responsible for her death and or not reporting her medical problem and disposing of her. How could Aruba just let a killer walk around, it makes the country look bad in my eyes. If they won't re arrest him because he is an arubian native and they feel like they can protect him and stood by him because they felt he was innocent at first. Then when he makes this confession they act like its no big deal and its not true and he was tying to impress the driver? Are you serious? This would never happen in USA.
Please will somebody out there give Natalee Holloway justice and get this guy behind bars, or take justice in your own hands and toss him in the ocean, left to die.
Please.
They would sit up & take notice if the American people woulv've boycotted Aruba, 'but' the Americans will never stick by Americans, you got Hindu's, Jewish,Chinese, Mexicans, every nationality, 'but' Americans. We always sell out to the higest bidder. Is'nt it strange that the Mexicans can close down work places for hours & the illegals can jam the streets without the fear of getting arrested & we can't stick behind an american woman trying to get support for a murdered daughter.
The three questions asked by Amber P. Amber makes excellent points. Questions that hit at the centre. :
........................................ ..............
1)"If it was Nelson Obuder's decision not to re-arrest Joran Van der Slooth, was Obuder's decision any way based on the fact that his father was and still maybe a Judge in training? If not, can you prove his father did not have any political influence in this case on his son's behalf?"
........................................ ..............
2) "How did the Aruban Government come up with the decision that Joran Van der Slooth may be mentally ill? Even so, mentally ill people do commit some of the most horrible of crimes. However, Joran Van der Slooth then bragged about them to a reporter and his comments were recorded for all to see! It may be indeed be the case that he was just saying these things to show off. However he did not have to go into SO MUCH DETAIL about what happened! Is it not true that only the person who really did the crime would only know so much detail about what really happened, as he stated in his video tape?"
........................................ ..............
3) "Many people feel that the Aruban Government should investigate the Aruban Police Force for corruption. The way they handled the case appears to be grossly inadequate! It seems to many that the Aruban Police did not to properly investigate the case starting from the day the crime was committed. It also appears to many that they deliberately delayed their investigation until it was too late to get any physical evidence, and many feel they did that on purpose, so Van der Slooth would go free!"
Information for question three
........................................ ..............
The Dutch judges from Curacao also share culpability in ignoring these statements by the three suspects. One in particular was Judge Robert “Bob” Smid who is reported to be a friend of Paulus Van Der Sloot, and had even stayed at his home while visiting the island. On August 30, 2005 Judge Smid issued a ruling that Joran should be held another 30 days, flew back to Curacao and immediately faxed in a reversal of his ruling. Two and a half weeks later Joran Van Der Sloot and the Kalpoe brothers were all released from giving further testimony in the case.
........................................ ..............
On September 3, 2005 Joran Van der Sloot was released from police custody and fled to Holland. Drawing on an obscure Dutch judgement in another case, the judge ruled that Joran’s schoolwork was apparently more important than giving any further testimony in the Natalee Holloway case, even though he and the Kalpoe brothers disagree on key points about what happened the night Natalee disappeared.
Aruban Court of Appeals Rules that Joran van der Sloot Won't Be Re-Arrested after His Taped Confession
........................................ .............
By Siobhan Morrissey
Originally posted Friday February 15, 2008 11:55 AM EST People Magazine
........................................ ..............
Joran van der Sloot won't be rearrested in the disappearance of Natalee Holloway – despite what appeared to be his recent confession to the crime.
........................................ ............
An Aruban court of appeal ruled late Thursday that while van der Sloot remains the prime suspect, he could not be rearrested solely on the confession, which was secretly taped inside a vehicle rigged with hidden cameras and recording devices.
........................................ .............
The court found the Dutch student's statements could not be corroborated. Because he has given so many different versions of what happened the night Natalee disappeared nearly three years ago, it's hard to tell what really happened, the court says.
........................................ .............
"Considering the possibility of a serious personality disorder – as voiced by the prosecution – combined with a personal history of untrue statements and remarks, which even according to the suspect himself are frequently false, the Court of Appeal has reasons for doubt regarding the incriminating character of the 'car-statement,'" the court stated.
........................................ ..............
Van der Sloot told a "friend" (who secretly recorded him for a Dutch TV show) that the Alabama teen went into convulsions and died on the beach the night she disappeared in May 2005. Then, van der Sloot said, someone dumped her at sea
..................................... ................
http://www.people.com/peo ple/article/0,,...
The three questions asked by Amber P. mentioned in the post below are the following, I wish I could put them in seperate paragraphs for easier reading, but Amber makes excellent points. Questions that hit at the centre. I suggest cutting them and pasting them so they don't all run togethor and think about what she says:
1)"If it was Nelson Obuder's decision not to re-arrest Joran Van der Slooth, was Obuder's decision any way based on the fact that his father was and still maybe a Judge in training? If not, can you prove his father did not have any political influence in this case on his son's behalf?"
2) "How did the Aruban Government come up with the decision that Joran Van der Slooth may be mentally ill? Even so, mentally ill people do commit some of the most horrible of crimes. However, Joran Van der Slooth then bragged about them to a reporter and his comments were recorded for all to see! It may be indeed be the case that he was just saying these things to show off. However he did not have to go into SO MUCH DETAIL about what happened! Is it not true that only the person who really did the crime would only know so much detail about what really happened, as he stated in his video tape?"
3) "Many people feel that the Aruban Government should investigate the Aruban Police Force for corruption. The way they handled the case appears to be grossly inadequate! It seems to many that the Aruban Police did not to properly investigate the case starting from the day the crime was committed. It also appears to many that they deliberately delayed their investigation until it was too late to get any physical evidence, and many feel they did that on purpose, so Van der Slooth would go free!"
Information for question three
........................................ ..............
The Dutch judges from Curacao also share culpability in ignoring these statements by the three suspects. One in particular was Judge Robert “Bob” Smid who is reported to be a friend of Paulus Van Der Sloot, and had even stayed at his home while visiting the island. On August 30, 2005 Judge Smid issued a ruling that Joran should be held another 30 days, flew back to Curacao and immediately faxed in a reversal of his ruling. Two and a half weeks later Joran Van Der Sloot and the Kalpoe brothers were all released from giving further testimony in the case.
........................................ ..............
On September 3, 2005 Joran Van der Sloot was released from police custody and fled to Holland. Drawing on an obscure Dutch judgement in another case, the judge ruled that Joran’s schoolwork was apparently more important than giving any further testimony in the Natalee Holloway case, even though he and the Kalpoe brothers disagree on key points about what happened the night Natalee disappeared.
How do we get justice for Natalee Holloway now? Joran ver de Sloots confession was front page news all around the world, not just the United States. The decision not to re-arrest Joran was front page news around the world. Aruba's press release was put out by a low level policeman. But high profile decisions that are going to be reported on are not made by a lowly policeman, they are made at the very top. In this case it seems more than obvious that the decision not to prosecute Joran was made by Aruba's Prime Minister, Nelson Obuder. You can't let him get away with that. It is still possible, I believe, to have Joran arrested and tried. But Aruba has drawn it's line in cement -- the answer is no. If you want to change that then you are going to have to hold Nelson Obuder accountable. You have to attack him for the decision in your radio talk shows, your letters to the editor and in places like YouChoose.Net. If you want to see Joran ver de Sloot convicted for the murder of Natalee Holloway, Americans will have to make Nelson Obuder's name stink worse than if fifty skunks decided to let fly all at the same time. Amber P. hit the nail right square on it's head. She stated three questions that Nelson Obuder should be made to answer, in essence three ways of attacking him. That's my viewpoint from here in Canada. But Amber P. is correct and she is an American. Three vital points about Obuder's decsion need to be challenged. Obuder can not possibly answer those three points. If Americans want justice for Natalee you are going to have to kick up the volume so loud that the speakers on the stereo risk being blown apart. And you have to make it abundantly clear that you want Obuder's head on a platter if Joran ver de Sloot is not arrested, tried and convicted for Natalee Holloway's murder.
First Google now is now on Yahoo! My other thread shows up on Google. But this thread hasn't got enough supporters to be in the "Popular" campaign and I only created it the day before yesterday. But it shows up on Yahoo! when you search Natalee Holloway Boycott, fifth from the top:
Boycott Aruba for Natalee Holloway | YouChoose
... and they only way to get Natalee Holloway Justice is to boycott Aruba ... Forum Discussion for Boycott Aruba for Natalee Holloway. Post your comment here! ...
www.youchoose.net/campaig n/boycott_aruba... - 45k - Cached
YouChoose.Net somebody must be looking at your site. How could a thread from inside a Website be listed in Yahoo!'s data base?
Oh yeah,, I think that both Google and Yahoo are against you now... would it be because they are careful that you don't steal their article and change them to benefit your own personal anger? I wonder!!!!!
Davis Re Keeping the Boycott Alive and Nelson Obuder: His address in Aruba is at the bottome of this post. I'll try and confirm it tomorrow. But if I can suggest a more effective method is to e-mail the editor of you local newspaper, Fox News, ABC News, NBC News, CBS News, CNN News, Time Magazine, all the media you can think of. I suspect the American people would love a name and face to direct American's anger over what happened to Natalee. That is what I intend to do and start posting links to America media tomorrow. For example, Fox News -- in my e-mail I'm going to ask why they haven't confronted Nelson Obuder -- the man how made the decison to quash the arrest of Natalee's murderer. I'll make the point that a decision of that kind could have only been made by the Prime Minister himself, Nelson Obuder. I'll ask Fox News what the American State Department is planning to do about Obuder's decision. Along with that I am going to include one of MK C posts and one of VanG's posts that slander Beth Twitty and their urls, especially MK C's one about Beth. Fox News I'm sure will be glad to get a new angle to follow up. I thought that would be the best way to keep the boycott alive -- give the American people a name and a face to direct their anger at. It's a good idea to write Aruba, but I'm afraid that all well get back is MC K, but more polite. But what would be the effect if Fox News received 200 letters and/or e-mails complaining about Nelson Obuder? Here is the address I found.
Nelson Obuder Prime Minister of Aruba, Parlamento di Aruba, Oranjestad, Aruba
Regarding "600,000 Reasons to Boycott Aruba" I typed the quotes myself from a report that the United Nations wrote on Human Trafficking. The quotes are accurate. There is no URL except to order the report. I tripled checked the parts I quoted and the parts I didn't put in quotes are my own synopsis of the rest of the chapter. I thought that would be obvious that the parts not in quotes are my synopsis. If you want something from a URL, do a search on drug trafficking and Aruba. You will find URL from U.S. law enforcement agencies that states Aruba is one of the major transit point for drug trafficking. But I'll leave that for someone else.
OH, what the Heck, let's tell them the truth!!!
HERE IS THE ORIGANAL POST: FROM THE US DEPARTMENT OF STATE! (NOT from the United Nations Task Force etc etc.. Like LIAR Wesley S have said...
.
PLEASE, Read and compare! YOU can notice all the changes LIAR Wesley S has done. YOU See AMericans... HE uses this site to lie. HE still think you are not smart enough. HE is playing with your emotions. Are we going to let him continue doing that?
.
OH... AND HERE IS THE WEBSITE LINK FOR THAT ARTICLE. I ENCOURAGE YOU TO PRINT BOTH AND COMPARE WHERE THE LIAR HAS MADE SO MANY CHANGES.... (isn't that illegal, by the way) This website exist. It is a wonder that he says that he obtained this info by order and then typed in the info him self. While it is the same info the website gave, only that Wesley made a few changes to it. But before I showed this link, he said that he COPIED PASTED the information from a website. In other sites, people are already beginning to see what a liar he has become to benefit his own sick anger and personal vangance. YOu see, when Wesley was 13, he was abused by either his father or mother. He was turtured, beaten, adn so many sad things happened to him, and this happened in his home in Canada. ANd nothing was done for him to get justice. So, he uses this case to look for his own justice.
.
http://www.state.gov/r/pa /ei/rls/38790.h...
.
.
The U.S. Government adopted a strong position against legalized prostitution in a December 2002 National Security Presidential Directive based on evidence that prostitution is inherently harmful and dehumanizing, and fuels trafficking in persons, a form of modern-day slavery.
Prostitution and related activities—including pimping and patronizing or maintaining brothels—fuel the growth of modern-day slavery by providing a façade behind which traffickers for sexual exploitation operate.
Where prostitution is legalized or tolerated, there is a greater demand for human trafficking victims and nearly always an increase in the number of women and children trafficked into commercial sex slavery.
Of the estimated 600,000 to 800,000 people trafficked across international borders annually, 80 percent of victims are female, and up to 50 percent are minors. Hundreds of thousands of these women and children are used in prostitution each year.
WOMEN AND CHILDREN WANT TO ESCAPE PROSTITUTION
The vast majority of women in prostitution don’t want to be there. Few seek it out or choose it, and most are desperate to leave it. A 2003 study first published in the scientific Journal of Trauma Practice found that 89 percent of women in prostitution want to escape.[1] And children are also trapped in prostitution—despite the fact that international covenants and protocols impose upon state parties an obligation to criminalize the commercial sexual exploitation of children.
PROSTITUTION IS INHERENTLY HARMFUL
Few activities are as brutal and damaging to people as prostitution. Field research in nine countries concluded that 60-75 percent of women in prostitution were raped, 70-95 percent were physically assaulted, and 68 percent met the criteria for post traumatic stress disorder in the same range as treatment-seeking combat veterans[2] and victims of state-organized torture.[3] Beyond this shocking abuse, the public health implications of prostitution are devastating and include a myriad of serious and fatal diseases, including HIV/AIDS.
A path-breaking, five-country academic study concluded that research on prostitution has overlooked "[t]he burden of physical injuries and illnesses that women in the sex industry sustain from the violence inflicted on them, or from their significantly higher rates of hepatitis B, higher risks of cervical cancer, fertility complications, and psychological trauma."[4]
STATE ATTEMPTS TO REGULATE PROSTITUTION
State attempts to regulate prostitution by introducing medical check-ups or licenses don’t address the core problem: the routine abuse and violence that form the prostitution experience and brutally victimize those caught in its netherworld. Prostitution leaves women and children physically, mentally, emotionally, and spiritually devastated. Recovery takes years, even decades—often, the damage can never be undone.
PROSTITUTION CREATES A SAFE HAVEN FOR CRIMINALS
Legalization of prostitution expands the market for commercial sex, opening markets for criminal enterprises and creating a safe haven for criminals who traffic people into prostitution. Organized crime networks do not register with the government, do not pay taxes, and do not protect prostitutes. Legalization simply makes it easier for them to blend in with a purportedly regulated sex sector and makes it more difficult for prosecutors to identify and punish those who are trafficking people.
The Swedish Government has found that much of the vast profit generated by the global prostitution industry goes into the pockets of human traffickers. The Swedish Government said, "International trafficking in human beings could not flourish but for the existence of local prostitution markets where men are willing and able to buy and sell women and children for sexual exploitation."[5]
To fight human trafficking and promote equality for women, Sweden has aggressively prosecuted customers, pimps, and brothel owners since 1999. As a result, two years after the new policy, there was a 50 percent decrease in women prostituting and a 75 percent decrease in men buying sex. Trafficking for the purposes of sexual exploitation decreased as well.[6] In contrast, where prostitution has been legalized or tolerated, there is an increase in the demand for sex slaves[7] and the number of victimized foreign women—many likely victims of human trafficking.[8]
Grant-making implications of the U.S. government policy
As a result of the prostitution-trafficking link, the U.S. government concluded that no U.S. grant funds should be awarded to foreign non-governmental organizations that support legal state-regulated prostitution. Prostitution is not the oldest profession, but the oldest form of oppression.
LIAR, you claery said that you COPIED PAST them from their website. I will later post the original.
600,000 REASONS TO BOYCOTT ARUBA
Re: Nelson Obuder, to the people who have e-mailed me about this post, Nelson Obuder is the Prime Minister of Aruba and Fredis Refenjol is the Governor of Aruba. The power to pass laws, I believe, belongs to Nelson Obuder and the Parliament of Aruba, Fredis Refenjol is mostly a figurehead, a representative of the Queen of the Netherlands. The Minister of Justice is Rudy Croes. But in answer to your questions "Nelson Obuder" is likely the name you are looking for.
The following is an exerpt on the United Nations, not the United States but the United Nations' Task Force on Human Trafficking. The following comes from the section that deals with countries where prostitution is legal. Prostitution in Netherlands is legal. The same task force deals with other countries where prostitution has been legalized besides the Netherlands. he United Nations investigation has found in it's own words, that legalized prostitution in the Netherlands is "a facade" for human trafficking and uses Aruba as a transit point. Since this website doesn't allow for bolding of titles, I've changed them to capital letters, where you see capital letters, it is a new section. Also note that the United Nations report does not say Aruba is doing anything illegal, but instead Aruba considers whatever happens as being legal because it is legal within their own borders. Note the United Nations' conclusion about this attitude in the last paragraph. It is from this where the "sex slave" theory about Natalee's disappearance originated. Not from some conspiracy theory, but the United Nations. We now know that Natalee was murdered and this post has nothing to do with her. Words within parentheses are mine. The report is about human trafficking and prostitution and is an excerpt from a much larger report. The words in parentheses are there to show that the report is referring to the relationship between human trafficking and LEGALIZED prostitution.
"Legalized Prostitution in the Netherlands and Aruba—including pimping and patronizing or maintaining brothels—fuel the growth of modern-day slavery by providing a façade behind which traffickers for sexual exploitation operate."
(My own note on the preceding paragraph. They do not use the word illegal but "facade" prostitution under Aruban law is not illegal.)
"Legalized Prostitution creates a safe haven for criminals who participate in illegal prostitution in South and Central America. Legalized prostitution in the Netherlands has made Aruba the main transit destination for the trafficking of women and children for sexual exploitation from South and Central America." (from South America to Aruba then to the Netherlands from the Netherlands to other countries in Europe)
"According to the United States State Department, the Aruban justice system acts as a facilitator for this trade by impeding families and others (other nations) attempts to locate missing persons."
"Where prostitution is legalized or tolerated, there is a greater demand for human trafficking victims and nearly always an increase in the number of women and children trafficked into commercial sex slavery."
It is estimated that between 600,000 to 800,000 women and children are trafficked for legal and illegal prostitution from (through) Aruba each year. Of these 600,000 to 800,000 it is estimated that this number includes hundreds of thousands of women and children who are sold into illegal prostitution. Of those sold into illegal prostitution 80 percent of victims are female.
(Note: the following deals prostitution of children who are under the age of consent in their home country. The forced prostitution occurs in the country where they have been transported to, so again, under Aruban laws, no law has been broken) "Fifty percent of chidren illegly trafficked to other countries from South and Central America are trafficked through Aruba (to the Netherlands and from the Netherlands to other countries) Legalized prostitution results in far more underground illegal trafficking than where prostitution is illegal.
PROSTITUTION IS INHERENTLY HARMFUL
Few activities are as brutal and damaging to people as prostitution. Field research in nine South and Central American countries concluded that 60-75 percent of women in prostitution were raped, 70-95 percent were physically assaulted, and 68 percent met the criteria for post traumatic stress disorder in the same range as treatment-seeking combat veterans and victims of state-organized torture. Beyond this shocking abuse, the public health implications of prostitution are devastating and include a myriad of serious and fatal diseases, including HIV/AIDS.
The burden of physical injuries and illnesses that women in the sex industry sustain from the violence inflicted on them, or from their significantly higher rates of hepatitis B, higher risks of cervical cancer, fertility complications, and psychological trauma."
STATE REGULATION TO PROTECT PROSTITUTES
(The Netherlands prides itself on it's regulations that safeguard prostitution)
"State attempts where prostitution is legal to regulate health problems and protect women from violence by introducing medical check-ups or licenses are often a façade that hides the core problem: the routine abuse and violence that form the prostitution experience involves brutal violence to silence those who wish to escape. Prostitution leaves women and children physically, mentally, emotionally, and spiritually devastated. Recovery takes years, even decades—often, the damage can never be undone.
Legalization of prostitution expands the market for commercial sex, opening markets for criminal enterprises and creating a safe haven for criminals who traffic people into prostitution. Organized crime networks do not need to register with governments, do not pay taxes (on human trafficking), and do not protect prostitutes.
"LEGALIZATION
Legalization simply makes it easier for them (human traffickers) to blend in with a purportedly regulated sex sector and makes it more difficult for prosecutors (from the victims countries) to identify and punish those who are trafficking people."
This is me again: Yes Aruba argues that nothing illegal happens and under their laws, technically to themselve it doesn't, but I still maintain that Aruba and Arubans live off the human misery of others. Arubans can disagree with me all they like, I admit I have an attitude towards that country. Others can draw their own conclusions. Boycott Aruba.
600,000 REASONS TO BOYCOTT ARUBA
Re: Nelson Obuder, to the people who have e-mailed me about this post, Nelson Obuder is the Prime Minister of Aruba and Fredis Refenjol is the Governor of Aruba. The power to pass laws, I believe, belongs to Nelson Obuder and the Parliament of Aruba, Fredis Refenjol is mostly a figurehead, a representative of the Queen of the Netherlands. The Minister of Justice is Rudy Croes. But in answer to your questions "Nelson Obuder" is likely the name you are looking for.
The following is an exerpt on the United Nations, not the United States but the United Nations' Task Force on Human Trafficking. The following comes from the section that deals with countries where prostitution is legal. Prostitution in Netherlands is legal. The same task force deals with other countries where prostitution has been legalized besides the Netherlands. he United Nations investigation has found in it's own words, that legalized prostitution in the Netherlands is "a facade" for human trafficking and uses Aruba as a transit point. Since this website doesn't allow for bolding of titles, I've changed them to capital letters, where you see capital letters, it is a new section. Also note that the United Nations report does not say Aruba is doing anything illegal, but instead Aruba considers whatever happens as being legal because it is legal within their own borders. Note the United Nations' conclusion about this attitude in the last paragraph. It is from this where the "sex slave" theory about Natalee's disappearance originated. Not from some conspiracy theory, but the United Nations. We now know that Natalee was murdered and this post has nothing to do with her. Words within parentheses are mine. The report is about human trafficking and prostitution and is an excerpt from a much larger report. The words in parentheses are there to show that the report is referring to the relationship between human trafficking and LEGALIZED prostitution.
"Legalized Prostitution in the Netherlands and Aruba—including pimping and patronizing or maintaining brothels—fuel the growth of modern-day slavery by providing a façade behind which traffickers for sexual exploitation operate."
(My own note on the preceding paragraph. They do not use the word illegal but "facade" prostitution under Aruban law is not illegal.)
"Legalized Prostitution creates a safe haven for criminals who participate in illegal prostitution in South and Central America. Legalized prostitution in the Netherlands has made Aruba the main transit destination for the trafficking of women and children for sexual exploitation from South and Central America." (from South America to Aruba then to the Netherlands from the Netherlands to other countries in Europe)
"According to the United States State Department, the Aruban justice system acts as a facilitator for this trade by impeding families and others (other nations) attempts to locate missing persons."
"Where prostitution is legalized or tolerated, there is a greater demand for human trafficking victims and nearly always an increase in the number of women and children trafficked into commercial sex slavery."
It is estimated that between 600,000 to 800,000 women and children are trafficked for legal and illegal prostitution from (through) Aruba each year. Of these 600,000 to 800,000 it is estimated that this number includes hundreds of thousands of women and children who are sold into illegal prostitution. Of those sold into illegal prostitution 80 percent of victims are female.
(Note: the following deals prostitution of children who are under the age of consent in their home country. The forced prostitution occurs in the country where they have been transported to, so again, under Aruban laws, no law has been broken) "Fifty percent of chidren illegly trafficked to other countries from South and Central America are trafficked through Aruba (to the Netherlands and from the Netherlands to other countries) Legalized prostitution results in far more underground illegal trafficking than where prostitution is illegal.
PROSTITUTION IS INHERENTLY HARMFUL
Few activities are as brutal and damaging to people as prostitution. Field research in nine South and Central American countries concluded that 60-75 percent of women in prostitution were raped, 70-95 percent were physically assaulted, and 68 percent met the criteria for post traumatic stress disorder in the same range as treatment-seeking combat veterans and victims of state-organized torture. Beyond this shocking abuse, the public health implications of prostitution are devastating and include a myriad of serious and fatal diseases, including HIV/AIDS.
The burden of physical injuries and illnesses that women in the sex industry sustain from the violence inflicted on them, or from their significantly higher rates of hepatitis B, higher risks of cervical cancer, fertility complications, and psychological trauma."
STATE REGULATION TO PROTECT PROSTITUTES
(The Netherlands prides itself on it's regulations that safeguard prostitution)
"State attempts where prostitution is legal to regulate health problems and protect women from violence by introducing medical check-ups or licenses are often a façade that hides the core problem: the routine abuse and violence that form the prostitution experience involves brutal violence to silence those who wish to escape. Prostitution leaves women and children physically, mentally, emotionally, and spiritually devastated. Recovery takes years, even decades—often, the damage can never be undone.
Legalization of prostitution expands the market for commercial sex, opening markets for criminal enterprises and creating a safe haven for criminals who traffic people into prostitution. Organized crime networks do not need to register with governments, do not pay taxes (on human trafficking), and do not protect prostitutes.
"LEGALIZATION
Legalization simply makes it easier for them (human traffickers) to blend in with a purportedly regulated sex sector and makes it more difficult for prosecutors (from the victims countries) to identify and punish those who are trafficking people."
This is me again: Yes Aruba argues that nothing illegal happens and under their laws, technically to themselve it doesn't, but I still maintain that Aruba and Arubans live off the human misery of others. Arubans can disagree with me all they like, I admit I have an attitude towards that country. Others can draw their own conclusions. Boycott Aruba.
600,000 REASONS TO BOYCOTT ARUBA
Re: Nelson Obuder, to the people who have e-mailed me about this post, Nelson Obuder is the Prime Minister of Aruba and Fredis Refenjol is the Governor of Aruba. The power to pass laws, I believe, belongs to Nelson Obuder and the Parliament of Aruba, Fredis Refenjol is mostly a figurehead, a representative of the Queen of the Netherlands. The Minister of Justice is Rudy Croes. But in answer to your questions "Nelson Obuder" is likely the name you are looking for.
The following is an exerpt on the United Nations, not the United States but the United Nations' Task Force on Human Trafficking. The following comes from the section that deals with countries where prostitution is legal. Prostitution in Netherlands is legal. The same task force deals with other countries where prostitution has been legalized besides the Netherlands. he United Nations investigation has found in it's own words, that legalized prostitution in the Netherlands is "a facade" for human trafficking and uses Aruba as a transit point. Since this website doesn't allow for bolding of titles, I've changed them to capital letters, where you see capital letters, it is a new section. Also note that the United Nations report does not say Aruba is doing anything illegal, but instead Aruba considers whatever happens as being legal because it is legal within their own borders. Note the United Nations' conclusion about this attitude in the last paragraph. It is from this where the "sex slave" theory about Natalee's disappearance originated. Not from some conspiracy theory, but the United Nations. We now know that Natalee was murdered and this post has nothing to do with her. Words within parentheses are mine. The report is about human trafficking and prostitution and is an excerpt from a much larger report. The words in parentheses are there to show that the report is referring to the relationship between human trafficking and LEGALIZED prostitution.
"Legalized Prostitution in the Netherlands and Aruba—including pimping and patronizing or maintaining brothels—fuel the growth of modern-day slavery by providing a façade behind which traffickers for sexual exploitation operate."
(My own note on the preceding paragraph. They do not use the word illegal but "facade" prostitution under Aruban law is not illegal.)
"Legalized Prostitution creates a safe haven for criminals who participate in illegal prostitution in South and Central America. Legalized prostitution in the Netherlands has made Aruba the main transit destination for the trafficking of women and children for sexual exploitation from South and Central America." (from South America to Aruba then to the Netherlands from the Netherlands to other countries in Europe)
"According to the United States State Department, the Aruban justice system acts as a facilitator for this trade by impeding families and others (other nations) attempts to locate missing persons."
"Where prostitution is legalized or tolerated, there is a greater demand for human trafficking victims and nearly always an increase in the number of women and children trafficked into commercial sex slavery."
It is estimated that between 600,000 to 800,000 women and children are trafficked for legal and illegal prostitution from (through) Aruba each year. Of these 600,000 to 800,000 it is estimated that this number includes hundreds of thousands of women and children who are sold into illegal prostitution. Of those sold into illegal prostitution 80 percent of victims are female.
(Note: the following deals prostitution of children who are under the age of consent in their home country. The forced prostitution occurs in the country where they have been transported to, so again, under Aruban laws, no law has been broken) "Fifty percent of chidren illegly trafficked to other countries from South and Central America are trafficked through Aruba (to the Netherlands and from the Netherlands to other countries) Legalized prostitution results in far more underground illegal trafficking than where prostitution is illegal.
PROSTITUTION IS INHERENTLY HARMFUL
Few activities are as brutal and damaging to people as prostitution. Field research in nine South and Central American countries concluded that 60-75 percent of women in prostitution were raped, 70-95 percent were physically assaulted, and 68 percent met the criteria for post traumatic stress disorder in the same range as treatment-seeking combat veterans and victims of state-organized torture. Beyond this shocking abuse, the public health implications of prostitution are devastating and include a myriad of serious and fatal diseases, including HIV/AIDS.
The burden of physical injuries and illnesses that women in the sex industry sustain from the violence inflicted on them, or from their significantly higher rates of hepatitis B, higher risks of cervical cancer, fertility complications, and psychological trauma."
STATE REGULATION TO PROTECT PROSTITUTES
(The Netherlands prides itself on it's regulations that safeguard prostitution)
"State attempts where prostitution is legal to regulate health problems and protect women from violence by introducing medical check-ups or licenses are often a façade that hides the core problem: the routine abuse and violence that form the prostitution experience involves brutal violence to silence those who wish to escape. Prostitution leaves women and children physically, mentally, emotionally, and spiritually devastated. Recovery takes years, even decades—often, the damage can never be undone.
Legalization of prostitution expands the market for commercial sex, opening markets for criminal enterprises and creating a safe haven for criminals who traffic people into prostitution. Organized crime networks do not need to register with governments, do not pay taxes (on human trafficking), and do not protect prostitutes.
"LEGALIZATION
Legalization simply makes it easier for them (human traffickers) to blend in with a purportedly regulated sex sector and makes it more difficult for prosecutors (from the victims countries) to identify and punish those who are trafficking people."
This is me again: Yes Aruba argues that nothing illegal happens and under their laws, technically to themselve it doesn't, but I still maintain that Aruba and Arubans live off the human misery of others. Arubans can disagree with me all they like, I admit I have an attitude towards that country. Others can draw their own conclusions. Boycott Aruba.
600,000 REASONS TO BOYCOTT ARUBA
Re: Nelson Obuder, to the people who have e-mailed me about this post, Nelson Obuder is the Prime Minister of Aruba and Fredis Refenjol is the Governor of Aruba. The power to pass laws, I believe, belongs to Nelson Obuder and the Parliament of Aruba, Fredis Refenjol is mostly a figurehead, a representative of the Queen of the Netherlands. The Minister of Justice is Rudy Croes. But in answer to your questions "Nelson Obuder" is likely the name you are looking for.
The following is an exerpt on the United Nations, not the United States but the United Nations' Task Force on Human Trafficking. The following comes from the section that deals with countries where prostitution is legal. Prostitution in Netherlands is legal. The same task force deals with other countries where prostitution has been legalized besides the Netherlands. he United Nations investigation has found in it's own words, that legalized prostitution in the Netherlands is "a facade" for human trafficking and uses Aruba as a transit point. Since this website doesn't allow for bolding of titles, I've changed them to capital letters, where you see capital letters, it is a new section. Also note that the United Nations report does not say Aruba is doing anything illegal, but instead Aruba considers whatever happens as being legal because it is legal within their own borders. Note the United Nations' conclusion about this attitude in the last paragraph. It is from this where the "sex slave" theory about Natalee's disappearance originated. Not from some conspiracy theory, but the United Nations. We now know that Natalee was murdered and this post has nothing to do with her. Words within parentheses are mine. The report is about human trafficking and prostitution and is an excerpt from a much larger report. The words in parentheses are there to show that the report is referring to the relationship between human trafficking and LEGALIZED prostitution.
"Legalized Prostitution in the Netherlands and Aruba—including pimping and patronizing or maintaining brothels—fuel the growth of modern-day slavery by providing a façade behind which traffickers for sexual exploitation operate."
(My own note on the preceding paragraph. They do not use the word illegal but "facade" prostitution under Aruban law is not illegal.)
"Legalized Prostitution creates a safe haven for criminals who participate in illegal prostitution in South and Central America. Legalized prostitution in the Netherlands has made Aruba the main transit destination for the trafficking of women and children for sexual exploitation from South and Central America." (from South America to Aruba then to the Netherlands from the Netherlands to other countries in Europe)
"According to the United States State Department, the Aruban justice system acts as a facilitator for this trade by impeding families and others (other nations) attempts to locate missing persons."
"Where prostitution is legalized or tolerated, there is a greater demand for human trafficking victims and nearly always an increase in the number of women and children trafficked into commercial sex slavery."
It is estimated that between 600,000 to 800,000 women and children are trafficked for legal and illegal prostitution from (through) Aruba each year. Of these 600,000 to 800,000 it is estimated that this number includes hundreds of thousands of women and children who are sold into illegal prostitution. Of those sold into illegal prostitution 80 percent of victims are female.
(Note: the following deals prostitution of children who are under the age of consent in their home country. The forced prostitution occurs in the country where they have been transported to, so again, under Aruban laws, no law has been broken) "Fifty percent of chidren illegly trafficked to other countries from South and Central America are trafficked through Aruba (to the Netherlands and from the Netherlands to other countries) Legalized prostitution results in far more underground illegal trafficking than where prostitution is illegal.
PROSTITUTION IS INHERENTLY HARMFUL
Few activities are as brutal and damaging to people as prostitution. Field research in nine South and Central American countries concluded that 60-75 percent of women in prostitution were raped, 70-95 percent were physically assaulted, and 68 percent met the criteria for post traumatic stress disorder in the same range as treatment-seeking combat veterans and victims of state-organized torture. Beyond this shocking abuse, the public health implications of prostitution are devastating and include a myriad of serious and fatal diseases, including HIV/AIDS.
The burden of physical injuries and illnesses that women in the sex industry sustain from the violence inflicted on them, or from their significantly higher rates of hepatitis B, higher risks of cervical cancer, fertility complications, and psychological trauma."
STATE REGULATION TO PROTECT PROSTITUTES
(The Netherlands prides itself on it's regulations that safeguard prostitution)
"State attempts where prostitution is legal to regulate health problems and protect women from violence by introducing medical check-ups or licenses are often a façade that hides the core problem: the routine abuse and violence that form the prostitution experience involves brutal violence to silence those who wish to escape. Prostitution leaves women and children physically, mentally, emotionally, and spiritually devastated. Recovery takes years, even decades—often, the damage can never be undone.
Legalization of prostitution expands the market for commercial sex, opening markets for criminal enterprises and creating a safe haven for criminals who traffic people into prostitution. Organized crime networks do not need to register with governments, do not pay taxes (on human trafficking), and do not protect prostitutes.
"LEGALIZATION
Legalization simply makes it easier for them (human traffickers) to blend in with a purportedly regulated sex sector and makes it more difficult for prosecutors (from the victims countries) to identify and punish those who are trafficking people."
This is me again: Yes Aruba argues that nothing illegal happens and under their laws, technically to themselve it doesn't, but I still maintain that Aruba and Arubans live off the human misery of others. Arubans can disagree with me all they like, I admit I have an attitude towards that country. Others can draw their own conclusions. Boycott Aruba.
600,000 REASONS TO BOYCOTT ARUBA
Re: Nelson Obuder, to the people who have e-mailed me about this post, Nelson Obuder is the Prime Minister of Aruba and Fredis Refenjol is the Governor of Aruba. The power to pass laws, I believe, belongs to Nelson Obuder and the Parliament of Aruba, Fredis Refenjol is mostly a figurehead, a representative of the Queen of the Netherlands. The Minister of Justice is Rudy Croes. But in answer to your questions "Nelson Obuder" is likely the name you are looking for.
The following is an exerpt on the United Nations, not the United States but the United Nations' Task Force on Human Trafficking. The following comes from the section that deals with countries where prostitution is legal. Prostitution in Netherlands is legal. The same task force deals with other countries where prostitution has been legalized besides the Netherlands. he United Nations investigation has found in it's own words, that legalized prostitution in the Netherlands is "a facade" for human trafficking and uses Aruba as a transit point. Since this website doesn't allow for bolding of titles, I've changed them to capital letters, where you see capital letters, it is a new section. Also note that the United Nations report does not say Aruba is doing anything illegal, but instead Aruba considers whatever happens as being legal because it is legal within their own borders. Note the United Nations' conclusion about this attitude in the last paragraph. It is from this where the "sex slave" theory about Natalee's disappearance originated. Not from some conspiracy theory, but the United Nations. We now know that Natalee was murdered and this post has nothing to do with her. Words within parentheses are mine. The report is about human trafficking and prostitution and is an excerpt from a much larger report. The words in parentheses are there to show that the report is referring to the relationship between human trafficking and LEGALIZED prostitution.
"Legalized Prostitution in the Netherlands and Aruba—including pimping and patronizing or maintaining brothels—fuel the growth of modern-day slavery by providing a façade behind which traffickers for sexual exploitation operate."
(My own note on the preceding paragraph. They do not use the word illegal but "facade" prostitution under Aruban law is not illegal.)
"Legalized Prostitution creates a safe haven for criminals who participate in illegal prostitution in South and Central America. Legalized prostitution in the Netherlands has made Aruba the main transit destination for the trafficking of women and children for sexual exploitation from South and Central America." (from South America to Aruba then to the Netherlands from the Netherlands to other countries in Europe)
"According to the United States State Department, the Aruban justice system acts as a facilitator for this trade by impeding families and others (other nations) attempts to locate missing persons."
"Where prostitution is legalized or tolerated, there is a greater demand for human trafficking victims and nearly always an increase in the number of women and children trafficked into commercial sex slavery."
It is estimated that between 600,000 to 800,000 women and children are trafficked for legal and illegal prostitution from (through) Aruba each year. Of these 600,000 to 800,000 it is estimated that this number includes hundreds of thousands of women and children who are sold into illegal prostitution. Of those sold into illegal prostitution 80 percent of victims are female.
(Note: the following deals prostitution of children who are under the age of consent in their home country. The forced prostitution occurs in the country where they have been transported to, so again, under Aruban laws, no law has been broken) "Fifty percent of chidren illegly trafficked to other countries from South and Central America are trafficked through Aruba (to the Netherlands and from the Netherlands to other countries) Legalized prostitution results in far more underground illegal trafficking than where prostitution is illegal.
PROSTITUTION IS INHERENTLY HARMFUL
Few activities are as brutal and damaging to people as prostitution. Field research in nine South and Central American countries concluded that 60-75 percent of women in prostitution were raped, 70-95 percent were physically assaulted, and 68 percent met the criteria for post traumatic stress disorder in the same range as treatment-seeking combat veterans and victims of state-organized torture. Beyond this shocking abuse, the public health implications of prostitution are devastating and include a myriad of serious and fatal diseases, including HIV/AIDS.
The burden of physical injuries and illnesses that women in the sex industry sustain from the violence inflicted on them, or from their significantly higher rates of hepatitis B, higher risks of cervical cancer, fertility complications, and psychological trauma."
STATE REGULATION TO PROTECT PROSTITUTES
(The Netherlands prides itself on it's regulations that safeguard prostitution)
"State attempts where prostitution is legal to regulate health problems and protect women from violence by introducing medical check-ups or licenses are often a façade that hides the core problem: the routine abuse and violence that form the prostitution experience involves brutal violence to silence those who wish to escape. Prostitution leaves women and children physically, mentally, emotionally, and spiritually devastated. Recovery takes years, even decades—often, the damage can never be undone.
Legalization of prostitution expands the market for commercial sex, opening markets for criminal enterprises and creating a safe haven for criminals who traffic people into prostitution. Organized crime networks do not need to register with governments, do not pay taxes (on human trafficking), and do not protect prostitutes.
"LEGALIZATION
Legalization simply makes it easier for them (human traffickers) to blend in with a purportedly regulated sex sector and makes it more difficult for prosecutors (from the victims countries) to identify and punish those who are trafficking people."
This is me again: Yes Aruba argues that nothing illegal happens and under their laws, technically to themselve it doesn't, but I still maintain that Aruba and Arubans live off the human misery of others. Arubans can disagree with me all they like, I admit I have an attitude towards that country. Others can draw their own conclusions. Boycott Aruba.
600,000 REASONS TO BOYCOTT ARUBA
Re: Nelson Obuder, to the people who have e-mailed me about this post, Nelson Obuder is the Prime Minister of Aruba and Fredis Refenjol is the Governor of Aruba. The power to pass laws, I believe, belongs to Nelson Obuder and the Parliament of Aruba, Fredis Refenjol is mostly a figurehead, a representative of the Queen of the Netherlands. The Minister of Justice is Rudy Croes. But in answer to your questions "Nelson Obuder" is likely the name you are looking for.
The following is an exerpt on the United Nations, not the United States but the United Nations' Task Force on Human Trafficking. The following comes from the section that deals with countries where prostitution is legal. Prostitution in Netherlands is legal. The same task force deals with other countries where prostitution has been legalized besides the Netherlands. he United Nations investigation has found in it's own words, that legalized prostitution in the Netherlands is "a facade" for human trafficking and uses Aruba as a transit point. Since this website doesn't allow for bolding of titles, I've changed them to capital letters, where you see capital letters, it is a new section. Also note that the United Nations report does not say Aruba is doing anything illegal, but instead Aruba considers whatever happens as being legal because it is legal within their own borders. Note the United Nations' conclusion about this attitude in the last paragraph. It is from this where the "sex slave" theory about Natalee's disappearance originated. Not from some conspiracy theory, but the United Nations. We now know that Natalee was murdered and this post has nothing to do with her. Words within parentheses are mine. The report is about human trafficking and prostitution and is an excerpt from a much larger report. The words in parentheses are there to show that the report is referring to the relationship between human trafficking and LEGALIZED prostitution.
"Legalized Prostitution in the Netherlands and Aruba—including pimping and patronizing or maintaining brothels—fuel the growth of modern-day slavery by providing a façade behind which traffickers for sexual exploitation operate."
(My own note on the preceding paragraph. They do not use the word illegal but "facade" prostitution under Aruban law is not illegal.)
"Legalized Prostitution creates a safe haven for criminals who participate in illegal prostitution in South and Central America. Legalized prostitution in the Netherlands has made Aruba the main transit destination for the trafficking of women and children for sexual exploitation from South and Central America." (from South America to Aruba then to the Netherlands from the Netherlands to other countries in Europe)
"According to the United States State Department, the Aruban justice system acts as a facilitator for this trade by impeding families and others (other nations) attempts to locate missing persons."
"Where prostitution is legalized or tolerated, there is a greater demand for human trafficking victims and nearly always an increase in the number of women and children trafficked into commercial sex slavery."
It is estimated that between 600,000 to 800,000 women and children are trafficked for legal and illegal prostitution from (through) Aruba each year. Of these 600,000 to 800,000 it is estimated that this number includes hundreds of thousands of women and children who are sold into illegal prostitution. Of those sold into illegal prostitution 80 percent of victims are female.
(Note: the following deals prostitution of children who are under the age of consent in their home country. The forced prostitution occurs in the country where they have been transported to, so again, under Aruban laws, no law has been broken) "Fifty percent of chidren illegly trafficked to other countries from South and Central America are trafficked through Aruba (to the Netherlands and from the Netherlands to other countries) Legalized prostitution results in far more underground illegal trafficking than where prostitution is illegal.
PROSTITUTION IS INHERENTLY HARMFUL
Few activities are as brutal and damaging to people as prostitution. Field research in nine South and Central American countries concluded that 60-75 percent of women in prostitution were raped, 70-95 percent were physically assaulted, and 68 percent met the criteria for post traumatic stress disorder in the same range as treatment-seeking combat veterans and victims of state-organized torture. Beyond this shocking abuse, the public health implications of prostitution are devastating and include a myriad of serious and fatal diseases, including HIV/AIDS.
The burden of physical injuries and illnesses that women in the sex industry sustain from the violence inflicted on them, or from their significantly higher rates of hepatitis B, higher risks of cervical cancer, fertility complications, and psychological trauma."
STATE REGULATION TO PROTECT PROSTITUTES
(The Netherlands prides itself on it's regulations that safeguard prostitution)
"State attempts where prostitution is legal to regulate health problems and protect women from violence by introducing medical check-ups or licenses are often a façade that hides the core problem: the routine abuse and violence that form the prostitution experience involves brutal violence to silence those who wish to escape. Prostitution leaves women and children physically, mentally, emotionally, and spiritually devastated. Recovery takes years, even decades—often, the damage can never be undone.
Legalization of prostitution expands the market for commercial sex, opening markets for criminal enterprises and creating a safe haven for criminals who traffic people into prostitution. Organized crime networks do not need to register with governments, do not pay taxes (on human trafficking), and do not protect prostitutes.
"LEGALIZATION
Legalization simply makes it easier for them (human traffickers) to blend in with a purportedly regulated sex sector and makes it more difficult for prosecutors (from the victims countries) to identify and punish those who are trafficking people."
This is me again: Yes Aruba argues that nothing illegal happens and under their laws, technically to themselve it doesn't, but I still maintain that Aruba and Arubans live off the human misery of others. Arubans can disagree with me all they like, I admit I have an attitude towards that country. Others can draw their own conclusions. Boycott Aruba.
600,000 REASONS TO BOYCOTT ARUBA
Re: Nelson Obuder, to the people who have e-mailed me about this post, Nelson Obuder is the Prime Minister of Aruba and Fredis Refenjol is the Governor of Aruba. The power to pass laws, I believe, belongs to Nelson Obuder and the Parliament of Aruba, Fredis Refenjol is mostly a figurehead, a representative of the Queen of the Netherlands. The Minister of Justice is Rudy Croes. But in answer to your questions "Nelson Obuder" is likely the name you are looking for.
The following is an exerpt on the United Nations, not the United States but the United Nations' Task Force on Human Trafficking. The following comes from the section that deals with countries where prostitution is legal. Prostitution in Netherlands is legal. The same task force deals with other countries where prostitution has been legalized besides the Netherlands. he United Nations investigation has found in it's own words, that legalized prostitution in the Netherlands is "a facade" for human trafficking and uses Aruba as a transit point. Since this website doesn't allow for bolding of titles, I've changed them to capital letters, where you see capital letters, it is a new section. Also note that the United Nations report does not say Aruba is doing anything illegal, but instead Aruba considers whatever happens as being legal because it is legal within their own borders. Note the United Nations' conclusion about this attitude in the last paragraph. It is from this where the "sex slave" theory about Natalee's disappearance originated. Not from some conspiracy theory, but the United Nations. We now know that Natalee was murdered and this post has nothing to do with her. Words within parentheses are mine. The report is about human trafficking and prostitution and is an excerpt from a much larger report. The words in parentheses are there to show that the report is referring to the relationship between human trafficking and LEGALIZED prostitution.
"Legalized Prostitution in the Netherlands and Aruba—including pimping and patronizing or maintaining brothels—fuel the growth of modern-day slavery by providing a façade behind which traffickers for sexual exploitation operate."
(My own note on the preceding paragraph. They do not use the word illegal but "facade" prostitution under Aruban law is not illegal.)
"Legalized Prostitution creates a safe haven for criminals who participate in illegal prostitution in South and Central America. Legalized prostitution in the Netherlands has made Aruba the main transit destination for the trafficking of women and children for sexual exploitation from South and Central America." (from South America to Aruba then to the Netherlands from the Netherlands to other countries in Europe)
"According to the United States State Department, the Aruban justice system acts as a facilitator for this trade by impeding families and others (other nations) attempts to locate missing persons."
"Where prostitution is legalized or tolerated, there is a greater demand for human trafficking victims and nearly always an increase in the number of women and children trafficked into commercial sex slavery."
It is estimated that between 600,000 to 800,000 women and children are trafficked for legal and illegal prostitution from (through) Aruba each year. Of these 600,000 to 800,000 it is estimated that this number includes hundreds of thousands of women and children who are sold into illegal prostitution. Of those sold into illegal prostitution 80 percent of victims are female.
(Note: the following deals prostitution of children who are under the age of consent in their home country. The forced prostitution occurs in the country where they have been transported to, so again, under Aruban laws, no law has been broken) "Fifty percent of chidren illegly trafficked to other countries from South and Central America are trafficked through Aruba (to the Netherlands and from the Netherlands to other countries) Legalized prostitution results in far more underground illegal trafficking than where prostitution is illegal.
PROSTITUTION IS INHERENTLY HARMFUL
Few activities are as brutal and damaging to people as prostitution. Field research in nine South and Central American countries concluded that 60-75 percent of women in prostitution were raped, 70-95 percent were physically assaulted, and 68 percent met the criteria for post traumatic stress disorder in the same range as treatment-seeking combat veterans and victims of state-organized torture. Beyond this shocking abuse, the public health implications of prostitution are devastating and include a myriad of serious and fatal diseases, including HIV/AIDS.
The burden of physical injuries and illnesses that women in the sex industry sustain from the violence inflicted on them, or from their significantly higher rates of hepatitis B, higher risks of cervical cancer, fertility complications, and psychological trauma."
STATE REGULATION TO PROTECT PROSTITUTES
(The Netherlands prides itself on it's regulations that safeguard prostitution)
"State attempts where prostitution is legal to regulate health problems and protect women from violence by introducing medical check-ups or licenses are often a façade that hides the core problem: the routine abuse and violence that form the prostitution experience involves brutal violence to silence those who wish to escape. Prostitution leaves women and children physically, mentally, emotionally, and spiritually devastated. Recovery takes years, even decades—often, the damage can never be undone.
Legalization of prostitution expands the market for commercial sex, opening markets for criminal enterprises and creating a safe haven for criminals who traffic people into prostitution. Organized crime networks do not need to register with governments, do not pay taxes (on human trafficking), and do not protect prostitutes.
"LEGALIZATION
Legalization simply makes it easier for them (human traffickers) to blend in with a purportedly regulated sex sector and makes it more difficult for prosecutors (from the victims countries) to identify and punish those who are trafficking people."
This is me again: Yes Aruba argues that nothing illegal happens and under their laws, technically to themselve it doesn't, but I still maintain that Aruba and Arubans live off the human misery of others. Arubans can disagree with me all they like, I admit I have an attitude towards that country. Others can draw their own conclusions. Boycott Aruba.
600,000 REASONS TO BOYCOTT ARUBA
Re: Nelson Obuder, to the people who have e-mailed me about this post, Nelson Obuder is the Prime Minister of Aruba and Fredis Refenjol is the Governor of Aruba. The power to pass laws, I believe, belongs to Nelson Obuder and the Parliament of Aruba, Fredis Refenjol is mostly a figurehead, a representative of the Queen of the Netherlands. The Minister of Justice is Rudy Croes. But in answer to your questions "Nelson Obuder" is likely the name you are looking for.
The following is an exerpt on the United Nations, not the United States but the United Nations' Task Force on Human Trafficking. The following comes from the section that deals with countries where prostitution is legal. Prostitution in Netherlands is legal. The same task force deals with other countries where prostitution has been legalized besides the Netherlands. he United Nations investigation has found in it's own words, that legalized prostitution in the Netherlands is "a facade" for human trafficking and uses Aruba as a transit point. Since this website doesn't allow for bolding of titles, I've changed them to capital letters, where you see capital letters, it is a new section. Also note that the United Nations report does not say Aruba is doing anything illegal, but instead Aruba considers whatever happens as being legal because it is legal within their own borders. Note the United Nations' conclusion about this attitude in the last paragraph. It is from this where the "sex slave" theory about Natalee's disappearance originated. Not from some conspiracy theory, but the United Nations. We now know that Natalee was murdered and this post has nothing to do with her. Words within parentheses are mine. The report is about human trafficking and prostitution and is an excerpt from a much larger report. The words in parentheses are there to show that the report is referring to the relationship between human trafficking and LEGALIZED prostitution.
"Legalized Prostitution in the Netherlands and Aruba—including pimping and patronizing or maintaining brothels—fuel the growth of modern-day slavery by providing a façade behind which traffickers for sexual exploitation operate."
(My own note on the preceding paragraph. They do not use the word illegal but "facade" prostitution under Aruban law is not illegal.)
"Legalized Prostitution creates a safe haven for criminals who participate in illegal prostitution in South and Central America. Legalized prostitution in the Netherlands has made Aruba the main transit destination for the trafficking of women and children for sexual exploitation from South and Central America." (from South America to Aruba then to the Netherlands from the Netherlands to other countries in Europe)
"According to the United States State Department, the Aruban justice system acts as a facilitator for this trade by impeding families and others (other nations) attempts to locate missing persons."
"Where prostitution is legalized or tolerated, there is a greater demand for human trafficking victims and nearly always an increase in the number of women and children trafficked into commercial sex slavery."
It is estimated that between 600,000 to 800,000 women and children are trafficked for legal and illegal prostitution from (through) Aruba each year. Of these 600,000 to 800,000 it is estimated that this number includes hundreds of thousands of women and children who are sold into illegal prostitution. Of those sold into illegal prostitution 80 percent of victims are female.
(Note: the following deals prostitution of children who are under the age of consent in their home country. The forced prostitution occurs in the country where they have been transported to, so again, under Aruban laws, no law has been broken) "Fifty percent of chidren illegly trafficked to other countries from South and Central America are trafficked through Aruba (to the Netherlands and from the Netherlands to other countries) Legalized prostitution results in far more underground illegal trafficking than where prostitution is illegal.
PROSTITUTION IS INHERENTLY HARMFUL
Few activities are as brutal and damaging to people as prostitution. Field research in nine South and Central American countries concluded that 60-75 percent of women in prostitution were raped, 70-95 percent were physically assaulted, and 68 percent met the criteria for post traumatic stress disorder in the same range as treatment-seeking combat veterans and victims of state-organized torture. Beyond this shocking abuse, the public health implications of prostitution are devastating and include a myriad of serious and fatal diseases, including HIV/AIDS.
The burden of physical injuries and illnesses that women in the sex industry sustain from the violence inflicted on them, or from their significantly higher rates of hepatitis B, higher risks of cervical cancer, fertility complications, and psychological trauma."
STATE REGULATION TO PROTECT PROSTITUTES
(The Netherlands prides itself on it's regulations that safeguard prostitution)
"State attempts where prostitution is legal to regulate health problems and protect women from violence by introducing medical check-ups or licenses are often a façade that hides the core problem: the routine abuse and violence that form the prostitution experience involves brutal violence to silence those who wish to escape. Prostitution leaves women and children physically, mentally, emotionally, and spiritually devastated. Recovery takes years, even decades—often, the damage can never be undone.
Legalization of prostitution expands the market for commercial sex, opening markets for criminal enterprises and creating a safe haven for criminals who traffic people into prostitution. Organized crime networks do not need to register with governments, do not pay taxes (on human trafficking), and do not protect prostitutes.
"LEGALIZATION
Legalization simply makes it easier for them (human traffickers) to blend in with a purportedly regulated sex sector and makes it more difficult for prosecutors (from the victims countries) to identify and punish those who are trafficking people."
This is me again: Yes Aruba argues that nothing illegal happens and under their laws, technically to themselve it doesn't, but I still maintain that Aruba and Arubans live off the human misery of others. Arubans can disagree with me all they like, I admit I have an attitude towards that country. Others can draw their own conclusions. Boycott Aruba.
600,000 REASONS TO BOYCOTT ARUBA
Re: Nelson Obuder, to the people who have e-mailed me about this post, Nelson Obuder is the Prime Minister of Aruba and Fredis Refenjol is the Governor of Aruba. The power to pass laws, I believe, belongs to Nelson Obuder and the Parliament of Aruba, Fredis Refenjol is mostly a figurehead, a representative of the Queen of the Netherlands. The Minister of Justice is Rudy Croes. But in answer to your questions "Nelson Obuder" is likely the name you are looking for.
The following is an exerpt on the United Nations, not the United States but the United Nations' Task Force on Human Trafficking. The following comes from the section that deals with countries where prostitution is legal. Prostitution in Netherlands is legal. The same task force deals with other countries where prostitution has been legalized besides the Netherlands. he United Nations investigation has found in it's own words, that legalized prostitution in the Netherlands is "a facade" for human trafficking and uses Aruba as a transit point. Since this website doesn't allow for bolding of titles, I've changed them to capital letters, where you see capital letters, it is a new section. Also note that the United Nations report does not say Aruba is doing anything illegal, but instead Aruba considers whatever happens as being legal because it is legal within their own borders. Note the United Nations' conclusion about this attitude in the last paragraph. It is from this where the "sex slave" theory about Natalee's disappearance originated. Not from some conspiracy theory, but the United Nations. We now know that Natalee was murdered and this post has nothing to do with her. Words within parentheses are mine. The report is about human trafficking and prostitution and is an excerpt from a much larger report. The words in parentheses are there to show that the report is referring to the relationship between human trafficking and LEGALIZED prostitution.
"Legalized Prostitution in the Netherlands and Aruba—including pimping and patronizing or maintaining brothels—fuel the growth of modern-day slavery by providing a façade behind which traffickers for sexual exploitation operate."
(My own note on the preceding paragraph. They do not use the word illegal but "facade" prostitution under Aruban law is not illegal.)
"Legalized Prostitution creates a safe haven for criminals who participate in illegal prostitution in South and Central America. Legalized prostitution in the Netherlands has made Aruba the main transit destination for the trafficking of women and children for sexual exploitation from South and Central America." (from South America to Aruba then to the Netherlands from the Netherlands to other countries in Europe)
"According to the United States State Department, the Aruban justice system acts as a facilitator for this trade by impeding families and others (other nations) attempts to locate missing persons."
"Where prostitution is legalized or tolerated, there is a greater demand for human trafficking victims and nearly always an increase in the number of women and children trafficked into commercial sex slavery."
It is estimated that between 600,000 to 800,000 women and children are trafficked for legal and illegal prostitution from (through) Aruba each year. Of these 600,000 to 800,000 it is estimated that this number includes hundreds of thousands of women and children who are sold into illegal prostitution. Of those sold into illegal prostitution 80 percent of victims are female.
(Note: the following deals prostitution of children who are under the age of consent in their home country. The forced prostitution occurs in the country where they have been transported to, so again, under Aruban laws, no law has been broken) "Fifty percent of chidren illegly trafficked to other countries from South and Central America are trafficked through Aruba (to the Netherlands and from the Netherlands to other countries) Legalized prostitution results in far more underground illegal trafficking than where prostitution is illegal.
PROSTITUTION IS INHERENTLY HARMFUL
Few activities are as brutal and damaging to people as prostitution. Field research in nine South and Central American countries concluded that 60-75 percent of women in prostitution were raped, 70-95 percent were physically assaulted, and 68 percent met the criteria for post traumatic stress disorder in the same range as treatment-seeking combat veterans and victims of state-organized torture. Beyond this shocking abuse, the public health implications of prostitution are devastating and include a myriad of serious and fatal diseases, including HIV/AIDS.
The burden of physical injuries and illnesses that women in the sex industry sustain from the violence inflicted on them, or from their significantly higher rates of hepatitis B, higher risks of cervical cancer, fertility complications, and psychological trauma."
STATE REGULATION TO PROTECT PROSTITUTES
(The Netherlands prides itself on it's regulations that safeguard prostitution)
"State attempts where prostitution is legal to regulate health problems and protect women from violence by introducing medical check-ups or licenses are often a façade that hides the core problem: the routine abuse and violence that form the prostitution experience involves brutal violence to silence those who wish to escape. Prostitution leaves women and children physically, mentally, emotionally, and spiritually devastated. Recovery takes years, even decades—often, the damage can never be undone.
Legalization of prostitution expands the market for commercial sex, opening markets for criminal enterprises and creating a safe haven for criminals who traffic people into prostitution. Organized crime networks do not need to register with governments, do not pay taxes (on human trafficking), and do not protect prostitutes.
"LEGALIZATION
Legalization simply makes it easier for them (human traffickers) to blend in with a purportedly regulated sex sector and makes it more difficult for prosecutors (from the victims countries) to identify and punish those who are trafficking people."
This is me again: Yes Aruba argues that nothing illegal happens and under their laws, technically to themselve it doesn't, but I still maintain that Aruba and Arubans live off the human misery of others. Arubans can disagree with me all they like, I admit I have an attitude towards that country. Others can draw their own conclusions. Boycott Aruba.
600,000 REASONS TO BOYCOTT ARUBA
Re: Nelson Obuder, to the people who have e-mailed me about this post, Nelson Obuder is the Prime Minister of Aruba and Fredis Refenjol is the Governor of Aruba. The power to pass laws, I believe, belongs to Nelson Obuder and the Parliament of Aruba, Fredis Refenjol is mostly a figurehead, a representative of the Queen of the Netherlands. The Minister of Justice is Rudy Croes. But in answer to your questions "Nelson Obuder" is likely the name you are looking for.
The following is an exerpt on the United Nations, not the United States but the United Nations' Task Force on Human Trafficking. The following comes from the section that deals with countries where prostitution is legal. Prostitution in Netherlands is legal. The same task force deals with other countries where prostitution has been legalized besides the Netherlands. he United Nations investigation has found in it's own words, that legalized prostitution in the Netherlands is "a facade" for human trafficking and uses Aruba as a transit point. Since this website doesn't allow for bolding of titles, I've changed them to capital letters, where you see capital letters, it is a new section. Also note that the United Nations report does not say Aruba is doing anything illegal, but instead Aruba considers whatever happens as being legal because it is legal within their own borders. Note the United Nations' conclusion about this attitude in the last paragraph. It is from this where the "sex slave" theory about Natalee's disappearance originated. Not from some conspiracy theory, but the United Nations. We now know that Natalee was murdered and this post has nothing to do with her. Words within parentheses are mine. The report is about human trafficking and prostitution and is an excerpt from a much larger report. The words in parentheses are there to show that the report is referring to the relationship between human trafficking and LEGALIZED prostitution.
"Legalized Prostitution in the Netherlands and Aruba—including pimping and patronizing or maintaining brothels—fuel the growth of modern-day slavery by providing a façade behind which traffickers for sexual exploitation operate."
(My own note on the preceding paragraph. They do not use the word illegal but "facade" prostitution under Aruban law is not illegal.)
"Legalized Prostitution creates a safe haven for criminals who participate in illegal prostitution in South and Central America. Legalized prostitution in the Netherlands has made Aruba the main transit destination for the trafficking of women and children for sexual exploitation from South and Central America." (from South America to Aruba then to the Netherlands from the Netherlands to other countries in Europe)
"According to the United States State Department, the Aruban justice system acts as a facilitator for this trade by impeding families and others (other nations) attempts to locate missing persons."
"Where prostitution is legalized or tolerated, there is a greater demand for human trafficking victims and nearly always an increase in the number of women and children trafficked into commercial sex slavery."
It is estimated that between 600,000 to 800,000 women and children are trafficked for legal and illegal prostitution from (through) Aruba each year. Of these 600,000 to 800,000 it is estimated that this number includes hundreds of thousands of women and children who are sold into illegal prostitution. Of those sold into illegal prostitution 80 percent of victims are female.
(Note: the following deals prostitution of children who are under the age of consent in their home country. The forced prostitution occurs in the country where they have been transported to, so again, under Aruban laws, no law has been broken) "Fifty percent of chidren illegly trafficked to other countries from South and Central America are trafficked through Aruba (to the Netherlands and from the Netherlands to other countries) Legalized prostitution results in far more underground illegal trafficking than where prostitution is illegal.
PROSTITUTION IS INHERENTLY HARMFUL
Few activities are as brutal and damaging to people as prostitution. Field research in nine South and Central American countries concluded that 60-75 percent of women in prostitution were raped, 70-95 percent were physically assaulted, and 68 percent met the criteria for post traumatic stress disorder in the same range as treatment-seeking combat veterans and victims of state-organized torture. Beyond this shocking abuse, the public health implications of prostitution are devastating and include a myriad of serious and fatal diseases, including HIV/AIDS.
The burden of physical injuries and illnesses that women in the sex industry sustain from the violence inflicted on them, or from their significantly higher rates of hepatitis B, higher risks of cervical cancer, fertility complications, and psychological trauma."
STATE REGULATION TO PROTECT PROSTITUTES
(The Netherlands prides itself on it's regulations that safeguard prostitution)
"State attempts where prostitution is legal to regulate health problems and protect women from violence by introducing medical check-ups or licenses are often a façade that hides the core problem: the routine abuse and violence that form the prostitution experience involves brutal violence to silence those who wish to escape. Prostitution leaves women and children physically, mentally, emotionally, and spiritually devastated. Recovery takes years, even decades—often, the damage can never be undone.
Legalization of prostitution expands the market for commercial sex, opening markets for criminal enterprises and creating a safe haven for criminals who traffic people into prostitution. Organized crime networks do not need to register with governments, do not pay taxes (on human trafficking), and do not protect prostitutes.
"LEGALIZATION
Legalization simply makes it easier for them (human traffickers) to blend in with a purportedly regulated sex sector and makes it more difficult for prosecutors (from the victims countries) to identify and punish those who are trafficking people."
This is me again: Yes Aruba argues that nothing illegal happens and under their laws, technically to themselve it doesn't, but I still maintain that Aruba and Arubans live off the human misery of others. Arubans can disagree with me all they like, I admit I have an attitude towards that country. Others can draw their own conclusions. Boycott Aruba.
OH, what the Heck, let's tell them the truth!!!
HERE IS THE ORIGANAL POST: FROM THE US DEPARTMENT OF STATE! (NOT from the United Nations Task Force etc etc.. Like LIAR Wesley S have said...
.
PLEASE, Read and compare! YOU can notice all the changes LIAR Wesley S has done. YOU See AMericans... HE uses this site to lie. HE still think you are not smart enough. HE is playing with your emotions. Are we going to let him continue doing that?
.
OH... AND HERE IS THE WEBSITE LINK FOR THAT ARTICLE. I ENCOURAGE YOU TO PRINT BOTH AND COMPARE WHERE THE LIAR HAS MADE SO MANY CHANGES.... (isn't that illegal, by the way)
.
http://www.state.gov/r/pa /ei/rls/38790.h...
.
.
The U.S. Government adopted a strong position against legalized prostitution in a December 2002 National Security Presidential Directive based on evidence that prostitution is inherently harmful and dehumanizing, and fuels trafficking in persons, a form of modern-day slavery.
Prostitution and related activities—including pimping and patronizing or maintaining brothels—fuel the growth of modern-day slavery by providing a façade behind which traffickers for sexual exploitation operate.
Where prostitution is legalized or tolerated, there is a greater demand for human trafficking victims and nearly always an increase in the number of women and children trafficked into commercial sex slavery.
Of the estimated 600,000 to 800,000 people trafficked across international borders annually, 80 percent of victims are female, and up to 50 percent are minors. Hundreds of thousands of these women and children are used in prostitution each year.
WOMEN AND CHILDREN WANT TO ESCAPE PROSTITUTION
The vast majority of women in prostitution don’t want to be there. Few seek it out or choose it, and most are desperate to leave it. A 2003 study first published in the scientific Journal of Trauma Practice found that 89 percent of women in prostitution want to escape.[1] And children are also trapped in prostitution—despite the fact that international covenants and protocols impose upon state parties an obligation to criminalize the commercial sexual exploitation of children.
PROSTITUTION IS INHERENTLY HARMFUL
Few activities are as brutal and damaging to people as prostitution. Field research in nine countries concluded that 60-75 percent of women in prostitution were raped, 70-95 percent were physically assaulted, and 68 percent met the criteria for post traumatic stress disorder in the same range as treatment-seeking combat veterans[2] and victims of state-organized torture.[3] Beyond this shocking abuse, the public health implications of prostitution are devastating and include a myriad of serious and fatal diseases, including HIV/AIDS.
A path-breaking, five-country academic study concluded that research on prostitution has overlooked "[t]he burden of physical injuries and illnesses that women in the sex industry sustain from the violence inflicted on them, or from their significantly higher rates of hepatitis B, higher risks of cervical cancer, fertility complications, and psychological trauma."[4]
STATE ATTEMPTS TO REGULATE PROSTITUTION
State attempts to regulate prostitution by introducing medical check-ups or licenses don’t address the core problem: the routine abuse and violence that form the prostitution experience and brutally victimize those caught in its netherworld. Prostitution leaves women and children physically, mentally, emotionally, and spiritually devastated. Recovery takes years, even decades—often, the damage can never be undone.
PROSTITUTION CREATES A SAFE HAVEN FOR CRIMINALS
Legalization of prostitution expands the market for commercial sex, opening markets for criminal enterprises and creating a safe haven for criminals who traffic people into prostitution. Organized crime networks do not register with the government, do not pay taxes, and do not protect prostitutes. Legalization simply makes it easier for them to blend in with a purportedly regulated sex sector and makes it more difficult for prosecutors to identify and punish those who are trafficking people.
The Swedish Government has found that much of the vast profit generated by the global prostitution industry goes into the pockets of human traffickers. The Swedish Government said, "International trafficking in human beings could not flourish but for the existence of local prostitution markets where men are willing and able to buy and sell women and children for sexual exploitation."[5]
To fight human trafficking and promote equality for women, Sweden has aggressively prosecuted customers, pimps, and brothel owners since 1999. As a result, two years after the new policy, there was a 50 percent decrease in women prostituting and a 75 percent decrease in men buying sex. Trafficking for the purposes of sexual exploitation decreased as well.[6] In contrast, where prostitution has been legalized or tolerated, there is an increase in the demand for sex slaves[7] and the number of victimized foreign women—many likely victims of human trafficking.[8]
Grant-making implications of the U.S. government policy
As a result of the prostitution-trafficking link, the U.S. government concluded that no U.S. grant funds should be awarded to foreign non-governmental organizations that support legal state-regulated prostitution. Prostitution is not the oldest profession, but the oldest form of oppression
OH, what the Heck, let's tell them the truth!!!
HERE IS THE ORIGANAL POST: FROM THE US DEPARTMENT OF STATE! (NOT from the United Nations Task Force etc etc.. Like LIAR Wesley S have said...
.
PLEASE, Read and compare! YOU can notice all the changes LIAR Wesley S has done. YOU See AMericans... HE uses this site to lie. HE still think you are not smart enough. HE is playing with your emotions. Are we going to let him continue doing that?
.
OH... AND HERE IS THE WEBSITE LINK FOR THAT ARTICLE. I ENCOURAGE YOU TO PRINT BOTH AND COMPARE WHERE THE LIAR HAS MADE SO MANY CHANGES.... (isn't that illegal, by the way)
.
http://www.state.gov/r/pa /ei/rls/38790.h...
.
.
The U.S. Government adopted a strong position against legalized prostitution in a December 2002 National Security Presidential Directive based on evidence that prostitution is inherently harmful and dehumanizing, and fuels trafficking in persons, a form of modern-day slavery.
Prostitution and related activities—including pimping and patronizing or maintaining brothels—fuel the growth of modern-day slavery by providing a façade behind which traffickers for sexual exploitation operate.
Where prostitution is legalized or tolerated, there is a greater demand for human trafficking victims and nearly always an increase in the number of women and children trafficked into commercial sex slavery.
Of the estimated 600,000 to 800,000 people trafficked across international borders annually, 80 percent of victims are female, and up to 50 percent are minors. Hundreds of thousands of these women and children are used in prostitution each year.
WOMEN AND CHILDREN WANT TO ESCAPE PROSTITUTION
The vast majority of women in prostitution don’t want to be there. Few seek it out or choose it, and most are desperate to leave it. A 2003 study first published in the scientific Journal of Trauma Practice found that 89 percent of women in prostitution want to escape.[1] And children are also trapped in prostitution—despite the fact that international covenants and protocols impose upon state parties an obligation to criminalize the commercial sexual exploitation of children.
PROSTITUTION IS INHERENTLY HARMFUL
Few activities are as brutal and damaging to people as prostitution. Field research in nine countries concluded that 60-75 percent of women in prostitution were raped, 70-95 percent were physically assaulted, and 68 percent met the criteria for post traumatic stress disorder in the same range as treatment-seeking combat veterans[2] and victims of state-organized torture.[3] Beyond this shocking abuse, the public health implications of prostitution are devastating and include a myriad of serious and fatal diseases, including HIV/AIDS.
A path-breaking, five-country academic study concluded that research on prostitution has overlooked "[t]he burden of physical injuries and illnesses that women in the sex industry sustain from the violence inflicted on them, or from their significantly higher rates of hepatitis B, higher risks of cervical cancer, fertility complications, and psychological trauma."[4]
STATE ATTEMPTS TO REGULATE PROSTITUTION
State attempts to regulate prostitution by introducing medical check-ups or licenses don’t address the core problem: the routine abuse and violence that form the prostitution experience and brutally victimize those caught in its netherworld. Prostitution leaves women and children physically, mentally, emotionally, and spiritually devastated. Recovery takes years, even decades—often, the damage can never be undone.
PROSTITUTION CREATES A SAFE HAVEN FOR CRIMINALS
Legalization of prostitution expands the market for commercial sex, opening markets for criminal enterprises and creating a safe haven for criminals who traffic people into prostitution. Organized crime networks do not register with the government, do not pay taxes, and do not protect prostitutes. Legalization simply makes it easier for them to blend in with a purportedly regulated sex sector and makes it more difficult for prosecutors to identify and punish those who are trafficking people.
The Swedish Government has found that much of the vast profit generated by the global prostitution industry goes into the pockets of human traffickers. The Swedish Government said, "International trafficking in human beings could not flourish but for the existence of local prostitution markets where men are willing and able to buy and sell women and children for sexual exploitation."[5]
To fight human trafficking and promote equality for women, Sweden has aggressively prosecuted customers, pimps, and brothel owners since 1999. As a result, two years after the new policy, there was a 50 percent decrease in women prostituting and a 75 percent decrease in men buying sex. Trafficking for the purposes of sexual exploitation decreased as well.[6] In contrast, where prostitution has been legalized or tolerated, there is an increase in the demand for sex slaves[7] and the number of victimized foreign women—many likely victims of human trafficking.[8]
Grant-making implications of the U.S. government policy
As a result of the prostitution-trafficking link, the U.S. government concluded that no U.S. grant funds should be awarded to foreign non-governmental organizations that support legal state-regulated prostitution. Prostitution is not the oldest profession, but the oldest form of oppression
OH, what the Heck, let's tell them the truth!!!
HERE IS THE ORIGANAL POST: FROM THE US DEPARTMENT OF STATE! (NOT from the United Nations Task Force etc etc.. Like LIAR Wesley S have said...
.
PLEASE, Read and compare! YOU can notice all the changes LIAR Wesley S has done. YOU See AMericans... HE uses this site to lie. HE still think you are not smart enough. HE is playing with your emotions. Are we going to let him continue doing that?
.
OH... AND HERE IS THE WEBSITE LINK FOR THAT ARTICLE. I ENCOURAGE YOU TO PRINT BOTH AND COMPARE WHERE THE LIAR HAS MADE SO MANY CHANGES.... (isn't that illegal, by the way)
.
http://www.state.gov/r/pa /ei/rls/38790.h...
.
.
The U.S. Government adopted a strong position against legalized prostitution in a December 2002 National Security Presidential Directive based on evidence that prostitution is inherently harmful and dehumanizing, and fuels trafficking in persons, a form of modern-day slavery.
Prostitution and related activities—including pimping and patronizing or maintaining brothels—fuel the growth of modern-day slavery by providing a façade behind which traffickers for sexual exploitation operate.
Where prostitution is legalized or tolerated, there is a greater demand for human trafficking victims and nearly always an increase in the number of women and children trafficked into commercial sex slavery.
Of the estimated 600,000 to 800,000 people trafficked across international borders annually, 80 percent of victims are female, and up to 50 percent are minors. Hundreds of thousands of these women and children are used in prostitution each year.
WOMEN AND CHILDREN WANT TO ESCAPE PROSTITUTION
The vast majority of women in prostitution don’t want to be there. Few seek it out or choose it, and most are desperate to leave it. A 2003 study first published in the scientific Journal of Trauma Practice found that 89 percent of women in prostitution want to escape.[1] And children are also trapped in prostitution—despite the fact that international covenants and protocols impose upon state parties an obligation to criminalize the commercial sexual exploitation of children.
PROSTITUTION IS INHERENTLY HARMFUL
Few activities are as brutal and damaging to people as prostitution. Field research in nine countries concluded that 60-75 percent of women in prostitution were raped, 70-95 percent were physically assaulted, and 68 percent met the criteria for post traumatic stress disorder in the same range as treatment-seeking combat veterans[2] and victims of state-organized torture.[3] Beyond this shocking abuse, the public health implications of prostitution are devastating and include a myriad of serious and fatal diseases, including HIV/AIDS.
A path-breaking, five-country academic study concluded that research on prostitution has overlooked "[t]he burden of physical injuries and illnesses that women in the sex industry sustain from the violence inflicted on them, or from their significantly higher rates of hepatitis B, higher risks of cervical cancer, fertility complications, and psychological trauma."[4]
STATE ATTEMPTS TO REGULATE PROSTITUTION
State attempts to regulate prostitution by introducing medical check-ups or licenses don’t address the core problem: the routine abuse and violence that form the prostitution experience and brutally victimize those caught in its netherworld. Prostitution leaves women and children physically, mentally, emotionally, and spiritually devastated. Recovery takes years, even decades—often, the damage can never be undone.
PROSTITUTION CREATES A SAFE HAVEN FOR CRIMINALS
Legalization of prostitution expands the market for commercial sex, opening markets for criminal enterprises and creating a safe haven for criminals who traffic people into prostitution. Organized crime networks do not register with the government, do not pay taxes, and do not protect prostitutes. Legalization simply makes it easier for them to blend in with a purportedly regulated sex sector and makes it more difficult for prosecutors to identify and punish those who are trafficking people.
The Swedish Government has found that much of the vast profit generated by the global prostitution industry goes into the pockets of human traffickers. The Swedish Government said, "International trafficking in human beings could not flourish but for the existence of local prostitution markets where men are willing and able to buy and sell women and children for sexual exploitation."[5]
To fight human trafficking and promote equality for women, Sweden has aggressively prosecuted customers, pimps, and brothel owners since 1999. As a result, two years after the new policy, there was a 50 percent decrease in women prostituting and a 75 percent decrease in men buying sex. Trafficking for the purposes of sexual exploitation decreased as well.[6] In contrast, where prostitution has been legalized or tolerated, there is an increase in the demand for sex slaves[7] and the number of victimized foreign women—many likely victims of human trafficking.[8]
Grant-making implications of the U.S. government policy
As a result of the prostitution-trafficking link, the U.S. government concluded that no U.S. grant funds should be awarded to foreign non-governmental organizations that support legal state-regulated prostitution. Prostitution is not the oldest profession, but the oldest form of oppression
OH, what the Heck, let's tell them the truth!!!
HERE IS THE ORIGANAL POST: FROM THE US DEPARTMENT OF STATE! (NOT from the United Nations Task Force etc etc.. Like LIAR Wesley S have said...
.
PLEASE, Read and compare! YOU can notice all the changes LIAR Wesley S has done. YOU See AMericans... HE uses this site to lie. HE still think you are not smart enough. HE is playing with your emotions. Are we going to let him continue doing that?
.
OH... AND HERE IS THE WEBSITE LINK FOR THAT ARTICLE. I ENCOURAGE YOU TO PRINT BOTH AND COMPARE WHERE THE LIAR HAS MADE SO MANY CHANGES.... (isn't that illegal, by the way)
.
http://www.state.gov/r/pa /ei/rls/38790.h...
.
.
The U.S. Government adopted a strong position against legalized prostitution in a December 2002 National Security Presidential Directive based on evidence that prostitution is inherently harmful and dehumanizing, and fuels trafficking in persons, a form of modern-day slavery.
Prostitution and related activities—including pimping and patronizing or maintaining brothels—fuel the growth of modern-day slavery by providing a façade behind which traffickers for sexual exploitation operate.
Where prostitution is legalized or tolerated, there is a greater demand for human trafficking victims and nearly always an increase in the number of women and children trafficked into commercial sex slavery.
Of the estimated 600,000 to 800,000 people trafficked across international borders annually, 80 percent of victims are female, and up to 50 percent are minors. Hundreds of thousands of these women and children are used in prostitution each year.
WOMEN AND CHILDREN WANT TO ESCAPE PROSTITUTION
The vast majority of women in prostitution don’t want to be there. Few seek it out or choose it, and most are desperate to leave it. A 2003 study first published in the scientific Journal of Trauma Practice found that 89 percent of women in prostitution want to escape.[1] And children are also trapped in prostitution—despite the fact that international covenants and protocols impose upon state parties an obligation to criminalize the commercial sexual exploitation of children.
PROSTITUTION IS INHERENTLY HARMFUL
Few activities are as brutal and damaging to people as prostitution. Field research in nine countries concluded that 60-75 percent of women in prostitution were raped, 70-95 percent were physically assaulted, and 68 percent met the criteria for post traumatic stress disorder in the same range as treatment-seeking combat veterans[2] and victims of state-organized torture.[3] Beyond this shocking abuse, the public health implications of prostitution are devastating and include a myriad of serious and fatal diseases, including HIV/AIDS.
A path-breaking, five-country academic study concluded that research on prostitution has overlooked "[t]he burden of physical injuries and illnesses that women in the sex industry sustain from the violence inflicted on them, or from their significantly higher rates of hepatitis B, higher risks of cervical cancer, fertility complications, and psychological trauma."[4]
STATE ATTEMPTS TO REGULATE PROSTITUTION
State attempts to regulate prostitution by introducing medical check-ups or licenses don’t address the core problem: the routine abuse and violence that form the prostitution experience and brutally victimize those caught in its netherworld. Prostitution leaves women and children physically, mentally, emotionally, and spiritually devastated. Recovery takes years, even decades—often, the damage can never be undone.
PROSTITUTION CREATES A SAFE HAVEN FOR CRIMINALS
Legalization of prostitution expands the market for commercial sex, opening markets for criminal enterprises and creating a safe haven for criminals who traffic people into prostitution. Organized crime networks do not register with the government, do not pay taxes, and do not protect prostitutes. Legalization simply makes it easier for them to blend in with a purportedly regulated sex sector and makes it more difficult for prosecutors to identify and punish those who are trafficking people.
The Swedish Government has found that much of the vast profit generated by the global prostitution industry goes into the pockets of human traffickers. The Swedish Government said, "International trafficking in human beings could not flourish but for the existence of local prostitution markets where men are willing and able to buy and sell women and children for sexual exploitation."[5]
To fight human trafficking and promote equality for women, Sweden has aggressively prosecuted customers, pimps, and brothel owners since 1999. As a result, two years after the new policy, there was a 50 percent decrease in women prostituting and a 75 percent decrease in men buying sex. Trafficking for the purposes of sexual exploitation decreased as well.[6] In contrast, where prostitution has been legalized or tolerated, there is an increase in the demand for sex slaves[7] and the number of victimized foreign women—many likely victims of human trafficking.[8]
Grant-making implications of the U.S. government policy
As a result of the prostitution-trafficking link, the U.S. government concluded that no U.S. grant funds should be awarded to foreign non-governmental organizations that support legal state-regulated prostitution. Prostitution is not the oldest profession, but the oldest form of oppression
OH, what the Heck, let's tell them the truth!!!
HERE IS THE ORIGANAL POST: FROM THE US DEPARTMENT OF STATE! (NOT from the United Nations Task Force etc etc.. Like LIAR Wesley S have said...
.
PLEASE, Read and compare! YOU can notice all the changes LIAR Wesley S has done. YOU See AMericans... HE uses this site to lie. HE still think you are not smart enough. HE is playing with your emotions. Are we going to let him continue doing that?
.
OH... AND HERE IS THE WEBSITE LINK FOR THAT ARTICLE. I ENCOURAGE YOU TO PRINT BOTH AND COMPARE WHERE THE LIAR HAS MADE SO MANY CHANGES.... (isn't that illegal, by the way)
.
http://www.state.gov/r/pa /ei/rls/38790.h...
.
.
The U.S. Government adopted a strong position against legalized prostitution in a December 2002 National Security Presidential Directive based on evidence that prostitution is inherently harmful and dehumanizing, and fuels trafficking in persons, a form of modern-day slavery.
Prostitution and related activities—including pimping and patronizing or maintaining brothels—fuel the growth of modern-day slavery by providing a façade behind which traffickers for sexual exploitation operate.
Where prostitution is legalized or tolerated, there is a greater demand for human trafficking victims and nearly always an increase in the number of women and children trafficked into commercial sex slavery.
Of the estimated 600,000 to 800,000 people trafficked across international borders annually, 80 percent of victims are female, and up to 50 percent are minors. Hundreds of thousands of these women and children are used in prostitution each year.
WOMEN AND CHILDREN WANT TO ESCAPE PROSTITUTION
The vast majority of women in prostitution don’t want to be there. Few seek it out or choose it, and most are desperate to leave it. A 2003 study first published in the scientific Journal of Trauma Practice found that 89 percent of women in prostitution want to escape.[1] And children are also trapped in prostitution—despite the fact that international covenants and protocols impose upon state parties an obligation to criminalize the commercial sexual exploitation of children.
PROSTITUTION IS INHERENTLY HARMFUL
Few activities are as brutal and damaging to people as prostitution. Field research in nine countries concluded that 60-75 percent of women in prostitution were raped, 70-95 percent were physically assaulted, and 68 percent met the criteria for post traumatic stress disorder in the same range as treatment-seeking combat veterans[2] and victims of state-organized torture.[3] Beyond this shocking abuse, the public health implications of prostitution are devastating and include a myriad of serious and fatal diseases, including HIV/AIDS.
A path-breaking, five-country academic study concluded that research on prostitution has overlooked "[t]he burden of physical injuries and illnesses that women in the sex industry sustain from the violence inflicted on them, or from their significantly higher rates of hepatitis B, higher risks of cervical cancer, fertility complications, and psychological trauma."[4]
STATE ATTEMPTS TO REGULATE PROSTITUTION
State attempts to regulate prostitution by introducing medical check-ups or licenses don’t address the core problem: the routine abuse and violence that form the prostitution experience and brutally victimize those caught in its netherworld. Prostitution leaves women and children physically, mentally, emotionally, and spiritually devastated. Recovery takes years, even decades—often, the damage can never be undone.
PROSTITUTION CREATES A SAFE HAVEN FOR CRIMINALS
Legalization of prostitution expands the market for commercial sex, opening markets for criminal enterprises and creating a safe haven for criminals who traffic people into prostitution. Organized crime networks do not register with the government, do not pay taxes, and do not protect prostitutes. Legalization simply makes it easier for them to blend in with a purportedly regulated sex sector and makes it more difficult for prosecutors to identify and punish those who are trafficking people.
The Swedish Government has found that much of the vast profit generated by the global prostitution industry goes into the pockets of human traffickers. The Swedish Government said, "International trafficking in human beings could not flourish but for the existence of local prostitution markets where men are willing and able to buy and sell women and children for sexual exploitation."[5]
To fight human trafficking and promote equality for women, Sweden has aggressively prosecuted customers, pimps, and brothel owners since 1999. As a result, two years after the new policy, there was a 50 percent decrease in women prostituting and a 75 percent decrease in men buying sex. Trafficking for the purposes of sexual exploitation decreased as well.[6] In contrast, where prostitution has been legalized or tolerated, there is an increase in the demand for sex slaves[7] and the number of victimized foreign women—many likely victims of human trafficking.[8]
Grant-making implications of the U.S. government policy
As a result of the prostitution-trafficking link, the U.S. government concluded that no U.S. grant funds should be awarded to foreign non-governmental organizations that support legal state-regulated prostitution. Prostitution is not the oldest profession, but the oldest form of oppression
OH, what the Heck, let's tell them the truth!!!
HERE IS THE ORIGANAL POST: FROM THE US DEPARTMENT OF STATE! (NOT from the United Nations Task Force etc etc.. Like LIAR Wesley S have said...
.
PLEASE, Read and compare! YOU can notice all the changes LIAR Wesley S has done. YOU See AMericans... HE uses this site to lie. HE still think you are not smart enough. HE is playing with your emotions. Are we going to let him continue doing that?
.
OH... AND HERE IS THE WEBSITE LINK FOR THAT ARTICLE. I ENCOURAGE YOU TO PRINT BOTH AND COMPARE WHERE THE LIAR HAS MADE SO MANY CHANGES.... (isn't that illegal, by the way)
.
http://www.state.gov/r/pa /ei/rls/38790.h...
.
.
The U.S. Government adopted a strong position against legalized prostitution in a December 2002 National Security Presidential Directive based on evidence that prostitution is inherently harmful and dehumanizing, and fuels trafficking in persons, a form of modern-day slavery.
Prostitution and related activities—including pimping and patronizing or maintaining brothels—fuel the growth of modern-day slavery by providing a façade behind which traffickers for sexual exploitation operate.
Where prostitution is legalized or tolerated, there is a greater demand for human trafficking victims and nearly always an increase in the number of women and children trafficked into commercial sex slavery.
Of the estimated 600,000 to 800,000 people trafficked across international borders annually, 80 percent of victims are female, and up to 50 percent are minors. Hundreds of thousands of these women and children are used in prostitution each year.
WOMEN AND CHILDREN WANT TO ESCAPE PROSTITUTION
The vast majority of women in prostitution don’t want to be there. Few seek it out or choose it, and most are desperate to leave it. A 2003 study first published in the scientific Journal of Trauma Practice found that 89 percent of women in prostitution want to escape.[1] And children are also trapped in prostitution—despite the fact that international covenants and protocols impose upon state parties an obligation to criminalize the commercial sexual exploitation of children.
PROSTITUTION IS INHERENTLY HARMFUL
Few activities are as brutal and damaging to people as prostitution. Field research in nine countries concluded that 60-75 percent of women in prostitution were raped, 70-95 percent were physically assaulted, and 68 percent met the criteria for post traumatic stress disorder in the same range as treatment-seeking combat veterans[2] and victims of state-organized torture.[3] Beyond this shocking abuse, the public health implications of prostitution are devastating and include a myriad of serious and fatal diseases, including HIV/AIDS.
A path-breaking, five-country academic study concluded that research on prostitution has overlooked "[t]he burden of physical injuries and illnesses that women in the sex industry sustain from the violence inflicted on them, or from their significantly higher rates of hepatitis B, higher risks of cervical cancer, fertility complications, and psychological trauma."[4]
STATE ATTEMPTS TO REGULATE PROSTITUTION
State attempts to regulate prostitution by introducing medical check-ups or licenses don’t address the core problem: the routine abuse and violence that form the prostitution experience and brutally victimize those caught in its netherworld. Prostitution leaves women and children physically, mentally, emotionally, and spiritually devastated. Recovery takes years, even decades—often, the damage can never be undone.
PROSTITUTION CREATES A SAFE HAVEN FOR CRIMINALS
Legalization of prostitution expands the market for commercial sex, opening markets for criminal enterprises and creating a safe haven for criminals who traffic people into prostitution. Organized crime networks do not register with the government, do not pay taxes, and do not protect prostitutes. Legalization simply makes it easier for them to blend in with a purportedly regulated sex sector and makes it more difficult for prosecutors to identify and punish those who are trafficking people.
The Swedish Government has found that much of the vast profit generated by the global prostitution industry goes into the pockets of human traffickers. The Swedish Government said, "International trafficking in human beings could not flourish but for the existence of local prostitution markets where men are willing and able to buy and sell women and children for sexual exploitation."[5]
To fight human trafficking and promote equality for women, Sweden has aggressively prosecuted customers, pimps, and brothel owners since 1999. As a result, two years after the new policy, there was a 50 percent decrease in women prostituting and a 75 percent decrease in men buying sex. Trafficking for the purposes of sexual exploitation decreased as well.[6] In contrast, where prostitution has been legalized or tolerated, there is an increase in the demand for sex slaves[7] and the number of victimized foreign women—many likely victims of human trafficking.[8]
Grant-making implications of the U.S. government policy
As a result of the prostitution-trafficking link, the U.S. government concluded that no U.S. grant funds should be awarded to foreign non-governmental organizations that support legal state-regulated prostitution. Prostitution is not the oldest profession, but the oldest form of oppression