https://apnews.com/article/russia-ukraine-immigration-moldova-poland-europe-17c62dbeb4c88e04e7253865bc20c9f0?user_email=86110aa28819497c6ee3f9175b425273e4be3b1de15d6924c58504dadda52e76&utm_source=Sailthru&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=March12_Russia_Ukraine&utm_term=Morning%20Wire%20Subscribers


Concern grows over traffickers targeting Ukrainian refugees

By STEPHEN McGRATHyesterday

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*A refugee that fled the conflict from neighboring Ukraine sticks out her
hand from a waiting area tent at the Romanian-Ukrainian border, in Siret,
Romania, Thursday, March 3, 2022. As millions of women and children flee
across Ukraine's borders in the face of Russian aggression, concerns are
growing over how to protect the most vulnerable refugees from being
targeted by human traffickers or becoming victims of other forms of
exploitation. (AP Photo/Andreea Alexandru)
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SIRET, Romania (AP) — One man was detained in Poland suspected of raping a
19-year-old refugee he’d lured with offers of shelter after she fled
war-torn Ukraine. Another was overheard promising work and a room to a
16-year-old girl before authorities intervened.

Another case inside a refugee camp at Poland’s Medyka border, raised
suspicions when a man was offering help only to women and children. When
questioned by police, he changed his story.

As millions of women and children flee across Ukraine’s borders in the face
of Russian aggression, concerns are growing over how to protect the most
vulnerable refugees from being targeted by human traffickers or becoming
victims of other forms of exploitation.

“Obviously all the refugees are women and children,” said Joung-ah
Ghedini-Williams, the UNHCR’s head of global communications, who has
visited borders in Romania, Poland and Moldova.

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“You have to worry about any potential risks for trafficking — but also
exploitation, and sexual exploitation and abuse. These are the kinds of
situations that people like traffickers … look to take advantage of,” she
said.

The U.N. refugee agency says more than 2.5 million people, including more
than a million children, have already fled war-torn Ukraine in what has
become an unprecedented humanitarian crisis in Europe and its fastest
exodus since World War II.

* <https://apnews.com/hub/russia-ukraine>*
RUSSIA-UKRAINE WAR <https://apnews.com/hub/russia-ukraine>



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In countries throughout Europe, including the border nations of Romania,
Poland, Hungary, Moldova and Slovakia, private citizens and volunteers have
been greeting and offering help to those whose lives have been shattered by
war. From free shelter to free transport to work opportunities and other
forms of assistance — help isn’t far away.

But neither are the risks.

Police in Wrocław, Poland, said Thursday they detained a 49-year-old
suspect on rape charges after he allegedly assaulted a 19-year-old
Ukrainian refugee he lured with offers of help over the internet. The
suspect could face up to 12 years in prison for the “brutal crime,”
authorities said.

“He met the girl by offering his help via an internet portal,” police said
in a statement. “She escaped from war-torn Ukraine, did not speak Polish.
She trusted a man who promised to help and shelter her. Unfortunately, all
this turned out to be deceitful manipulation.”

Police in Berlin warned women and children in a post on social media in
Ukrainian and Russian against accepting offers of overnight stays, and
urged them to report anything suspicious.

Tamara Barnett, director of operations at the Human Trafficking Foundation,
a U.K.-based charity which grew out of the All Party Parliamentary Group on
Human Trafficking, said that such a rapid, mass displacement of people
could be a “recipe for disaster.”

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“When you’ve suddenly got a huge cohort of really vulnerable people who
need money and assistance immediately,” she said, “it’s sort of a breeding
ground for exploitative situations and sexual exploitation. When I saw all
these volunteers offering their houses … that flagged a worry in my head.”

The Migration Data Portal notes that humanitarian crises such as those
associated with conflicts “can exacerbate pre-existing trafficking trends
and give rise to new ones” and that traffickers can thrive on “the
inability of families and communities to protect themselves and their
children.”

Security officials in Romania and Poland told The Associated Press that
plain-clothed intelligence officers were on the lookout for criminal
elements. In the Romanian border town of Siret, authorities said men
offering free rides to women have been sent away.

Human trafficking is a grave human rights violation and can involve a wide
range of exploitative roles. From sexual exploitation — such as
prostitution — to forced labor, from domestic slavery to organ removal, and
forced criminality, it is often inflicted by traffickers through coercion
and abuse of power.

A 2020 human trafficking report by the European Commission, the EU’s
executive branch, estimates the annual global profit from the crime is 29.4
billion euros ($32 billion). It says that sexual exploitation is the most
common form of human trafficking in the 27-nation bloc and that nearly
three-quarters of all victims are female, with almost every fourth victim a
child.

Madalina Mocan, committee director at ProTECT, an organization that brings
together 21 anti-trafficking groups, said there are “already worrying
signs,” with some refugees being offered shelter in exchange for services
such as cleaning and babysitting, which could lead to exploitation.

“There will be attempts of traffickers trying to take victims from Ukraine
across the border. Women and children are vulnerable, especially those that
do not have connections — family, friends, other networks of support,” she
said, adding that continued conflict will mean “more and more vulnerable
people” reaching the borders.

At the train station in the Hungarian border town of Zahony, 25-year-old
Dayrina Kneziva arrived from Kyiv with her childhood friend. Fleeing a war
zone, Kneziva said, left them little time to consider other potential
dangers.

“When you compare ... you just choose what will be less dangerous,” said
Kneziva, who hopes to make it to Slovakia’s capital of Bratislava with her
friend. “When you leave in a hurry, you just don’t think about other
things.”

A large proportion of the refugees arriving in the border countries want to
move on to friends or family elsewhere in Europe and many are relying on
strangers to reach their destinations.

“The people who are leaving Ukraine are under emotional stress, trauma,
fear, confusion,” said Cristina Minculescu, a psychologist at Next Steps
Romania who provides support to trafficking victims. “It’s not just human
trafficking, there is a risk of abduction, rape ... their vulnerabilities
being exploited in different forms.”

At Romania’s Siret border after a five-day car journey from the bombed
historical city of Chernihiv, 44-year-old Iryna Pypypenko waited inside a
tent with her two children, sheltering from the cold. She said a friend in
Berlin who is looking for accommodation for her has warned her to beware of
possibly nefarious offers.

“She told me there are many, very dangerous propositions,” said Pypypenko,
whose husband and parents stayed behind in Ukraine. “She told me that I
have to communicate only with official people and believe only the
information they give me.”

Ionut Epureanu, the chief police commissioner of Suceava county, told the
AP at the Siret border that police are working closely with the country’s
national agency against human trafficking and other law enforcement to try
to prevent crimes.

“We are trying to make a control for every vehicle leaving the area,” he
said. “A hundred people making transport have good intentions, but it’s
enough to be one that isn’t … and tragedy can come.”

Vlad Gheorghe, a Romanian member of the European Parliament who launched a
Facebook group called United for Ukraine that has more than 250,000 members
and pools resources to help refugees, including accommodation, says he is
working closely with the authorities to prevent any abuses.

“No offer for volunteering or stay or anything goes unchecked, we check
every offer,” he said. “We call back, we ask some questions, we have a
minimal check before any offer for help is accepted.”

At Poland’s Medyka border, seven former members of the French Foreign
Legion, an elite military force, are voluntarily providing their own
security to refugees and are on the lookout for traffickers.

“This morning we found three men who were trying to get a bunch of women
into a van,” said one of the former legionnaires, a South African who gave
only his first name, Mornay. “I can’t 100% say they were trying to recruit
them for sex trafficking, but when we started talking to them and
approached them — they got nervous and just left immediately.”

“We just want to try and get women and kids to safety,” he added. “The risk
is very high because there are so many people you just don’t know who is
doing what.”

Back at her tent on the Siret border, Pypypenko said people were offering
help — but she wasn’t sure who she could trust.

“People just enter and tell us that they can take us for free to France,”
she said. “Today we are for three hours here … and we had two or three
propositions like that. I couldn’t even imagine such a situation, that such
a big tragedy could be the field of crime.”

___

AP journalists Renata Brito in Siret, Romania; Vanessa Gera and Monika
Scislowska in Warsaw, Poland; Justin Spike and Bela Szandelszky in Zahony,
Hungary; and Florent Bajrami in Medyka, Poland, contributed to this report.

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