http://news.kuwaittimes.net/2013/01/05/labour-exploitation-main-reason-for-human-trafficking-iom/

Labour exploitation, main reason for human trafficking: IOM 
GENEVA: Half of the human trafficking cases brought before IOM for assistance 
in 2011 involved victims of labour exploitation according to IOM’s first report 
on counter trafficking and assistance to vulnerable migrants.

The report which looked into human trafficking trends in 2011, by way of 
assistance, collected information from more than 150 IOM Missions including 
Gulf countries. During the period, IOM provided assistance to some 3,014 
victims of labour exploitation, which represents a 53 percent of all recorded 
instances of assistance sought by victims of human trafficking. By contrast, 
only 27 per cent of the cases assisted by IOM involved trafficking for sexual 
exploitation. Since 2010, labour trafficking has overtaken sexual exploitation 
as the main type of trafficking, seen in cases assisted by IOM. IOM keeps the 
world’s largest case level statistics on human trafficking. Labour trafficking 
is a feature of many economic sectors, particularly those requiring manual 
labour such as agriculture, construction, domestic work, fisheries, and mining.

In many cases, the exploitation takes place under the guise of legal and 
contractual work, but with degrading conditions of work which are different 
from the promises given to the workers. Though assistance to female victims of 
trafficking has remained fairly on the same level as that of 2008, the report 
says there has been an increase of demand for assistance from male victims of 
trafficking from 1,656 individuals in 2008 to 2,040 in 2011. Women however, 
says the report, continue to represent the majority of trafficked persons 
receiving IOM assistance, making up nearly two thirds (62 percent) of cases 
assisted by IOM. This includes cases involving sexual exploitation, labour 
exploitation, and a combination of sexual and labour exploitation. During the 
2011 period, IOM provided help to around 2,700 trafficked and exploited 
migrants, the majority, 835, were Ukrainians. The figure shows a decline of 
seven percent in assisted cases, compared with the number of persons assisted 
in 2010.

The decline is attributed to external factors rather than being a reflection of 
the actual drop in cases of human trafficking. The main countries of 
destination for human trafficking victims according to the report are the 
Russian Federation, Haiti, Yemen, Thailand and Kazakhstan. Top countries of 
origin were named by the report as Ukraine, Haiti, Yemen, Laos, Uzbekistan and 
Cambodia. IOM provides a wide range of assistance to victims of human 
trafficking including legal and medical assistance, voluntary return , 
reintegration assistance, protection and shelter prior to voluntary 
repatriation. — KUNA


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