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【New!】Trafficking in Persons Report 2010

JAPAN (Tier 2)

Japan is a destination, and to a much lesser extent, source and
transit country for men, women, and children subjected to trafficking
in persons, specifically forced labor and forced prostitution. Male
and female migrant workers from China, Indonesia, the Philippines,
Vietnam, and other Asian countries are sometimes subject to conditions
of forced labor. Some women and children from East Asia, Southeast
Asia, Eastern Europe, Russia, South America, and Latin America who
travel to Japan for employment or fraudulent marriage are forced into
prostitution. Japanese organized crime syndicates (the Yakuza) are
believed to play a significant role in trafficking in Japan, both
directly and indirectly. Traffickers strictly control the movements of
victims, using debt bondage, threats of violence, and other coercive
psychological methods to control victims. The media and NGOs continue
to report abuses of the Industrial Trainee and Technical Internship
Program (the “foreign trainee program”), including debt bondage,
restrictions on movement, unpaid overtime, and fraud - elements which
contribute to situations of trafficking. Women typically faced debt
upwards of $49,000 upon commencement of their contracts, and had to
pay employers additional fees for living expenses, medical care, and
other necessities, leaving them predisposed to debt bondage. “Fines”
for misbehavior added to their original debt, and the process that
employers used to calculate these debts was not transparent. A growing
and significant number of Japanese women and girls are victims of sex
trafficking in the country, a highly lucrative industry for criminal
networks and other operators in Japan. In the case of domestic
victims, the threat of blackmail, credit card debts, and other debts
from loan sharks are often used as coercive mechanisms in trafficking.
Japan is a transit country for persons trafficked from East Asia to
North America. Japanese men continue to be a significant source of
demand for child sex tourism in Southeast Asia.

Read more...
 
Polaris Post Volume 36

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Polaris Post Volume 36
May 2010
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It's been a bit chilly May and now the rainy season is approaching.
We need something that cheers us up!

* Polaris on Facebook ////////////////////////////////////////////////

We have just started a Facebook fan page!
Please join us at http://bit.ly/polarisjp
You will see many pics from the May. 27 Event night with Jake Adelstein.

//////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////


* Polaris Project Monthly Seminar 2010 "You Know Human Trafficking?"
The second seminar held at Body Shop Shinjuku on Saturday, June 5====

The Polaris Project Monthly Seminar 2010 has started in May.
The seminar will bring discussions about human trafficking from
multiple aspects.

The first seminar introduced recent human trafficking cases in Japan.

The second seminar in June will welcome
Ms。 Eiko Sudo of IOM, an international
organization that combats human trafficking. Ms Sudo will discuss victim
support in Japan.

Join us at the Body Shop Shinjuku!


Read more...
 
Polaris Project presents An Evening with Jake Adelstein

Polaris Project presents
An Evening with Jake Adelstein

Thursday, May 27,
2010 7.00 - 10.00pm
The Tokyo 21c Club

co-hosted by the Ivy League Alumni Associations of Japan

Read more...
 
Polaris Post Volume 35

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      Polaris Post Volume 35
                                      April 2010
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It is getting warmer and the Golden Week is coming up, at last.
Please watch for Polaris Project's 2010 Monthly Seminar after the Golden Week!

*Polaris Project Monthly Seminar 2010 "You Know Human Trafficking?"
The first seminar on Saturday, May 15 =======

In 2009-2010, Polaris Project's monthly seminar attracted 650
participants in total.
The 2010-2011 Seminar will feature ten speakers and will start
on Saturday, May 15.

The theme of monthly seminar in 2010 is "You Know Human Trafficking?"

"Human trafficking is an old story and it is all gone, right?"
"Isn't it happening in other countries, but not in Japan?"
"What is the difference between human trafficking and smuggling?"
"How many victims are there?"
"What is the market size of human trafficking?"
...you'll find answers to such questions at the monthly seminar.

The goal of the 10-time seminar is to understand the problem of
human trafficking and to learn what you could do to stop human trafficking.
We will offer a discount membership that allows you to attend the first
five seminars for the fee for four!

Please download a flyer in Japanese for the information of the first five
seminars: https://polarisproject.jp/images/M_images/seminer-flyer-a_v006.pdf
Read more...
 
Polaris Post Volume 34
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       Polaris Post  Volume 34
                                       April 2010
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The weekend in Tokyo was chilly but the cherry blossoms were in full
bloom. We should be take good care of ourselves in this chilly spring.

* Activity Report 2009 is now online==================================

The annual activity report 2009 in Japanese is now online at Polaris
Japan's website.

The Tokyo office made the organizational base more solid by becoming
an officially non-profit organization, certified by the Cabinet Office
of Japan.

The following numbers give you some of the highlights of 2009...

348 phone calls to our hotline (356 in 2008)
43 cases of direct services to victims (e.g. accompanying victims to the
    public services, the police, etc) (24 in 2008)
2,781 participants to the speeches made by Polaris staff (2,213 in 1008),
     including 1,080 people who attended the speeches made for the police,
     the immigration bureau, the government, and educational professions
650 people attended Polaris monthly seminar  "How do we stop commercial
   sexual exploitation of children?" (since February 2009-) (0 in 2008)

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Read more...
 
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