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Why Traffickers Go After Native American Women

  • Published on
    March 19, 2019
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  • Category:
    Anti-Slavery Activists, Human Trafficking
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In 2015 the National Congress of American Indians found that an estimated 40 percent of women who are victims of sex trafficking identify as American Indian, Alaska Native, or First Nations.

Phoenix, Arizona — which has a large Native community — has also been identified as a major jurisdiction for trafficking for sexual exploitation by the US Department of Justice.

Despite this evidence, “Native Americans are largely overlooked as victims,” explained Cindy McCain, co-chair of the Arizona Human Trafficking Council.

Accordingly to Valaura Imus-Nahsonhoya, a Hopi expert on human trafficking in Indian country, targeting of Native women occurs for several reasons. The Navajo-Hopi Observer reports:

Why seek Natives? “We’re associated with fetishes,” such as long hair, exotic looks that sex patrons perceive as Asian or Hispanic, Imus-Nahsonhoya says.”We could look like anything.”

Sex traffickers prey upon young girls and women they perceive as vulnerable. Labor traffickers look for boys and young men, as well as girls, to labor in oil fields, sweatshops, “man camps” and as domestic help.

The high rates of poverty and hardship in tribal communities; historical trauma and culture loss; homelessness and runaway youth; high rates of involvement with child welfare systems, including entry into the foster care system; exposure to violence in the home or community; drug and alcohol abuse; and low levels of law enforcement all add up to a community rich in targets for traffickers.

Imus-Nahsonhoya says that she learned most of what she knows about trafficking from survivors of this degrading and often dangerous life. “One trafficked woman showed me a list of services and her daily quota,” says Imus-Nahsonhoya. “From age 14 to 17, she had to make $600 a day. But she never saw a dime of that.” That’s why sex trafficking is said to be a $12 billion business.

For Valaura Imus-Nahsonhoya, one key to preventing sex trafficking in the Native community is for tribal leaders to pass new laws.

“Tribes still don’t have the right codes [laws] to prosecute traffickers,” she said. And “We’re not prepared to deal with trafficking in tribal casinos.”

In one case, she spotted what she suspected as a case of sex trafficking at a Arizona tribal casino. Yet when she notified the staff they laughed at her, prompting Imus-Nahsonhoya to call the tribal police. The incident led to the tribe providing regular training for casino workers on trafficking.

Some tribal nations like the Navajo already have codes that address trafficking, such as the Violence Against Women Act. Imus-Nahsonhoya hopes other tribes will follow their lead.

“Tribal leadership is key to addressing trafficking,” she said.

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Emmanuel Hang
5 years ago

I will fight to end the enslavement of my people

Stanley Holman
Stanley Holman
5 years ago

No it’s because it’s the FBI and they know the layout so very well. Serious, my friends in Anonymous found out they do that to children in orphanages to! Orphanages have no laws binding them to even report a missing child. Kind of a strange thing to offer these types of establishments ain’t it? There is no reason for this ruling that’s points in the favor for corruption. Think about it.

Gigi
Gigi
4 years ago

It’s just as bad for the northern reservations also.

Chotsi
Chotsi
5 years ago
Reply to  Stanley Holman

The preferarable term for and by us (orphans) is split feather.

Sapphire Blue
Sapphire Blue
1 year ago

I am a victim of organ trafficking in Oklahoma. The Chickasaw Nation Medical Hospital in Ada Oklahoma removed my left kidney without my knowledge or consent. They lied to me, withheld vital medical information from me, exploited me for their financial gain, made me a prisoner of their corrupt medical system and all of the politicians including the President of the United States knows about what they did to me and nothing is done about it.

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