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End Orphanage Child Trafficking

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Criminals are profiting from the trafficking and abuse of children in orphanages around the world. Traffickers, attracted by the funding orphanages receive from donations and organizations offering ‘voluntourism’ placements, effectively turn children into commodities by ensuring there is a constant supply of children available to attract funding.

‘Voluntourism’ – the practice of combining voluntary work with tourism – has become a popular trend,1 creating a boom in vacation packages involving volunteer work. It’s clear that organizations offering orphanage placements can play a role in ending the cycle of abuse fueled by demand for volunteer placements, which traffickers are exploiting to profit from the mistreatment of vulnerable children.

Poor families are vulnerable to being duped into giving up their children to orphanages with false promises of better care and an education. Instead, these children are often exploited, abused, malnourished, forced to work and sometimes re-trafficked to other orphanages to repeat the cycle and bring in more funds. Child trafficking into and across orphanages is a global problem.

Join us in asking volunteer tour operators to help stop orphanage trafficking by removing the financial incentive and making a strong statement against orphanage trafficking.

We are asking them to:

  • stop offering orphanage placements to volunteers
  • publish a statement outlining their commitment to end orphanage child trafficking, and
  • join the worldwide movement to ensure children are raised in safe families empowered to care for their own children with the support of partners experienced in child protection.

A positive trend with unexpected consequences

Volunteer placement organizations have assigned thousands of volunteers across the world to projects bringing mutual lasting benefits to volunteers and communities. Although usually a small portion, some offer placements in orphanages.

We are not suggesting that they have placed, or promoted the placement of, volunteers in orphanages which exploit or traffick children. However, we believe their support is crucial to disrupting traffickers’ business model and breaking the cycle of exploitation.2

Troubling stories of abuse & exploitation

An estimated 5.4 million children are living in orphanages around the world.3 Yet 80% of them have at least one parent or family member who could look after them, with additional support where needed.4

It’s clear from these numbers that something doesn’t add up.

  • In Cambodia, Sinet Chan was repeatedly beaten, raped, starved and forced to work on the orphanage director’s rice paddies and farms without pay. Now, she is a strong ambassador for the Cambodian Children’s Trust, telling her story and raising awareness of the potentially terrible conditions children face in institutions.
  • In Haiti, some families were paid 75 USD to give their children away to orphanages on false promises their children would receive an education and opportunities for the future, only for them to end up living in slave-like conditions.5
  • Vulnerable children being separated from their families and placed in orphanages to attract funding, volunteers and donations from well-meaning tourists is replicated across Southeast Asia and has also been reported on in Nepal and across Africa.6 7
  • In one case in Nepal, a mother searching for her two children who she believed were in school, found them in an orphanage. The orphanage director then extorted the mother and insisted she pay him 144,000 rupees (1,440 USD) before he would release her children.8

Families living in poverty are vulnerable to being tricked into selling or giving their children to orphanages with false promises of better care and education. Yet, even in well-resourced orphanages, destroying lasting family-based relationships has serious detrimental effects on long-term development and psychological well-being. It should only ever be used as temporary care and as the last resort.

Community-based approaches: a better alternative

“He dressed us up looking poor so the visitors see us, they feel pity for us, and they donate more. But they don’t really know what was going on inside the orphanage.” Sinet Chan, Cambodian Children’s Trust ambassador, describing her experiences.9

Recognizing the risks facing children in orphanages, the government of Cambodia has launched a pilot program to reintegrate children into families. In July 2017, it finalized a decree which tasks officials with identifying vulnerable children and overseeing their reintegration into families.

Community-based approaches, which seek to place children into families and offer support and resources as-needed, offer a healthier model of care than institutionalization. Redirecting the compassion, energy and resources of caring volunteers and organizations into community-based programs can end the cycle of abuse perpetrated by traffickers and exploitative orphanages.

Together, we can have an impact

Global Vision International, African Impact and others 10 are anti-trafficking leaders in the tourism sector who have already committed to stop placing volunteers in orphanages. This is how they are working to end trafficking and support children in institutions:

“We hope to work toward ending the perpetuation of child trafficking and the separation of children from family care. We are currently working with our local partners to assist them with transitioning to alternative solutions that aim to reunify children with their families.” – Global Vision International 11

“We took the decision to stop working with a number of orphanages […] and, as of 2018, no longer have any affiliation with this type of institution. This decision was not taken lightly and was only done when sustainable and practical solutions were in place to care for the children.” – African Impact 12

With your help, we can get more volunteer tour operators to take a strong stand against orphanage trafficking. Join the call today and help end child trafficking.

  • September 27, 2024: The Freedom United community is trying to get in touch with Love Volunteers for World Tourism Day to ask if they can take a stand against orphanage trafficking.

    Copy this message and paste this message as a comment on Love Volunteer’s Twitter/X and Facebook: “Can you take a stand against #OrphanageTrafficking and stop promoting placements in orphanages?”

     

  • August 2024: Five officials from Costa Rica’s child welfare agency have been arrested for allegedly trafficking children for adoption by falsifying reports to remove them from their families, according to the country’s Judicial Investigation Agency. The investigation, which began in 2022, revealed that the officials—lawyers and social workers—fabricated claims, such as accusing families of drug use, to justify taking children into state care. Once in custody, the officials reportedly arranged to adopt the children themselves or secure paid roles as their temporary caretakers. Read more

  • July 2023: WIN! PMGY published a policy against offering orphanage placements on its FAQ page. We have been asking this of voluntourism operator PMGY since 2018 in order to undermine the business model of orphanage trafficking. Thanks to years of your sustained messages, PMGY has finally enacted policies that help protect children from trafficking. Read our field report on this win here.

  • July 2023: We finally made direct contact with PMGY’s CEO, Philip Russell. We offered a meeting in person which was rejected and our request for them to remove placements that appear to take place in residential care settings was ignored.  

  • Aug 07, 2018: Campaign Launches

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Divya
4 years ago

I want to thank you. Good job! You guys do a great blog, and have some great contents. Keep up the good work. Thanks

vineeta anne whyte
vineeta anne whyte
4 years ago

This is absoloutely appaling, great that you are discussing it to try and get it stopped asap. Please let me know are all the children safe now? If so you need to do it asap.

Chris Singleton
Chris Singleton
5 years ago

It’s so important that when you begin a campaign, that your explanation about that campaign’s importance be very clear and easily understandable. You need a writer who can distill the facts into a concise, compelling story. I read on for many paragraphs before I could figure out the basis of this campaign… your initial paragraphs were fuzzy and didn’t make sense, which makes the campaign look half-baked. You need to find a talented writer!

June Picard
5 years ago

Again, women and children have been victimized by men since earliest history. What is wrong with these “men?’ are they so afraid of vulnerability, is it all about power , greed, stupidity, cruelty. Whatever the cause, they must be stopped.

Call on volunteer tour operators to take a stand against orphanage trafficking

115,964

Help us reach 150,000

To all volunteer organizations offering placements in orphanages,

I am concerned about the mounting evidence and research highlighting the risk of trafficking and exploitation facing children in institutions and orphanages across the world. I urge you to:

- remove all advertisements and mention of voluntary orphanage placements on your website

- commit to stop funding placements in orphanages and publish a short statement on your website clarifying your organization’s position against voluntary placements in orphanages that may be directly fuelling the trafficking and exploitation of children

- establish a sustainable and careful system of divestment and join the worldwide movement to ensure children are raised in safe families who have been empowered to care for their own children with the support of partners experienced in child protection.

Yours sincerely,

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