Citizens of developed and developing countries around the world believe that slavery is no longer practical in modern world. America is proud of its free lands, but it can not be any further from the truth. The government refuses to recognize that such things exist in their territory. The sluts of the most despicable form are in the darkness of every society. Trafficking is one of the most severe human rights violations still occurring today.
Trafficking is one of the fastest growing, most profitable illegal industries, second to drug trafficking. Global trafficking income is estimated at $ 44.3 billion per year. With globalization, people, money, goods and services have become more active across national borders. Expansion of trafficking is caused by many interrelated factors between supply side and demand side. On the supply side, the increase in world population, rapid social and economic change in all countries of the world, and government policy or omission affect the situation of trafficking. Economic struggles and major political changes in developing countries create an economic environment that sustains extreme poverty and desperation and there is no choice other than accepting work under oppressive circumstances for many people.
Trafficking is a global phenomenon characterized by sex trafficking, slave labor and organ trafficking. Poverty is the center of trafficking. In a sex trade, women and children are considered only to satisfy sex goods. This has become an organized $ 1 billion industry centered on investors, malicious recruiters, corrupt officials. Globalization has created a service industry that is fully committed to providing transportation, counterfeiting of documents, legal, financial and financial support. Prostitution in India's largest red line district, Camatipura, produced $ 400 million, of whom 100,000 prostitutes were kidnapped from rural areas in India and trafficked
A worldwide demand for cheap, unskilled and exploitable workforce is driving human trafficking. It is estimated that the profits of forced labor in the world will reach $ 44.3 billion per year. Trafficking is now the second largest criminal industry in the world, next to drug trafficking and the fastest growing criminal industry. Protection of minimum wages established by labor law and employment law requires safety measures to prohibit discrimination and to protect the rights of the organization to improve working conditions. Enhancement and broader implementation of these legal protections in these communities will alleviate workers' vulnerability to trafficking and other forms of exploitation.