СВІТОВИЙ КОНҐРЕС УКРАЇНЦІВ UKRAINIAN WORLD CONGRESS
  CONGRÈS MONDIAL UKRAINIEN CONGRESO MUNDIAL UCRANIO  

 PRESS RELEASES
2004

March 8, 2004

STATEMENT ON SLAVE TRAFFICKING

    The Ukrainian World Congress (UWC), established in 1967, is a global organization representing Ukrainian communities outside Ukraine with affiliates in some thirty countries, including Argentina, Armenia, Australia, Belgium, Brazil, Canada, Czech Republic, Estonia, France, Georgia, Germany, Greece, Hungary, Kazakhstan, Lithuania, Latvia, Moldova, Poland, Romania, Russian Federation, Serbia and Montenegro, Switzerland, United Kingdom, United States, Uzbekistan as well as associates in Austria, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Bulgaria, Croatia, Italy, Portugal, Slovakia, Spain, Portugal.  In 2003 the UWC was registered as a NGO in consultative status with ECOSOC. Over the course of recent months the UWC has followed closely the activities of relevant United Nations bodies, regional and global governmental institutions and non governmental organizations on issues of concern.
         In this regard, the international slave trade is among the most acute global issues confronting Ukrainians.  The profound impact of the slave trade on Ukrainians is confirmed by Oleksandr Dolzhenkov,  Deputy Rector for Scholarly Research at the Institute of Law of the Odessa University, who recently reported that "more than 400,000 Ukrainian women are currently being held abroad in sex slavery". On its part, the International Organization for Migration (IOM) put the figure at 500,000 Ukrainian women being trafficked to the West. Other researchers have confirmed that the number of Ukrainian women and girls who are victims of the slave trade is staggering. A report on "Trafficking in Women from Ukraine" prepared by Donna M. Hughes of the University of Rhode Island and Tatyana Denisova of Zaporizhia State University states: "From 1995 to 2000, approximately 400,000 women under the age of 30 left Ukraine. "Trafficking of women and children for sexual exploitation is a serious problem in Ukraine affecting 100,000’s of victims and their families."
         In his investigative study "The Natashas: The New Global Sex Trade", published by Viking Canada, Canadian journalist, Victor Malarek exposes the new international crime networks that run the slave trade industry in the countries of the former Soviet Union, selling and buying women and girls from Ukraine and other countries in the region. Malarek underscores the need for additional attention by the international- ional community to their plight: "Over the past three decades the world has witnessed four distinct waves of trafficking for sexual exploitation. This latest traffic from Eastern and Central Europe has been dubbed “the Fourth Wave¹,” and the speed and proportion are truly staggering. Just a decade ago, these women didn¹t even register on the radar screen. Today, they represent more than 25 percent of the (slave) trade."
         According to these studies, Ukraine is one of the largest sources for slave traders:

  • Ukrainian women are the largest group trafficked in Turkey;
  • Ukrainian women are the second largest group outside U.S. military bases in Korea;
  • Women from CIS countries comprise 70 per cent of trafficking in Israel;
  • Ukrainian women constitute the largest foreign group trafficked in the Netherlands;
  • 70 percent of   Ukrainian women in Poland were trafficked;
  • Women from Central, East Europe and CIS countries constitute 80 percent of trafficking in Germany.

        Other large markets for the slave trade in Ukrainians include: Greece, Cyprus, Italy, Spain, Yugoslavia, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Hungary, Czech Republic, Croatia, United Arab Emirates, Syria, China, Canada and Japan.
         This relatively new and huge dimension of the international slave trade should be accorded the requisite attention and resources by the international community. Clearly, existing relevant United Nations Conventions constitute formidable international instruments including, the 1949 United Nations Convention for the Suppression of the Traffic in Persons and the Exploitation of the Prostitution of Others and the United Nations Convention Against Transnational Organized Crime, including the Protocol to Prevent, Suppress, and Punish the Trafficking of Persons, Especially Women and Children. It is appropriate that the Protocol on Trafficking is within the context of the Convention Against Transnational Organized Crime as the international slave trade is a highly organized criminal industry, that generates over 20 billion dollars US and that recognizes neither national boundaries or norms. The UWC looks forward to and will work towards the early ratification of the Protocol on Trafficking by the governments that have as yet not done so. Equally important are international instruments on the protection of children including the prevention of trafficking in children promulgated by the ILO and UNICEF. Indeed, an alarming proportion of the slave trade in Ukrainians is of girls under the age of 18 with a significant number as young as 12 and 13 years old.
         In this regard as well, the UWC welcomes the recent statement by the NATO ambassadors of the United States and Norway who pledged to promote a NATO wide policy to coordinate the efforts of the 46 countries in the alliance's Euro-Atlantic Partnership Council to, inter alia, pursue evidence of trafficking in persons and help host countries to investigate human trafficking, to prohibit military personnel and civilian service contract employee participation in activities that support or promote human trafficking and impose penalties on contractors who fail to monitor their employees' conduct. Similarly, the European Union and other regional governmental entities have professed their determination to fight the crime of human trafficking. However, for all of the legislation and professions of indignation and solemn commitments to fight trafficking, they have not stemmed the growth in size and scope of the slave trade industry.
         The UWC recently established a Taskforce on the trafficking of children, women and men. The Taskforce will coordinate the activities of member organizations of the UWC worldwide. In this, we look forward to close collaboration with relevant bodies of the United Nations and other international and regional organizations, NGOs and government agencies. The UWC shares the view of virtually all NGOs engaged in exposing and combating this scourge: trafficking is a modern-day form of slavery and a grave violation of human rights. We further agree that the international community
must do more, much more meaningful, tangible work. To this end, we call on the United Nations system and governments to:

  • Marshal the political will to combat trafficking;
  • Undertake prevention and awareness campaigns;
  • Encourage and support the activities of non governmental organizations;
  • Promulgate national legislation to punish traffickers and their facilitators;
  • Prioritize law enforcement efforts to arrest and convict traffickers;
  • Provide humanitarian services to victims and assist in their reintegration into society;
  • Ratify and implement the UN Convention Against Transnational Organized Crime, including the Protocol to Prevent, Suppress, and Punish the Trafficking of Persons, Especially Women and Children;
  • Develop international, regional and bilateral cooperation with countries of origin, transit and destination; 
  • Accord special focus on the new front for traffickers in Central and East Europe.

     The Ukrainian World Congress stands ready to join in the struggle against trafficking, to defeat those who engage in the slave trade, and to rescue, save and rehabilitate the victims.


The above was submitted to the Forty-eighth session of the United Nations’ Commission on the Status of Women, held at the UN Headquarters in New York City, March 1-12, 2004.

  February 13, 2004

UKRAINIAN WORLD CONGRESS LAUNCHES
TASKFORCE TO COMBAT HUMAN TRAFFICKING
    The UWC Executive Board at its meeting in Toronto on February 7, 2004 established a task force to combat the illegal trafficking of Ukrainians. The taskforce will function under the auspices of the UWC Human and Civil Rights Commission and will be chaired by a representative from the World Federation of Ukrainian Women¹s Organizations (WFUWO), a member organization of the UWC. Other members of the task force include:
  • Maria Szkambara, Vice Chair, UWC Executive Board
  • Borys Potapenko, Chair, UWC Commission on the United Nations
  • Iryna Kurowyckyj, WFUWO Representative to the UWC
  • Jurij Darewych, Chair, UWC Human and Civil Rights Commission
  • Olga Danylak, Chair, UWC World Council for Social Services
  • Jurij Klufas, Chair, UWC Commission on Media Relations.
     In April 2003, the UWC Commission on the United Nations initiated research on international activities in combating human trafficking, specifically Ukrainians. Subsequently, several Ukrainian women¹s groups began to address the issue and a number of publications, newspaper articles and books have been published, most prominent among them "The Natashas ­ The New Global Sex Trade" by the award winning Ukrainian Canadian author and investigative journalist Victor Malarek.
    The problem of human trafficking has become rampant and Ukrainians, female and male, adults and children, are acutely affected. The aim of the task force is to coordinate Ukrainian Diaspora activity in this regard and serve as a liaison with the government of Ukraine as well as numerous international governmental and non governmental organizations and groups dealing with this problem, including the United Nations and the International Organization for Migration.

January 9, 2004                                                                     


UKRAINIAN WORLD CONGRESS SEEKS PRESIDENT KUCHMA’S           SUPPORT FOR “ZAKORDONNI UKRAINTSI” BILL

           Following a surprising veto of the recently passed  Verkhovna Rada bill on the status of “zakordonni ukraintsi” by the President of Ukraine, the UWC has written to the President seeking a reversal of his position.  In a letter to President Kuchma, UWC President Askold S. Lozynskyj pointed to a number of incongruities in the position taken by the President’s legal advisors, in particular, a lack of understanding that the “zakordonni ukraintsi” are an integral part of the Ukrainian nation, albeit without the rights of citizenship, and substantially more than simply foreigners.  The President’s veto was supported primarily by arguments of alleged contravention of existing purported definitions of the Ukrainian nation and  provisions for foreigners both in the Constitution and in other Ukrainian legislation. Mr. Lozynskyj’s letter concludes with an appeal to the President to personally revisit this issue as the veto appears to contradict his prior support for the legislation.


January 9, 2004                                                                                              


UKRAINIAN WORLD CONGRESS SEEKS MEDVEDCHUK’S  DISMISSAL

          Following up on the VIII UWC Congress venue fiasco, the UWC wrote to Chief of Presidential Administration Viktor Medvedchuk requesting an explanation, inasmuch as the original Congress site is within his jurisdiction. Having failed to receive even the courtesy of a reply, the Executive Board in December 2003 decided to wait an additional thirty days for a response, and  failing that, to request that President Kuchma dismiss his chief of staff. The UWC’s argumentation is as follows: the UWC entered into a binding contract with the Ukrainian Home to hold its VIII Congress from August 19-21, 2003 and made the requisite deposit; two weeks prior to the event the UWC was notified that the Ukrainian Home rescinds the contract because of imminent renovations; the Ukrainian Home falls within the jurisdiction of the Presidential Administration; throughout the ordeal the UWC intervened with representatives of the Presidential Administration insisting on contractual obligations; the UWC was compelled to contract for alternate accommodations; these events were followed up with a demand for an explanation from Chief of Presidential Administration Medvedchuk; there has been no response. The UWC’s formal request for Medvedchuk’s dismissal was forwarded to the President on January 5, 2004 





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