I had to give [the pimp] all my money. If I did not [earn a set amount] they punished me by removing my clothes and beating me with a stick until I fainted, electrocuting me, cutting me.” Although there are laws set in place globally that prohibit sex trafficking, it impacts every country around the world. Equality now states that “at least 20.9 million adults and children are bought and sold worldwide into commercial sexual servitude, forced labor and bonded labor. About 2 million children are exploited every year in the global commercial sex trade. Almost 6 in 10 identified trafficking survivors were trafficked for sexual exploitation. Women and girls make up 98% of victims of trafficking for sexual exploitation.” A personal story of a dear friend can attest to the realities of women and young girls in Afghanistan being subjected to sex trafficking and underage marriages as an unsettling way of settling a debt. “During my deployment to Southern Afghanistan (OEF 08-09), I served on a mission that involved an eleven-year-old boy who requested aid from my infantry unit, to rescue and relocate his sister, age 8, who had been taken to cover a debt her father owed to another man,” said Charles Reeves (US Army SGT Ret.). “Upon arrival to the village, it was quickly assessed that the multiple wives and daughters of the captor were hiding the young girl, and in that attempt were comfortable perpetuating the stifling nature of Sharia law, that regards women as
I had to give [the pimp] all my money. If I did not [earn a set amount] they punished me by removing my clothes and beating me with a stick until I fainted, electrocuting me, cutting me.” Although there are laws set in place globally that prohibit sex trafficking, it impacts every country around the world. Equality now states that “at least 20.9 million adults and children are bought and sold worldwide into commercial sexual servitude, forced labor and bonded labor. About 2 million children are exploited every year in the global commercial sex trade. Almost 6 in 10 identified trafficking survivors were trafficked for sexual exploitation. Women and girls make up 98% of victims of trafficking for sexual exploitation.” A personal story of a dear friend can attest to the realities of women and young girls in Afghanistan being subjected to sex trafficking and underage marriages as an unsettling way of settling a debt. “During my deployment to Southern Afghanistan (OEF 08-09), I served on a mission that involved an eleven-year-old boy who requested aid from my infantry unit, to rescue and relocate his sister, age 8, who had been taken to cover a debt her father owed to another man,” said Charles Reeves (US Army SGT Ret.). “Upon arrival to the village, it was quickly assessed that the multiple wives and daughters of the captor were hiding the young girl, and in that attempt were comfortable perpetuating the stifling nature of Sharia law, that regards women as