Home English News
News
【New!】Polaris Post Volume 39
-----------------------------
---------------------------------------
       Polaris Post Volume 39
                                       August 2010
---------------------------------------------------------------------


Have you seen the music clip of "Love The Way You Lie," a new
song by Eminem and Rihanna (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uelHwf8o7_U)?
Polaris Japan twittered about it.

The song features domestic violence. It does introduce the issue
to the listeners, at the same time, it sounds like it speaks for
the perpetrator.
Either way the video is very powerful--please watch it and let
us know what you think!

And Radiohead sings about human trafficking through their song
"All I need": http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-xHfBAKMcCc



<Next Seminar>
Polaris will host a movie screening of "Lilja-4ever," a film
on human trafficking which has not been released in Japan.
Saturday, October 16, 2pm-5pm, at University of Tokyo, Komaba Campus
No regular seminar will be held in October.
Read more...
 
【New!】Polaris Post Volume 38
-----------------------------
---------------------------------------
       Polaris Post Volume 38
                                       August 2010
---------------------------------------------------------------------
―――――――――――――――――――――――――――――――――――
* Polaris Project Monthly Seminar 2010
The forth seminar held at JICA Chikyu Hiroba on Saturday, August 28====
 "Japanese Victims--Children and Sexual Crime, Abuse, and Sex Industry"
―――――――――――――――――――――――――――――――――――

The Polaris Project Monthly Seminar 2010 focus on one aspect of human
trafficking.

The first seminar introduced recent human trafficking cases in Japan,
and the second covered the victim supports, and the third was on
labor exploitation.

The forth seminar in August will focus on Japanese victims of human
trafficking.

A community home for children and youth have many children who have
experienced sexual abuse, physical abuse, and exploitation in the
sex industry.

The seminar will bring about discussions on victimization of Japanese
trafficking from Mr. Masahide Ishizawa, who works at a community home.

Please join us at the JICA Chikyu Hiroba in Hiroo.

The Forth Seminar:
 "Japanese Victims--Children and Sexual Crime, Abuse, and Sex Industry"
(The lecture will be in Japanese)
Read more...
 
【New!】Polaris Post Volume 37

---------------------------------------------------------------------
Polaris Post Volume 37
July 2010
---------------------------------------------------------------------

It'll be a busy summer with the Soccer World Cup and the upcoming
Upper House Election.

South Africa is having a great time with the World Cup, but did you
know that the number of brothels has doubled this year?
With incoming soccer fans who are travelling into the country to
watch the games, there are some concerns about increases in human
trafficking and child prostitution.
(For more information, please follow us at twitter:http://twitter.com/ppjapan

―――――――――――――――――――――――――――――――――――
* Polaris Project Monthly Seminar 2010 "You Know Human Trafficking?"
The third seminar held at Body Shop Shinjuku on Saturday, July 24====
―――――――――――――――――――――――――――――――――――

The Polaris Project Monthly Seminar 2010 is an opportunity to learn
about the multiple aspects of human trafficking.
The seminar will bring discussions about human trafficking from
multiple aspects.

The first seminar introduced recent human trafficking cases in Japan and
the second covered the victim supports by IOM, International Organization
for Migration.

The third seminar in July will welcome Ms. Sonoko Kawakami of Amnesty
International Japan,  of IOM, an international human rights advocacy
organization. She will focus on labor exploitation and will discuss
problems foreign trainees in Japan face.

Join us at the Body Shop Shinjuku!
Read more...
 
Trafficking in Persons Report 2010

JAPAN (Tier 2)

Japan is a destination, and to a much lesser extent, source and
transit country for men, women, and children subjected to trafficking
in persons, specifically forced labor and forced prostitution. Male
and female migrant workers from China, Indonesia, the Philippines,
Vietnam, and other Asian countries are sometimes subject to conditions
of forced labor. Some women and children from East Asia, Southeast
Asia, Eastern Europe, Russia, South America, and Latin America who
travel to Japan for employment or fraudulent marriage are forced into
prostitution. Japanese organized crime syndicates (the Yakuza) are
believed to play a significant role in trafficking in Japan, both
directly and indirectly. Traffickers strictly control the movements of
victims, using debt bondage, threats of violence, and other coercive
psychological methods to control victims. The media and NGOs continue
to report abuses of the Industrial Trainee and Technical Internship
Program (the “foreign trainee program”), including debt bondage,
restrictions on movement, unpaid overtime, and fraud - elements which
contribute to situations of trafficking. Women typically faced debt
upwards of $49,000 upon commencement of their contracts, and had to
pay employers additional fees for living expenses, medical care, and
other necessities, leaving them predisposed to debt bondage. “Fines”
for misbehavior added to their original debt, and the process that
employers used to calculate these debts was not transparent. A growing
and significant number of Japanese women and girls are victims of sex
trafficking in the country, a highly lucrative industry for criminal
networks and other operators in Japan. In the case of domestic
victims, the threat of blackmail, credit card debts, and other debts
from loan sharks are often used as coercive mechanisms in trafficking.
Japan is a transit country for persons trafficked from East Asia to
North America. Japanese men continue to be a significant source of
demand for child sex tourism in Southeast Asia.

Read more...
 
Polaris Project presents An Evening with Jake Adelstein

Polaris Project presents
An Evening with Jake Adelstein

Thursday, May 27,
2010 7.00 - 10.00pm
The Tokyo 21c Club

co-hosted by the Ivy League Alumni Associations of Japan

Read more...
 
<< Start < Prev 1 2 3 4 5 Next > End >>

Page 1 of 5
For a World Without Slavery