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“Breaking the chains for those victimized as children by human trafficking, child abuse and bullying to lead survivors into lives filled with faith, hope and love.”

Ark of Hope for Children is empowering advocates and donors to bring care and awareness to those victimized as children by human trafficking, child abuse and bullying. Ark of Hope is a human rights umbrella organization using a trauma informed approach to serve survivors through our various programs.

This approach acknowledges that traumatized people often respond to daily life quite differently even years after their traumatic experiences ended. If we can address their trauma, we can change lives. Unconditional love, understanding and mentoring support can empower victims to mold the challenges of their past into hope filled futures as thriving survivors.

Statistics we have gathered about child trafficking, child abuse and bullying show that intervention is highly needed. Click the links above to the latest statistics or click on our programs below that highlight our efforts to mobilize lighthouses of hope for survivors throughout the U.S. and beyond.

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Why we care

Ark of Hope's mission and goals

Child Trafficking

Needs of Rescued Child Trafficking Survivors

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This page is the result of extensive research Ark of Hope for Children has done to discover what child sex trafficking victims need in order to be led from the point of rescue, to full and flourishing adulthood. The purpose of our research was for the planning of our upcoming Harbourage safe homes for rescued child trafficking victims to be built in north central Florida. 

As discussed on Ark of Hope’s international child trafficking statistics page, human trafficking victims can be male or female, under 4 to 25 years old that has been traded for sex multiple times a day. Victims of trafficking may not even speak the native language, having been bought, sold and brought here from another country. Survivors need medical attention for abuse, possible drug addiction, STD's and a full range of possible mental issues including post traumatic stress.

Traffickers and pimps see victims as their property with great earning potential. Because of that victims are controlled using fear, physical abuse, drugs, mind control, alienation, moving to a foreign country, stripped of identification and passports, and mind controlled into believing the police and authority figures are the bad guys. Traffickers know that escaped or rescued victims can lead to the arrest and prosecution of traffickers, so they are prepared to protect their property. (ECPAT UK study "Watch Over me?")

Ark TwibbonThe nature of law enforcement work requires immediate and detailed accounts of the trafficking; however, trafficked persons need basic services and crisis counseling before speaking with law enforcement. The early interviews in particular result in retraumatization, the exacerbation of the trauma symptoms such as anxiety and the sense of danger, memory problems and a disjointed account that creates credibility concerns.” A trafficked person is much more likely to be an effective witness that results in a prosecution if they do not feel coerced and if they have had the opportunity to get the basic social services they need.

Depending on the needs of individual victims, services required for recovery may include any or all of the following: medical care; emergency and transitional housing with long-term housing assistance; mental health counseling; job training and placement; family location and reunification; translation and interpretation; advocacy in the criminal justice system; spiritual support; criminal, civil and immigrationCornered legal assistance; safety planning; and repatriation.

Children and young adults rescued from child trafficking have far too few safe, qualified environments where they can be taken for habilitation and training for a normal productive life. All too often they have ended up in juvenile detention programs or traditional foster care. Juvenile detention is much too rigid and unforgiving, while foster care is simply not prepared for traumatized victims that have been sold many times a day for sex. They need more stability than traditional foster care, which often bounces children from home to home. They will most often run away, back to the dangerous life that had endangered them or succumb to suicide, alcohol, drugs on the streets.

Teens are often placed in foster care and juvenile detention. They are NOT criminals, but victims, and most foster parents will have no idea how to meet their complex physical and psychological needs. There is most often no stability as children bounce from home to home in traditional foster care. Plus foster care will not take children over 17 years old so where do they go? Of the 20,000 released from foster care in the U.S. every year, 25% are jailed within 2 years and a vast number homeless. 

Victims of child sex trafficking need stable, long term environments to live in with care takers that will patiently help them transition from their past life of controlled abuse to healthy independence. Survivors must also receive full access to medical, emotional, educational and legal assistance.

Male victims are overlooked for rescue or for rehabilitation. In our third interview video Blair Corbett has attempted to raise the level of awareness of the issue of male sex trafficking victims. In the rescuing sense, do we even pay attention to what a male child prostitute looks like? If selling themselves on the street, would we even know what to look for? Is society biased treating males as if "they enjoy it" so they can't be victims?

Male child abuse victims have proven to be every bit as traumatized as females. In some cases, even more so due to the very nature of being a male victim. Embarrassment and shame leave the victim unable to share, so the tendency towards suicide is even greater. Ark of Hope for Children has found only one safe home within the U.S. that provides any bed space at all for rescued males. Yet the Penn State scandal of 2011-12 and others like it show the very high demand for young 

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Caregivers must earn the survivors trust, and be capable of developing quality relationships with individuals of varying maturity levels. They must be willing to listen to victimized people who may have not had anyone truly care about them for years, if ever. They must provide an environment for education and learning skills that coach survivors to become flourishing self reliant adults. In doing so, the adults or organization must be capable of committing to the living arrangements for survivors well into their twenties. With these thoughts in mind, Ark of Hope for Children has planned its Harborage Child Trafficking Safe Homes as a place to habilitate, transform and restore child sex trafficking victims.

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Child trafficking Statistics

U.S. & International

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Ark of Hope for Children has compiled the following U.S. and international statistics on human trafficking, child trafficking and sex trafficking.thumb Prostituted sm These trafficking stats were sought so we could research the needs of rescued child trafficking victims. These became our keys towards our plan for the Harbourage safe homes for child trafficking survivors. Statistics are updated bi-yearly and sources are at the end.

Statistics compiled by Ark of Hope for Children

High Springs, FL This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. 


* "When a child has been recruited, transported, harbored, or received and some commercial element is introduced in the production of child pornography, then that individual has also engaged in child trafficking. Whether they work in strip clubs or sweatshops, these boys and girls are victims of human trafficking."

* The Trafficking Victims Protection Act (TVPA) defines “severe forms of trafficking in persons” as: sex trafficking in which a commercial sex act is induced by force, fraud, or coercion, or in which the person induced to perform such an act has not attained 18 years of age." 

* "The economic reality is that human trafficking is driven by profits. If nobody paid for sex, sex trafficking would not exist."

Where do trafficked children come from?

thumb barbed wire ark 600flatChild trafficking victims, whether for labor, sex or organ trafficking, come from all backgrounds, include both boys and girls. They span a wide age range from 1 to 18 years old. Sex trafficking victims up to roughly 25 years old most often started as young as 14. Children are trafficked out of, or into the United States from all regions of the world and represent a variety of different races, ethnic groups and religions. They may be brought to the U.S. legally or smuggled in.

Trafficked children can be lured to the U.S. through the promise of school or work and promised the opportunity to send money back to their families. Children are also vulnerable to kidnappers, pimps, and professional brokers. Some children are even sold to traffickers by their families, who may or may not have an understanding of what will happen to the child. U.S. born children are also trafficked within the U.S., coming from any racial group, socio-economic background, and come from or trafficked within both city and rural areas.

The numbers;

Update: In 2012 the (UNODC) United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime reports the percentage of child victims had risen in a 3 year span from 20 per cent to 27 per cent. Of every three child victims, two are girls and one is a boy.

Gender and age profile of victims detected globally: 59% Women - 14% Men - 17% Girls and 10% were Boys.

  • 600,000 to 800,000 women, children and men bought and sold across international borders every year and exploited for forced labor or commercial sex (U.S. Government)
  • When internal trafficking victims are added to the estimates, the number of victims annually is in the range of 2 to 4 million
  • 50% of those victims are estimated to be children
  • It is estimated that 76 percent of transactions for sex with underage girls start on the Internet
  • 2 million children are subjected to prostitution in the global commercial sex trade (UNICEF)
  • There are 20.9 Million victims of Trafficking World wide as of 2012
  • 1.5 Million victims in the United States

The impact;

  • Human trafficking has surpassed the illegal sale of armsthumb No More
  • Trafficking will surpass the illegal sale of drugs in the next few years
  • Drugs are used once and they are gone. Victims of child trafficking can be used and abused over and over
  • A $32 billion-a-year industry, human trafficking is on the rise and is in all 50 states (U.S. Government)
  • 4.5 Million of trafficked persons are sexually exploited
  • Up to 300,000 Americans under 18 are lured into the commercial sex trade every year
  • From 14,500 - 17,500 of those victims are trafficked into the United States each year

Click to read the Needs of Rescued Trafficking Victims 


 According to non-governmental U.S. sources;

  • Average age a victim enters trafficking is 11 to 14 years old
  • Approx 80% are women and children bought, sold and imprisoned in the underground sex service industry
  • Average life span of a victim is reported to be 7 years (found dead from attack, abuse, HIV and other STD's, malnutrition, overdose or suicide)

The largest group of at-risk children are runaway, thrown away, or homeless American children who use survival sex to acquire food, shelter, clothing, and other things needed to survive on America's streets. According to the National Runaway Switchboard  1.3 million runaway and homeless youth live on America's streets every day. [5,000 die each year] It would not be surprising to learn that the number of children trafficked in the United States is actually much higher than 300,000.

Children are often targeted by traffickers as they are deemed easier to manipulate than adults. More money can be earned by younger girls and boys exploited in sexual exploitation, especially virgins. Pre-pubescent girls are reported to be injected with hormones to bring on puberty. Younger girls are expected to have a greater earning potential, and as such are in greater demand. 

Physical and Mental Consequences of Trafficking for victims;thumb Beaten

  • Child victims of human trafficking face significant problems. Often physically and sexually abused, they have distinctive medical and psychological needs that must be addressed before advancing in the formative years of adulthood.
  • Child victims of exploitation can face a number of long-term health problems:
  • Sleeping and eating disorders
  • Sexually transmitted diseases
  • HIV/AIDS, pelvic pain, rectal trauma and urinary difficulties from working in the sex industry
  • Drug addiction
  • Chronic back, hearing, cardiovascular or respiratory problems from endless days toiling in dangerous agriculture, sweatshop or construction conditions
  • Fear and anxiety
  • Depression, mood changes
  • Guilt and shame
  • Cultural shock from finding themselves in a strange country
  • Posttraumatic Stress Disorder
  • Traumatic bonding with the trafficker

Click to read about Ark of Hope's planned Harbourage Safe Homes for Child Trafficking Victims


Pull factors;thumb Leaving home-2

Demand for cheap labor and for prostituted women, girls, and boys is the primary "pull" factor. Common push and pull factors exploited by traffickers include:

  • Unemployment and perceived job opportunities overseas (into the U.S.)
  • Unhappy home situation: The victim may be in an abusive situation, their family may be in debt, or there may be an addict in the family
  • Relatives and friends live in the destination country
  • Returning migrants, legal and illegal, say they have made a better living for themselves

Sex buyers are far more complicit in the victimization of sex trafficking victims. Sex tourism and child pornography have become worldwide industries, facilitated by technologies such as the Internet, which vastly expand the choices available to pedophiles and permit instant and nearly undetectable transactions. 

Trafficking Victims:

  • Child trafficking victims, like other child victims, come from many backgrounds and include both boys and girls across a widethumb Foster sisters range of ages.
  • Children are trafficked to the U.S. from all regions of the world and represent a variety of different races, ethnic groups and religions.
  • They may be brought to the U.S. legally or smuggled in.
  • Internationally trafficked children, especially adolescents, may be lured overseas to the U.S. through the promise of work or school and the opportunity to send money back to their families.
  • Children are also vulnerable to kidnappers, pimps, and professional brokers.
  • Some children are sold to traffickers by their families, who may or may not have an understanding of what will happen to the child.
  • U.S. citizen children may also be trafficked within the U.S., and come from multiple racial groups and socio-economic backgrounds.

 Click to read the Needs of Rescued Trafficking Victims


Runaways:

Many youth, especially U.S. citizen children trafficked within the U.S., run away from problems at home and may be exploited as a result of emotional vulnerability, homelessness and the need to survive. Youth who run away from home and engage in "survival sex" often find themselves vulnerable to pimps and traffickers involved in prostitution networks. Approximately 55% of street girls, and a good percentage of boys, engage in formal prostitution and some think it is much higher than that. This means that a child client who has been homeless or living on the street for any amount of time has a great likelihood of having been sexually exploited or trafficked.thumb Street Kid

The sexual exploitation of children is not limited to particular racial, ethnic or socioeconomic groups, although children from poor families appear to be at somewhat higher risk of commercial sexual exploitation. In fact, most of the street children encountered in the study were Caucasian youths who had run away from middle-class families. One clear theme is the is proportionate number of street youth who have histories of recurrent physical or sexual abuse at home and took to the streets in a desperate effort to bring their abuse to an end.

According to these researchers, child sexual exploitation in the United States affects as many boys as girls, but boys are less well-served by social service and law enforcement systems because of the widespread belief that boys are better able than girls to fend for themselves. Without intervention, research has shown many boys shift from being victims of sexual abuse to victimizing other boys and girls as pimps and traffickers.

People are recruited in several different ways such as through fake employment agencies, acquaintances, newspaper ads, front businesses, word of mouth or abduction. Traffickers may be neighbors, friends, returnees, agricultural operators, owners of small businesses, diplomats and even families. Increasingly, however, the traffickers are organized crime syndicates, often in collaboration with corrupt law enforcement entities, government officials or employers, who may use several intermediaries from the first point of contact to the final destination of the victim. If the victim is transported, they use both legal and illegal means of transport and various techniques to keep their victim enslaved.

They may keep them under lock and key or in isolation from the public and from their family members or support networks, confiscate their passports or identification documents, use the threat of violence against the enslaved person or their families, threaten them with shame, fear of imprisonment or deportation, and control their money.

The psychological effects of torture are helplessness, shame and humiliation, shock, denial and disbelief, disorientation and confusion, and anxiety disorders including post traumatic stress disorder, phobias, panic attacks and depression. Victims may experience Traumatic Bonding (Stockholm Syndrome) – a form of coercive control in which the perpetrator instills in the victim fear as well as gratitude for being allowed to live or for any other perceived favors, however small. 


Ark of Hope for Children's sources for U.S. and international trafficking statistics;

2012 UNITED NATIONS OFFICE ON DRUGS AND CRIME Global Report - Vienna

U.S. Trafficking In Persons Report - June 2012

Trafficking Victims Protection Act

U.S. Trafficking In Persons Report - June 2011

Child Trafficking Update - October 2011

Defender Foundation

FBI on Human Sex Trafficking – March 2011

Child Exploitation and Online Protection Centre, Hanoi

Child Victims of Human Trafficking Report- Dept Health & Human Services

Crimes Against Children Report- Interpol – September 2009

Trafficking in Human Beings Report- Interpol – December 2009 

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Joe Gardiner moves on

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After a short stint as our volunteer Director of Marketing position Joseph Gardiner has moved on. More here

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