Sex Trafficking In Somalia Essay

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For Somali, a young girl from Southeast Asia sex trafficking has shaped who she is today. She has overcome many obstacles while coping with the struggle of being a victim of sex trafficking. She was taken captive against her will and forced into sex-slavery by a brothel. Somali was promised the support of locating her family members, but the brothel owners mislead her. At the time Somali was unaware of her age and name, assuming that she was only 12 years old, she was forced to have sex with various men daily. If she was ill and refused to have sex with the men, the brothel owner’s would starve and beat her. Unfortunately Somali is not the only young girl to have experienced such a tragedy. Indeed sex trafficking is an international illegal act that is used as a business to acquire revenue. It is going against everything humans have fought for and find most sacred; the right to simply say no, the right to have freedom and to be treated as one wishes to be treated. As sex trafficking brings in money, it is also emotionally and physically harmful to ones health and mentality. This is a worldwide issue that …show more content…

For example, a sex slavery victim named Sumana was one of the many to experience great tragedy during her time locked in a brothel. She was forced to have sex with up to 30 men a day without the use of protection; as a result she became pregnant. Without her consent they aborted her baby, it was excruciating and gory. Her mother and father do not accept her now because she was once a sex slave. The men called her a whore and still to this day she has to cope with the memories that her past taunts her with. According to the sex slave victim from the PBS document Half of the Sky (2011) “there was no love for me, I hate my body because my body brings me bad luck.” This proposes that girls cannot love their body for the stunning things it can do when they experience sex

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