Ā FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASEĀ
Broken Chalk Statement on World Day Against Trafficking in PersonsĀ
By Leticia CoxĀ Ā Ā
Date: 30 July 2025Ā
Ā A Global Silence: Confronting the Epidemic of Missing and Trafficked ChildrenĀ
On thisāÆWorld Day Against Trafficking in Persons, Broken Chalk raises an urgent alarm about one of the most devastating and underreported crises of our era: the widespread trafficking and disappearance of children.Ā Ā
From war-torn provinces to bustling urban centres and hidden online spaces, children are vanishingāmany into exploitative systems that thrive on silence and impunity.Ā
The renewed public interest sparked by developments in the Jeffrey Epstein case reminds the world that trafficking is not confined to remote or unstable regionsāit infiltrates elite circles, crosses international borders, and exploits the worldās most vulnerable populations. As attention returns to the global crisis of missing and trafficked children, Broken Chalk demands a unified international response to a problem that transcends geography.Ā
North America: Indigenous Communities in the CrosshairsĀ
In Canada and the United States, Indigenous children face disproportionate risks of trafficking. Despite representing a small fraction of the population, Indigenous women and girls account for roughlyāÆ50% of all trafficking victims in Canada. In the U.S.,āÆup to 40% of trafficking survivors in some regions are Indigenous, often enduring cycles of abuse rooted in systemic racism, intergenerational trauma, and historical displacement. Underreporting, legal loopholes, and jurisdictional confusion further obscure the true scale of this crisis.Ā
Ā Africa: The Hidden EpidemicĀ
Across the African continent, thousands of children vanish each year. Many are trafficked for forced labor, sexual exploitation, or ritual killingsāparticularly during election seasons or business ceremonies where traditional āmutiā medicine fuels demand.Ā
Contributing factors include:Ā
- Cross-border traffickingāÆfor labour, sexual exploitation, and organ harvesting.Ā
- Digital grooming, with traffickers exploiting social media to lure victims.Ā
- Corruption and institutional failure paralyse investigations and silence cases before theyāre even reported.Ā
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This is not simply a law enforcement issueāit is a structural failure, and it is costing lives.Ā
Asia: Trafficking in the Shadows of War and PovertyĀ
In South and Central Asia, endemic poverty and armed conflict create ideal conditions for child trafficking.Ā
- InāÆPakistan, up toāÆ4,300 childrenāÆare reported missing annually.Ā
- InāÆSri Lanka, unresolved āwhite vanā abductions from the civil war era still haunt families.Ā
- InāÆAfghanistan, the continued exploitation of young boys throughāÆbacha bÄzÄ«āÆpersists, often shielded by corrupt officials.Ā
Despite international scrutiny, justice remains elusive and protection mechanisms remain weak.Ā
Europe: Disappeared in the Heart of CivilisationĀ
In Europe, trafficking networks have evolved to exploit migrant and vulnerable children with chilling efficiency. BetweenāÆ2021 and 2023, overāÆ51,400 migrant childrenāÆwent missing across the continentāan average of 47 children every single dayāÆ(Lost in Europe, 2025). The majority were unaccompanied minors or children in state care.Ā
InāÆEastern and Central Europe, most trafficking cases involve sexual exploitation.Ā
InāÆWestern Europe, forced labor and criminal exploitation of boys are on the rise.Ā
Trafficking in Europe is not a fringe issueāit is a mainstream human rights emergency hiding behind closed doors.Ā
Ā Australia & New Zealand: Legal Frameworks Lag Behind RealityĀ
In Australia, the 2013 case ofāÆR v KAK, involving the sexual exploitation of a 12-year-old girl trafficked by her own mother, remains the countryās only conviction for child trafficking. More than a decade later, legislation continues to fall short, failing to clearly define or prosecute child trafficking cases.Ā
New Zealand, too, shows troubling signs of institutional inertia. Despite evidence in cases like that of āGraceāāa severely abused 13-year-oldāno trafficking charges were brought. Experts warn that laws on the books rarely translate into protection on the ground.Ā
South America: Trafficking in the Crosswinds of Inequality and MigrationĀ
Human trafficking continues to pose a growing threat across South America, where systemic inequality, organised crime, mass migration, and limited institutional oversight converge to create a high-risk environment for exploitation.Ā
Countries such asāÆVenezuela, Peru, Colombia, Brazil, and others function asāÆsource, transit, and destination pointsāunderscoring the urgent need for coordinated regional strategies. According to the UNODC,āÆ13% of all trafficking victims detected in Central and Western EuropeāÆoriginate from South America. InāÆMERCOSUR border zones, more thanāÆ3,500 victimsāÆhave been identified in the last five yearsā60% women,āÆ30% minors, with nearly half subjected toāÆsexual exploitationāÆand 38% forced intoāÆbrutal labour.Ā
Children and adolescents in particular face harrowing levels of vulnerability. In ruralāÆAndean communities, remoteāÆAmazonian territories, and denseāÆborder regions, minors are trafficked for sexual exploitation, domestic servitude, forced labour, and even organ harvesting.Ā
Reports fromāÆPeru, Colombia, Venezuela, andāÆGuyanaāÆconfirm the use of children ināÆillegal mining operations andāÆcross-border smuggling routes.Ā
Migrant children, especially Venezuelans in transit, are heavily targeted due to their undocumented status and social isolation. Victims as young asāÆ11 years oldāÆhave been identified.Ā
Adolescent girlsāÆare increasingly trafficked ināÆurban centresāÆlikeāÆBogotĆ”, Santiago, andāÆLima.Ā
While promising initiatives like theāÆEcuadorāPeru Binational Immediate Response TeamāÆoffer hope, the broader institutional response remains fragmented and insufficient. High-risk zonesāsuch asāÆMadre de Dios (Peru), Norte de Santander (Colombia), TarapacĆ” (Chile), and theāÆTriple Frontierādemand urgent, coordinated, and child-centred interventions.Ā
Broken Chalkās Global Call to ActionĀ
We cannot combat what we refuse to acknowledge. Broken Chalk urges:Ā Ā
- National child alert systemsāÆto be implemented and standardised across regions.Ā
- Legal harmonisationāÆto close jurisdictional gaps that let traffickers operate with impunity.Ā
- Cross-border collaborationāÆfor victim recovery, support, and long-term reintegration.Ā
- Significant investmentāÆin child protection systems, especially in post-conflict and high-migration zones.Ā
- AccountabilityāÆfor institutions whose negligence or corruption enables exploitation.Ā
- Silence Is Not NeutralāIt Is ComplicityĀ
Ā As Broken Chalk continues our investigations into child trafficking and disappearance worldwide, one truth stands out: trafficking doesnāt only happen in hidden corners of the world. It happens behind the closed doors of luxury homes, in chat rooms, on refugee routes, and in regions left to fend for themselves.Ā
The Epstein case may be legally closedābut it remains wide open in the court of public conscience. We will continue to ask hard questions and expose the truths that others try to bury.Ā
We owe every victimānamed and unnamed, seen and unseenānothing less.Ā
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ENDĀ


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