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1
24th April 20:11
External User
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Israel: "Goy *** w/Jewish fems = taboo!" (sign case control population law)
Bottom line: In Israel, the international center of "white slavery" (the
buying and selling of white Gentile *** slaves) it's illegal for imported
foreign Gentile male workers to have relations with Jewish Israeli women.
I hope the result of this is that many of these men will then instead have
relations (and babies) with Gentile Muslim and Christian Paestinian women,
further aggravating the Zionists' impending "population bomb" troubles.
And boy (or should I say *goy*?) Bill Clinton and Gary Condit should be
especially glad they're not foreign workers in Israel!
http://www.thestar.com/NASApp/cs/ContentServer?pagename=thestar/Layout/Art
icle_Type1&c=Article&cid=1072178838039&call_pageid =968332188774&col=968705
899037
Dec. 23, 2003
Stay away from Israeli women, foreign workers told
FROM ASSOCIATED PRESS
JERUSALEM — An Israeli company has required thousands of Chinese workers to
sign a contract promising not to have *** with Israelis or try to convert them,
a police spokesperson said today.
According to the do***ent, male workers cannot come into contact with Israeli
women — including prostitutes — become their lovers or marry them,
spokesperson Rafi Yaffe said. He said there was nothing illegal about the
requirement and no investigation had been opened against the company.
The labourers are also forbidden in the contract from engaging in any religious
or political activity. Those who violate the agreement will be sent back to
China at their own expense.
About 260,000 foreigners work in Israel, having replaced Palestinian labourers
during three years of fighting. When the government first began to allow the
entrance of the foreign workers in the late 1990s, ministers warned of a
"social time bomb" caused by workers assimilating with Israelis.
More than half the workers are in the country illegally. Israeli police have
increased efforts to deport those working without permits in light of high
Israeli unemployment, which has reached 11 per cent in recent months.
Israeli advocates of foreign workers — who come also from Thailand, the
Philippines and Romania — say they are held by employers in nearly slave-like
conditions and their bosses frequently take their passports and refuse to pay
them.
A spokesperson for the Labour and Social Affairs Ministry did not return calls
requesting comment.
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http://www.metimes.com/2K1/issue2001-37/reg/***_slavery_thriving.htm
*** slavery thriving in Holy Land
By Megan Goldin NEVE TIRZA PRISON, ISRAEL
Christina, an 18-year-old university student from Moldova, has been bought and
sold so many times she has lost count.
Christina, who declined to give her real name, studied classics and
anthropology and played basketball as a hobby before she was lured from a rural
town in one of Europe's poorest countries to *** slavery in Israel.
She is not alone.
Hundreds of thousands of 'Christinas' have been bought like merchandise,
beaten, ****d and chained in Western brothels in a 21st century form of
slavery.
Christina received top marks in her anthropology studies but couldn't sc****
together enough money to pay for photocopies, let alone buy textbooks.
Her dire economic situation made her fair game for women hired by criminal
gangs to lure young, naive girls from Moldova and other financially-strapped
Eastern European countries into prostitution with promises of large sums of
money.
"I never thought I would actually have to do it," Christina said in
bewilderment. "I thought once I arrived I would find a way to escape and find
other work, as a waitress or something."
Christina was flown to Egypt where along with 20 other Moldovan and Russian
women aged between about 18 and 24, she was escorted across the Sinai desert
into southern Israel by a Bedouin smuggler.
They walked over dunes, eventually crawling under a barbed-wire border fence in
the middle of the night.
Rolls of money changed hands between the Bedouin and the Russian-speaking men
who bought the women. Christina doesn't know how much they paid, but the market
price for a woman like her in Israel is around $8,000.
Frightened, an illegal alien, unfamiliar with Hebrew or Israeli geography,
Christina had no real hope of escaping.
Instead she was taken to a brothel in northern Israel where she was forced to
have *** with around 15 men every day, ****d, beaten and threatened with death
if she ran away.
Eventually she did and is now a witness in a court case against the pimp who
bought and mistreated her under a new Israeli law that makes human trafficking
punishable by up to 16 years in prison.
"It's very easy. You just put them on a plane, walk them through the desert and
you have slaves," said lawyer Nomi Levenkron, who represents women like
Christina who are locked in a special wing of the Neve Tirza prison near Tel
Aviv while they wait to testify or to be deported for entering Israel
illegally.
*** slavery, or white slavery as it was called in the 19th century, is almost
as old as prostitution itself. But it has had a sudden resurgence since the
collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991 devastated many eastern European
economies.
Women who earn around $20 a month in Moldova are promised $1,000 a month abroad
to work as prostitutes. It is a tempting offer for young women with bleak
futures in their home countries or burdened with supporting a large family.
Sometimes the women don't know they are being sent to work as prostitutes and
are told they will be waitresses or secretaries. Others are simply kidnapped.
Almost always they are trafficked by the local Mafia, frequently on a forged
passport and threatened that if they don't behave, their family back home will
suffer the consequences.
"They come from a place with no money, a very poor family in a poor village,
looking for a better future," said Levenkron, a legal adviser to the Hotline
for Migrant Workers, the only organization in Israel that helps former
***-slaves.
"These women are so naïve, they don't realize people are lying to them," she
said.
Israel is a popular destination for the human trade. It is not difficult to
smuggle and hide Russian-speaking women in a country where almost a million
people originate from the former Soviet Union.
"It's very easy for them to disappear between all the Russian-speaking women in
Israel," Levenkron said. "It's very easy for traffickers to bring women here
and when you have the supply, you have the demand."
A recent U.S. State Department report on human trafficking put Israel on a list
of countries where the phenomenon is rampant. It has until 2003 to implement
"minimum standards for the elimination of trafficking" or face stiff economic
sanctions.
According to Zahava Gal-On, who heads an Israeli parliamentary committee on
trafficking, that means deterring traffickers with hefty prison sentences
instead of a few months in jail, the usual punishment handed down by Israeli
courts.
It also means putting women like Christina in safe houses instead of jail,
thereby encouraging them to stay and testify.
In the past the victim has been locked up, sometimes for as long as six months,
while the pimp is let off with a small fine or a brief stay in jail although
under the law, it is the brothel owner, not the woman, who has committed a
crime.
Like most former ***-slaves, Christina is penniless. Those lucky enough to be
paid a paltry sum, usually a few dollars, by their pimps save the money to buy
themselves freedom from their brothel-prisons. Often they are sold before they
can do so.
"They are slaves and slaves of the worst kind," Levenkron said. "They are
disposable people because it's so easy to buy a person."
Human trafficking is becoming a modern day scourge, said Tal Raviv, an advocate
for the International Organization for Migration who works in Kosovo where
trafficking is widespread.
"This has become a huge phenomena in the last decade," said Raviv during a
visit to Israel. "The estimates are between half a million to 700,000 women
trafficked every year just to the West, but the global figures are for
millions."
Law enforcement officials say human trafficking is almost as rampant as drug
and weapons smuggling. Many of the women being trafficked are forced to work in
brothels.
In Africa and Asia, men are often sent to sweatshops and children forced to
work in cocoa plantations in West Africa. Some of those trafficked are slated
to be unwilling donors for black market organ transplants, Raviv said.
"Trafficking people is much easier than trafficking drugs and weapons," she
said.
"It's easier because if you find drugs or the arms, there is no question
something illegal has happened. But if you find a person with a passport, how
do you know this person is not traveling out of their own free will?"
Raviv says the only difference between the 21st century version of slavery and
that of the plantations in the Americas some 200 years ago is that today
slavery is illegal.
"When you buy and sell a person, then it means a person is merchandise and that
is slavery," Raviv said. "The person has no freedom, no control over his or her
fate."
Reuters
"If ye love wealth better than liberty ... servitude better than ... freedom,
go home from us in peace. We ask not your counsel or your arms ... May your
chains set lightly upon you. May posterity forget that ye were our countrymen."
- Samuel Adams
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