I do not know the real difference legally between child labor and child slavery, but I do know that it’s at least 75% a joke (maybe 80%!) when I list on my facebook that my occupation is "kitchen slave". The girl in this article isn’t kidding and doesn’t have facebook or any other fun in her life. I work harder on chores than a lot of kids I know, but I am NOT a slave/
Child maid trafficking spreads from Africa to US
By RUKMINI CALLIMACHI, Associated Press Writer
AP – Shyima Hall, 19, who was 10 when she was trafficked to a gated community as a domestic worker, is shown …
IRVINE, Calif. – Late at night, the neighbors saw a little girl at the kitchen sink of the house next door.
They watched through their window as the child rinsed plates under the open faucet. She wasn’t much taller than the counter and the soapy water swallowed her slender arms. To put the dishes away, she climbed on a chair.
But she was not the daughter of the couple next door doing chores. She was their maid.
Shyima was 10 when a wealthy Egyptian couple brought her from a poor village in northern Egypt to work in their California home. She awoke before dawn and often worked past midnight to iron their clothes, mop the marble floors and dust the family’s crystal. She earned $45 a month working up to 20 hours a day. She had no breaks during the day and no days off.
The trafficking of children for domestic labor in the U.S. is an extension of an illegal but common practice in Africa. Families in remote villages send their daughters to work in cities for extra money and the opportunity to escape a dead-end life. Some girls work for free on the understanding that they will at least be better fed in the home of their employer.
The custom has led to the spread of trafficking, as well-to-do Africans accustomed to employing children immigrate to the U.S. Around one-third of the estimated 10,000 forced laborers in the United States are servants trapped behind the curtains of suburban homes, according to a study by the National Human Rights Center at the University of California at Berkeley and Free the Slaves, a nonprofit group. No one can say how many are children, especially since their work can so easily be masked as chores.
Once behind the walls of gated communities like this one, these children never go to school. Unbeknownst to their neighbors, they live as modern-day slaves, just like Shyima, whose story is pieced together through court records, police transcripts and interviews.
"I’d look down and see her at 10, 11 — even 12 — at night," said Shyima’s neighbor at the time, Tina Font. "She’d be doing the dishes. We didn’t put two and two together."
What I don’t understand is why, if the people next door saw her working in the kitchen during school days, why they didn’t think something was wrong and ask more questions. There’s more to the article.



18 Comments







While I appreciate what you’re saying, we’re in a struggle with AP at present, they are being very heavy handed with people using as few as 35 words in a quotation of theirs – we’re talking lawsuits.
Hope you will be able to find material from non-AP sources in the future.
Here’s the relevant section of About Oxdown:
Thanks.
Fergawdsake! They are a NEWS service. What’s WITH THEM?
oh, let me go look. huff post copied the WHOLE article.
Yeah, but HuffPo’s rich now. Or didn’t you hear the latest dirt?
http://www.antiwar.com/blog/20…..-fox-news/
I’ve been suspecting this for sometime as my comments were being banned if they didn’t fit the propaganda being catapulted there. I really noticed it when they were pushing Larry Summers for Sec Tres. I hope this isn’t a snark, but I got really fed up and suspicious. And the Rick Warren deal was about the same deal
This one is in the herald tribune but it says that AP is its source.
Thanks – super story – sorry to have to take your sourcing away. Keep up the good work on writing – hope to hear a lot more from you.
Yeah even in the herald tribune if its AP material, their lawyers get all twitchy about people quoting even one paragraph. They’ve really gone off the deep end. Our responsibility is to protect our writers and our blog from their craziness until they can get a grip.
Thanks for your understanding.
so should i just take it down?
Don’t want you or Cassie getting sued.
No it’s ok – just wanted to make the guidelines clear for the future. If they sue us over Cassie using 3 paragraphs to talk about – of all things – child slavery – bring it on baby.
They wouldn’t go after her in any case, just the blog.
Hopefully the combined efforts and pushback from a lot of blogs will shame them into returning to a civilized stance. What they are trying to do is legally indefensible – common use, fair use, permits a certain amount of quoting. They have truly gone off the deep end. We’re just trying to do our part to keep the pressure on.
Is having a secret slave a Status Symbol or something? Is the minimum wage really to high? Is there a demand among bosses to Beat their workers like Seals? Are Human Rights Old Hat and PC after 9/11?
I think KBR has a subcontractors who hire a bunch of immigrants for slave wages who are brought in to cook in the Green Zone for our Troops.
Google Toyota and slave labor lots of hits.
I think any company that uses slave labor should have all their products banned. I think we can get the Unions behind this since they would benefit.
Who else can we get to support the cause?
A millionaire couple in New York were found guilty of slavery in Dec./07.
..forgot the link..
http://www.iht.com/articles/ap…..-Labor.php
Funny how the Press is ignoring this bit of gossip news among the rich.
Rules? We don’t need no stinking rules! We are the rich; we answer to no one. The rich protect their own rather efficiently; much to the detriment of the rest of society.
This is a really ugly and pervasive problem. Part of a multi-billion (yeah, billion with a “B”) dollar industry in human trafficking. It is not just for labor, though a lot is especially in Africa and South Asia. Children as young as 8-9 are also being trafficked for sexual purposes. I talk about it in my ethnicity and gender classes and had to do a bunch of research. Learned a lot of things I would really rather not know. Glad to see you tackling this.
Cassie, thanks for highlighting this issue.