Thursday, January 10, 2013
Modern-Day Comfort Women: The U.S. Military, Transnational Crime, and the Trafficking of Women
http://www.uri.edu/artsci/wms/hughes/modern_day_comfort_women.pdf
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Donna M. Hughes, Katherine Y. Chon, and Derek P. Ellerman
Donna M. Hughes is a Professor and holds the Eleanor M. and Oscar M. Carlson Endowed Chair in
Women’s Studies at the University of Rhode Island. She has completed research on the trafficking of
women from Russia and Ukraine, and trafficking in women into the United States. She has done
extensive research on the use of new information technologies for the trafficking of women and
children for sexual exploitation. She is the editor of the international volume Making the Harm
Visible: The Global Sexual Exploitation of Women and Children, Speaking Out and Providing
Services.
Katherine Y. Chon is co-founder and co-executive director of Polaris Project, a Washington, DC
based non-profit organization combating trafficking of women and children. She has a background in
cross-cultural education theory, social science research, and experimental design and analysis. She
has worked with research projects at the Institute for Elementary and Secondary Education, Brown
University, and Butler and Miriam Hospitals in Providence, RI investigating family violence and
child abuse, adolescent suicide, and issues in curriculum development. She has a Sc.B. in Psychology
from Brown University.
Derek P. Ellerman is co-founder and co-executive director of Polaris Project, a Washington, DC
based non-profit organization combating trafficking of women and children. Most recently, he served
as Executive Director of the Center for Police and Community, working on issues of police reform in
Rhode Island. He has also served as President of the Rhode Island Committee for Non-Violence
Initiatives. In addition to his non-profit experie nce, Derek is an established freelance web-designer
and 3D modeler. He has a Sc.B. in Cognitive Neuroscience from Brown University.
Modern-Day Comfort Women:
The U.S. Military, Transnational Crime,
and the Trafficking of Women
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Introduction
The U.S. military bases in Republic of Korea (commonly known as South Korea) form an
international hub for trafficking of women for prostitution and related forms of sexual exploitation.
The trafficking of women is a lucrative moneymaker for transnational organized crime networks,
ranking third, behind drugs and arms, in criminal earnings. The traffickers recruit and transport
women to meet the demand largely created by U.S. military personnel and civilian men in South
Korea and the United States. In some cases, the U.S. servicemen themselves are traffickers working
with Asian organized crime networks.
This paper will examine three types of trafficking that are connected to US military bases in South
Korea: Domestic trafficking of Korean women to clubs around the military bases in South Korea,
transnational trafficking of women to clubs around military bases in South Korea, and the
transnational trafficking of women from South Korea to massage parlors in the United States.
Although, the three types of trafficking will be discussed separately, in reality, they sometimes
overlap. For example, in one case a Korean woman was the victim of multiple acts of trafficking: She
was abducted at age 14 from her village in South Korea, and was repeatedly raped and exploited by
soldiers of the South Korean army. An American soldier brought her to the U.S. through a sham
marriage, where she was then trafficked within the U.S. on a massage parlor circuit (Gallagher,
1995).
Methods
Terms and Definitions
For the purpose of this paper, the definition of “trafficking” is based on the U.S. Victims of
Trafficking and Violence Protection Act of 2000.
“Sex trafficking means the recruitment, harboring, transportation, provision, or obtaining of a
person for the purpose of a commercial sex act.” A commercial sex act is defined as “any sex
act on account of which anything of value is given to or received by any person.”
For criminal charges to be brought against perpetrators, their activities must meet the criteria of
“severe form of trafficking in persons,” which is “sex trafficking in which a commercial sex act is
induced by force, fraud, or coercion, or in which the person induced to perform such act has not
attained 18 years of age.” Coercion is defined as:
Modern-Day Comfort Women:
The U.S. Military, Transnational Crime, and the
Trafficking of Women
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“(A) threats of serious harm to or phys ical restraint against any person; (B) any scheme, plan,
or pattern intended to cause a person to believe that failure to perform an act would result in
serious harm to or physical restraint against any person; or (C) the abuse or threatened abuse
of the legal process.”
“Transnational trafficking” is used to mean sex trafficking of women that involves the crossing of an
international border. “Domestic trafficking” is used to mean sex trafficking within the borders of a
country in recognition that the tactic s used by procurers and pimps are the same when women are
recruited and transported within the same country. Often, as in the case of massage parlors, the
women are used on regional and national circuits, which should be recognized as a form of domestic
trafficking.
In discussing the sites of prostitution in the U.S., the term “massage parlor” is used, although the
establishments are also known by other euphemisms such as “spas,” modeling studios,” and “hostess
bars.”
Sources of Data
Prior to the initiation of this research, no studies on the trafficking of women to Korea had been
conducted or completed.1 Similarly, there were no research studies on the trafficking of women from
Korea, or trafficking of Korean women that involved U.S. servicemen. There have been several
studies on the use of Korean women for prostitution by U.S. servicemen, but the focus was not on
trafficking. Korean and other Asian nongovernmental organizations (NGOs) have documented the
transnational and domestic trafficking of women associated with U.S. military personnel, but they
were not research reports. Because of the lack of previous research, the paper relied on NGO reports
and media stories from the U.S., South Korea, and the Philippines.
For this research report, the authors conducted 36 interviews using open-ended questions with social
service providers, activist organizations, law enforcement officials, reporters, and a researcher in the
U.S. and South Korea. The interviews included 19 law enforcement officials, 10 social service
providers and/or activist organizations, 6 reporters, and 1 researcher. All interviews were conducted
by telephone in August, September, and October 2002.
U.S. Military in Republic of Korea and Violence Against Women
The United States has had troops in South Korea for almost six decades, starting in 1945 following
World War II.2 Today, there are 100 U.S. military bases throughout South Korea with 37,000 troops.
From the 1950s to 1970s, the United States Forces in Korea (USFK) and the Republic of Korea
cooperatively agreed to set up “rest and relaxation” centers for U.S. troops. The purpose was to
provide entertainment and improve the morale of the troops. The kijichon (military camp towns)
around the U.S. military bases that resulted from this policy are closed to South Korea citizens and
allow only U.S. troops and those who provide services to enter. Although prostitution is officially
1 While the research for this paper was underway, the International Organization for Migration released its
report “Women Tra fficked for U.S. Military Bases – IOM Report,” September 3, 2002.
2 For a detailed account of U.S. and Korean relations and their tacit accommodation of U.S. servicemen with
women for sex, see Katherine H. S. Moon. Sex Among Allies: Military Prostitution in the U.S.-Korea
Relations. New York: Columbia University Press, 1997.
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illegal in South Korea, the sex industry around the U.S. military bases thrives with an estimated
20,000 women in the kijichon (Kim, 1997). Most of the clubs or bars in the kijichon have rooms
upstairs for prostitution (Moon, 1997; McMichael, 2002a).
The abuse and exploitation of Korean women for “rest and relaxation” by soldiers preceded the
arrival of U.S. troops. The Japanese army used Korean women for sexual slavery during World War
II (Howard, 1995; Hicks, 1995). At the time, the women were euphemistically referred to as “comfort
women,” and although that term is no longer used, a number of Asian women’s nongovernmental
organizations (NGOs) characterize the ongoing trafficking and sexual exploitation of Korean and
Philippine women by U.S. military troops as a continuation of the same practice. In fact, several
sources say that some of the original “comfort women” used by the Japanese army were in turn used
by U.S. troops following the defeat of Japan (Kim, 1997). The experiences of the women are similar;
except now, the U.S. troops refer to them by other euphemistic and derogatory terms, such as “guest
relations officer,” “bar girls,” “hostesses,” “entertainers,” and “juicy girls” (Kim, 1997; Donato, 2002;
Demick, 2002).
During the almost six decades that U.S. troops have been stationed in South Korea they have
committed many crimes in the Korean communities (Ahn, n.d.). One group gathered crime reports
and found that from 1945 to 1999, servicemen committed over 10,000 crimes (National Campaign for
the Eradication of Crimes by U.S. Troops in South Korea, 1999). In 1992, the brutal rape and murder
of Yoon Keum Yi, a prostit ute, by a U.S. serviceman, generated public outrage about crimes
committed by U.S. troops (Kim, 1997; Kirk, Cornell & Okazawa-Rey, 2000). More recent crimes
include the stabbing murder of Si-Sun Li near a U.S. military base in 1998 and the beating death of a
31 year old bar waitress by two American soldiers in 2000. In both cases, the men said they got angry
because the women refused to have sex with them (Associated Press, 1998; Associated Press, 2000).
The Status of Forces Agreement (SOFA), a security treaty, between the U.S. and Republic of Korea
makes it difficult for Koreans to take legal action against U.S. troops, even when they have
committed crimes (Moon, 1997). Created during the Cold War era, the U.S. was able to “negotiate
separate and often unequal security treaties with each of its Asian allies,” providing few favorable
provisions for countries like the Republic of Korea (Cornwell and Wells, 1999). While the Republic
of Korea has some legal jurisdiction over crimes committed by U.S. troops, a clause in SOFA’s
article 22 states that South Korea must give “sympathetic consideration” for any request made by the
U.S. to waive its rights unless the case is considered of “particular importance” (Moon, 1997;
“Activists intensify SOFA,” 2002). According to the National Campaign for the Eradication of Crime
by U.S. Troops in Korea, the U.S. military is responsible for disciplining their troops, but frequently,
when crimes are committed, the men are just moved to another post (Kirk & Okazawa-Rey; n.d.). In
1999, only 3.6 percent of all crimes committed by U.S. servicemen were brought to trial by the South
Korean government (Young Koreans United, 2000).
In the climate of tolerance for crimes committed by U.S. troops, prostitution and trafficking for
prostitution are among the most tolerated.
Domestic Trafficking of Korean Women for U.S. Military Personnel
According to one estimate, over one million Korean women have been used in prostitution by U.S.
troops since the end of World War II (Moon, 1997). One man, formerly stationed at the Osan Air
Base described the contemporary kijichon locale and prostitution in the following way:
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Outside the front gate of our air base is a town called song-tan. There is a strip of bars along
this street…about 25 bars. Men go to these bars to see the ‘juicy girls.” …when a man see a
girl that he likes, he calls her over, or sometimes one of the old ladies that work at the bar
just bring a girl to the man. He then buys her a ‘juicy’ (a small glass of juice or alcohol) for
about $10. sometimes they just talk, or sometimes he gropes her, but many times the talk
negotiate a ‘barfine’ … money paid to the owner of the bar so that the girl can go out for the
evening ‘bar hopping,’ or to a hotel to have sex” (Anonymous, email, May 2001).
Korean girls and women become vulnerable to recruiters after they have been abandoned by families
or run away from home because of abuse. They usually have limited job skills and few options for
work. They are domestically trafficked from various regions of South Korea for kijichon prostitution
outside U.S. bases. Korean women are recruited into prostitution by employment agencies that play a
central role in domestic trafficking (Yu, n.d.). Young women who run away from home are often
searched for by employment agencies. When the girl or woman is found, the cost to trace her is
charged to her as a debt that she then has to repay (Yu, n.d.). Also, Korean women enter prostitution
as a way to pay off credit card debt without knowing the conditions and violence they will face.
According to one agency, “We hear many cases of those who started out making quick money to pay
off credit card debts but ended up in situations they didn’t know existed” (Go, IOM-Seoul, personal
communication, September, 2002).
Once Korean women are in prostitution, they quickly accumulate more debt. Pimps manipulate the
women into incurring debts, so that they will not be able to leave. Women are charged for rent, food,
furniture, clothes, and medical expenses; so often, the longer the woman is in prostitution, the larger
is her debt. One former bar woman said her debt accrued for 25 years while she was being used in the
kijichon. Over this period of time, she had to pay for 25 abortions because she said she could not
“bring another life in to this world if he/she has a life like mine” (Kirk, 1995). According to the
representative of United Voice for the Eradication of Prostitution in Korea (Hansori):
“Every day a woman has to pay her pimp the money from three customers. If she fails to pay,
it is added to her debt. A woman is sold from one place to another every one to two months,
and the agency fee that the employer pays the employment agency is added to her debt. [One
woman] started with no debts, but at the end of eight years in prostitution, her debt increased
to over 20 million won (over US$20,000) (Yu, n.d.).
The pervasive tactic for recruiting and coercing Korean women into prostitution is through the
creation and manipulation of debts. These debts are then used to control the women and keep them in
prostitution, often for years.
Transnational Trafficking of Women to South Korea
In the last decade, the economic conditions have improved for South Korea, offering women more
opportunities than in the past. Consequently, foreign women are increasingly replacing the Korean
women in prostitution around the U.S. bases.
Women from the Philippines, the Russian Federation, Bolivia, Peru, Mongolia, China, Bangladesh,
Kyrgyzstan, and Uzbekistan have been trafficked into South Korea (Jhoty, 2001; McMichael, 2002a;
Lhagvasuren, 2001). According to the International Organization for Migration in Seoul, 5,000
women have been trafficked into South Korea, mostly Russians and Filipinas, who are replacing the
Koreans (Capdevila, 2002a; Go, IOM-Seoul, personal communication, September 2002). For
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example, in one kijichon area with 40 clubs, of the 301 women in prostitution, 107 were Korean, 149
were Philippine, and 45 were Russian (Union of Women’s Social Organizations, n.d.).
For decades, Filipina women have been used in prostitution by U.S. troops around the large military
bases in the Philippines, but those bases closed in the 1990s. The closing of the U.S. military bases, as
well as the Asian economic crisis led to high unemployment, especially among women in the
Philippines where only 46.8 percent of women are employed compared to 85.7 percent of men
(Enriquez, n.d.). The Philippine government supports and facilitates the overseas employment of
Filipinos because it helps solve their unemployment problem, and the workers abroad send home
money to support families, helping to alleviate poverty (Enriquez, n.d.). Because the Philippines is a
source of unskilled workers for South Korea, there are a number of agencies and schemes that recruit
and facilitate the travel and work of Filipinos in South Korea (Enriquez, n.d.). Traffickers work
within this system. Recruiters who work for foreign employers travel around the countryside offering
poor young women opportunities for work abroad, often giving parents advance payments on their
daughters’ wages (Cruz, 2002). As thousands of Filipinas go abroad expecting to find work, many are
now in circumstances of sexual exploitation by US troops in South Korea similar to those they were
in when the U.S. military bases were in the Philippines.
The presence of Filipinas around the U.S. bases in South Korea was noted as early as 1987, but in
recent years, the numbers have been increasing (Enriquez, n.d.). In 1994, there were approximately
250 Filipinas in prostitution around the U.S. military bases in South Korea. By 1997, the number
increased to 1,365, and by 2002, the number rose to 3,000 (Donato, 2002). Traffickers target
particular communities for recruiting women for prostitution abroad, such as those displaced in
Central Luzon due to the eruption of the Mt. Pinatubo volcano and closure of the U.S. bases
(Enriquez, n.d.). The women are mostly young, with high school or less education, coming from the
rural areas and from poor families (Enriquez, n.d.). Many Filipinas are recruited by agencies that
require the women to pay placement fees to secure good jobs for them (Donato, 2002). Instead of the
jobs promised, the women are met at the airport and taken to bars or clubs around U.S. military bases
(Donato, 2002).
In other cases, many Filipina women arrive in South Korea on E-6 entertainer visas and or false
documents (Go, IOM-Seoul, personal communication, September, 2002). They are recruited as
Overseas Performing Artists (OPA), for which they are required to prove they have ente rtainer skills
before they are granted authorized entry into other countries to work in the entertainment industry
(“Filipino Women Hired,” 2002). There are indications that the Technical Education and Skills
Development Authority (TESDA), which supervises the training and testing centers that determine if
the women sent abroad are qualified as performing artists, is involved in bribery and deception with
the issuance of E-6 visas (Cruz, 2002). Recruiters either bribe the authorities at the testing centers or
send in skilled doubles to perform in order to get the needed certification for the woman to be able to
go abroad on an entertainer visa (Cruz, 2002). When the woman arrives at the destination abroad, she
is in the country legally as an entertainer with heavy debts owed to her employer, but with no true
artistic skills. She is then forced into prostitution.
According to the Korean Immigration Bureau of the Ministry of Justice, the number of people
entering South Korea on E-6 entertainment visas has climbed steadily: 2,150 in 1998, 4,486 in 1999,
and 7,044 in 2000 (Jhoty, 2001). According to one report, the Korea Special Tourism Association, an
association made up of 189 club owners near the kijichon areas, was the chief contractor for holders
of the E-6 visas (Capdevila, 2002b). The Association began lobbying the government to bring in
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foreign women to work in the nightclubs in 1996. The president of the Association claimed that their
organization plays an important role in preventing GI harassment of Korean women and in
strengthening U.S.-South Korea relations: “If it hadn’t been for us, there would be sexual violations,
maybe rapes. We are contributing to United States and Korean relations in our own way, and nobody
appreciates it” (Demick, 2002). This claim is the same one used by the Japanese during World War II:
Providing “comfort women” to the Japanese troops would prevent them from raping or harassing the
local women.
Many women overstay the E-6 visas or work illegally on 90-day visitor’s visas, known as C-3 visas
(Jhoty, 2001). According to a spokesperson at the Ministry for Gender Equality, more women are
trafficked through C-3 visas than E-6 visas. For example, in 2001, 1,500 Filipina and 3,518 Russian
women entered on E-6 visas, while 6,675 Filipinas and 11,633 Russian entered on C-3 visas (Sung,
2001). A Ministry spokesperson said it is difficult to locate the holders of the C-3 visas after the visas
expire because they are issued without strict passport inspection (Sung, 2001). If the women escape
from the traffickers or pimps, they are considered illegal immigrants, sent to immigrant detention
centers, and deported (Jhoty, 2001).
The collapse of the Soviet Union has created conditions in which tens of thousands of women from
former Soviet countries are going abroad looking for work (Hughes, Forthcoming). Many of the
Russian women held professional jobs at home before going to South Korea with false passports
(Capdevila, 2002b). Between January 2000 and March 2001, approximately 6,000 Russian women
entered Korea through Busan port and Gimpo airport (Jhoty, 2001). In 2000, 3,064 Russians entered
South Korea on E-6 visas, 2,927 of them women (Jhoty, 2001). Less is known about the Russian or
Russian-speaking women who are used in prostitution around the bases. The lack of information is
due to fewer NGOs collecting information and documenting the women’s experiences. Russian
officials have repeatedly refused to comment on the situation (Jhoty). According to an IOM-Seoul
representative, there are more Russian women in prostitution in South Korea than Philippine women,
but there are more Filipinas in kijichon prostitution because they speak English, which is in demand
around the U.S. bases (Go, IOM-Seoul, personal communication, September, 2002).
Organized crime groups have taken advantage of the economic difficulties faced by women. In
January 2000, a network involving Russian organized crime and Koreans was broken up in Seoul.
The Russian group supplied the women and received $1000 per month for each woman they supplied.
The Koreans operated a job placement agency, through which they had trafficked over 50 Russian
women into South Korea during the previous year (“10 arrested,” 2000).
There is evidence that although the Philippines and countries of the former Soviet Union are
geographically, linguistically, and culturally distant, the same traffickers are at work in the
recruitment and enslavement of women. Several years ago, Kim Kyong-Su was investigated by the
Yong-San District police for “importing 1,093 foreign women, from the Philippines and Russia, to
work as entertainers near the U.S. military camp.” He was suspected of being paid recruiting fees by
234 club-bar owners to provide women for their use. He and two accomplices were charged with
illegal recruitment and forging documents (Enriquez, n.d.).
After women arrive in South Korea, some are forced into prostitution right away; others are worn
down by pressure and inability to pay their debts unless they engage in prostitution. In the beginning,
the women are only required to sit with men and push drinks, but they make no money. They soon
discover that the only way to make money and pay their debts is through prostitution (McMichael,
2002a).
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Recent investigations found that the women “are all indentured servants, modern-day sexual slaves.
… These Filipino girls say they’re locked in the bar every night” (Merriman, 2002). Another
investigative report found that every woman interviewed inside and outside the clubs, with the
exception of some in Seoul, said they were trafficked (McMichael, 2002a). The journal of a 22-yearold
Filipina detailed how she and other trafficking victims were locked in their rooms, had their
passports and travel documents confiscated, threatened with violence, prohibited to make phone calls,
and were given less than $10 a week for food (Demick, 2002). In some housing for the women, video
cameras are mounted over the doors to monitor their movement. Women are usually allotted only a
short period of freedom, such as a half hour per day (McMichael, 2002a). One reporter found that the
women were “[s]ometimes packed into one room with six or more women, they often survive on little
more than ramyeon (noodles) and are forced to work, even when ill” (Jhoty, 2001). These detainment
conditions led to five foreign women dying in a fire in a Gunsan brothel in 2000. In early 2002, a
similar fire broke out in a Gunsan pub, and 12 women died because they were prevented from
escaping by barred exits (Lee, 2002). According to a member of the U.S. Air Force who was stationed
at Osan Air Base:
“[M]ost have a contract for one year. They supposedly get paid $300-$350 per month. but
their wages are held by their owners for 3 to 4 months to pay for the airline ticket and other
expenses. they usually work from 7 p.m. to 1 or 2 a.m. 7 days a week. they are usually
confined to their quarters from 2 a.m. to noon the next day. this is to make sure the girl is not
prostituting herself without the owner getting his cut. because of the long nights that these
girls put in, they often turn to shabu (that is the name for the drug speed here in the orient) to
keep themselves awake and looking happy” (Anonymous, email, May 2001).
In an exposé, TV reporter Merriman filmed U.S. military police patrolling and protectin g the bars and
brothels where U.S. servicemen use trafficked women for prostitution. The military officers
acknowledge on camera that they know the women are trafficked, but that it was their job to protect
the bars and brothels to ensure the safety of US servicemen (Merriman, 2002). One soldier stationed
at Camp Casey remarked, “You know something is wrong when the girls are asking you to buy them
bread. They can’t leave the clubs. They barely feed them” (Demick, 2002). A different report
documented the good relations between the bar owners, pimps, and military police (McMichael,
2002a). U.S. soldiers said that the club-bar owners buy the women at auctions and must earn large
sums of money before they are given their passports and freedom (Merriman, 2002).
When the women come to the attention of the Korean government, the most usual response is
deportation. The Korean government defends their treatment of women as illegal aliens, not as
victims, because they allegedly voluntarily engage in prostitution and make money (Jhoty, 2001). In
2001, in an international assessment of countries’ efforts to combat trafficking, the U.S. State
Department ranked South Korea on tier 3 (the lowest rating) because South Korea did not comply
with minimum standards and had made no efforts to comply. The Trafficking in Persons Report
stated that Korea was a country of origin and transit for trafficked persons. Teresa Oh from the
Korean NGO Saewoomtuh criticized the report because it failed to recognize that South Korea was
also a destination country for trafficked women and children (Jhoty, 2001). Other Korean NGOs
demanded that the “U.S. share the blame for Korea’s problem of prostitution and human trafficking,”
referring to the significant role the U.S. military plays in creating the demand for trafficked women
(Kim, n.d.).
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Trafficking Korean Women to the United States
Asian and Asian-American organized crime networks operate transnationally within and between
South Korea and the U.S. One of their activities is operating massage parlors throughout the U.S. that
use Korean women for prostitution. The trafficking networks use some of the same methods migrant
smugglers use to get women into the U.S., including: uninspected entry, meaning the women are
smuggled in to the U.S. across the borders with Mexico or Canada without passing through
immigration control points, the use of counterfeit documents, and entry on student or tourist visas.
Another route that is routinely used by traffickers involves marriage to U.S. military personnel. In
some cases, traffickers pay servicemen to bring Korean women into the U.S. through sham marriages.
In other cases, traffickers and pimps target Korean women who are abandoned or divorced by U.S.
military personnel.
Korean-American gangs that are known to be involved in prostitution are the Korean Fuk Ching, the
Green Dragons, the Korean Killers and Korean Power. The gangs also engage in international drug
trafficking, extortion, home invasions of Korean immigrants, and gambling (McGarvey, 2002).
Law enforcement officials describe the nationwide network of massage parlors as having a “layered
business structure” (Doucette, 2002a), and “hierarchy” (Sergeant Jim Lalone, Waterford Township
Police, Michigan, personal communication, August 30, 2002). One law enforcement officer described
one network that was headquartered in Houston with links to Seoul:
The mamasans in the massage parlors [in the network around the country] send the money to
Houston and Dallas, and they send it back to Korea. … Someone is running these rings. They
are routing the women. … Someone is keeping track. …There is a hierarchy” (Sergeant Jim
Lalone, Waterford Township Police, Michigan, personal communication, August 30, 2002).
An indication of a well-organized network is the efficiency and quickness with which massage
parlors reopen after a raid. Usually, the massage parlors reopen within days or weeks of a police raid
(New York law enforcement officer, personal communication, September 2002; Michael Mendez,
Vice Unit, Dallas Police Department, Texas, September 5, 2002; Doucette, 2002b). In some cases, if
the climate becomes too hostile, the pimps move to another location before reopening.
U.S. Military Personnel as Traffickers
A high proportion of the Korean women used in the massage parlors in the U.S. were originally
married to U.S. servicemen. According to one INS agent, “I don’t recall ever having interviewed a
Korean prostitute in this country that was not in the country as a result of being married to an
American serviceman” (Goldman, 2002). A social service provider in New York City stated that the
majority of women from massage parlors that she sees were previously married to U.S. military
servicemen (Rainbow Center, personal communication, October 17, 2002).
For women in prostitution around the military bases in South Korea, it is difficult to escape the
stigmatization of society. Their only hope of getting out of prostitution and emigrating to the U.S. is
to marry a US serviceman (Moon, 1997, p. 4). Even the trafficked women from the Philippines say
their dream is to marry an American man who will buy their freedom (Merriman, 2002). In some
cases, U.S. men pay off the women’s debt to the pimp to free them (Kim, 1997). In one case, a U.S.
serviceman helped a trafficked woman escape by contacting a known anti-trafficking activist in Seoul
(McMichael, 2002b).
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In the 1980s, Army statisticians reported that the decade produced 25,000 marriages between Korean
women and U.S. soldiers, at a rate of about 3,500 a year (Henican, 1989). Although many of these
marriages may start off with good intention, 80 percent of marriages between Korean women and
U.S. servicemen end in divorce (Moon, 1997, p.35). The women may have poor job or language
skills, and are often victims of domestic violence or abandoned by their American husbands
(Rainbow Center, personal communication, October 17, 2002). Isolated from both Korean and
American communities, they have few options but to return to prostitution (Kim, 1997; Raymond,
Hughes & Gomez, 2001). Traffickers or pimps often target women who were married or recently
divorced from U.S. servicemen with attractive job offers. Korean women owners or recruiters for
massage parlors are familiar with cultural practices and family obligations that could be used to
pressure women into earning money. For example, the madams look for Korean women who were
formerly married to U.S. servicemen and are trying to survive economically on three to four part-time
jobs. She tells them they can make more money working part-time in the massage parlor. According
to a former law enforcement officer who worked on prostitution and massage parlor cases for ten
years: “There were Korean women who were predators, recruiting other women into the business…
They knew where to push the buttons” (Former New York law enforcement officer, personal
communication, October 15, 2002).
In some cases, the marriages between Korean women and U.S. servicemen were never intended to be
legitimate; they were a way to bring the women into the U.S. The woman may have cooperated in a
sham marriage in order to get into the U.S. in the hope of finding a better life. In other cases, her new
husband served as a trafficker, working with an Asian crime network in deceiving the woman.
Victims often say that their “husbands” sold them to massage parlors after their arrival in the United
States (Unidentified woman, Fox On The Record, 2002; Kim, 1997). According to a former law
enforcement official in New York City, women may be coerced into the sham marriages by
Korean/Korean-American gangs to repay a debt (Former New York law enforcement officer, personal
communication, October 15, 2002). Korean-American gangs obtain young women for prostitution
through connections to organized crime groups in South Korea, and use sham marriages to American
military servicemen to get the women into the US; they are then turned over to the Korean-American
gangs that run massage parlors. Some of the young women may have been abducted from villages in
South Korea and forced into sham marriages (McGarvey, 2002).
After gathering information from numerous massage parlor raids around the country, law
enforcement officials name “sham marriages” with “GIs” as one of the primary methods that
traffickers use to get women into the U.S. (Doucette, 2002c).
In Houston, police who issued licenses to work in “sexually oriented businesses” identified two
general groups of Korean women in the area massage parlors. The women in one group speak no
English and need an interpreter to assist them with the application. These women have Korean family
names on their passports, but the passports are not stamped as they should be if they passed through
official immigration control points when leaving Korea or entering the U.S. There is another group of
Korean women who can speak more English and have American last names, indicating that they have
been married to an American man (Sergeant Tim Cox, Vice Division, Houston Police Department,
personal communication, September 12, 2002).
According to a police officer who was involved in raids on Korean massage parlors in the Midwest,
the network that operates in his area is run by a Korean organized crime network based in Seoul, and
11
relies on U.S. military personnel to bring Korean women into the U.S. The women are usually young
and attractive: Some are as young as 18, most are in their early 20s, but a few are in their 50s:
“The men are paid by the Korean mob that is based in Seoul. They are paid $1500 to marry
the Korean woman. In San Francisco, the divorce is already arranged as soon as he gets her
into the country. Then he gets another $1500. …Black military personnel are involved.
...Don’t know why that is, but 90 percent of the men are black. A few whites guys, and never a
Hispanic man”(Sergeant Jim Lalone, Waterford Township Police, Michigan, personal
communication, August 30, 2002).
According to Police Chief William Dwyer who was involved in closing Korean massage parlors in
Farmington Hills, Michigan in the mid-1980s:
“We learned servicemen had married some of the defendants in the case and brought them
over here for a certain amount of money -$5,000 to $10,000. … It was a slavery thing. They
divorced once they were here and [the women] went to work for a Korean crime cartel who
had them actually living inside these places” (Martindale, 2000).
According to a representative of the Army’s Criminal Investigation Division, “soldiers are seldom
punished even when sham marriages are suspected” (Henican, 1989). Other police sources indicate
that this pattern continued through the 1990s (Gillerman & Goodrich, 1997). In 1993, police obtained
specific information on a member of the U.S. Navy who delivered a Korean woman to a massage
parlor in Oakland County, Michigan. One of the women, who had just been delivered to the brothel
two weeks before the raid, was willing to talk to the police and tell them that her “husband” had taken
her to the brothel, then left her there. According to the Oakland County prosecutor:
“She was his wife, officially. He was paid to bring her here. He was in town less than 24
hours. He then left for Norfolk, Virginia” (Prosecutor, Oakland County, Michigan, personal
communication, August 30, 2002).
Marriage certificates to American men enable women to obtain additional pieces of identification,
which makes it more difficult to detect the activity of the traffickers. According to one officer
involved in the raid of a club with Korean women in Rhode Island:
“They were Korean women, with Americanized names. We checked on their legal status with
INS – and they all cleared. … they had IDs, driver’s licenses… What happens is they would
marry American servicemen and then get divorced” (Raymond, Hughes & Gomez, 2001).
Transnational trafficking networks have several ways to get women into the US for use in massage
parlors, one of which is to use US military personnel. According to one law enforcement officer, “The
military is the key! I’ve never seen it any other way” (Sergeant Jim Lalone, Waterford Township
Police, Michigan, personal communication, August 30, 2002).
Different transnational crime groups may use different methods, which probably change over time as
other opportunities for supplying women arise, but at least some of them make heavy use of U.S.
military personnel as couriers, making them traffickers by law.
Massage Parlor Circuits
Crime groups usually manage a string of massage parlors around the country. Sometimes Korean
women who were formerly prostitutes own the individual massage parlors (Former New York law
enforcement officer, personal communication, October 15, 2002). Women are rotated from place to
12
place, in order to supply “fresh faces” for the men (Merriman, 2002). According to one police officer,
“They women are there just a short time and then move on to the next location… They move from
one big city to the next” (Michael Mendez, Vice Unit, Dallas Police Department, personal
communication, September 5, 2002).
In keeping with their close association with U.S. military personnel, many massage parlors with
Korean women are located around military bases in the U.S. For example, there is a heavy
concentration of Korean massage parlors in Waldorf, Maryland, close to the large military
populations of Andrews Air Force Base, Bolling Air Force Base, Naval Research Center, and the
Pentagon (Polaris Proje ct, 2002).
One network of Korean massage parlors has a circuit around the Midwest and southeast. The string of
massage parlors runs across the southern seaboard, up the eastern seaboard and across the Midwest.
According to a law enforcement officer who has been involved in raiding a number of the massage
parlors in Michigan:
They start the women off in Houston and Dallas. Then they take them east along the southern
seaboard. Then they go onto Florida, Georgia, from there, to Ohio, Michigan. We have 3 to 4
towns they are in here: Grand Rapids, Flint, Waterford, and Saginaw. They move them
around in vehicles; they never fly. The women spend one month in each place, then onto the
next. They want fresh faces. (Sergeant Jim Lalone, Waterford Township Police, Michigan,
personal communication, August 30, 2002).
What happens to women in the massage parlors was described as “horrible, unbelievably terrible” by
an NGO representative (Frank Barnaba, Paul and Lisa Program, personal communication, September
5, 2002). Throughout the country, sources report that women live under similar conditions in most
locations. The women have few possessions and live in the massage parlors, usually sleeping on the
floor (Merriman, 2002). According to one law enforcement official who was involved in several raids:
“When we raided the spa, we found that the women’s sleeping quarters upstairs … This
apartment … was not furnished at all…there were blankets and sleeping bags all over the
pace. Almost like a communal type living. Next to the sleeping bag, was a cosmetic bag,
handbag. The women slept there, made a small space for themselves next to their sleeping
bags…. I think they get moved on a lot. So this is temporary living situation. How they were
living was definitely made for ease of mobility. If they closed overnight, they could just pack
up and throw everything into a van and just go” (Raymond, Hughes & Gomez, 2001).
The women seldom leave the premises and are required to work all the time.
“They don’t have access to a vehicle. We’ve never seen cars parked in the vicinity to indicate
that these women are independent to drive out when they please. We’ve also never observed
these women ever venture outside of the premises. I believe that the managers feed, clothe
them as they see fit. If they do go out, it is probably an organized outing in the company van.
… These women were not just walking out the door” (Raymond, Hughes & Gomez, 2001).
Women are required to work to pay off debts. Even daily expenses for travel and living expenses,
referred to as papkap or “rice money,” are added to the women’s debt. In one case in Royal Oak,
Michigan, the prosecutor said that in Korea the women’s family members were living under threat or
she was being used to pay off a family debt (Charles Semchena, Royal Oak, Michigan Attorney’s
Office, personal communication, September 4, 2002). In another case in Rhode Island, the women
had to work 16 to 18 hours per day to repay their $10,000 debt for travel to the U.S. A police officer
13
noted that one of the women had cigarette burns on her arm. The club owner provided housing and
food for the women, but did not pay them. Any money they made came from tips, which required the
women to engage in prostitution (Rockoff, 1998).
Women in the massage parlors are subjected to high rates of violence. In one case in Washington,
D.C., a man killed a woman by stabbing her 23 times in the face, neck, chest, arms, and hands (U.S.
Attorney’s Office, July 17, 2001). A researcher who has done studies on massage parlors in
connection to AIDS commented on the level of violence and coercion the women are subjected to:
“I’m aware that many of these women are abused by clients and by their employers. They are
required to have sex with several men on a daily basis, and are indebted to their employers.
Some are required to pay off debts. Some are under contract for their work, and must work a
certain amount of time and [earn] money to meet the requirements of their contract” (Tooru
Nemoto, Center for AIDS Prevention Studies, University of California -San Francisco,
personal communication, October 11, 2002).
The crime networks have many ways of preventing the women from leaving. The women believe that
if they can make enough money to pay their debt, they will be able to leave and look for other
opportunities. This keeps them compliant. According to an officer in the Houston Vice Division,
“They save their money to pay their debt. Then just about the time their debt is paid, someone breaks
into the massage parlor and steals their money.” The women are told they have to continue working
to pay their debt (Sergeant Tim Cox, Vice Division, Houston Police Department, personal
communication, September 12, 2002).
In other situations, drugs were used to control the women. A former law enforcement officer
commented:
“The prevalence of crack and cocaine was a device that a lot of madams used to create some
level of obligation. Girls would get addicted to the stuff. Even if there was no original debt
going into the situation, debt was incurred by purchasing narcotics. It would be done
informally, while they were waiting for customers. They did it because others did it” (Former
New York law enforcement officer, personal communication, October 15, 2002).
A woman who provides assistance for women from massage parlors in New York City said that many
of women had been physically and verbally abused and have problems with substance abuse
(Rainbow Center, personal communication, October 17, 2002).
Official Corruption and Trafficking of Women
There is widespread official complicity and corruption in the trafficking of women for prostitution.
Traditionally, organized crime groups strive to corrupt officials in order to conduct their activities.
Transnational trafficking of women is dependent on crossing borders and obtaining the necessary
travel and identity documents, so involvement of corrupt officials, who take bribes or assist in
providing authentic documents, is crucial to successful operations. Because prostitution is often
viewed as a “victimless crime,” polic e and other officials are more willing to cooperate with the
pimps and traffickers.
In South Korea, police are often complicit in the control of the women by returning escaping women
to the bar owners (McMichael, 2002a). Teresa Oh, a social worker who assists women in prostitution
reported that, “If a Russian or Filipina girl runs away, and the club owner calls the police, the police
14
will go get her-and she will be abused when she’s brought back” (McMichael, 2002a). Senior
Superintendent Kim Kang-ja, Director of the Women and Juvenile Division of the Korean National
Police Agency, cites widespread corruption or tolerance of prostitution in clubs around the U.S.
bases. She said that “almost all” of the South Korean police and officials responsible for enforcing
prostitution laws accept bribes (McMichael, 2002a). She added that if the South Korean law banning
consorting with prostitutes was tightly enforced “almost all U.S. soldiers would be arrested. Korean
police should arrest them, or hand them to the American officers. But it’s not actually taking place.
Nobody is controlling them” (McMichael, 2002a).
In the U.S., a nationwide investigation into Asian American organized crime exposed how corrupt
police officers protect and assist the operation of Korean prostitution rings. Presently, as part of a
nation-wide crackdown on Asian-American organized crime involving Korean massage parlors, a
Sunnyvale, California police officer stands accused of accepting gifts, cash, and sex in exchange for
police information and protection for two Korean “hostess bars.” In addition, he helped the owners of
the club track down women who escaped before paying their debt. On one occasion, he traveled with
the owner of the club to Hawaii to threaten a woman with jail or deportation if she did not pay the
owner money (Stites, Cronk, & Pittman, 2002).
Several law enforcement officials who were interviewed noted suspicious patterns in the identity
documents that the Korean women in the massage parlors had when a raid took place. One officer
noticed that although the women had what appeared to be authentic passports, they were not stamped
which would be required if the women had passed through immigration control (Sergeant Tim Cox,
Vice Division, Houston Police Department, personal communication, September 12, 2002).Another
official noted that most of the women had driver’s licenses issued for the same place (Prosecutor,
Oakland County, Michigan, personal communication, August 30, 2002). These irregularities or
suspicious patterns seem to indicate that corrupt officials may be involved in assisting the traffickers
or massage parlor crime groups in getting identity documents for the women.
U.S. Military and Government Response to Trafficking of Women
U.S. Military, Government, and Federal Law Enforcement Response
When confronted with evidence of U.S. troops using women for prostitution and women being
trafficked for prostitution in South Korea, the Department of Defense has two standard responses.
The first is to say that engaging in prostit ution is a violation of US Military Code of Conduct, thereby
stating that they have an official policy against it and that men who engage in prostitution are in
violation of the rules. The Department of Defense’s second response is to say it is prevented from
taking action against in South Korean civilian criminal activity because it would violate South
Korea’s sovereignty (McMichael, 2002a).
According to a man formerly stationed at the Osan Air Base, South Korea:
“I also believe that the Korean government and the United States Forces Korea (USFK)
knows what is going on and does very little to stop it. The USFK has the military authority to
make these places "off-limits" but doesn't unless they find out that prostitution is going on in
an establishment. Then they usually make that establishment "off-limits" for a while then it
gets taken off their list of "off-limit establishments" and there back in business again.
Prostitution is prohibited to military personnel by the military uniform code of justice but it
goes on” (Anonymous, email, May 2001).
15
The U.S. State Department is on record saying that U.S. soldiers should not engage in prostitution.
Nancy Ely-Raphel, former head of the Office to Combat Trafficking in Persons said, “There’s a zerotolerance
policy on the part of our military toward prostitution and towards frequenting brothels. So
the military can do a lot about it” (McMichael, 2002c). Yet, in a report released by Saewoomtuh, a
South Korean NGO providing services to military base prostitutes, eighty-four percent of male U.S.
military personnel admitted to being with a prostitute (Kim, 2000).
In the spring and summer 2002, exposés on the exploitation of trafficked women around U.S. military
bases in South Korea were aired by several news agencies. The reports showed that military police
were aware of the activities and patrolled the bars. In response, a number of U.S. Congressmen wrote
a letter to Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld requesting an investigation. Army Secretary
Thomas E. White responded that military police “do not regulate, protect, or support Korean
businesses or enterprises in any way” (McMichael, 2002a). Further investigation is underway, and
there may be Congressional hearings on this topic in the future.
The trafficking of Korean women for prostitution in the U.S. is not a new phenomenon, and in the
past has received periodic federal attention. In 1986, the Senate Permanent Subcommittee on
Investigations reported on U.S. servicemen’s involvement in bringing Korean women into the U.S.
for use in massage parlor prostitution circuits. They identified a pattern of Asian/Asian-American
organized crime groups using sham marriages to get women into the U.S. According to Dan Rinzel,
the chief Republican counsel to the subcommittee nearly all the women entered the U.S. “by visas
obtained through fraudulent marriages to American GIs stationed in Korea” (Yeager, 1994).
In summer 2002, a crackdown by federal agents on Asian organized crime in the U.S. revealed both
the scope of the massage parlor networks and the progress that needs to be made by U.S. authorities
in effectively countering trafficking. Eighty-seven warrants were served in California, Michigan,
Kentucky, Nevada, Tennessee, Connecticut, Ohio, North Carolina, Texas, Georgia, Pennsylvania, and
Virginia (Associated Press, 2002a). The investigation was initiated five years before when one of the
massage parlor operators tried to bribe public officials, including a judge (Associated Press, 2002b).
This series of cases was investigated from the framework of organized crime, which focused on the
crimes of money laundering and bribery, not trafficking in women. Initial comments by FBI and local
police that appeared in newspaper stories indicated these women were in classic trafficking
conditions: the women were recruited in South Korea and provided visas by brokers; if visas could
not be arranged, the women were flown into Mexico and smuggled across the border; the women
were brought to the U.S. under false pretenses; the women were obligated to repay debts for travel
and living expenses by engaging in prostitution; and the women lived in the massage parlors and were
only allowed to leave for short periods of time (Mickle & Palmer, 2002; Associated Press, 2002a;
Associated Press, 2002b). While initial investigations by the FBI did not find any evidence of
trafficking, screening for trafficking may have failed due to intimidation of the victims by organized
crime groups, cultural barriers in communication, and lack of follow-up by law enforcement. One FBI
official involved with the case believes that trafficking was probably present, and cited lack of
prioritization by the FBI as the reason why the screening may have failed and no follow-up was
planned (FBI agent, Michigan, personal communication, August 10, 2002). Calls to newspaper
reporters in the towns where arrests were made indicated that just days after the raids and arrests, the
massage parlors were open again (Ken Palmer, reporter, Flint Journal, personal communication,
August 7, 2002).
16
Local Law Enforcement Response
Although a few smaller municipalities have worked vigorously to close massage parlors because of
their unpopularity in the community, in larger cities, there is little enforcement of laws concerning
massage parlors or the establishments reopen within a few days of a raid (Michael Mendez, Vice
Unit, Dallas Police Department, personal communication, September 5, 2002). Reasons given for lack
of enforcement range from massage parlors being a lower priority than other types of prostitution or
organized crime, lack of personnel and resources due to decrease in size of vice units, and legal
challenges to ordinances regulating massage parlors (Sergeant Jim Lalone, Waterford Township
Police, Michigan, personal communication, August 30, 2002; Keith Haight, Vice Unit, Los Angeles
Police Department, personal communication, September 5, 2002; Sergeant Tim Cox, Vice Division,
Houston Police Department, personal communication, September 12, 2002).
Law enforcement personnel in the United States are generally unaware that Korean women in
massage parlors are potential victims of trafficking. The women are usually treated as criminals, as in
Flushing, New York, where the women were arrested or in Providence, Rhode Island, where one
victim with cigarette burns was arrested and deported. Many police recognize the slavery-like
conditions under which the women work, but are unaware of the concept of trafficking in persons as a
human rights violation and the legal status of a trafficking victim. Women’s possession of U.S.
drivers’ licenses or other documents makes victimization harder to recognize. Prosecution of the
victims further victimizes the women, and shields the traffickers from being held accountable under
US anti-trafficking law.
Conclusion
The U.S. military bases in South Korea form a hub for the transnational trafficking of women from
the Asia -Pacific and Eurasia to South Korea and the United States. Over the past six decades, U.S.
troops have used an estimated million Korean women in prostitution. During the 1990s, increasing
numbers of women from the Asia -Pacific and Eurasia, particularly the Philippines and Russia, were
trafficked into bars and brothels around the military bases in South Korea. From South Korea, women
are trafficked, frequently by U.S. servicemen, to the United States where they are used in prostitution
on massage parlor circuits. Asian, Russian, and Korean-American organized crime groups cooperate
with each other to run the trafficking networks. The number of different groups or gangs that are
involved, how they are interlinked, or cooperate is unknown. They exist to make money by supplying
women to meet the demand for prostitution by U.S. military personnel in South Korea and men in the
United States.
A significant number of Korean women in massage parlors in the U.S. are former wives of U.S.
servicemen. Some of the marriages are legitimate, but after being abandoned or divorced, Korean
women are vulnerable to being recruited for the massage parlor circuit. In other cases, the marriage
was a sham arranged by organized crime networks as a method to get Korean women into the U.S.
The widespread tolerance of prostitution in bars around the U.S. bases in South Korea and the
massage parlors around the U.S. has fueled the demand for women, resulting in increased trafficking
of women. In South Korea, if there are too many negative incidents relating to prostitution in the bars,
they are listed as off-limits to the troops for a certain period of time; later the ban is lifted. In the U.S.,
a few smaller communities have permanently closed massage parlors, but in most large cities, there is
little investigation or effective enforcement of laws. Most of the massage parlors reopen within days
of police raids.
17
In both South Korea and the United States, some members of the military, police, and social service
agencies recognize the abusive, exploitive, and often slavery-like conditions under which the women
live. Yet, the women are still usually treated as criminals, instead of victims. In South Korea, the
foreign women are deported. In the U.S., with a few exceptions, most police raids on massage parlors
focus on arresting the women.
The findings of this research indicate that much more education is needed for military personnel,
federal and local law enforcement personnel, and social service providers on the trafficking of women
for prostitution. In the interviews that were done for this paper, few of those interviewed in the U.S.
were aware of the Victims of Trafficking and Violence Protection Act that was passed by Congress in
2000, or the implications of the new abolitionist definitions of sex trafficking. Changes in U.S. local
law enforcement practices are needed because priorities for enforcement of laws against massage
parlors are set at the local level. A nation-wide paradigm shift is needed in how prostitution in
massage parlors is viewed and handled. Police officers need to recognize that the women are most
likely victims of transnational and domestic trafficking. They should be offered services instead of
being arrested as criminals.
Much more research in needed on the transnational and domestic trafficking of women to South
Korea and from South Korea to the U.S. From the interviews conducted and media stories and NGOs
reports reviewed, there appear to be a variety of methods that traffickers and pimps use. In this paper,
these different methods have been described, with a focus on the involvement of U.S. servicemen, but
much more in-depth research is needed to fully characterize and quantify the different modes of
operation. It is not known if different organized crime networks use methods specific to their groups,
or if different methods reflect changes in modes of operation over time. It is not known if different
methods of trafficking are unique to certain geographical regions.
More service providers are needed to assist the women used in the bars in South Korea and the
massage parlors in the U.S. While the Philippine Embassy has created strong outreach efforts and
local NGOs in South Korea are increasingly providing services to women involved in military
prostitution, there are fewer such provisions for Russian women who are involved in sex trafficking.
In the U.S., the infrastructure and trained personnel for coordinated outreach to trafficking victims
within massage parlors currently do not exist. Additionally, the lack of a strong social support system
within the Korean American community (due to the stigma associated with prostitution) and within
the greater community (due to language barriers) adds to the ease of targeting trafficking victims.
On a more positive note, a new awareness is growing. In the Republic of Korea, a coalition of
women’s organizations (Korea Women’s Associations United – KWAU) has recently created a
committee working to draft a bill to strengthen anti-trafficking initiatives to be presented before the
National Assembly (KWAU, 2002; Cho, Y.S., personal communication, 2003). Furthermore,
increasingly strained political relationships between the U.S. and Republic of Korea suggest an
opportunity for constructive changes in the SOFA. The acquittal of U.S. servicemen who allegedly
ran over two school girls with their tank led to massive public outrage against crimes committed by
the U.S. military. Combined with recent nuclear threats from North Korea, the U.S. government
agreed to set up a task force to revise the current SOFA conditions, including ways to strengthen
South Korea’s right to investigate crimes committed by U.S. soldiers (Korea Now staff, 2002).
Also, in the U.S., the Victims of Trafficking and Violence Protection Act is providing new tools and
definitions to fight the trafficking of women. The annual Trafficking in Persons report with its
ranking of countries’ compliance to minimum standards for combating trafficking is putting countries
18
on notice that they are failing in their response to fight the trafficking of women. In 2001, South
Korea was ranked on tier 3, the lowest. As a result, the government began to take steps to bring itself
into compliance, resulting in its rank being raised to tier 2 in 2002. More media stories and research
are exposing the traffickers and the harm to victims. Media exposés in South Korea have generated
investigations by the U.S. Congress. The combination of these pressures is creating an increase in
arrests of traffickers in South Korea (“Prosecution combats brothels,” 2002). In the U.S., federal
prosecutors have increased the number of cases of trafficking they are pursuing, although, to date,
none have involved Korean massage parlors.
19
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