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Ozier Muhammad/The New York Times
Martina Okeke, 68,
says that she was fooled into coming to America as a
servant by a family on Staten Island that refused for
12 years to pay her.
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April 24, 2007—Martina
Okeke lives in a dark basement in Queens that reeks of some
mystery odor. She earns $100 a week caring for a cherubic toddler.
She ekes out a few more dollars pushing a battered shopping
cart through the streets of South Jamaica, filling it with
cans and bottles she plucks from the garbage and cashes in
for the deposits.
Welcome to America.
“It’s not easy,” she said with a shrug. “Yeah,
but what can I do?”
She is used to doing whatever she must to survive. Born 68
years ago in Nigeria,
she has been a seamstress, a trader and even a farmer. She
said that in 1988, widowed and with two children to support,
she agreed to come to the United States to cook, clean and
care for the children of a Nigerian couple living in Staten
Island. She said they promised to pay her $300 a month. There
were promises of a house and tuition, she added, for her two
children back home.
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Ozier Muhammad/The New York Times
Beatrice Okezie,
30, spent nine years enslaved by a Bronx couple, who
were convicted on federal charges. She now helps similar
victims.
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She admits now that she toiled 12
years for a paycheck that never came. Not one cent.
Encouraged by friends from her church, she worked up the courage
to leave the family in 2000. Still, she refused to report the
family to the authorities.
“I did not want to have a bad name,” she said,
in the basement that is her home in freedom. “That somebody
took me from Nigeria to America and I made trouble for them.
I know my people. They would say I went to America to make
trouble. That would not be good for me.”
Fear keeps victims of human trafficking in shadows.
This is not uncommon, said advocates for victims of human
trafficking. Fear, uncertainty and cultural taboos make it
hard for women like Ms. Okeke to speak out. Although human
trafficking has been a federal crime since 2000, efforts in
the New York State Assembly to criminalize human trafficking
and provide services for its victims have yet to succeed while
advocates and politicians struggle to reconcile competing concerns
over punishment and assistance.
“It’s amazing that we have not passed a law,” said
Assemblyman Jeffrey Dinowitz, who started working on such a
bill three years ago to enable local police departments and
prosecutors to go after offenders. “For the most part,
victims of human trafficking are not your typical poster child,
so there is no urgency. And one of the biggest challenges is
the victims are afraid to come forward, since there are so
many burdens placed on them.”
Although politicians — especially at the federal level — inveigh
against human trafficking as a crime that enslaves thousands
of people, especially women forced into prostitution, policy
experts said there were no reliable figures on the extent of
the problem. The federal government cites a figure of up to
800,000 people being trafficked internationally, with more
than 14,000 of those entering this country.
But those figures were criticized as flawed in a report issued
last year by the Government
Accountability Office, an investigative arm of Congress,
which concluded that the government actually had no “effective
mechanism” for estimating victims.
In what is believed to be the first effort of its kind in
the nation, the nonprofit Vera Institute of Justice has begun
a research project in New York City to develop better methods
of identifying and counting victims of human trafficking.
In the absence of reliable figures, prosecutors and policy
makers said, human trafficking is often cast in terms of the
global sex trade, partly because there are more systematic
methods like raids on brothels to root out its victims, as
well as advocacy groups helping them.
“A lot of claims have been made by various agencies
of the U.S. Government, lobbyists and activists that sex trafficking
is the bigger problem, but there is no evidence to support
that,” said one policy expert who spoke on condition
of anonymity in order not to jeopardize relationships with
advocacy groups and government officials. “And I am not
sure that having the numbers will help the claims people have
been trying to make.”
One federal prosecutor who has successfully brought cases
against traffickers in the city said that people forced into
labor as factory workers or domestic help might be more the
norm than people would think. But they are also hard to root
out because they are out of sight and isolated from the public.
Ms. Okeke said she spent her 12 years living in the basement
of a house on a dead-end street on the north shore of Staten
Island. In 1988, she said, a relative of Marco and Grace Mbadiwe
approached her in her village with the promise of work in the
United States. She accepted, expecting to be paid $300 a month.
What followed upon her arrival, she said, was two years of
cooking, cleaning and baby-sitting without a day off. Only
after she protested, she said, was she given Sundays off.
But no matter how many times she asked, she said, the Mbadiwes
never paid her.
“They paid me nothing,” she said. “Every
time I asked they said when I was ready to go back to Nigeria
they would do something. I did not say anything against them.
When I saw I received no pay, nothing, I told them, ‘I
want to go, so pay me.’ They said I had to wait until
I reached Nigeria.”
The Mbadiwes are divorced and did not respond to separate
and repeated requests made in person, in writing and by phone
for comment. Grace Mbadiwe, who now operates a day care center
in her home, would reply only, “I have nothing to say
about it” when asked in detail about Ms. Okeke’s
claims.
Since leaving the family in 2000, Ms. Okeke has been helped
with food and housing by a man from her village who gave her
the basement apartment, which she shares with another woman.
She has also sought immigration help
from Africans in America, a group that was established six
years ago to assist others who found themselves through force
or fraud living in servitude.
Bonaventure Ezekwenna runs the group along with his wife,
Beatrice Okezie, who herself spent nine years enslaved by a
Bronx couple, who were eventually convicted on federal charges
and sentenced to more than 10 years each. Through fliers and
word of mouth, Africans in America tries to spread its message
to others who may still be in servitude.
The group knows the lure of this country remains strong. “There
is really crushing poverty back home, and everybody wants to
run away from it,” Mr. Ezekwenna said. “When the
trafficker comes, all he has to do is say they are taking them
to America or Europe. That is synonymous with having a better
life. How do you convince them? It is not hard.”
Ms. Okeke certainly found no golden door awaiting her when
she arrived in this country. For now, she will settle for the
battered gray metal door that leads to her basement home, where
toddler toys clutter the room. She has not seen her own children — now
adults — since 1988.
“They said they need my help,” she said of a recent
letter from one of her children. “They are suffering.”
If she had the money, she would like to go visit them. Then
she would come right back to New York, to the apartment where
the cabinet doors hang off kilter, sunlight barely reaches
and calendars teasingly depict smiling tykes and fetching women.
“This is rich compared to Nigeria,” she said. “Nigeria
before was good. Now, it is like hellfire.”
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