Woman seemed 'shut down,' human-trafficking trial hears - The Globe and Mail

Written By Unknown on Kamis, 05 September 2013 | 16.14

A young woman who was allegedly kept in domestic servitude at a lavish West Vancouver home appeared "shut down" and submissive upon leaving the residence, even insisting on helping carry the purse of a responding police officer, according to Crown witnesses at a human trafficking trial in Vancouver.

More Related to this Story

Mumtaz Ladha, 60, is accused of bringing Mwanaisha (Aisha) Hassan to Canada from Tanzania and forcing her to work 18-hour days at her home in the British Properties – cooking, housekeeping, washing vehicles, giving massages, laundering undergarments by hand – for no pay and little food. Ms. Hassan had previously worked as a "servant" for Ms. Ladha in Tanzania, and the two came to B.C. in August, 2008, when Ms. Ladha promised her a job at a Vancouver-area hair salon, police said when announcing charges in 2011.

Ms. Ladha is charged with one count related to bringing a person into Canada "by means of abduction, fraud, deception, or use of threat of force or coercion," one count of employing a foreign national illegally and two counts related to misrepresenting and withholding facts, all under the Immigration and Refugee Protection Act (IRPA). She pleaded not guilty to all on Wednesday.

Police had said earlier that individuals who befriended Ms. Hassan and were concerned for her well-being helped her leave the West Vancouver property in June, 2009. She then sought assistance at a Salvation Army shelter.

At the opening of the trial on Wednesday morning, the court heard from several Crown witnesses, including a transition house worker and several police officers involved with the case.

Caroline Raymond, a former RCMP constable who served as human trafficking co-ordinator for the Pacific region, met with Ms. Hassan several times over about a 10-month period. She said the alleged victim, then in her early 20s, looked more like a teenager, lacked confidence, acted like a "young girl" and wanted to stay "abnormally close" to her. Ms. Raymond said Ms. Hassan often insisted on holding her purse and helping her with other duties.

"She felt really uncomfortable not serving me," Ms. Raymond said.

Laurie Parker-Stuart, who worked as a violence counsellor at a Vancouver transition home, said she first met the alleged victim in early June, 2009, after receiving a "crisis call" from a support service society. "[The worker] expressed to me she knew it wasn't our usual sort of case – domestic violence, in the sense of the husband, the wife – but there were concerns," Ms. Parker-Stuart said.

"Certainly, there was a question as to whether it might be considered human trafficking, something we didn't deal with with great frequency at that time."

The workers decided to bring Ms. Hassan into the transition house to further assess the situation. Ms. Parker-Stuart described her as "very closed" and "under stress." Ms. Hassan was "very happy that meals were available" at the transition house, Ms. Parker-Stuart said.

When asked by Crown counsel if Ms. Hassan, whose first language is Swahili, had any connections in the community, Ms. Parker-Stuart said: "She didn't really have anyone."

Constable Kelly English, dispatched to help retrieve Ms. Hassan's belongings from the the Ladha residence, said the passport was not immediately available, but Ms. Ladha's daughter, Zahra, was able to produce it the next day.

The officer described Ms. Hassan's room as small, with three or four feet between the bed and a cabinet. There was a television and an ensuite bathroom, she said. Constable English said she retrieved one garbage bag full of Ms. Hassan's clothing and there was roughly enough remaining to fill another bag – testimony that appears to contradict initial police reports that suggested she did not have much clothing while residing with the Ladhas.

While there have been dozens of human trafficking cases under the Criminal Code of Canada, there has only ever been one human trafficking conviction under the Immigration and Refugee Protection Act.

In a landmark verdict, Franco Orr, of Vancouver, was found guilty in late June of employing a foreign national illegally and misrepresenting facts that could induce an error. He is scheduled to be sentenced in mid-October. The Crown is seeking five or six years in jail, while the defence is calling for a conditional sentence.

The trial, which is scheduled for four weeks, continues.


Anda sedang membaca artikel tentang

Woman seemed 'shut down,' human-trafficking trial hears - The Globe and Mail

Dengan url

https://goartikelasik.blogspot.com/2013/09/woman-seemed-shut-down-human.html

Anda boleh menyebar luaskannya atau mengcopy paste-nya

Woman seemed 'shut down,' human-trafficking trial hears - The Globe and Mail

namun jangan lupa untuk meletakkan link

Woman seemed 'shut down,' human-trafficking trial hears - The Globe and Mail

sebagai sumbernya

0 komentar:

Posting Komentar

techieblogger.com Techie Blogger Techie Blogger