| Young Women Lured into Trafficking by
    Job Ads. [Argentina] The 
ads read: "presentable young ladies", "no
    qualifications or experience required", "easy work," "good
    conditions," and "hours by arrangement". They often offer salaries of over
    2,000 dollars. It sounds like a dream to thousands of poor, unemployed teenagers and young
    women in Argentina. But 
the advertisement is
 the gateway to a nightmare: the trafficking
    and sexual exploitation of women. The same newspapers that publish employment
    "opportunities" for young women, advertise their "services for men and
    women." In a society where more than 40 percent of the population lives in poverty,
    the ads are tempting. Police in the northwestern province of Jujuy have received more than
    50 reports of missing young women since September 2005. All of them had gone to see about
    a "job" and have not been heard of since. Ads offering sexual services take a
    different tone: "Daring university student", "wild graduates",
    "erotic little doll" are likely to tempt clients looking for young, or even
    under-age, women. "Hot Paraguayans", "blonde Brazilians", "new
    bunny fresh from the countryside", or "just in from the south" allude to
    their places of origin. With increasing frequency, the Argentine justice system is
    breaking up trafficking rings that kidnap women and reduce them to servitude, turning them
    into merchandise that can be shipped from one place to another without leaving a trail.
    These gangs tend to act with the connivance of police, the justice system, and sometimes
    politicians. | 
  
    | Pro-Life
    Nation. [El Salvador] 
More than a dozen
countries have liberalized their abortion laws
    in recent years, including South Africa, 
Switzerland, Cambodia and 
Chad. In a handful of
    others, including Russia and 
the United States (or parts of it), the movement has been
    toward criminalizing more and different types of abortions. In 
South Dakota, the governor
    recently signed the most restrictive abortion bill since the Supreme Court ruled in 1973,
    in Roe v. Wade, that state laws prohibiting abortion were unconstitutional. The South
    Dakota law, which its backers acknowledge is designed to test Roe v. Wade in the courts,
    forbids abortion, including those cases in which the pregnancy is a result of rape or
    incest. Only if an abortion is necessary to save the life of the mother is the procedure
    permitted. A similar though less restrictive bill is now making its way through the
    Mississippi Legislature. In this new movement toward 
criminalization, El Salvador 
is in
    the vanguard. The array of exceptions that tend to exist even in countries where abortion
    is circumscribed - rape, incest, fetal malformation, life of the mother - don't apply in
    El Salvador. They were rejected in the late 1990's, in a period after the country's long
    civil war ended. The country's penal system was revamped and its constitution was amended.
    Abortion is now absolutely forbidden in every possible circumstance. No exceptions. There
    are other countries in the world that, like El Salvador, completely ban abortion,
    including Malta, Chile 
and
 Colombia. 
El Salvador, however, 
has not only a total ban on
    abortion but also an active law-enforcement apparatus - the police, investigators, medical
    spies, forensic vagina inspectors and a special division of the prosecutor's office
    responsible for Crimes Against Minors and Women, a unit charged with capturing, trying and
    incarcerating an unusual kind of criminal. Like the woman I was waiting to meet. | 
  
    | Femicide On the Rise. [Latin America] On
    the eve of International Women's Day 2006, a delegation of Latin American women made a
    historic journey to Washington, DC. Rather than celebrating the gains women have made
    through their many struggles, the group arrived at the headquarters of the Inter-American
    Commission on Human Rights (IACHR) of the Organization of American States with an alarming
    message: femicide, the murder of women, is spreading. (Femicide) is not only present
    in Ciudad Juarez and most of Mexico, it's a regional problem, warns Marimar Monroy,
    a representative of the non-governmental Mexican Commission for the Defense and Promotion
    of Human Rights and one of the delegates to the IACHR. Joined by grassroots delegates from
    Guatemala, Colombia, Peru, and other nations, Monroy presented a report to
 the IACHR
    commissioners that sketched widespread violence against women from multiple causes,
    rampant failures in the procurement of justice for victims and relatives, the prevalence
    of impunity, and the absence of standard statistical gathering and record-keeping methods
    to document gender violence. Monroy and her Latin American colleagues delivered their
    femicide report as one piece of a campaign aimed at making the problem more visible
    in the region. Incomplete murder rates cited in the NGO report mention 373 murders
    of women in Bolivia from 2003 
to 2004, 143 in Peru during 2003, 
and more than 2,000 in Guatemala
.
    In Colombia, 
a woman is reportedly killed e
very 6 days by her partner or ex-partner. Ciudad
    Juarez and Chihuahua City,
 Mexico, two 
cities where the femicide trend was first widely
    noticed, have suffered the murder of more than 500 women from multiple causes since 1993,
    according to press and other sources. Dozens more remain missing. Latin American women's
    organizations contend that member nations of the Organization of American States are in
    widespread violation of international treaties and declarations that protect the rights of
    women , including the American Convention on Human Rights, the Universal Declaration of
    Human Rights, the Belem do Para Convention, and others. Appealing to the IACHR to
    follow-up on previous recommendations the human rights institution has made about
    eradicating femicide, delegation representatives considered the Washington
 hearing a
    positive step.  |