Archive for the 'Travel & Culture' Category

08 Nov

Movie Reveals Growing Threat To World Wanderers

Movie “Taken” portrays ugly traveler threatmoviereview_taken-poster-big2

BY PHILL FELTHAM

Wandering the world solo can be a scary venture, particularly if you’re a female wanderer. The film “Taken,” now playing in the theatres, really gives an accurate portrayal.

Liam Neeson stars in the drama that seems to be aimed for teenagers and tweeners about a retired spy trying to spend time with his estranged daughter. Neeson’s character, having dealt with the scum of the world, knows and hears things that most people could never imagine. This is one reason why he gets paranoid when his daughter and her friend, both 17, plan to backpack Europe.

This fact is particularly important to the movie because it reflects the bubble perspective: the belief that the rest of the world is as safe as home and that no real dangers exist. Obviously in the movie they do. Of course, when the girls get to Europe something horrible happens.

At the airport, the two girls are encountered by a friendly French local by the name of “Peter.” He shares a taxi with the girls to their residence. However, after Peter finds out where they’re staying, he calls in the location to his accomplices who soon come by and abduct the two girls.

The movie proceeds to get even more disturbing when we find out what happens to the girls. They are abused, drugged up and then sold to the highest bidder as prostitutes.

“People trafficking has reached epidemic proportions over the past decade, with a global annual market of about $42.5 billion,” the Council of Europe states. Male and female trafficking victims are typically recruited using coercion, deception, fraud, the abuse of power, or outright abduction. Threats, violence, and economic leverage such as debt bondage can often compel a victim to consent to exploitation that involves prostitution, forced labor or services.

Although there is some discrepancy in the actual collected data, one credible source, the United States Department of State, estimates that “600,000 to 820,000 men, women, and children are trafficked across international borders each year, approximately 70 percent are women and girls and up to 50 percent are minors. The data also illustrates that the majority of transnational victims are trafficked into commercial sexual exploitation.”

While the movie takes place in Europe, reports of human trafficking have occurred all over the world. According to Radio Free Europe, as many as 70 percent of women between the ages of 18 and 30 would like to leave Russia to work abroad. Because visa restrictions make it almost impossible for young women to obtain legal working status overseas, many women buy visas from so-called “employment” services who force them into prostitution and slavery once they cross the border.

What’s alarming is that, according to The Globe and Mail, the Fundamentalist Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints (not to be confused with the Mormon Church) has been implicated in the trafficking of underage women across state and international boundaries in the U.S. and Canada. The motivation for this crime is mostly for polygamous practices or plural marriage.

WHERE CAN I FIND OUT MORE ABOUT HUMAN TRAFFICKING?

Governments around the globe are actively trying to prevent human trafficking. Here are a few sources of information that might be of some help:

The Canadian Department of Justice
http://www.justice.gc.ca/eng/fs-sv/tp/faq.html

The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services
http://www.acf.hhs.gov/trafficking/

Any Canadian traveling abroad should register with the Canadian Foreign Affairs before departing from the country. That way your location can be traced if anything happens. iT!

Phill Feltham is the publisher of The Weekly Wanderer and Senior Editor of Maximum Fitness magazine. He’s travelled to eight countries and lived overseas for two years.

14 Dec

CHOOSING YOUR TRAVEL GUIDE

sany0180It all starts with Lonely Planet.

PUBLISHED: THE WEEKLY WANDERER #127
DATE: NOVEMBER 21, 2008.

BY PHILL FELTHAM

I’ve been telling my friends and family recently about my second trip to Europe in ’09. This time, I plan to travel to France and explore what is arguably one of the most beautiful countries in the world. At this point, they’re just words. That’s at least until I buy my France travel guide. My plans don’t officially begin until I buy the travel guide.

I talked about going to England for 12 years, but it wasn’t until I bought my Lonely Planet travel guide that the real preps started. Wanderers that are familiar with the Australian company’s travel books will definitely agree that without the book’s maps, country and city information and itineraries, you feel pretty naked without it. And it doesn’t have to be a Lonely Planet travel guide, any travel guide that details the country is a must-buy for making your trip that much easier. Wanderers don’t have to worry about carrying lots of maps or information on your travel sites—it’s all contained in one little book.

Once the travel guide is purchased, then I find my mindset switches from “I want to get there” to “How am I going to get there?” I start highlighting the sites I want to see, the budget hotels, the visa information, the cost of traveling (my personal favorite) and other useful information. I make my budget based off of Lonely Planet’s financial suggestions. And, I’ll say to this point that I’ve always come back from any of the eight countries I’ve traveled to with extra money leftover.

For England, I found myself using the Lonely Planet guide and a variety of sources available on the Internet. The guide pointed me in the direction of what I needed to do to get there. When I was in England, I always took my travel guide with me. I almost lost my United Kingdom book in a restaurant in Edinburgh. Thankfully, I didn’t.

When I lived in Taiwan, the travel guide to this little island is what made me a believer in these handy books. Many guides provide subway or train maps that you can cross-reference with other maps in the book, which makes it easy to find hostels, sites, restaurants, etc. Often, I’d make my own itinerary based on the maps in these books. If I’m in the mood to just get lost, then I’ll leave my travel guide in the bedroom and venture wherever chance takes me. Sometimes it makes me wish that I brought my guide, while at other times, I feel rewarded for finding my way without any help. But, that doesn’t happen until I consult the book first.

The guides are particularly useful if you’re in another country that speaks a completely different language. You won’t always be in a position to ask for directions, but when you need to, your travel guide can give you a few useful phrases that can help make communication a little bit easier. Need I say more? mdm

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