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Russian pop star Valeriya fights human
trafficking
Stephanie Nebehay
GENEVA—Russian pop star Valeriya says she is drawing on her experience
as a battered wife and “slave” to help migrant workers break free of
sexual exploitation and forced labour in her homeland. Valeriya was
formally named on Tuesday as goodwill envoy for the Russian Federation
on behalf of the International Organization for Migration (IOM), an
agency she has teamed up with for the past year to combat human
trafficking.
“I meet and talk to these people, I am not a professional psychologist
but I am sure I can help people with my own experience as an ex-victim
of slavery. I suffered a lot of domestic violence,” the blonde
40-year-old told a news briefing. “I was forced to work for a man, my
(former) husband, who treated me like a slave. So I feel I know the
subject maybe even more than many others and am ready to help people
with all my heart,” she said.
Valeriya — who only goes by her first name — has sold 100 million CDs.
She is entering the British music market, where she has been dubbed the
Russian Madonna, with an English version of her album “Out of Control.”
Her anti-trafficking clips already appear on Russian television and she
plans to dedicate some of her concerts around Europe next year to
raising public awareness of the problem.
“This evil exists... it is among us,” she said. “Sometimes we artists,
actors and musicians are able to bring more public attention to a
problem than officials or politicians. We speak the language of emotions
and feelings.”
Russia has become an attractive destination for millions of migrants
from neighbouring countries looking for better opportunities, according
to the IOM. The Geneva-based agency says that it has good cooperation
with the Russian authorities. Some 260 victims of trafficking have been
assisted at an IOM rehabilitation centre which opened in 2006 in Moscow.
Many are Russians, followed by migrants from Uzbekistan, Moldova and
Ukraine.
“The one thing we can say with some certainty is it’s the tip of the
iceberg,” said Richard Danziger, IOM’s head of counter-trafficking
activities worldwide. |