By María Lourdes Rivas*
Slavery
still exists.
Human
trafficking currently takes third place for the most severe issues affecting
Central America after narcotrafficking and the smuggling of weapons. Nicaragua is first on the list of “source
countries” for human trafficking, and evidence shows that Guatemala is the
highest “consumer” in the region.
Women,
children, and adolescents of both sexes are the principal target of
traffickers’ networks who seek the sale of organs and the trafficking of
persons for sexual or labor exploitation.
According
to the National Coalition for Human Trafficking, the furthest borders of
Nicaragua (to the north and to the south), are the territories where the
majority of traffickers operate. Chinandega,
León, Madriz, Nueva Segovia, Rivas, and Rio San Juan are the departments with
the highest number of cases of trafficking victims.
The threat
is so real and so close that it is affecting the evangelical church. In a survey done by the Nehemiah Center
(2011) with two groups of pastors and leaders from León and Chinandega, 74% of
those interviewed claimed that this is a problem that has been affecting their
congregations for some time now. 80% of
those surveyed were in agreement that the church should act in response to this
reality.
The pilot
project Combating Human Trafficking in
Nicaragua, directed by the Nehemiah Center, has been researching this topic
during the past year and has been training 12 churches in León and Chinandega
in themes such as Legislation on Human Trafficking, Victim Counseling, and
Action Plans for preventing trafficking in communities.

At the
beginning of this year, thanks be to God, we were able to rescue a girl from
Chinandega. Following the procedures
they had learned, through prayer, and by working as a team, we were able to
learn the whereabouts of the girl just before she was about to be transported
by traffickers to El Salvador. The young
girl is now receiving spiritual and psychological support.
The
Nehemiah Center is concluding the pilot project in the next month. We are very satisfied with what we have
accomplished, but we hope to continue with this effort. We are praying for the human and financial
resources to continue with this work of prevention and attention to
victims. It is risky work, but it is
also a duty: as Christians we are called to live an abundant life in Christ,
but we are also called to announce and defend the plentitude of life in the
context of slavery and death.
*Project Facilitator,
Combating Human Trafficking in Nicaragua.
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