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17 April 2009 Haaretz Israel -- Five people
charged with bringing Ukrainian women into Israel to
work as prostitutes were released on bail over the
weekend. In her ruling, Tel Aviv District Court Judge
Dalia Ganot said the state does not have sufficient
evidence to get a conviction for human trafficking.
"None of the complaintants was forced to have sex
either for free or to pay for the expense of bringing
them to Israel," Ganot wrote. "And no evidence was
brought from which one can infer the existence of
supervision or control over the movements of the
plaintiffs or the scope of their work."
The prosecution will not appeal the defendants'
release and said it expects to prove the charges
during the trial. Prosecution officials said Ganot did
find evidence that most of the defendants had brought
people into the country to work as prostitutes, and
accordingly set a high bail. MK Zahava Gal-On (Meretz-Yahad)
, who heads the Knesset subcommitte on trafficking in
women, said Ganot appears not to have internalized the
law against trafficking in women. She said the reasons
the court gave "reflect insensitivity and
inflexibility. "
"It's too bad the judge has not succeeded in
understanding that anyone who treats a woman as an
object, as currency - even if he takes them to the
gyncologist or to Superland [an amusement park], for
all his kindness, is dangerous to society and its
values, and should be behind bars," she said.
Ganot wrote in her ruling that the two complainants
seemed to have freedom of movement, noting that one of
the defendants said he took them to the gynecologist
and the supermarket, as well as the beach and
Superland.
Retired Tel Aviv District Court judge Shelly Timan
supported the ruling, saying Ganot showed courage in
making the right decision while condemning human
trafficking, especially when the women are put to work
as prostitutes.
"The pressure exerted on the prosecution to continue
to 'revive' the phenomenon - which is disappearing, if
it still exists at all - by charging pimps with human
trafficking, " said Timan, "verges on scandalous."
The indictment comprises one of the most serious
charges in a case involving the trafficking of women.
Alexander Zaiman, Mashiah Hahiashvili and Marina
Hahiashvili were charged with conspiring with
Ukrainians to bring women to Israel to work as
prostitutes and collect payment for it. The two other
defendants are Benny Mirilashvili and Binyamin Ben-Naim.
The two complainants told police that when they needed
money a woman in Ukraine named Lena convinced them to
go to Israel to work as prostitutes. |