Trafficked woman hopes sharing her story will help girls back home in Akwesasne - Action News
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Trafficked woman hopes sharing her story will help girls back home in Akwesasne

Sierra was trafficked when she was 14. Like half of the victims of sex trafficking in Canada, she is Indigenous. She wants to help prevent it from happening to others.

'I survived this for a reason,' says Sierra, who was sold at age 14

At 14, she was trafficked for five months. Then her community built her back up

1 year ago
Duration 0:58
Sierra, whose last name CBC has agreed not to use, was recruited into sex-trafficking when she was 14. Shes one of many women from Akwesasne who have received services for survivors of sex trafficking in the community.

WARNING: This article contains graphic content and may affect those who have experienced sexual violence or know someone affected by it.

Sierra, 34, isdetermined to speak out about howshe survived what she calls a hellish ordeal.

Raised by a mother who moved frequently between the United States andAkwesasne a Mohawk community bordering Cornwall, Ont.Sierra saidshehad a chaotic childhood, including being raped several times.

It was in Texas, at the age of 14, that she met the man who later sold her.

The trafficker, twice her age and at first charming,began selling her to many clients, she said.

The first time traumatized her forever.

"I don't know how long it went on, how many men raped me. I just remember fainting many times from the pain," Sierra recalls. "I was praying to die I disconnected from my body, and when I came to my senses, I couldn't walk or sit."

All the pain and rage I felt as an abused child rubbed off on my behaviour. All I wanted to do was rebel.- Sierra

The mankept her away from her family by controlling her every move, using severaltacticsto maintain his hold on her, she said.

"All the pain and rage I felt as an abused child rubbed off on my behaviour. All I wanted to do was rebel."

Sierraendured this ordeal for five months until she developed a serious infection and her trafficker, fearing she would die, left her in hospital in critical condition, she said.Doctors contacted her mother, who came to her bedside.

Once recovered, Sierra returned to Akwesasne andstayed at a rehabilitation centre for young girls before returning to school.

"The pain will fade with time, but the scars will remain. They allow us to never forget that we got through it. They remind you that you are a survivor, not a victim," Sierra said.

Akwesasnea lesser-knownchoice for sex traffickers

CBC hasagreed to only identify Sierra by her first namebecause she fearsrepercussions for her career.

Throughout her interview, she heldthe hand of Patrick Dussault, ahuman trafficking liaison officer at afamily wellness centre in Akwesasne.

Dussault, a former Ontario Provincial Police (OPP) officer, saidhehelped a fewwomen like Sierra during his law enforcement career work he carries on today.

A man in a t-shirt gives an interview.
Dussault is a former police officer who now runs workshops to teach the warning signs of human trafficking. (Flix Desroches/Radio-Canada)

Sierra now lives in Akwesasne, a Mohawk traditional hunting and fishing ground where the French set up amission in the 1750s, then had provincial and international borders laid over it.

Now located between Quebec, Ontario and New York state, the Mohawk territory hasapproximately 20,000 residents over about 90 square kilometres.

Akwesasne is susceptible to humantraffickersbecause of its geographic location, Dussault said, becauseyou can travel freely between Quebec and the United Stateswith no border crossings.

It's also surrounded by the waters of the St. Lawrence River, a convenient channel for traffickers of weapons, tobacco and people.

A map of the St. Lawrence River area with Akwesasne marked in the middle.
Divided by Quebec, Ontario and New York borders, the Mohawk territory of Akwesasne hasapproximately 20,000 residents. (Radio-Canada)

When the river is frozen,traffickers crossthe borders via "the ice road" on foot or by snowmobile, often managingto evade the Canadian Coast Guard, Dussault said.

Traffickers also rely on Highway 401, a major trade corridor between Quebec and Windsor, Ont., that passes through Cornwall. Via the 401, they can stop in several cities to selltrafficked people and recruit others.

All the experts Radio-Canada spoke to stressed that,given the illicit nature of human trafficking, most cases are not reported.

Statistics Canada said there were about 550 police-reported incidents of human traffickingin 2021 across Canada. The vast majority of those incidents were in large cities.

Between January and October 2022, Dussault counted 13 trafficking survivors who sought help from the centre. None of them were from the region, but all were sold in Akwesasne and Cornwall, he said.

"The girls recruited in Akwesasne rarely go to work there [because] the pimps want to break any ties a girl may have," Dussault said in a French interview.

"If a girl is recruited one morning [in Akwesasne], by tonight she'll be in Toronto, Windsor or Montreal. She won't be in Cornwall. She'll be as far away as possible."

According to Dussault, three women from Akwesasne have received services asvictims of sex trafficking in the last five months.

A sign in Kanienkha, the Mohawk language, welcomes people to Kawehno:ke.
Kawehno:ke, or Cornwall Island, is one of three districts under the Mohawk Council of Akwesasne. The Saint Regis Mohawk Tribe works with the United States and New York governments. (Flix Desroches/Radio-Canada)

Indigenous women most at risk

About 50 per cent of the victims of human trafficking in Canada are Indigenous women, even though they represent less than five per cent of the total population, according to a report released in 2020 by Public Safety Canada.

It's not uncommon for traffickers to set up shop outside of group homes to target the more fragile youth who are transiting out of the child welfare system.- Chanel Blouin, Native Women's Association of Canada

Aziz Froutan, a spokesperson for the Canadian Centre to End Human Trafficking, notes that because of colonialism, exploitative experiences among Indigenouswomen are normalized in Canada.

Indigenousvictims often don't go to the police and the authorities are not always properly trained to understand the realitiesof Indigenouswomen who are being exploited, Froutan adds.

Chanel Blouin, a policy advisor for the Native Women's Association of Canada, saidIndigenouschildren, who are more often placed in the care of the child welfare system, are also more vulnerable to exploitation networks.

Someone works on a laptop at a desk.
Blouin is a policy advisor for the Native Women's Association of Canada, or NWAC. (Submitted by Chanel Blouin)

"It's not uncommon for traffickers to set up shop outside of group homes to target the more fragile youth who are transiting out of the child welfare system," she said.

Over-incarceration of Indigenous peopleand a general lack of resources make Indigenouswomen more vulnerable to human trafficking, she adds.

Working together to fightexploitation

According to Luc Dumont, a detective staffsergeant with the OPP'shuman trafficking unit, police have seen an increase in the number of reported human trafficking cases in recent years.

Ontario has a higher annual average of reported human trafficking cases than other Canadian provinces, Dumont said.

From 2010 to 2020, almost two-thirds of reported human trafficking cases were reported in Ontario, according to Statistics Canada.

It seems like every time we come up with new social networks or new online recruiting platforms, there are two more coming out. We're always a few steps behind.- Patrick Dussault

To address the growing volume and complexity of cases, Ontario launched a strategy in 2021 bringingtogether 21 municipal police services and Indigenous groups.

The joint team, which has tripled in size in three years, includes full-time investigators and analysts working to dismantle trafficking groups operating in Canada and beyond.

Dumont saidit's difficult to attribute the increase in reported cases to any one factor. However, he saidthat increased awareness means people are more likely to recognize and reportthe problem.

Dussault, the human trafficking liaison officerin Akwesasne, saidit's crucial thatdifferent regions work together, pointing to the case of a young woman fromAkwesasnewho went missing late in 2022.

"She was reported missing to Mohawk police. Ten minutes later, she was located in Ottawa via an escort website. It is thanks to the American authorities that we were able to find this woman from our community," he said.

"It seems like every time we come up with new social networks or new online recruiting platforms, there are two more coming out. We're always a few steps behind."

A man gestures toward a waterway in winter with a reporter next to him.
Dussault gestures toward the St. Lawrence River. (Flix Desroches/Radio-Canada)

Grand Chief Abram Benedict ofthe Mohawk Council of Akwesasnesaidthat while the Ontario government is providing more and more resources to combat human trafficking,funding remains low given the complexity of the issueinhis territory.

"There has been a lot of investment in policing to combat gun trafficking, but much less to combat human trafficking," Benedict said.

"So we're lobbying the government to give the Mohawk police more resources for law enforcement, but also for prevention."

More police officers and more modern equipment are among the specific resourcesneeded, he adds.

A leader in a blazer and orange shirt speaks into a microphone.
Abram Benedict is the Grand Chief of the Mohawk Council of Akwesasne (Submitted by Mohawk Council of Akwesasne)

Sierra wants to educate

Sierra has not yetpressed charges against her abuser, who is currently serving time for other crimes. She saidshe is afraid, butmay consider doing so one day.

She has decided to help tackle the issue of human trafficking in other ways.

She wants to work with Dussault, who runs prevention workshops aimed atfamilies, police officers, social workers and at-risk girls thathelp participants recognize the signs of trafficking.

Two people give an interview in an office.
Sierra was interviewed by Radio-Canada with Dussault at her side. (Flix Desroches/Radio-Canada)

"I survived this for a reason,"Sierra said. "I want people to know that it could happen to their sister or daughter.

"If I had known how to show signs, if my mother had known how to decode certain signs or ask questions, I could have been saved from the start.

"I want to give others the opportunity to be free from dangerous situations. It fills me with dignity and pride to know that I've been through this and am coming back to help. Here I am, 20 years later, strong enough to talk about it."


Support is availablethrough the Ontario governmentfor anyone who has experienced sexual violence or human trafficking. If you suspect someone is a victim of human trafficking, call your local police service or the national human trafficking help line at 1-833-900-1010. It is open 24 hours a day. If there is immediate danger, call 9-1-1.