--Google Inc. announced Wednesday that it's providing $11.5 million
in grants to 10 organizations working to end modern-day slavery and human
trafficking.
Gary
Haugen, president and CEO of International Justice Mission, one of the grant
recipients, called the move a "game-changing investment." IJM is a
Washington-based human rights agency that works to rescue victims of slavery
and sexual exploitation in about a dozen countries.
"This
is the largest corporate step up to the challenge that is beginning to apply
direct resources to the fight against slavery," Haugen said.
According
to estimates by grant recipients, Google's support will free an estimated
12,000 people from slavery and prevent millions more from being victimized.
Numbers vary widely, but policymakers, activists and scholars estimate the
number of modern-day slaves at somewhere between 10 million and 30 million
people worldwide.
Google's
director of charitable giving, Jacquelline Fuller, said the company chose to
spotlight the issue of slavery because the topic of freedom -- "the most
basic of human rights," as she puts it -- resonated with company employees
around the world.
"Many
people are surprised to learn there are more people trapped in slavery today
than any time in history," Fuller said. "The good news is that there
are solutions. Google is supporting organizations that have a proven track
record and a plan to make a difference at scale."
Google
made the announcement through a link posted on its web page. The gift is part
of a total of $40 million the Internet giant is giving in charitable donations
during the holiday season.
The
grant will be shared by newly formed coalitions of international
anti-trafficking organizations. The bulk of the donation, $8 million, will go
to two coalitions led by IJM in India, with about half going toward direct
intervention and government-led rescue operations, and half toward advocacy and
awareness projects. In addition, $1.8 million will go to the U.S.
Anti-Trafficking Initiative -- a partnership between Polaris Project, which
operates the National Human Trafficking Resource Center hotline, Slavery
Footprint, an interactive Web site and mobile app that estimates how much of a
user's lifestyle relies on forced labor, and IJM.
IJM
says most of its funding comes from private donations. In 2010, it notes, less
than 1% of its funding came from major corporations or corporate foundations.
"It
gives us a sense of what's possible," said IJM's Haugen. "We can
actually change the whole balance of resources between those who are the
criminals, hurting human beings and those who are on the side of those who need
freedom today."
CNN
has also joined the fight against modern-day slavery and collaborates regularly
with many advocacy groups, including the recipients of these Google grants.
Since launching the CNN Freedom Project in March, CNN has broadcast more than
200 stories and a half-dozen documentaries on the issue of human trafficking
and modern-day slavery. Nearly 2,000 people have come out of slavery, either
directly or indirectly, as a result of those stories. cnn
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