The women are frequently lured with promises of high-paying jobs and marriage. Although the concept of trafficking is rather straightforward, the methods employed by traffickers are varied and reflect ingenuity in attempting to thwart detection by law enforcement.
The women are often provided with fraudulent visas and passports and taken to another country. Upon their arrival they are informed that the job no longer exists, but they are still indebted to the agent for the trip, which usually costs them between $5,000 and $20,000.
Since many countries have imposed stricter border controls and entry requirements the possibilities for legal migration have decreased. Therefore, many women, eager to escape poverty or political and social insecurity, and not aware of the dangers of illegal migration, find it worth paying this hefty fee to try their luck, only to find themselves exploited by traffickers.
Because of the government's stricter entry controls or requirements, the traffickers exploit the potential for profit in l=illegal migration. They can supply the victims with services such as fraudulent travel documents, transportation, guided border crossings, accommodation and job brokering.
Nina Karpacheva, deputy of the Ukrainian Parliament's Commission on Human Rights, reports that up to 85 percent of Ukrainian women involved in prostitution abroad are forced into this business against their will. She said that thousands of Ukrainian women have been turned into "white slaves" in many countries, particularly in Greece, Turkey, the United States, Israel, Germany and the Netherlands.