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EBay halts auction of
Vietnamese girls
By RACHEL KONRAD
Associated Press
March 12, 2004
SAN JOSE, Calif. (AP) - EBay
Inc. halted an auction this week and suspended a Taiwanese user who
allegedly tried to sell three Vietnamese girls for a starting bid of
$5,400.
The auction, which began March
2 on eBay's Taiwan site, did not include a detailed description of
the goods for sale but said the ``items'' were from Vietnam and
would be ``shipped to Taiwan only.''
The site included five photos
of three people. One dark-haired woman in a white shirt wore makeup
and blue nail polish, and the other two appeared to be girls no
older than their early teens. The 10-day auction had a starting
price of 180,000 Taiwanese dollars, or $5,411.88.
Vietnamese activists groups in
Australia and the United States noticed the listing as early as
March 5 and began sending e-mails to women's rights and immigrant
advocates around the world. Many of them contacted eBay, and earlier
this week customer service representatives pulled the auction, now
listed as ``invalid item.''
``There couldn't be a clearer
case of what's not allowed on eBay" spokesman Hani Durzy said today.
``We are constantly scanning the site for items along the line of
this one worldwide, and as soon as we see them we take them down.''
San Jose-based eBay strictly
forbids the sale or purchase of humans, alive or dead.
The company, which acts as an
intermediary between buyers and sellers for products ranging from
garage-sale items to supercomputers, doesn't screen auction items
before they go live on the site.
However, it routinely halts
auctions involving human corpses or anything else it deems
inappropriate or illegal, and it often suspends the person or group
behind such sales.
EBay turned over information
on the seller to Taiwanese authorities, Durzy said. He would not
release any more information on the user, identified on the site as
``mmm0052g'' and an eBay member since March 1.
Durzy said auctions of humans
were ``incredibly rare,'' and those that the company has
investigated are usually hoaxes.
``We have no idea if this one
was a joke, but frankly it's irrelevant to us,'' Durzy said. ``We
took it down as soon as we became aware of it.''
American activist groups
including the Fairfax, Va.-based National Congress of Vietnamese
Americans, one of the groups that alerted eBay with e-mails and a
letter to CEO Meg Whitman, applauded the auction giant's swift
moves. Members say they'll continue to monitor eBay's listings for
human trafficking.
But NCVA president Hung Nguyen
said the illegal trade -- often involving girls or young women who
work as sex slaves -- will likely continue regardless of whether
Internet sites clamp down.
``The only real alternative is
to give countries opportunities for people to educate and better
themselves,'' Nguyen said. ``If we could improve the economic
conditions in places like Vietnam and Cambodia, there would be less
likelihood that people would sell themselves or their children into
slavery or brothels.'' |