Have you ever lost your parents in the grocery store when you were little? You feel like it’s impossible to find them, and then a lady asks you if you need help. You tell her what happened and she takes you to a room where she calls your parent’s names over the loudspeaker and you're reunited with them. People in developing countries feel that same way, except there’s no reunion with their parents or friends. The person who offers help, takes them away into forced labor, prostitution, or trained as child soldiers. Defined by the UN as the acquisition of people by improper means such as force, fraud, or deception, with the aim of exploiting them, human trafficking has been an ongoing issue throughout the world. Victims are often taken at a young age and grow up being abused and forced into labor and prostitution. Somaly Mam, when giving her testimony at an interview with the President and CEO of the UN World Affairs Council, spoke of how she was born into Cambodia during the war, with both of her parents dead. She dreamed of having a family, and when she was still young, an old man came to her village, telling her that he knew her family. He took her to a different village and realized she made a mistake. She was forced to wear provocative clothing and forced to work at a brothel. At the UN Human Rights Council’s 14th session, another survivor, Jana Kohut, spoke of how she was trying to find a job in Slovenia, and her friend told her she got her an interview, then later disappeared.10 minutes into the interview Jana was abducted and transported to the trafficker’s house where she was beaten and raped, and later forced to work as a prostitute. She was fed meat infested with maggots and says she can still feel them crawling in her throat today. Children in countries where there is a civil war, are often abducted and trained to become child soldiers. If victims of this make it back home, the families often view the girls as ta