The White slave trade affair, also known as L’affaire de la traite des blanches, De handel in blanke slavinnen and Affaire des petite Anglaises, was a famous international scandal in Brussels in Belgium in 1880–1881.[1] It attracted international attention to the issue of sex trafficking and became the starting point of the international campaign against sex trafficking.
In 1880, it was revealed that about fifty foreign girls had been sex trafficked illegally to work in brothels in Brussels. The case became a major scandal which attracted international infamy, especially since it became known that some people within the authorities had been involved in the trade. The scandal ended in both the mayor of Brussels as well as the head of the city's police force were forced to resign from their posts.
The scandal attracted international attention to the ongoing issue of sex trafficking. The intense press coverage resulted in public interest in the issue. It resulted in an international campaign against sex trafficking, which became labelled as white slave trade. Campaigns against sex trafficking first started in Belgium after the scandal of 1880, and spread from there to Great Britain in 1885, to France in 1902 and to the United States in 1907. [2]