Resistance is futile as many women who have been trafficked have found. Any attempt to resist rape, violence, or prostitution is met with further violence. The only act of resistance that is worthwhile is a successful escape. Many women do pluck up the courage to run away and some are found by the police and taken to social services or organisations like POPPY, one of only two government funded refuges for trafficked women. The severe underfunding of this sector means that police and social services often place vulnerable young women in flats. Unsupported placements like these are common but are not the best solution for women who have been traumatised. Police also refer women to church based initiatives like the CHASTE (Churches Against Sex Trafficking in Europe) network which, along with the Salvation Army and the St John of God Trust, provides 20 bedspaces – one third of safe housing available in the UK for trafficked women. This is independently funded through donations, thus saving the government large sums of money. However, the religious ethos of these safe houses, including their policies on abortion, may not be the best place for trafficked women, many of whom find themselves pregnant.