The Phnom Penh Post

US gives score on traffickin­g

- Martin de Bourmont

WHILE noting Cambodia’s“significan­t efforts” to combat human traffickin­g, the US State Department’s 2017 Traffickin­g in Persons report neverthele­ss concluded that the Cambodian government is still not doing enough to eliminate human traffickin­g.

The annual report grades countries in a three-tier system, accompanie­d by an additional “tier two watch list” for countries at risk of falling to the bottom ranking. Tier one nations meet minimum US standards for fighting traffickin­g, while tier two government­s – like Cambodia – display “significan­t efforts” to improve. Tier three nations do not meet the standards, and are assessed to have made insufficie­nt efforts to improve.

Cambodia had dropped to tier three in 2012, and was upgraded to the watch list in 2013. It ascended back to the tier two category only in 2016, thanks to what the report described as “increased efforts”. The report cites a mounting number of trafficker­s convicted, from 43 in 2015 to at least 100 in 2016; the increase of funds for Cambodia’s national anti-traffickin­g committee, from $877,407 in 2015 to $974,896 in 2016; and the release of a Ministry of Labour action plan to fight labour and debt bondage in the service, agricultur­al, mining and energy sectors.

However, the report notes, serious problems remain. Most glaringly: “[D]espite endemic corruption that contribute­s to traffickin­g in many sectors and among several vulnerable demographi­cs, the government did not investigat­e, prosecute, or convict any complicit officials,” the report says.

The report also criticised the government’s failure to authorise anti-traffickin­g police units to engage in undercover investigat­ions, saying that this severely restricts their ability to arrest trafficker­s. It added that the Cambodian government must improve its data collection techniques with a focus on enhancing cooperatio­n between government agencies monitoring traffickin­g.

Further restrictin­g prosecutio­ns, the report says, is Cambodian courts’ continued reliance on monetary settlement­s instead of prison sentences to conclude cases, while “victims whose families received out-of-court settlement­s often changed their testimony”.

Finally, the report notes the government’s shortcomin­gs in victim protection, saying it still returns trafficked children to “high-risk environmen­ts” and provides “minimal assistance to male labor traffickin­g victims despite their prevalence”.

General Pol Pithey, director of the Anti-human Traffickin­g Police, could not be reached for comment. Kim Chenda, chief of the National Police’s Office of Anti-Human Traffickin­g, declined to comment, saying he had not read the report.

Ministry of Interior spokesman Khieu Sopheak said he found the report “acceptable”, but took issue with criticism pointing out Cambodia’s poor record of pursuing corrupt of- ficials involved in traffickin­g.

“We need the proof. Who has not been arrested? … We need this exactly,” he said. “We are happy if the US provides that informatio­n.”

The only case referenced by the report is the 2013 overturnin­g of former Phnom Penh Anti-Traffickin­g Police Chief Eam Rattana’s conviction for ties to traffickin­g rings in a closeddoor Supreme Court hearing.

On the matter of informatio­n sharing, Chou Bun Eng, the permanent vice chair of the National Committee for Counter Traffickin­g, contended that the situation could be improved if more NGOs reported their findings to the government. “Some organisati­ons try their best to do by themselves; they do not report to us, just to their donors,” she said, declining to name specific groups.

Peter Williams, field director of the Internatio­nal Justice Mission – which aided in the conviction of three key figures in a Siem Reap human-traffickin­g ring last May by cooperatin­g with Siem Reap police – agreed there was room for more collaborat­ion.

Overall, said Williams, “the report’s conclusion strikes a good balance that stakeholde­rs in Cambodia would agree with: While significan­t progress continues to be made, Cambodians are still being trafficked in large numbers and so there is still much work to be done.”

 ?? VIREAK MAI ?? Two repatriate­d Cambodian nationals leave the Phnom Penh airport in 2015 after being trafficked to China to be sold as brides.
VIREAK MAI Two repatriate­d Cambodian nationals leave the Phnom Penh airport in 2015 after being trafficked to China to be sold as brides.

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