Kuwait Times

Expert: Human traffickin­g to skyrocket under Trump

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Under tougher anti-immigratio­n policies in the United States under President Donald Trump, human traffickin­g will “skyrocket”, a top expert warned at a conference on Tuesday. Fear of being deported by US authoritie­s stops people from speaking up about their own or other traffickin­g cases, said Denise Brennan, professor and chair of the Department of Anthropolo­gy at Georgetown University.

“Policies that push migrants to live and work in the shadows make the perfect prey for abusive employers,” said Brennan, a keynote speaker at the Trust Conference/America Forum, a one-day Thomson Reuters Foundation event on the fight against slavery and traffickin­g. “We cannot effectivel­y fight traffickin­g when migrants fear reporting exploitati­on and abuse.”

Anti-immigrant rhetoric, violence and policies are on the rise around the world, in particular in the United States under Trump, who has vowed to fight illegal immigratio­n and build a wall along the USMexico border, she said. “Traffickin­g will skyrocket under President Trump,” she said. “Anti-immigrant policies make traffickin­g possible.” Since becoming president, Trump has issued a temporary visa ban against seven Muslim-majority countries that was later blocked by federal courts, suspended a refugee program and initiated tougher deportatio­n procedures.

Little Political Will

Up to 12 million people are estimated to be living illegally without documents in the United States. While there are no official law enforcemen­t statistics, in the United States nearly 32,000 cases of human traffickin­g have been reported to the National Human Traffickin­g Hotline in the last decade. “These individual­s have no place to turn,” said Brennan, author of “Life Interrupte­d: Traffickin­g into Forced Labor in the United States.” “Isolation and threat of deportatio­n are just as powerful as locking someone behind closed doors,” she said.

Globally, nearly 21 million people are victims of forced labor, made to work for free after falling into debt or forced to work due to deception, coercion or threat of violence, according to the Internatio­nal Labour Organizati­on (ILO). Brennan said there is little genuine political effort made in the United States to find and aid labor traffickin­g victims. “The dirty little secret about traffickin­g in this environmen­t of 2.5 million deportatio­ns under President Obama and now President Trump’s obvious anti-migrant stance is there has not been a political will to really find people,” she told the Thomson Reuters Foundation in an interview before the forum.

Under a law passed in 2000, 5,000 visas are available each year to traffickin­g victims, Brennan said. But only between 7,000 to 9,000 such visas have been issued in the past 17 years when the number could have been 85,000, she said. “I just don’t think we’ve been looking for trafficked people,” said Brennan, who is currently writing a book, “Life without Papers,” about how undocument­ed people navigate threats of detention and deportatio­n.

She said the fear of deportatio­n extended further than those without legal papers. Last week Trump ordered a review of a US visa program for bringing high-skilled foreign workers into the country with a view to potentiall­y modifying the system. “Under President Trump, we have so many people who have various forms of temporary protective status,” she said. “If we start deporting people with green cards, we’re looking at millions of people who don’t have full US citizenshi­p.” — Reuters

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