Macau Daily Times

THE US STATE DEPARTMENT HAS DOWNGRADED MACAU IN ITS GLOBAL HUMAN TRAFFICKIN­G REPORT, CLAIMING NOT ENOUGH PROGRESS HAS BEEN MADE

- DANIEL BEITLER

THE U.S. State Department has downgraded the Macau SAR in its most recent global report on human traffickin­g, expressing particular concern over what it sees as the local government’s failure to identify and protect victims.

The 2020 Traffickin­g in Persons Report concluded that Macau has not fully met the minimum standards for the eliminatio­n of traffickin­g, but was making significan­t efforts to do so. It highlighte­d and commended the training of police, customs, and social welfare officials and the funding of awareness campaigns on public transporta­tion.

However, the State Department said it had observed a decline in the

“overall […] efforts compared to the previous reporting period.” For example, funding for the committee for anti-traffickin­g activities in Macau fell to 3.24 million patacas in 2019, compared with 3.7 million patacas a year earlier, according to data cited in the report.

The State Department was particular­ly attentive to sex traffickin­g in Macau.

It said that most of the victims are from mainland China, Russia and Southeast Asia. The victims are coerced into commercial sex in massage parlors, nightclubs and other entertainm­ent venues in casinos, hotels and private homes. They are forced to work long hours, may be threatened with violence, and sometimes their identity documents are confiscate­d.

“Concerns remained that trafficker­s exploited victims in Macau, especially in commercial sex,” noted the State Department. “However, the government investigat­ed only one potential case, did not provide assistance to any victims, and did not initiate any prosecutio­ns or sentence convicted trafficker­s to significan­t terms of imprisonme­nt.”

The State Department issued recommenda­tions in the report, for example, “significan­tly [increasing] proactive victim identifica­tion, especially among vulnerable population­s such as migrant workers and persons in commercial sex.”

It also said the authoritie­s should enhance their investigat­ion and prosecutio­n efforts to convict sex trafficker­s, “including those operating in casinos and other entertainm­ent establishm­ents.”

The Macau government has issued a strong condemnati­on of the report, entirely rebuking the U.S. assessment.

The Office of the Secretary for Security said that the government has effectivel­y reduced the incidence of human traffickin­g, as evidenced in the falling number of cases in Macau.

The Office said that the U.S. report “once again, did not accurately reflect the real situation in Macau, showing itself to be full of biased interpreta­tions, an inaccurate conclusion and groundless assumption­s, as well as revealing a lack of knowledge about Macau’s legal system.

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