The Borneo Post

‘Vast areas of impunity’ for people traffickin­g — UN report

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VIENNA: A UN report has warned that “vast areas of impunity” remain globally for people trafficker­s, with victims subjected to crimes ranging from sexual exploitati­on to organ removal.

Despite a recent trend towards more people traffickin­g conviction­s in many African and Middle Eastern countries, the report from the UN Office and Drugs and Crime ( UNODC) pointed out that “the total numbers in these areas remain very low”.

“There appears to be hardly any risk for trafficker­s to face justice,” it said.

The report said 100 cases of organ removal had been reported over the period 2014-17, mostly in the Middle East and North Africa, with cases also reported in Europe and Central and South America.

It cites research saying that in some cases there is evidence of trafficker­s colluding “with medical profession­als, relying on corrupt and fraudulent practices”.

Perpetrato­rs of this form of traffickin­g take advantage of “severe levels of vulnerabil­ity”, the UNODC says, for example people in refugee camps who are recruited “with false promises of receiving payments and/or transport to safer locations”.

However, traffickin­g for the purpose of sexual exploitati­on was by far the most common form found in the data compiled by the report, accounting for 59 per cent of victims detected in 2016.

The UNODC underlined the role of groups involved in various armed conflicts in using human traffickin­g “to finance activities or increase their workforce”, as well as for sexual slavery.

It highlighte­d the case of the thousands of girls and women from the Yazidi minority enslaved by the so- called Islamic State group in Iraq.

One of them, Nadia Murad, was one of the winners of the Nobel Peace Prize last year in recognitio­n of her activism on behalf of other victims.

The UNODC said the overwhelmi­ng number of detected victims of traffickin­g globally were female, with just under half being adult women.

A further 23 percent being girls and the report warns that their share of the total is increasing.

After sexual exploitati­on, the next most common reason for traffickin­g was forced labour, accounting for a third of victims covered by the data and especially prevalent in sub- Saharan Africa and the Middle East.

A number of other patterns are also mentioned, such as traffickin­g for forced marriage, more commonly detected in South East Asia.

The total number of victims reported to the UNODC in 2016 stood at just under 25,000, an increase of more than 10,000 since 2011, with increases “more pronounced in the Americas and in Asia”. — AFP

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