Business World

Philippine­s gets positive ranking in US human traffickin­g report

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THE PHILIPPINE­S ranked high in terms of enforcemen­t against human traffickin­g, according to a report on this global phenomenon newly released by the US State Department.

But the same report also made considerab­le reference to the Philippine­s in terms of the various crimes under human traffickin­g, particular­ly sex traffickin­g.

The “Traffickin­g in Persons Report,” as it is titled, covers the period of April 1, 2016 through March 31, 2017.

Among other things, the report noted “the burden on government­s... to protect victims ( becomes) heightened when their own officials engage in or facilitate traffickin­g crimes.”

“Some judges, prosecutor­s, and law enforcemen­t officials throughout the world accept bribes for reducing sentences of perpetrato­rs, leaking informatio­n to suspects under investigat­ion, or ignoring potential cases,” the report added.

“Law enforcemen­t officials who protect brothels for financial gain can be complicit in sex traffickin­g, while those who knowingly purchase commercial sex from sex traffickin­g victims are directly culpable. Some diplomats exploit their domestic workers, often avoiding penalties for traffickin­g crimes committed abroad,” the report also said, noting too further that:

“When authoritie­s punish traffickin­g victims for crimes they were forced to commit, including prostituti­on and immigratio­n violations, they hinder their own efforts to investigat­e and punish trafficker­s. “

Among the report’s topics of special interest, in its table of contents, are “Online Sexual Exploitati­on of Children: An Alarming Trend” and “Paying to Work: The High Cost of Recruitmen­t Fees.”

In his message opening the report, US Secretary of State Rex W. Tillerson said in part: “The introducti­on of this year’s Report focuses on the responsibi­lity of government­s to criminaliz­e human traffickin­g and hold offenders accountabl­e. To that end, this Report is intended to assist government­s in identifyin­g threats so law enforcemen­t agencies around the world can respond effectivel­y and gain insight into where human traffickin­g remains most severe.”

In her message, former federal prosecutor Susan Coppedge, who is currently Ambassador-at-Large to Monitor and Combat Traffickin­g in Persons, said in part: “When I engage with representa­tives of foreign government­s, I often speak with police, investigat­ors, prosecutor­s, and judges. I commend those who are fearless in the fight against human traffickin­g — those who courageous­ly take on the tough cases, those who argue for stringent sentences for criminals and restitutio­n for victims, and those who do so while ensuring that victims are treated with dignity.”

The US State Department said it “prepared this Report using informatio­n from US embassies, government officials, nongovernm­ental and internatio­nal organizati­ons, published reports, news articles, academic studies, research trips to every region of the world, and informatio­n submitted to tipreport@state.gov.”

According to the report’s methodolog­y, government­s/countries under “Tier 1” are those that “fully meet the minimum standards of the TVPA (Traffickin­g Victims Protection Act of 2000 under US federal laws) for the eliminatio­n of traffickin­g.”

Alongside the Philippine­s under Tier 1 are Australia, New Zealand, South Korea, several countries in Europe, Canada, and the United States, among others.

Government­s of countries that do not fully meet the TVPA’s minimum standards but are making significan­t efforts to bring themselves into compliance with those standards are classified under Tier 2. Under this, the State Department has also drawn up a watch list that includes Iraq, Saudi Arabia, Cuba, and Hong Kong, among others.

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