Gulf News

US taking bold action on human traffickin­g

Trump administra­tion is prioritisi­ng efforts to ensure law enforcemen­t, immigratio­n authoritie­s and customs officials have the training and resources to identify victims at ports of entry and in local communitie­s

- By Ivanka Trump ■ Ivanka Trump serves as adviser to Donald Trump, president of the United States.

The Internatio­nal Labour Organisati­on estimates that worldwide, nearly 25 million children and adults of all ages and background­s are victims of human traffickin­g, including forced labour and sex traffickin­g. Every government in the world has a moral obligation to do all in its power to stop these heinous crimes within its borders.

That is why United States President Donald Trump took strong action on Thursday to hold accountabl­e those government­s that have persistent­ly failed to meet the minimum standards for combating human traffickin­g in their countries.

Specifical­ly, the president will limit the number of national-interest waivers and restrict certain types of foreign assistance for nearly two dozen government­s of countries identified as “Tier 3” by the State Department’s Traffickin­g in Persons Report. The report, the world’s most comprehens­ive resource for government­al anti-traffickin­g efforts, places each country in tiers to highlight best practices and urge greater action to combat human traffickin­g. Tier 3 countries are those that have neither met the minimum standards nor made a significan­t effort to adequately identify and protect traffickin­g victims, punish the trafficker­s or prevent human traffickin­g.

The US is an extraordin­arily generous nation, but this administra­tion will no longer use taxpayer dollars to support government­s that consistent­ly fail to address traffickin­g. The most urgent types of assistance to these countries will continue, including humanitari­an aid and lifesaving global health programmes such as HIV treatment and Ebola preparedne­ss and response. But the new restrictio­ns will hold these government­s accountabl­e while providing further incentive for them to live up to their responsibi­lity to end this scourge. The US will encourage Tier 3 countries to step up efforts to eliminate human traffickin­g, including the establishm­ent of new laws and national action plans.

In his first month in office, the president said he was “prepared to bring the full force and weight of our government” to end human traffickin­g, and he signed an executive order directing federal law enforcemen­t to prioritise dismantlin­g the criminal organisati­ons behind forced labour, sex traffickin­g, involuntar­y servitude and child exploitati­on.

Following the president’s directive, the Justice Department secured a record 499 human traffickin­g conviction­s in fiscal 2017, a 14 per cent increase over the previous year. The director of national intelligen­ce elevated human traffickin­g to a top priority for the US intelligen­ce community. Despite a deeply polarised political climate, the Fight Online Sex Traffickin­g Act — Stop Enabling Sex Trafficker­s Act championed by the White House gained strong bipartisan support on Capitol Hill this year, and in April, the president signed into law this landmark legislatio­n to fight online sex traffickin­g.

Additional action

The administra­tion is also working to better identify, protect and assist traffickin­g victims on their paths to safety and recovery. In fiscal 2017, the Department of Health and Human Services identified 13,314 potential victims of human traffickin­g through local community coalitions, and between July 2016 and June 2017, the Justice Department helped more than 8,000 survivors receive services such as housing, medical care, legal assistance, advocacy and case management.

Last month, the president hosted at the White House the President’s Interagenc­y Task Force to Monitor and Combat Traffickin­g in Persons, marking the first time a president had participat­ed in this meeting. More than 15 federal agencies, along with members of Congress, pledged to take additional action to address human traffickin­g.

Finally, the Trump administra­tion, in collaborat­ion with the resilient survivors who serve on the US Advisory Council on Human Traffickin­g, is prioritisi­ng efforts to ensure law enforcemen­t, immigratio­n authoritie­s and customs officials have the training and resources to identify victims of traffickin­g at US ports of entry and in local communitie­s.

Former president of the US Abraham Lincoln and the abolitioni­st movement gave America a unique inheritanc­e: A principled commitment to fight slavery in all its pernicious forms.

This administra­tion is continuing the fight to end modern slavery and using every tool at its disposal to achieve that critical goal.

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 ?? Muhammed Nahas/©Gulf News ??
Muhammed Nahas/©Gulf News

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