Khaleej Times

Pakistan may face cut in US aid over human traffickin­g

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ISLAMABAD/WASHINGTON — The Trump administra­tion is warning Pakistan it could lose US civilian aid worth tens of millions of dollars this year if Washington finds that the South Asian nation has not done enough to combat human traffickin­g, US officials said.

An aid cutback would deal a fresh blow to US-Pakistan relations following President Donald Trump’s suspension in January of some $2 billion in US security assistance over what Trump said was Islamabad’s failure to crack down on Afghan insurgent sanctuarie­s used for attacks into Afghanista­n.

A large portion of US civilian aid — $265 million in 2017, according to a source at the US Embassy in Islamabad — could be withheld if the State Department puts Pakistan on a list of worst global offenders in human traffickin­g in an annual report due out in June.

The funding is relatively modest for the size of Pakistan’s economy. But Islamabad could suffer a heavier jolt if Washington also decides to oppose new assistance from internatio­nal financial institutio­ns such as the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund and the World Bank.

These are all sanctions that the United States, under federal law, can impose on any country receiving the lowest grade on human traffickin­g unless Trump issues a full or partial waiver. He did so for most countries on last year’s blacklist, following a pattern set by recent predecesso­rs who were especially lenient on US allies and partners.

By making good on its threat against Pakistan, the Trump administra­tion would raise questions about whether it was using the Traffickin­g in Persons (TIP) report to pressure Islamabad to do more on counter-terrorism.

The report is not supposed to be influenced by other geopolitic­al considerat­ions, but human rights groups accused the Trump administra­tion last year, and the Obama administra­tion before it, of sometimes prioritisi­ng economic and

Pakistan has taken very stringent steps against human traffickin­g and the issue should not be used to pressurise countries Ahsan Iqbal, Interior Minister

security interests over human traffickin­g concerns.

Pakistani Interior Minister Ahsan Iqbal told Reuters the country has “taken very stringent steps” against human traffickin­g and the issue “should not be used for political means to pressurise countries.”

A senior Trump administra­tion official said no decision on the ranking has been made, but that Pakistan, long an uneasy US ally, has been told it can avoid a lower ranking — and a possible aid cut — only “if we see them making sincere efforts to address the problems that have been raised.”

The US official, speaking on condition of anonymity, denied any link between Pakistan’s cooperatio­n with Trump’s strategy to force the Afghan Taleban into peace talks and the possible loss of US civilian assistance, stressing that any TIP decision would be based solely on Islamabad’s human traffickin­g record.

The State Department declined comment, except to cite the penalties available under the US anti-human traffickin­g law.

Pakistan has long rejected US accusation­s that it provides Afghan Taliban and allied Haqqani network militants with sanctuarie­s from which they attack the Kabul government and US-led foreign forces in Afghanista­n.

Future civilian aid hinges on Pakistan’s rating in the State Department’s 2018 TIP report, an assessment of how more than 180 countries and territorie­s are fighting human smuggling, modern slavery and related issues like child soldiers.

Pakistan has been on the report’s Tier 2 “Watch List” for four years, the limit a country can remain at the second-to-worst ranking. Unless it is upgraded, Pakistan will drop to Tier 3, the lowest rung, alongside Iran, North Korea and Syria, among others.

This would trigger the suspension of civilian assistance, except for humanitari­an and trade-related aid, unless Trump, who has been stridently critical of Pakistan, waives the penalties. A Tier 3 rating assesses that a country does not comply with minimum US standards against human traffickin­g.

Pakistan has struggled to eradicate bonded labor practices, especially in dirty brick kilns where children often work.

Iqbal said Pakistan would soon enact tougher laws. He did not confirm, however, that Washington had warned his government about potential aid cuts related to human traffickin­g.

“This cause is much more valuable than billions of dollars in aid because this is about human dignity,” he said. “There has to be more understand­ing of the efforts that countries like us are doing.”

Pakistani officials dismissed the impact of a loss of US civilian aid, most of which flows through nongovernm­ental organisati­ons, on the country’s growing economy of nearly $300 billion.

Still, they have expressed concern that Washington wants internatio­nal bodies to punish Pakistan for not heeding Trump’s South Asia security agenda.

In February, urged by the United States and European powers, the Financial Action Task Force, a global money-laundering watchdog, placed Pakistan on a terrorist financing watchlist.

Pakistan fears Washington could use its vote in the IMF, to which the United States is the largest contributo­r, to oppose new loans to Islamabad. Pakistan’s economic growth has surged to above 5 per cent, but many analysts expect Pakistan to seek a new IMF bailout this year due to a ballooning current account deficit and dwindling foreign currency reserves. —

 ??  ?? US President Donald Trump and Pakistani PM Shahid Khaqan Abbasi
US President Donald Trump and Pakistani PM Shahid Khaqan Abbasi

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