US says Iran and Venezuela are failing to crack down on human trafficking
The White House said it had ordered that Iran, Venezuela and four African nations be added to a US list of countries accused of failing to crack down on human trafficking, a step that further isolates them from the US.
The White House said on Saturday it was also increasing restrictions on North Korea, Eritrea, Russia and Syria, which were already on the list, by constraining them from engaging in educational or cultural exchanges with the US.
The Trump administration also instructed the US executive director of the International Monetary Fund and US executive directors at other multilateral development banks to vote against extending loans or other funds to North Korea, Russia and Iran for the US fiscal year 2018, which began yesterday.
Under a 2000 US law – the trafficking victims protection act – the United States does not provide non-humanitarian, non-trade-related foreign assistance to any country that fails to comply with minimum standards for eliminating trafficking and is not making efforts to do so.
The White House said that Iran, Venezuela, the Democratic Republic of the Congo, Equatorial Guinea, South Sudan and Sudan had been added to the list of countries subject to these restrictions for the new fiscal year.
The move came six days after president Donald Trump included Venezuela and Iran on a list of eight countries targeted for travel restrictions to the United States. The restrictions on Venezuela focused on government officials who the Trump administration blamed for the country’s slide into economic disarray. The travel ban on Iranians was broader.
That travel ban list lifted previous restrictions on citizens from Sudan.