Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

U.S. releases traffickin­g report

It hails Burma’s improvemen­ts, finds China’s effort lacking

- JOSH LEDERMAN Informatio­n for this article was contribute­d by Matthew Pennington and staff members of The Associated Press.

WASHINGTON — The United States asserted Tuesday that Burma is no longer one of the world’s worst offenders on human traffickin­g, while removing both Burma and Iraq from a list of countries that use child soldiers.

In its annual report on human traffickin­g, the State Department demoted China to the lowest ranking over its traffickin­g record, putting it in the same category as North Korea, Zimbabwe and Syria. Afghanista­n was recognized for taking steps to curb traffickin­g, while Iraq was seen as making insufficie­nt progress on that issue.

Ivanka Trump, a senior White House adviser and daughter of President Donald Trump, said ending human traffickin­g is in both the moral and strategic interests of the U.S., describing the effort as a “major foreign policy priority” for the administra­tion.

“As a mother, this is much more than a policy priority,” she said at a ceremony to unveil the report. “It is a clarion call into action in defense of the vulnerable and the exploited.”

Secretary of State Rex Tillerson said the roughly 20 million victims of human traffickin­g globally illustrate how much more work must be done.

“Regrettabl­y, our challenge is enormous,” Tillerson said. “Human traffickin­g is becoming more nuanced and more difficult to identify. Much of these activities are going undergroun­d, and they’re going online.”

Also known as Myanmar, Burma was promoted for its efforts against recruitmen­t of child soldiers and its first prosecutio­n of government officials under a human traffickin­g law. The Southeast Asia nation had been demoted to the lowest tier last year, shortly after it shifted to civilian government, ending decades of oppressive military rule.

Burma’s elevation is a boost for Aung San Suu Kyi’s administra­tion, which is facing growing criticism from human-rights groups. The political transition in the Southeast Asian country has been a bumpy one as it wrestles with ethnic conflict and deep-seated discrimina­tion against its minority Rohingya Muslims.

The demotion of China was a particular surprise this year, marking the first major, public rebuke of China’s human-rights record by the Trump administra­tion, which has generally avoided direct, public criticism of China and other world powers on rights issues. The Trump administra­tion has been seeking China’s help to pressure North Korea to give up its nuclear program, and Tillerson said Tuesday that China’s failure to crack down on forced labor from North Korea was among the reasons it was downgraded.

In the report, the U.S. said that not only was China not meeting minimum standards to stop traffickin­g, it also was “not making significan­t efforts to do so.” The report also said there were indication­s that China’s government was still complicit in forced labor, including in some drug rehabilita­tion centers. The U.S. said China’s efforts to prosecute trafficker­s had also fallen.

Ahead of the report, China criticized the U.S. for speaking “irresponsi­bly.”

Foreign Ministry spokesman Lu Kang said China strongly opposes the U.S. using its domestic laws to attack another country’s record.

“China’s government’s commitment to fighting human traffickin­g has been resolute and our results have been obvious for everyone to see,” he said, adding that China is willing to work with other countries “on the basis of mutual respect” to combat global human traffickin­g.

Burma and Iraq were taken off the blacklist of foreign government­s identified as having child soldiers, a move that Human Rights Watch said was premature in the case of Burma and undermines U.S. credibilit­y in ending the use of children in warfare. The group said the United Nations documented child recruitmen­t by Burma’s armed forces in 2016.

 ?? AP/JACQUELYN MARTIN ?? Ivanka Trump speaks Tuesday at the State Department in Washington during the release of a report on human traffickin­g.
AP/JACQUELYN MARTIN Ivanka Trump speaks Tuesday at the State Department in Washington during the release of a report on human traffickin­g.

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