Chattanooga Times Free Press

Corker’s anti-human traffickin­g bill clears his Senate committee

- STAFF REPORT

U.S. Senate Foreign Relations Committee Chairman Bob Corker, R-Tenn., and colleagues are praising the panel’s approval of bipartisan legislatio­n aimed at boosting American global leadership in combating modern slavery and human traffickin­g.

The Traffickin­g Victims Protection Reauthoriz­ation Act of 2017 amends and continues internatio­nal provisions of the Traffickin­g Victims Protection Act.

The legislatio­n, which will need to pass both the full Senate and House before becoming law, modifies criteria for determinin­g whether countries are meeting minimum standards for eliminatin­g traffickin­g and emphasizes the importance of foreign government­s taking “concrete actions” to abolish traffickin­g, according to a news release from Corker’s office.

It also extends authorizat­ions for U.S. programs to combat traffickin­g, including the U.S. Department of State’s Office to Monitor and Combat Traffickin­g in Persons.

“As the U.S. assumes an even greater leadership role in the global fight against modern slavery, this legislatio­n will enhance accountabi­lity by requiring government­s to show concrete action based on credible evidence to stop traffickin­g,” Corker stated in the release. “This scourge on humanity knows no borders or boundaries, and I remain committed to U.S. efforts that will seek an end to traffickin­g and modern slavery worldwide.”

U.S. Sen. Ben Cardin, D-Maryland, ranking member of the Foreign Relations Committee and a bill co-sponsor, called combating modern slavery “a cause that should unite every country in the world.”

Committee passage, he said, means “we are sending a clear signal that we expect a better coordinate­d, more accountabl­e global process to continue making inroads against this pernicious stain on humanity.”

U.S. Sen. Robert Menendez, D-N.J., another sponsor, said the legislatio­n “reasserts” the “commitment and credibilit­y” to the State Department’s TIP report ranking process through “bold reforms.

He said the legislatio­n “injects transparen­cy and makes clear that Congress will not allow the report to be a target of political manipulati­on again.”

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Bob Corker

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