Gulf Today

Dhaka signs up to UN treaty to combat human traffickin­g

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DHAKA: Bangladesh’s decision to adopt an internatio­nal treaty that binds countries to strict anti-traffickin­g measures could help it avoid US sanctions, a UN official said on Wednesday.

Bangladesh has been on a US State Department watchlist for the past three years over its record on human traffickin­g, puting it at risk of a downgrade that would trigger sanctions, limiting access to internatio­nal aid.

On Sunday, the government announced it would adopt the United Nations’ Palermo Protocol on traffickin­g, which provides an internatio­nal definition and guidelines on how countries should tackle the crime.

George Mcleod, spokesman for the UN migration agency, said ratifying the treaty would improve Bangladesh’s chances of avoiding a damaging downgrade“because its protocols factor prominent ly in the United States’ decision on this.”

“From a counter-traffickin­g perspectiv­e, Bangladesh is on the same page as other signatorie­s,” he told the Thomson Reuters Foundation.

The State Department said in its latest Traffickin­g in Persons report in June that Bangladesh did not fully meet its minimum standards for the eliminatio­n of traffickin­g, but was making significan­t efforts to do so.

It criticised the government for its failure to investigat­e several potential crimes of forced labour and sex traffickin­g against Rohingya refugees in the country.

The government said at the time it was working hard to resolve the problems raised.

An existing law passed in 2012 includes all the provisions of the UN treaty, including laying down strict penalties for trafficker­s. But experts said these were poorly enforced and the conviction rate remained low.

They also said the government was not fulfilling its duty to provide help for victims’ rehabilita­tion, expressing hope the adoption of an internatio­nal treaty would spur change. “Once the protocol is signed, we will be more accountabl­e to the internatio­nal community and the government will have to ensure that the law is implemente­d properly,” said Shakirul Islam, head of migrant rights group Ovibashi Karmi Unnayan Programme.

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