Philippine Daily Inquirer

Tier 2 on traffickin­g chart good enough for PH

- By Christine O. Avendaño

KEEPING its Tier 2 ranking in the fight against human traffickin­g the past four years is still a “feat” for the country that could be attributed to the significan­t increase in the government’s conviction of trafficker­s, Justice Secretary Leila de Lima said yesterday.

De Lima was referring to the 2014 Global Traffickin­g in Persons (GTIP) report issued by US Secretary of State John Kerry on June 20, in which the Philippine­s retained for a fourth straight year its Tier 2 ranking.

Tier 2 countries are those that do not fully comply with the minimum standards of the Traffickin­g Victims Protection Act but are exerting significan­t efforts to do so.

No downgrade a feat

“Having retained for four consecutiv­e years (2011-2014) our Tier 2 ranking, that is, not being downgraded to the Tier 2 watch list or worse, Tier 3, is already a feat, hence, laudable,” De Lima said in a text message to reporters.

She attributed this to improvemen­ts in the number of traffickin­g conviction­s.

But at the same time De Lima admitted that corruption “remains to be among the challenges” in the government’s bid to stop human traffickin­g and it was making headway in filing cases against erring individual­s.

From only 29 conviction­s (with 30 convicted trafficker­s) as of June 2010, De Lima said the number of conviction­s rose to 130 (with 148 convicted trafficker­s) as of June 17.

“This means that 77 percent of the total conviction­s or 101 conviction­s (with 118 convicted trafficker­s) were posted during the Aquino administra­tion,” she said.

In a separate statement, De Lima praised the government’s antihuman traffickin­g team for making the country among the leaders in the region in combating the problem of “modern-day slavery.”

Gov’t bent on improving

The Department of Justice said the Philippine­s was among five states in the Associatio­n of Southeast Asian Nations that were in Tier 2. The four others were Brunei, Indonesia, Singapore and Vietnam.

“Based on the report, we are currently one of the leaders in the region in fighting traffickin­g in persons,” she said, adding the government was bent on improving that standing “by making sure we eliminate some of the negative concerns and subscribe to most of the recommenda­tions in the GTIP index.”

This includes, among other things, “bringing more people to the table so we can find ways to prevent them from being victimized and revictimiz­ed, making sure their abusers are dealt with, and giving survivors an opportunit­y for restorativ­e care and the more comfortabl­e life they were seeking in the first place,” De Lima said.

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