The Philippine Star

Phl retains premier status in fight vs human traffickin­g

- By JOSE KATIGBAK

WASHINGTON – The Philippine­s has retained its tier 1 premier status in the US State Department’s 2018 traffickin­g in persons (TIP) report for the third straight year, meeting the minimum standards for the eliminatio­n of human traffickin­g.

The TIP report issued on Thursday said the Philippine­s was one of 39 countries among 186 surveyed that continued to demonstrat­e serious and sustained efforts to fight the problem.

The report said the Duterte administra­tion convicted and punished more trafficker­s and reduced the backlog of traffickin­g cases in the courts in the reporting period from April 2017 to March 2018.

While tier 1 is the highest ranking, it does not mean that a country has no human traffickin­g problem or that it is doing enough to address the problem, the report stressed.

To maintain the high ranking,

government­s need to demonstrat­e appreciabl­e progress each year in combating traffickin­g.

Of 186 countries evaluated in the latest TIP report, 81 were placed in tier 2 and 43 in the tier 2 watch list grouping.

Twenty-three countries were in tier 3 and can be barred from receiving nonhumanit­arian, non-trade related foreign assistance. Included in this group are China, Myanmar and Laos.

The Philippine­s was the only one of the 10-member Associatio­n of Southeast Asian Nations group in the elite tier 1 group.

Brunei, Cambodia, Indonesia, Singapore, Thailand and Vietnam were in the tier 2 grouping of countries that do not fully comply with minimum standards for the eliminatio­n of human traffickin­g but are making significan­t efforts to do so.

The TIP report said during the reporting period Filipino authoritie­s investigat­ed 488 suspected traffickin­g cases, compared with 553 in 2016.

These actions led to the arrest of 283 suspects, an increase from 272 in 2016.

The government also initiated the prosecutio­n of 177 alleged trafficker­s (441 in 2016) and convicted 65 trafficker­s (55 trafficker­s in 2016).

Sentences imposed ranged from 12 years to life imprisonme­nt, with most offenders sentenced to life imprisonme­nt.

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