Bangkok Post

Kuala Lumpur gets traffickin­g status upgrade

Move paves way for US-led free-trade deal

-

WASHINGTON: The United States is upgrading Malaysia from the lowest tier on its list of worst human traffickin­g centres, US sources said on Wednesday, a move that could smooth the way for an ambitious US-led free-trade deal with the Southeast Asian nation and 11 other countries.

The upgrade to so-called “Tier 2 Watch List” status removes a potential barrier to President Barack Obama’s signature global trade deal. A provision in a related trade bill passed by Congress last month barred from fast-tracked trade deals Malaysia and other countries that earn the worst US human traffickin­g ranking in the eyes of the US State Department.

The upgrade follows internatio­nal scrutiny and outcry over Malaysian efforts to combat human traffickin­g after the discovery this year of scores of graves in peoplesmug­gling camps near its northern border with Thailand.

The State Department last year downgraded Malaysia in its annual “Traffickin­g in Persons” report to Tier 3, alongside North Korea, Syria and Zimbabwe, citing “limited efforts to improve its flawed victim protection regime” and other problems.

But a congressio­nal source with knowledge of the decision said the administra­tion had approved the upgraded status. A second source familiar with the matter confirmed the decision.

Some US lawmakers and human-rights advocates had expected Malaysia to remain on Tier 3 this year given its slow pace of conviction­s in human-traffickin­g cases and pervasive traffickin­g in industries such as electronic­s and palm oil.

This year’s full State Department report, including details on each country’s efforts to combat human traffickin­g, is expected to be released next week.

State Department spokesman John Kirby said the report was still being finalised and that “it would be premature to speculate on any particular outcome”.

Mr Obama visited Malaysia in April 2014 to cement economic and security ties. Malaysia is the current chair of the 10-nation Asean. It is seeking to promote unity within the bloc in the face of China’s increasing­ly assertive pursuits of territoria­l claims in the South China Sea, an object of US criticism.

In May, just as Mr Obama’s drive to win “fast-track” trade negotiatin­g authority for his trade deal entered its most sensitive stage in the US Congress, Malaysian police announced the discovery of 139 graves in jungle camps used by suspected smugglers and trafficker­s of Rohingya Muslims from Myanmar.

Malaysia hopes to be a signatory to Mr Obama’s legacy-defining Trans-Pacific Partnershi­p, which would link a dozen countries, cover 40% of the world economy and form a central element of his strategic shift towards Asia. On June 29, Mr Obama signed into law legislatio­n giving him “fasttrack” power to push ahead on the deal.

Lawmakers are working on a compromise that would let Malaysia and other countries appearing on a US blacklist for human traffickin­g participat­e in fasttracke­d trade deals if the administra­tion verified that they have taken concrete steps to address the most important issues identified in the annual traffickin­g report.

The graves were found in an area long known for the smuggling of Rohingya and local villagers reported seeing Rohingya in the area, but Malaysia’s Deputy Home Minister Wan Junaidi Tuanku Jaafar has said it was unclear whether those killed were illegal migrants. The discovery took place after the March cut-off for the US report.

The State Department would have needed to show that Malaysia had neither fully complied with minimum anti-traffickin­g standards nor made significan­t efforts to do so to justify keeping Malaysia on Tier 3, which can lead to penalties such as the withholdin­g of some assistance.

In its report last year, the State Department said Malaysia had reported 89 human-traffickin­g investigat­ions in the 12 months to March 2014, down from 190 the previous year, and nine conviction­s compared with 21 the previous year.

In the latest year to March, Malaysia’s conviction rate is believed to have fallen further, according to human-rights advocates, despite a rise in the number of investigat­ions. That reinforced speculatio­n Malaysia would remain on Tier 3.

“If true, this manipulati­on of Malaysia’s ranking in the State Department’s 2015 TIP report would be a perversion of the traffickin­g list and undermine both the integrity of this important report as well as the very difficult task of confrontin­g states about human traffickin­g,” said Democratic Senator Robert Menendez, who had pushed to bar Tier 3 countries from inclusion in the trade pact.

Phil Robertson, deputy director of Human Rights Watch’s Asia division, said he was “stunned” by the upgrade. “They have done very little to improve the protection from abuse that migrant workers face,” he said. “This would seem to be some sort of political reward from the United States and I would urge the US Congress to look long and hard at who was making the decisions on such an upgrade.”

Malaysia has an estimated 2 million illegal migrant labourers, many of whom work in conditions of forced labor under employers and recruitmen­t companies in sectors ranging from electronic­s to palm oil to domestic service.

Last year’s report said many migrant workers are exploited and subjected to practices associated with forced labour. Many foreign women recruited for ostensibly legal work in Malaysian restaurant­s, hotels, and beauty salons are subsequent­ly coerced into prostituti­on, the report said.

 ?? EPA ?? A Royal Malaysia Police officer stands guard at an abandoned camp in which mass graves were found in Wang Kelian, Perlis, Malaysia, in May.
EPA A Royal Malaysia Police officer stands guard at an abandoned camp in which mass graves were found in Wang Kelian, Perlis, Malaysia, in May.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Thailand