Yahoo – AFP, Dave Clark, June 30, 2016
Washington
(AFP) - The United States on Thursday blacklisted eight more countries for
failing to combat human trafficking, including fledgling democracy Myanmar, but
was criticized for taking an easier line on Thailand.
Announcing
the release of the State Department's annual human trafficking report,
Secretary of State John Kerry insisted the rankings were based on objective
criteria, and not political favor.
But
activists, while welcoming the designation of Myanmar and Uzbekistan to the
worst category of wrongdoer, complained that US allies Thailand and Malaysia
got off relatively lightly.
"There
are some tough calls. In the end, they come down to an element of discretion,
but not much, because we have a fixed set of rules that Congress had created,
and we follow those rules," Kerry said.
"The
conclusions are based on facts and are based on a lot of analysis over the
year," he said.
Djibouti,
Haiti, Papua New Guinea, Sudan, Suriname and Turkmenistan were also added to
the now 26-strong blacklist of governments the State Department believes are
not fighting people smuggling or slavery.
Kuwait and
Thailand found themselves promoted from this "Tier 3" list of worst
offenders to the "Tier 2 watch list" of countries making some kind of
effort to combat the trade in persons but still under scrutiny.
Libya,
Somalia and Yemen were judged special cases whose governments are in too much
chaos to be judged.
Last year,
the State Department was criticized for not including Myanmar on its Tier 3
list, amid allegations that Washington was turning a blind eye to slavery while
encouraging a slow transition to democracy.
Myanmar
held contested general elections last year won by the party of veteran rights
activist and Nobel laureate Aung San Suu Kyi, who now steers the country's
first civilian government.
Persecuted minority
Suu Kyi had
spent a decade fighting corrupt military rule, and Washington has been keen to
support her once pariah country on the slow road to democratic reform.
But much
remains to be done, and the government has been accused of backsliding,
particularly as regards the fate of the persecuted Rohingya Muslim minority.
This year's
report on Myanmar dubs it "a source country for men, women, and children
subjected to forced labor and for women and children subjected to sex
trafficking, both in Burma and abroad."
![]() |
Myanmar's
democracy champion Aung San Suu Kyi, who is currently visiting
Thailand, has
come under fire for failing to speak up for the Rohingya (AFP Photo/
Lillian
Suwanrumpha)
|
People from
across Myanmar are subject to abuse, but the report says "Rohingya
individuals are particularly vulnerable to sex and labor trafficking in Rakhine
State, including forced labor perpetrated by government authorities."
Myanmar has
been on the "Tier 2 watch list" for four years -- the maximum period
it can be allowed under US law to improve its practices or be relegated to the
third tier -- which is what has now happened.
Washington
had also been accused of taking too lenient an approach to Uzbekistan, where
the government makes no attempt to hide the fact that it press-gangs civil
servants into forced labor to harvest cotton.
This year
report notes that "government-compelled forced labor of adults remains
endemic during the annual cotton harvest" and concludes that the Uzbek
government is not making any significant attempt to halt trafficking.
Human
rights watchdogs welcomed the demotion of Myanmar and Uzbekistan, which they
felt had been unfairly protected from scrutiny for political reasons in last
year's report, but expressed regret that Thailand and Malaysia were not also
being held to account.
Mass
grave
"We're
encouraged by the State Department's decision to downgrade Burma -- that was a
country that we were paying pretty close attention to," said Kristen
Abrams, acting director of anti-trafficking umbrella group ATEST.
"We're
also equally encouraged by the right of last year's wrong on Uzbekistan, a
country that has state orchestrated forced labor," she said.
But
watchdogs remain concerned that Washington is going easy on its allies in
Southeast Asia, where the fishing industry in particular is regularly accused
of using forced labor in inhumane conditions at sea.
"Starting
with Thailand, we have seen some willingness to reform some of their laws, but
it's not made any significant impact on the ground," Abrams said.
"With
Malaysia, we know that they were moved up last year for political reasons. It
was unjustified then and it remains unjustified today," she said, citing a
failure to investigate mass graves.
The report
notes that: "Discoveries of migrant camps and mass graves along the border
with Thailand in 2015 generated reports some officials were complicit in
facilitating migrant smuggling, which may have included trafficking
crimes."
But it
concludes that Malaysia is "making significant efforts" to meet
minimum standards to fight the crime.




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