| Posted 6/27/2011 at 3:16 PM by Aaron S (AaronSmith) | |
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Well I did know that it still existed in the world, but look how many countries are not meeting anti-trafficking requirements!

CNN wrote: A U.S. Government anti-slavery report published Monday throws the spotlight on countries it says are not meeting minimum anti-trafficking standards.
The U.S. State Department's Trafficking In Persons (TIP ) Report identifies countries that it says meet minimum standards, countries working towards them and countries that appear to be doing little to stop trafficking.
Each country is put into one of four grades - Tier 1, Tier 2, Two Watch and Tier Three. The United States can impose sanctions on countries in the bottom tier. (See how the countries rank)
This year, the Dominican Republic was the only country to lift itself out of the bottom tier, and the Czech Republic was the only country to slip out of the top-ranked countries.
The TIP Report cited weak prevention efforts for labor trafficking and the lack of formal steps by the Czech government to reduce demand for commercial sex acts.
It said the Dominican Republic got a higher ranking for protecting more victims and making significant efforts to comply with the minimum standards laid down in the U.S. Trafficking Victims Protection Act.
As the report was published, U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton said: "This report is a tool and we are interested in working with countries around the world to get results."
She said one focus will be countries where anti-trafficking laws are on the books but are rarely used to convict the traffickers. (Watch Clinton explain why trafficking is "unforgiveable")
In Africa, Nigeria and Mauritius kept their Tier 1 status - the only African nations in the top rank - while Algeria, Central African Republic, Equatorial Guinea, Guinea-Bissau, Libya, and Madagascar all dropped into Tier 3
In Asia, China stays on the Two Watch list while India moves off the Watch list and into Tier 2. The report credited India for law enforcement efforts but expressed concern over reports that corrupt officers facilitate sex trafficking.
CNN is seeking reaction of countries singled out for criticism. (See inside the TIP war room)
The report is compiled with the help of U.S. embassies, non-governmental organizations, aid groups and individuals who have submitted data or their own personal accounts.
It counts known cases of human trafficking in more than 175 countries, whether for commercial sex, bonded labor, child labor, involuntary domestic servitude or child soldiers.
And it tracks new legislation, prosecutions and convictions. (See how the report is compiled using 2010 figures)
Tier 1 countries meet the minimum standards laid down in the TVPA but it does not also mean the country does not have trafficking issues or that it cannot improve beyond the minimum.
Tier 2 countries don't fully comply with the minimum standards but are often seen as making significant progress.
Tier 2 Watch countries have fallen short of the legislation's minimum standards despite making "significant efforts." It includes countries with high numbers of victims of severe forms of human trafficking.
Tier 3 countries do not appear to be trying to reach the minimum standard - and they could face limited U.S. sanctions.
The report also honors as heroes 10 people around the world who are trying to stamp out human trafficking.
They include Amela Efendic, who works with trafficking victims in Bosnia-Herzegovina; Charimaya Tamang, a former sex slave who now runs an anti-trafficking organization in Nepal; and Dilcya Garcia, who has pioneered human trafficking prosecutions in Mexico. |
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| Posted 6/27/2011 at 3:17 PM by Aaron S (AaronSmith) | |
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It didn't post the image.... http://thecnnfreedomproject.blogs.cnn.com/2011/06/27/slavery-report-names-weak-link-nations/ |
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| Posted 6/28/2011 at 11:59 AM by Carolyn D (Carolyn) | |
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Thanks for letting us know about this report, Aaron! Human trafficking is also a major domestic issue in the United States. Here in Michigan, more girls are commercially sexually exploited in one month (141) than there are women and girls under age 25 who were killed in car accidents in one year (106). |
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| Posted 6/28/2011 at 2:51 PM by Jasmin M (jmaurer) | |
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It's great that a report like this exists, but I rather dislike how much the emphasis is on this being a foreign problem, when like Carolyn states, it's not. They also fail to define human trafficking, which I find unfortunate.
But it is still important to get reports like this out so that we can have a better picture of what is happening. Our domestic problems do not mean that it also doesn't exist elsewhere. |
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| Posted 6/29/2011 at 7:10 AM by Camila F (CamilaFMarquez) | |
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| Thanks for this info Aaron. As the ladies above me mentioned, Jasmin and Carolyn, there are thousands of trafficking cases that occur here in the States. In regards to child trafficking in particular, Love 146 has a great list of resources if you go here |
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