As
required by the Trafficking Victims Protection Act of 2000
(TVPA), the U.S. Department of State has released today
and submitted to Congress its 2007 report on foreign governments'
efforts to eliminate severe forms of trafficking in persons.
The Trafficking in Persons Report 2007
(TIP), the seventh annual TIP Report, is intended to raise
global awareness, to highlight efforts of the international
community, and to encourage foreign governments to take
effective actions to counter all forms of trafficking in
persons. The report is prepared using information from U.S.
embassies, foreign government officials, NGOs and international
organizations, published reports, research trips to every
region, and information submitted to tipreport@state.gov.
This email address was established for NGOs and individuals
to share information on government progress in addressing
trafficking. U.S. diplomatic posts reported on the trafficking
situation and governmental action based on thorough research,
including meetings with a wide variety of government officials,
local and international NGO representatives, officials of
international organizations, journalists, academics, and
survivors.
This year's TIP intends
to call the world's attention to the existence of modern-day
slavery, and the desperate need to eliminate it the same
way the world ended the African slave trade more than a
century ago.
Human trafficking plagues every country
including the United States.
The Report covers 164 countries and territories,
together comprising 85 percent of the world. It ranks 151
countries and territories where some 100 cases of human
trafficking or more have been identified. It spells out
what countries are doing on prosecution, protection, and
prevention, and what more we can do together on all three
fronts.
Tier Placement
The Department places each country included
on the 2007 TIP Report into one of the three lists, described
as tiers. This placement is based more on the extent of
government action to combat trafficking, rather than the
size of the problem, important though that is. The Department
first evaluates whether the government fully complies with
the TVPA's minimum standards for the elimination of trafficking.
Governments that do fully comply are placed in Tier 1. For
other governments, the Department considers whether they
are making significant efforts to bring themselves into
compliance. Governments that are making significant efforts
to meet the minimum standards are placed in Tier 2. Governments
that do not fully comply with the minimum standards and
are not making significant efforts to do so are placed in
Tier 3. Governments of countries in Tier 3 may be subject
to certain sanctions. The U.S. Government may withhold non-humanitarian,
non-trade-related foreign assistance. Countries that receive
no such assistance would be subject to withholding of funding
for participation by officials and employees of such governments
in educational and cultural exchange programs. (See Introduction
- Methodology.)
Regardless of tier placement, every country
can do more, including the United States. No country placement
is permanent. All countries must maintain and increase efforts
to combat trafficking.
"Trafficking in persons is
a modern-day form of slavery, a new type of global slave
trade. Perpetrators prey on the most weak among us, primarily
women and children, for profit and gain. They lure victims
into involuntary servitude and sexual slavery. Today we
are again called by conscience to end the debasement of
our fellow men and women. As in the 19th century, committed
abolitionists around the world have come together in a
global movement to confront this repulsive crime. President
George W. Bush has committed the United States Government
to lead in combating this serious 21st century challenge,
and all nations that are resolved to end human trafficking
have a strong partner in the United States."
- Condoleezza Rice, Secretary
of State
Related articles and material:
- Secretary Rice's Remarks on Release of Trafficking in Persons
Report
- New U.S. Anti-Trafficking
Chief Emphasizes Partnerships
- State Department Offers Film
Program on Trafficking in Persons
- Argentine Woman Fights Trafficking
with Indomitable Hope
- Heroes Acting To End Modern-Day
Slavery
- Secretary Rice' Letter on Release of
Trafficking in Persons Report
- Introduction to State Department’s 2007 Trafficking in Persons Report
Following is an on-the record press briefing
by Ambassador Mark P. Lagon on the release of the 2007 Trafficking
in Persons Report:
Ambassador Mark P. Lagon |
|
|
Ambassador Mark P. Lagon, Senior Advisor
on Trafficking in Persons
On-The-Record Briefing: Release of the 2007 Trafficking in
Persons Report
Washington, DC
June 12, 2007
2007 Trafficking in Persons Report (10:13
a.m. EDT)
AMBASSADOR LAGON: It's a pleasure to be
here. Thank you, Secretary Rice, and good morning. I'd like
to offer an overview of what's in the report and then after
a few minutes, welcome your questions. It's an honor to
succeed Ambassador John Miller as director of an extraordinary
office dedicated to ending a deeply dehumanizing form of
exploitation. Human trafficking or trafficking in persons
is modern-day slavery.
At the heart of U.S. efforts to end human
trafficking is a commitment to human dignity. Every day,
all over the world, people are coerced into bonded labor,
bought and sold in prostitution, exploited in domestic servitude,
enslaved in agricultural work and in factories, and captured
to serve unlawfully as child soldiers. Estimates of the
number vary widely. According to U.S. Government estimates,
approximately 800,000 people are trafficked across international
borders each year and about 80 percent of them are female.
Up to half are minors.
And these figures do not include millions
who are trafficked into labor and sexual slavery within
national borders. Stomach-wrenching individual stories,
however, tell more than the aggregate numbers and these
are the people who motivate everyone active in the movement
to abolish human trafficking.
Let me tell you about one victim. At age
22, Ko Maung left Burma with his new bride to find work
in a neighboring country. He took a job on a fishing boat
for two years because he was promised good money, $70 per
month. But that boat stayed at sea for three years and the
workers were fed only fish and rice. Not getting enough
vitamins, they began to starve. They were denied medical
care or passage home. The good job turned out to be a floating
death camp. One by one, the men began to perish, including
Ko Maung. His body was dumped overboard. So were the exhausted,
malnourished bodies of 29 other modern-day slaves.
60 fishermen who survived weren't paid
at all. Police refused to prosecute the employer since there
are no bodies to prove a crime. In a climate of official
indifference with forced labor violations typically not
criminalized, desperate, migrant laborers are especially
vulnerable to forced fraud and coercion, the fundamental
markers of human trafficking. This seventh annual Trafficking
In Persons report is dedicated to Ko Maung and to his grieving
family.
The structure of the report and the purpose
are focused largely on drawing the world's attention on
the existence of modern-day slavery and the desperate need
to eliminate it in the same way that the world ended the
African slave trade more than a century ago. Human trafficking
plagues every country in one way or another, including the
United States. The report covers 164 countries and territories,
comprising some 85 percent of the world. It ranks 151 countries
and territories where there have been some 100 cases of
human trafficking that were documented. It spells out what
countries are doing on prosecution, prevention and protection
and what more can be done together between the United States
and other countries on all three fronts.
The U.S. Government is committed to taking
action in cooperation with other nations. The process of
diplomatic engagement bilaterally to mitigate the problems
documented in the report goes on throughout the year, not
just in this season that I'm talking to you now. Our sources
of information for this report include U.S. Embassies, NGOs
worldwide, brave activists fighting human trafficking, foreign
law enforcement officers and staff visits. Extensive analysis
based on criteria laid out by Congress in the law goes into
the assignment of countries into Tier 1, Tier 2, Tier 2
Watch List and Tier 3.
A country falls into Tier 3 if its government
is not making a significant effort to combat human trafficking.
A Tier 3 country can be sanctioned if it doesn't take seriously
antislavery action in the next 90 days. Sadly, this year
the list of countries on Tier 3 has grown to -- due to a
lack of effort by these governments to combat this serious
transnational crime. There are a total of 16 countries on
Tier 3, seven of which dropped down to Tier 3 this year:
Algeria, Bahrain, Equatorial Guinea, Kuwait, Malaysia, Oman
and Qatar.
It's especially disappointing that so many
wealthy countries in the Near East that aren't lacking adequate
resources to make significant progress are on Tier 3. For
instance, Saudi Arabia is on Tier 3 for the third year.
These are countries in that region that rely extensively
on foreign migrant laborers. Practices such as sponsorship
laws create conditions that make guest workers especially
vulnerable to trafficking in the region.
Sponsorship laws give employers extensive
personal authority over workers, allowing them to control
movement and legal status. These -- there are cases of workers
escaping abuse in private homes or work sites. They flee
to local police. But if their sponsor denies them an exit
permit to leave the country, the exploited workers are effectively
held hostage in a shelter or a police detention center,
sometimes for years. The power given to sponsors over foreign
workers should be limited and counterbalanced with rights
for workers to seek legal redress and governments in destination
countries should be more active in protecting workers.
Now 32 countries are on the Tier 2 Watch
List, the same number as last year. The Tier 2 Watch List
should be a warning. Unfortunately, too many major countries
on the Tier 2 Watch List have ignored this warning year
after year. India, Mexico, and Russia are on the Tier 2
Watch List for the fourth consecutive year. Armenia, China,
and South Africa are on Tier 2 Watch List for a third consecutive
year. For all Tier 3 and Tier 2 Watch List countries, the
United States outlines a short-term action plan through
which to spur bilateral commitment and specific steps to
improve the situation. Tier 2 Watch List is not supposed
to become a parking lot for governments lacking the will
or interest to stop exploitation and enslavement on their
soil. We stand ready to cooperate with these nations and
support any efforts they make to end this travesty within
their borders.
On a positive note, 10 governments ranked
on Tier 2 Watch List last September when the President made
final determinations on tier status moved up to Tier 2 on
this report: Bolivia, Brazil, Indonesia, Israel, Taiwan,
Peru, Jamaica, they're among these moving up to Tier 2 based
on significant new efforts. Belize moved up from Tier 3
to Tier 2 in one year. The Government of Brazil renewed
its commitment to confronting slave labor in the Amazon
with a number of new measures. The Government of Indonesia
enacted a sweeping counter-trafficking law providing protection
for all victims including migrant laborers who are fraudulently
recruited from overseas work, but fall into trafficking
as a trap.
Last week, a raid in Taiwan, a real success
story, demonstrated a welcome new attitude. Working closely
with U.S. law enforcement, Taiwan broke up a cross-border
trafficking ring, arresting 12 people suspected of trafficking
women to the United States and other countries where they
were exploited in prostitution and pornography. Countries
that have established credentials in good governments and
rule of law are more likely to move quickly in protecting
victims of trafficking and handing down justice to exploiters.
For example, while China resisted joining
the international community in upholding universal anti-trafficking
standards, given a lack of rule of law, Taiwan's vibrant
civil society and democratic character have helped it adopt
significant reforms over the past year. On Tier 1, three
countries appear for the first time this year: Georgia,
Hungary, and Slovenia. Georgia's performance is particularly
notable, considering it's the only Tier 1 country in a region
struggling to strengthen rule of law. Georgia has shown
an admirable political commitment to confronting human trafficking.
Its improvement includes efforts to prevent girls and women
from being lured into the global sex trade, where exploiters
turn women and girls into mere commodities with their bodies
for sale.
Young girls and unsuspecting women are
often lured or kidnapped or sold into an omnivorous sex
industry. The length between prostitution and sex trafficking
is indisputable. That's why we must move with more creativity
and commitment to deal with the demand for victims. Prostitution
is not a victimless crime. It ruins lives from Mexico to
Malta, from Tel Aviv to Tokyo, from Albany, New York to
Abuja, Nigeria. Sexual servitude is particularly grotesque
in human trafficking. The report is interspersed with stories
of survivors who have been aided by U.S. programs that demonstrate
our commitment to rescue and rehabilitate innocent victims.
Let me tell you briefly about some trends
that we see highlighted in the 2007 report. Use of debt,
first of all, as a tool of coercion and secondly, stalled
progress in strengthening rule of law. First, in both labor
and sexual exploitation, illegal or illegitimate debt is
increasingly used to keep people in servitude. This debt
is used by traffickers as an instrument of coercion. How
does this work? People are enticed into fraudulent offers
of work abroad that require a steep payment up front for
the services of a labor agency arranging the job or a payment
that goes straight to the future employer.
To pay the fee, workers often borrow money
from relatives and friends or they mortgage property. Sometimes,
additional debt is added at the place of employment: inflated
fees for supposed costs of room and board or equipment.
Sometimes, new, unexpected transportation fees are added.
The debt becomes exorbitant on purpose, yet workers are
trapped into trying to pay it off for years. This debt is
as effective as overt force in keeping them in bondage,
yet it's invisible and often overlooked by criminal investigators.
In trafficking for prostitution, we're increasingly aware
of debt being used to coerce and control victims. Daily
fees charged by brothel owners for rent, food, drugs, even
condoms create an inescapable financial burden that amounts
to debt bondage, a form of human trafficking.
A second trend, second theme; the 2007
TIP report reflects our overall sense that progress on the
critical front of rule of law appears to have stalled. Democracy
and rule of law are crucial to fighting human trafficking.
And fighting trafficking conversely is crucial to the future
of democracy worldwide, since trafficking is one of the
most brutal ways to silence women, half of humankind worldwide.
This lack of progress on rule of law can be traced to official
corruption and complicity on the one hand and indifference
on the other. These passive and active factors perpetuate
abuse despite increased public awareness and despite extraordinary
bravery on the part of activists and NGOs around the world.
It hurts my heart to share with you this
very recent example that typifies the confluence of officials'
complicity in trafficking and indifference in the face of
heroism to end modern-day slavery. One of the heroes highlighted
in this year's report, Kailash Satyarthi of the Indian NGO
Bachpan Bachao Andolan or BBA, prompted the rescue of 92
Bengali children enslaved in goldsmith and jewelry factories
in India's capital city of New Delhi. The children were
forced to eat, sleep, and labor in workshops, 10 to a room.
Dangerous chemicals were used for making gold ornaments
in the same rooms that they were kept 24 hours a day. Most
of the children were under the age of 14. According to the
children, many were physically and sexually abused.
Just days after this rescue which didn't
result in any arrests in India, the factory owners, managers,
and their thugs showed up at BBA's shelter with iron rods,
sticks, and bricks. They tried to recapture the children.
Shelter staff were injured. When police finally responded,
no one was arrested. The connections and clout of these
traffickers were enough, apparently, to thwart justice.
India has the world's largest labor trafficking problem
with hundreds of thousands of sex trafficking victims and
millions of bonded laborers including forced child laborers.
In India, there is no national anti-trafficking effort,
no recognition of bonded labor on an official level, and
poor efforts against sex trafficking. The world's largest
democracy has the world's largest problem of human trafficking.
The goal of this report is not to punish.
It's to stimulate government action in concert with the
United States to end modern-day slavery and to celebrate
the heroism of those who are working to help spare victims
from pain. The report identifies anti-trafficking heroes
from around the world and commendable practices. Individuals
and local initiatives can make a difference in leading path-breaking
efforts to protect victims, increase global awareness, and
protect and prosecute criminals. On pages 38-41 of the report,
you see some of these inspirational examples, and I'd urge
you to read that part of the report carefully.
The United States is deeply committed to
fulfilling its responsibilities and to fight against trafficking
in persons within our own borders as well. We have a problem
at home which we're confronting forcefully, and we're working
to be a partner to those abroad, including through substantial
and frankly compassionate funding. In fiscal year 2006,
we contributed more than $74 million abroad, funding 154
international projects in 70 countries. Since fiscal year
2001, the United States Government has funded more than
$448 million to fight human trafficking.
This report is not just an assessment and
a judgment about nations, but a blueprint about the sorts
of things the United States can help other countries do
programmatically. Modern slavery has met with a powerful
movement, seeking its abolition in the 21st century, assuming
the mantles of William Wilberforce and Josephine Butler.
I want to thank you for your support. Thank
you for joining us here; taking the time. By broadcasting
this tragic but true story of trafficking in persons, you
help prevent a widespread crime against human dignity and
help give victims hope for escape. I welcome your questions
and I'd ask you when you ask a question, to identify yourself
and your media organization.
QUESTION: Anne Gearan from the Associated
Press. You mentioned repeat offenders, Saudi Arabia and
India, also strategic U.S. allies. Do you think those countries
regard their positions with the United States as inviolable,
and thus they don't have to take you seriously?
AMBASSADOR LAGON: They shouldn't. We make
clear in our high-level dialogues with them that this isn't
a tertiary or secondary issue. I was just speaking with
the Secretary this morning about how we talked to some of
these important partners of ours on some fronts and make
sure that we engage in them in diplomacy so that there isn't
just a burst of activity after this report comes out on
my part, but in fact a regular dialogue through the year
with those countries.
Of course, in the case of some that you
mention, the problem of trafficking in persons is part of
a larger problem of rule of law and a pattern of certain
ethnic groups and foreign workers being seen as less than
human. This is the crux of the human trafficking problem.
When someone -- a woman, a child, someone from another ethnic
group or cast -- is seen as not worthy of concern -- they're
only a foreign worker, they're only a woman -- that's a
horrifying situation. And as part of a larger effort with
these countries, we're trying to affect change.
Elise.
QUESTION: Elise Labott with CNN. Just to
follow-up on the case of India that's been on the Tier 2
Watch List for four years, could you talk about the decision
not to put India on the list this year? It's a quite extensive
description of the problem, and you yourself just detailed
horrible conditions for up to 65 million bonded laborers
in India.
AMBASSADOR LAGON: Like many countries that
are on the Tier 2 Watch List, there is a very severe problem
with human trafficking in India. The more time we spend
on this report in modesty, the more we learn about problems
of labor trafficking, of bonded labor. And in this report
we see reflected more and more detail about an endemic problem
in India. We need to engage in a very serious dialogue with
India, with them having the sense that they will be reassessed
about their tier level and how their record is changing,
like all Tier 2 Watch List countries. That includes an offer
of partnership because two serious democracies who have
a developing alliance. The relationship, the level of communication
between our two governments is such that it can stand some
serious frank talk about a problem like bonded labor or
sex trafficking. And we're going to lay out working with
them, a kind of action plan for steps forward on this before
the reassessment.
QUESTION: If I can just follow up.
AMBASSADOR LAGON: Sure.
QUESTION: Haven't you already done that
in the case of India? I mean, haven't you already had an
action plan for them and --
AMBASSADOR LAGON: We have. And what's required
is that in the context of our overall diplomacy with them,
talking about all sorts of serious issues, great power of
politics, counterterrorism, civilian nuclear cooperation
and so on, that this has to have high level emphasis as
well as a serious problem, but in modesty. You know, the
United States is not only in a position to point fingers.
We need to say we had our legacy of slavery, we had our
legacy of segregation, we had our legacy of discrimination.
Serious democracies have evolved, but we need to ramp up
that effort. With a serious sense on the part of the Indian
Government that, you know, reassessment is a distinct possibility.
QUESTION: It's not something that was a
political determination.
AMBASSADOR LAGON: No. Look, there are many
different variables that are taken into account in everything
we do at the State Department. I would be perpetuating a
fraud to say that we don't look at multiple factors in our
relationship with countries any time we take a step on a
particular issue like human trafficking. But look at the
report -- Zimbabwe, it has a situation on political opposition
being repressed and our relationship with the government
in a very critical state on other grounds. But the facts
are that through our leveraging and through our prodding
Zimbabwe has taken some tangible steps and it's actually
moved up from Tier 3 to Tier 2. So there are, you know,
efforts, very strong efforts to make an objective assessment
based on criteria laid out in the law and I played a small
part in the passage of the law in the year 2000 and so I
know a little bit about those criteria.
QUESTION: Arshad Mohammed with Reuters.
You've pointed out that a number of the new countries in
Tier 3 are relatively wealthy near eastern countries, significant
oil exporters that do not lack for resources. There are
also a number of them U.S. allies -- Kuwait, Oman, Bahrain,
Qatar, Algeria. What, to your mind, explains the fact that
these countries which were not previously in this lowest
category of not even meeting the minimal standards should
have slid down this year? And secondly, on Saudi Arabia,
it is clearly not very sensitive to the kinds of sanctions
that could be imposed in terms of the withholding of certain
U.S. assistance or withholding of U.S. support in the international
financial institutions. And given that it's been in the
lowest category for three years in a row, it's not been
too sensitive to the shame factor of being exposed through
the report.
Do you wish you had -- and I know you've
only been at this a little while, but do you wish you had
stronger statutory tools to try to influence behavior, one;
and two, can you think of anything else you can do to try
to get countries that have been serially in the lowest category
to do more?
AMBASSADOR LAGON: That's a great question.
I'd say on balance that the tools provided by the Trafficking
and Victims Protection Act and our friends on Capitol Hill
are quite good. This is a unique example of the human rights
reports that we have in different areas generally on countries,
the ones on religious freedom and so on, because the tier
ranking is much more refined. It's associated with producing
action plans for the two lowest rungs for steps that need
to be taken, potential sanctions, grace periods for nations
to take steps so that they might be either boosted up the
scale of tiers or find themselves sliding down. So on balance,
it's actually one of the more refined tools that's been
given to us in terms of sanctions and reports.
In fact, now for the third time the legislation
is going to be reauthorized this year, and I think Capitol
Hill will think about refinements, you know, of such things,
including, you know, how long states can stay on the Tier
Two Watch List among other things.
As far as the region, what we found as
a general pattern in this report is an endemic problem of
the way foreign workers are treated in the Persian Gulf,
in Middle Eastern states. There is a recruitment pattern
of people, unsuspecting people who are offered jobs as secretaries,
as maids; they end up being sex slaves or put into domestic
servitude in an involuntary way. That's seen throughout
the region and it seems to be an increasingly acute problem.
Sir.
QUESTION: Yes. Charlie Wolfson from CBS.
You mentioned the figure of 800,000 worldwide as an estimate.
Do you have an estimate of the number of people trafficked
across the U.S. border?
AMBASSADOR LAGON: Well, an estimate that
we work off is approximately 14,500 to 17,500 per year.
I'll say something about statistics. We wish we had better
statistics. It would be helpful to know how much of a dent
in the problem we're making. But I do think that with the
resources that we have to fight the traffickers, to help
the victims, we want to make sure that we don't spend a
great deal of money on the statistical study when some of
those resources could be used to build a victims shelter
or to train law enforcement officers in other countries
or figure out how to prevent officials in other countries
from deciding to get their palms greased in corruption and
allow trafficking to occur.
QUESTION: Hi. I'm Libby Leist from NBC.
I wanted to ask about Iraq and can you talk a little bit
about why it's designated a special case? And also how concerned
are you about forced labor inside that country, including
at facilities run by the U.S. or projects being built by
the United States?
AMBASSADOR LAGON: A serious question and
one that we're very seized with. I mean, there are a number
of cases in the report that are designated as special cases.
They tend to be either a case in which the requisite number
of cases of trafficking, 100 cases, haven't been easy to
document. And so the government in question isn't rated
or it's a case of a government that is facing enormous turbulence,
like Liberia last year, Haiti at times. And you know, let's
speak the truth about Iraq, there is a very turbulent situation
with strife among ethnic groups and caused by terrorists.
While we're pleased that democratic elections have taken
place and that rule of law is being slowly rooted into place,
you know, it's the conclusion of the U.S. Government that
it's -- you know, it should be a special case in terms of
rating it. We however are very serious about talking about
the problem of trafficking in Iraq.
In a situation in which there is a conflict,
open-armed conflict, this is a place where people can be
vulnerable. And so when you talk about the actual possibility
of trafficking in persons, I'd like to say that, you know,
my office has a role I think vested in it by Congress of
being a kind of conscience in the U.S. Government about
trafficking in persons so that we don't look aside when
we have strategic purposes and not look at trafficking in
persons.
There were media reports in October of
2005 about questionable labor practices by defense subcontractors.
There appeared to be cases of foreign workers who had their
passports withheld and were not getting the kind of pay
that they'd been promised quickly in February of 2006. And
the Defense Department did a study on the ground -- inspector
general study -- and shortly thereafter in May 2006 rules
were put in place so that only licensed recruiting companies
could be used by subcontractors, passports couldn't be taken
away and that all workers would be given a signed contract
in their own native language and in English.
More recently, there have been allegations
about a Kuwaiti company involved in the construction site
of the U.S. Embassy in Baghdad. Our office received a number
of credible reports in late 2006 and we insisted on the
State Department launching through its Office of the Inspector
General an examination of this. And we didn't -- rightly
didn't play a part in the writing of that report since the
Inspector General is independent. With the help of Defense
Department investigators, they've looked into indicators
of trafficking, we will continue at the office I lead to
ask questions about that.
QUESTION: Is that OIG report --
AMBASSADOR LAGON: I'm sorry.
QUESTION: Is that OIG report public?
AMBASSADOR LAGON: It is. Yeah, it's on
the website.
Sir.
QUESTION: Lambros Papantoniou, Greek correspondent.
Ambassador Lagon, what Greece and Cyprus should be done
ready to transfer to Watch List number 1 like the United
Kingdom, Poland, Czech Republic, Georgia, Canada, Australia
and some other countries of your choice?
AMBASSADOR LAGON: I'm sorry. What?
QUESTION: What Greece and Cyprus should
be done to transfer from the list, number two to one?
AMBASSADOR LAGON: What needs to be done?
QUESTION: Mm-hmm.
AMBASSADOR LAGON: The -- in the cases of
Greece and Cyprus, they're clearly governments that have
substantial rule of law and substantial resources, unlike
developing countries. And we intend to continue working
with both of them on how to move forward.
As far as Greece goes, its anti-trafficking
laws are adequate, but it's -- in particular, its identification
of victims of trafficking are rather weak. Shelters are
underused. So what we need to do is work on going further
and helping Greece actually hold traffickers to account
and convict them, and to more systematically identify victims
because what we found here at home is that having a victim-centered
approach -- so that people are not treated like illegal
aliens or criminals, but in fact victims with rights --
as essential.
As far as Cyprus goes, again, there's a
pretty strong case that there's capacity on the part of
the Government of Cyprus. But there is a big problem of
Cyprus being a destination for sex trafficking of Eastern
European women. There is a tilt in the anti-trafficking
law towards -- focused on sex trafficking but not on death
bondage. One thing in the sex trafficking area that would
be very helpful is if Cyprus abolished the so-called artiste
visa where people come, lured into being dancers -- exotic
dancers and you know what that ends up being.
QUESTION: In which category you are placing
the United States of America since you told us earlier that
is included in this process?
AMBASSADOR LAGON: The United States of
America is not perfect, and we haven't assigned it a tier
rating. But unlike some other human rights reports, it's
actually addressed here. You'll find a summary of the U.S.
record along the same lines of what it's doing on protecting
victims, preventing trafficking through public awareness
and prosecution. Also, annually, the Department of Justice
puts out a report on everything that's being done by the
United States Government on trafficking in persons. And
we in our office try and make sure that the world sees that
report.
It is very important that the United States
be seen as a partner and that we have a problem at home.
We are not just standing with our arms folded, judging others,
because this is a transnational problem. There's serious
trafficking in persons into the United States from East
Asia, from Latin America, from Europe, and there's trafficking
within the United States. And we're ready to be judged because
we offer our hand as a partner to try and solve this problem
of modern-day slavery.
MODERATOR: Okay, this will be the last
question.
AMBASSADOR LAGON: Okay.
QUESTION: Kirit Radia with ABC News. I
had a question about Syria, to follow up on the Iraq question
that Libby asked. Your report talks about sexual exploitation
of Iraqis in Syria. How many of those does your office believe
are refugees?
AMBASSADOR LAGON: I don't know off the
top of my head what the number is. I could get back to you
on that. We take seriously the problem of Iraqi refugees
and the vulnerability that they have. That's one of the
reasons why Under Secretary Dobriansky has led an effort
and -- Department of State to deal with Iraqi refugees in
concert with the UN High Commissioner for Refugees. But
it is indeed possible that those who have fled from Iraq
are vulnerable, and it's the responsibility of not just
the United States but the international community to deal
with that in Syria. The problem in Syria though is that
you have some of these endemic issues of how foreign workers
are treated and mistreated, plus a particularly closed and
insensitive government.
After this session, let me say that Mark
Taylor, who heads the section of our office that prepares
this report, and Eleanor Gaetan, who is our Senior Coordinator
for Public Affairs, will be on hand to provide background
on the report; the level of detail if you want to go into
it further afterward. And I'd welcome hearing from you over
the next few days and weeks because I'm here to help promote
public awareness, not just engage in diplomacy.
Thank you for taking the time with me.
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