
| Time for ‘war’ on human trafficking |
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| Sunday, 24 June 2012 01:05 |
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-- USA fingers Jamaica, Guyana and Trinidad THREE leading member countries of the Caribbean Community -- Jamaica, Guyana and Trinidad and Tobago -- are among nations criticised by the United States of America for failing to be more forthcoming in arresting the grave problems associated with the crime of human trafficking. It may be ironical that such an accusation, or rebuke, as detailed in the U.S. State Department’s 12th and latest annual report on ‘trafficking in persons (TIP)’ comes from the world’s sole superpower. There, in the USA, as data reveals, thousands of foreign women and children, of varying ethnicities, ages and nationalities -- among them from this region as well -- continue to be exploited as slaves for sex and drug-related crimes, and forced to exist in fear and degradation. But this reality of human trafficking -- a curse far worse than drug trafficking, and of which the USA is still viewed as the world’s leading consumer -- should in no way be used to either excuse or rationalise the evident shortcomings by governments of the Caribbean to intelligently, aggressively and methodically deal with the crime of human trafficking. It is a horrible reminder of the dark period of slavery. Since passage by the USA of the Trafficking Victims Protection Act of 2000, successive administrations in Washington have been consistently unearthing and exposing crimes in trafficking in persons, and using an assessment system to remind governments of their shortcomings in combating this dehumanising problem. An often controversial category would be that of ‘Tier-2’, used by the U.S. State Department to expose non-compliance by governments in effectively arresting the scourge of human trafficking. Non-compliance category Denial mode? |
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Time for ‘war’ on human trafficking

