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| Human Trafficking Report |
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25/06/2008
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Human Trafficking Report, 1.00 MB - Download (MP3)
Human Trafficking Report, 1.00 MB
- Listen to (MP3)
The U.S. State
Department released its annual Trafficking in Persons report June 4. The report
covered a record number of countries-one-hundred-seventy-and focused
specifically on a number of vulnerable groups, including North Koreans in
China, Burmese in Thailand, stateless people, migrant workers and domestic
servants particularly in the Gulf.
According to the State Department, an estimated eight-hundred-thousand people
are trafficked across international borders annually, with eighty percent of
the victims being female and up to fifty percent being children. These figures
do not include millions who are trafficked for purposes of labor and sexual
exploitation within national borders, as well.
Since the release of the first report seven years ago, Secretary Of State
Condoleezza Rice said the fight against human trafficking has gained global
awareness. This year's report focused heavily on measuring government efforts
to punish offenders and protect victims. Unfortunately, said Dr. Rice, the
report's findings revealed a disturbing discovery related to labor trafficking:
Although more countries are addressing sex trafficking through prosecutions and
convictions, the petty tyrants who exploit their laborers rarely receive
serious punishment.
In addition to the weak prosecution of labor trafficking offenses, the report
also found weak trafficking victim protection. The report took a fresh look at
demand, both for women in commercial sexual exploitation and for forced labor
and the cheap goods it produces.
The U.S. has spent over five-hundred-twenty-eight million dollars to implement
anti-trafficking programs in one-hundred-twenty countries since 2001. Secretary
of State Rice said international cooperation is needed to confront this
injustice.
We hope this report encourages responsible nations across the globe to stand
together, to speak with one voice, and to say that freedom and security are
non-negotiable demands of human dignity.
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