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US criticised over top anti-trafficking ranking despite failings

Thomson Reuters Foundation

The United States has undermined its credibility in the global drive to end human trafficking by giving itself top marks in its annual report on the crime despite dwindling prosecutions and protection for foreign victims, advocates said on Monday.

Since 2000, the US State Department’s Trafficking in Persons report has sorted countries into four tiers based on how well the office perceives they are tackling the problem.

US immigrants Texas

At sunrise, immigrants are escorted to a tent that serves a dining hall for the US Government’s newest holding centre for migrant children in Carrizo Springs, Texas, US, on 9th July, 2019. The Department of Health and Human Services, which holds immigrant children unaccompanied by a parent under federal law, says about 225 children are currently held at a former “man camp” for oilfield workers. PICTURE: Eric Gay/Pool via Reuters/File photo.

The United States was again ranked Tier 1 this year and the report highlighted a rise in investigations, more funding for victims services, and blocking imports made by forced labour.

Yet the country also secured fewer prosecutions, issued fewer visas for victims, and had not done enough to evaluate vulnerable groups for trafficking red flags, the report said.

Several anti-trafficking organisations questioned how the United States could maintain the top ranking despite having acknowledged a decline in prosecutions and victim protection – two of three key factors upon which countries are assessed.

“When the United States upgrades undeserving countries and fails to honestly assess its own shortcomings, it loses credibility and the ability to persuade other countries to do better,” the foundation Humanity United said in a statement.

Non-profits Migration that Works, the Alliance To End Slavery and Trafficking and the Human Trafficking Legal Center all published similar statements questioning the US ranking.

The State Department did not respond to a request for comment in time for publication.

Several leading anti-trafficking groups skipped a White House event on the topic in January led by advisor Ivanka Trump amid criticism that President Donald Trump’s immigration policies enabled the crime and harmed victims.

The backlog of pending applications for visas for victims and their families has grown since Trump took office in 2017, with applicants often waiting at least two years for a response.

Last year the United States approved the lowest number of the T-visas – 991 – since 2010, according to government data.

A Reuters investigation in 2015 found that TIP report experts had been overruled by senior diplomats and pressured into inflating assessments of strategically important countries.

In this year’s report – which was published last week and warned of the impact of the coronavirus pandemic – 22 countries were upgraded including Bangladesh, Iraq and Saudi Arabia, while Afghanistan, Ireland and Pakistan were among the 23 downgraded. 

The Solidarity Center, an advocacy group, said the Trump administration had put an emphasis on sex trafficking ahead of forced labour – bucking the trend of many anti-trafficking actors – and that this was reflected in the TIP report’s introduction.

“We may be going backwards a little bit in terms of the importance of also focusing on forced labour,” said Neha Misra, migration and human trafficking senior specialist for the group.

An estimated 20 million people globally are victims of forced labour while 4.8 million are being trafficked for sex, according to the Walk Free Foundation. The rights group estimates there are 400,000 modern slaves in the United States.

 

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