Bush on human trafficking
September 28, 2004
The following is an editorial reflecting the views of the United States
Government:
Since the release in June of the U.S. State Department’s 2004 Trafficking in
Persons Report, four countries cited for not meeting minimum standards have
made steps to combat trafficking in recent months. The State Department says
that Bangladesh, Ecuador, Guyana, and Sierra Leone are increasing prosecution,
creating anti-trafficking police units, establishing legislation, and waging
public awareness campaigns to combat modern-day slavery in their respective
countries.
The steps taken by those four countries stand in contrast to the continuing
failure of other countries, namely Burma, Cuba, North Korea, Sudan, Equatorial
Guinea, and Venezuela. This month, President George W. Bush decided to impose
full or partial sanctions on those six countries for their lack of efforts to
combat the trafficking of human beings.
The latest estimates by the U.S. show that every year, some
six-hundred-thousand to eight-hundred-thousand people are trafficked across
country borders. Of those, more than seventy-percent are women and girls, the
majority of whom are forced into sexual servitude. United Nations experts say
that the trafficking of human beings is now the third largest revenue generator
for organized crime groups, behind only the illicit trade in arms and drugs.
At the U-N General Assembly, in New York City, President Bush said the U.S.
“and many nations have joined together to confront the evil trafficking in
human beings:
“We’re supporting organizations that rescue the victims, passing stronger
anti-trafficking laws, and warning travelers that they will be held to account
for supporting this modern form of slavery. Women and children should never be
exploited for pleasure or greed, anywhere on earth.”
Since 2001, the U.S. has provided more than two-hundred-ninety-five-million
dollars in support of anti-trafficking programs for more than
one-hundred-twenty countries. This support and cooperation has contributed to
the prosecution of nearly eight-thousand perpetrators of trafficking crimes
around the world.
“We’ve got a problem. We need to do something about it,” says President Bush.
“This trade in human beings brings suffering to the innocent...and we will lead
the fight against it.”
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