21
June 2013
By Kevin Ponniah and Sen David
Cambodia’s
efforts to combat human trafficking have worsened, the US State Department said
yesterday, with its most recent annual trafficking report downgrading the
Kingdom for the first time since 2009.
The
report, released by US Secretary of State John Kerry, slams the government for
failing to make progress in holding human traffickers and child sex tourists to
account, and alleges cover-ups by senior government officials.
It
points to “inadequate prosecutions and sentences” and weak efforts to identify
and protect victims, as well as “endemic corruption”, as reasons for the
lowered ranking.
“The
government did not make efforts to address trafficking-related corruption
during the year, and complicity of government officials contributed to a
climate of impunity for trafficking offenders and a denial of justice to
victims,” it says.
Minister
of Information Khieu Kanharith rejected the report’s findings yesterday.
“Cambodia
is not behind on human trafficking, as we have been accused, because we know
that it is a crime that the government cannot risk ignoring… and this is a job
we work on every day,” he said.
The
2013 Trafficking in Persons (TIP) report placed Cambodia on its Tier 2 Watch
List – a sub-level ranking that indicates a lack of evidence to prove the
government has taken the anti-trafficking measures required for Tier 2 status.
A
Tier 2 ranking, however, only means that governments are “making significant
efforts” to comply with minimum anti-trafficking standards.
Cambodia
had been ranked as a Tier 2 nation for the past three years, and the downgrade
comes as the number of prosecuted traffickers more than halved to just 50
people in this reporting period, resulting in 44 convictions.
Opposition
MP Mu Sochua said she supported the Kingdom’s downgrade.
“I
wasn’t happy with [last year’s ranking], I think the US wanted to give the
government a grace period, and I’m glad this year there is more of a warning.
There is much to be done,” she said.
However
Steve Morrish, executive director of anti-trafficking NGO SISHA, disagreed with
the report’s assessment.
“I
think [authorities] are trying very hard to improve the situation and I know
that cooperation between the national police and the courts from SISHA’s
perspective has been very, very good,” he said.
“I
think that Cambodia has come a long way in the last couple of years and is
doing a lot better than before … There is more willingness from police to work
on exploitation and trafficking crimes.”
He
added that declining prosecution figures could have a myriad of explanations
beyond a waning commitment from authorities, such as a decline in traffickers
or an indication that traffickers had adopted more sophisticated methods to
evade better policing.
Systemic
corruption has stymied anti-trafficking efforts at all levels, the report
notes, with some labour recruitment firms reportedly having financial
connections with senior government officials – though no evidence is given.
Sochua
pointed to the large nightclubs, spas and massage parlours in Phnom Penh that
act as fronts for brothels.
“Don’t
tell me these are just clubs. Behind every club of that size there is an
official behind, police or military . . . They cannot open without the
blessing, the support and the protection of high-ranking officials,” she said.
“I
think the report is correct. I think the level of poverty, the level of
corruption and the level of impunity all creates a safe haven for trafficking.”
In
December 2011, Eam Rattana, the former Phnom Penh anti-human trafficking and
juvenile protection chief was sentenced in absentia to seven years in prison
for complicity in an illegal prostitution ring.
He
escaped the charges and is said to remain at-large.
The
TIP report also cites the plight of Cambodian domestic workers in the region,
particularly those left stranded in Malaysia after the government placed a ban
on maids traveling there in 2011 amid reports of abuse.
Moeun
Tola, labour program head at the Community Legal Education Center, said many
parents are still missing daughters who lost contact after their contracts were
allowed to be extended without family approval.
“The
problem is that there is no clear governance and no strong measures from the
government to close those companies so the companies are just careless,” he
said.
Cambodia
plans to send up to 400 maids to Singapore later this year under a pilot scheme
after training, and if their safety can be assured, according to the Ministry
of Labour, who could not be reached for comment yesterday.
Chiv
Pally, deputy director at the anti-human trafficking and juvenile protection
department, denied the report’s accusations.
He
pointed to the recent arrest of Taiwanese national Lin Yu Shin, 53, who was arrested
in Siem Reap on charges of trafficking Cambodians onto fishing trawlers off the
coast of Africa, as evidence of government action.
Lin’s
company – Giant Ocean International Fishery – is estimated by CLEC to have
trafficked some 1,000 Cambodians over the past few years who were lured with
the promise of lucrative jobs.
Last
month anti-trafficking NGOs including the International Organization for
Migration told the Post that the number of Cambodian men being trafficked to
work on Thai fishing vessels had exponentially increased this year.
Just
yesterday, six Cambodians who were rescued after being trafficked to work as
fishermen and plantations workers in Malaysia and Thailand were repatriated,
with 10 other rescued workers waiting to return.
According
to Tola, however, Cambodian labourers wanting to work abroad are caught in a
double-bind as even when they go through legal channels, they face
exploitation.
“It’s
a good step to arrest the Giant Ocean owner…but there are other agencies that
are recruiting people and sending them to Thailand, Malaysia and other
countries and putting them into slavery-like working conditions,” he said.
Thailand
was placed on the Tier 2 watch list for the fourth consecutive year and would
have been relegated to Tier 3 had it not again been granted a waiver in
exchange for unveiling plans that could meet anti-trafficking standards if
implemented.
PPP

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