Kamis 10 Jul 2014 16:57 WIB

US urges SE Asia action against human trafficking

Migrant workers unload frozen fish from a boat at a fish market in west of Bangkok, Friday, June 20, 2014. The United States has blacklisted Thailand and Malaysia for failing to meet its minimum standards in fighting human trafficking.
Foto: AP/Sakchai Lalit
Migrant workers unload frozen fish from a boat at a fish market in west of Bangkok, Friday, June 20, 2014. The United States has blacklisted Thailand and Malaysia for failing to meet its minimum standards in fighting human trafficking.

REPUBLIKA.CO.ID, WASHINGTON - The United States urged Southeast Asia's regional bloc on Tuesday to do more to combat human trafficking after two of its member states were blacklisted for failing to act decisively against exploitation of migrant laborers.

A Democratic senator also questioned whether Malaysia, one of the countries downgraded in a State Department report last month, should be excluded from a US-backed trans-Pacific trade pact currently under negotiation.

Longtime US ally Thailand was also demoted to the lowest level in the annual US rankings of governments' anti-trafficking efforts, principally over abusive practices in the Thai seafood industry. Scot Marciel, the top US diplomat for Southeast Asia, told a congressional hearing the Association of Southeast Asian Nations, or ASEAN, is slowly beginning to address human trafficking but "can and should do more."

The so-called "tier 3" rankings for Thailand and Malaysia mean they could face US sanctions. Other ASEAN members, Laos, Cambodia and Myanmar are on a watch list. Those poorer nations are a source of cheap labor for garment factories, long-haul fishing boats, plantations and households in their more prosperous neighbors.

Thailand and Malaysia are principally destination countries, and Marciel said the downgrade of two important partners in Asia indicated that the rankings were not based on political considerations.

Thailand, already facing restrictions on US security assistance after a military coup in May, had lobbied hard to avoid the blacklisting, and it has complained the US did not recognize the progress it's made. But Luis CdeBaca, US ambassador-at-large for human trafficking issues, said those efforts were almost exclusively focused on the sex industry.

"While we want that, and while we laud the people who are doing that in Thailand, the crushing numbers actually show up in forced labor," CdeBaca told a Senate panel that oversees policy toward East Asia. He said he hoped the downgrade would heighten awareness in the region of the seriousness of labor trafficking.

On the positive side of the ledger in Southeast Asia, CdeBaca said ASEAN has taken initial steps toward drafting a convention on trafficking in persons and a regional plan of action. The US also wants it to establish a secretariat on human trafficking.

sumber : AP
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