US demotes Thailand and Qatar for abysmal human trafficking records
Corruption impedes progress in Thailand, and workers die in both because of conditions, says US state department's report
The Guardian |
The US has signalled its mounting concern over modern-day slavery in Thailand and Qatar after it downgraded both countries on its human trafficking watchlist following revelations of appalling maltreatment of migrant workers.
Thailand was relegated to the lowest rank in the state department's Trafficking in Persons (TiP) report
– meaning it is now considered no better than North Korea, Iran or
Saudi Arabia in the way it treats workers and protects them from abuse.
Qatar was demoted to a watchlist one rung above, and will join Thailand
if it doesn't improve its record in the coming years. Malaysia was also
downgraded.
The American censure comes amid widespread criticism of Thailand and Qatar, following two Guardian investigations that exposed repugnant conditions of slavery in both countries.
"There
cannot be impunity for those who traffic in human beings," said John
Kerry, the US secretary of state. "It must end." Slavery, he said, "rips
and tears at the fabric of the rule of the law".
He added that consumers should also bear some responsibility for
combating the trafficking business, estimated to be worth £100bn a year.
"It is for each of us to make sure the goods we buy are free from
forced labour."
The leading state department official for
combating trafficking added that Guardian investigations exposing
slavery in Thailand and Qatar had helped keep the spotlight on abuse in
the run-up to yesterday's downgrade.
"The recent investigations
[focusing on slavery and trafficking issues] in Thailand were fortuitous
in their timing because, as we were doing our diplomatic job, these
pieces of work have created a conversation around serious issues of
trafficking in global fisheries," said Luis CdeBaca.
"Over the
past year we have seen the Guardian, as well as the ITUC [International
Trade Union Confederation], Amnesty and Human Rights Watch all shed
light on the vulnerability of hundreds of thousands of migrant workers
in Qatar. In Qatar we see a dramatic reliance on foreign labour – yet,
even though there are legal structures in place to protect [migrant
workers], these seem to exist largely on paper."
In Thailand, the
Guardian investigation found that slaves forced to work on Thai fishing
boats are integral to the production of prawns sold in the UK, US and
EU. In Qatar, an undercover Guardian investigation exposed severe labour
abuses in a country where migrant workers are tethered to a single
employer, often denied pay for months at a time – and even refused the
right to leave the country.
In both countries, workers die because of the way they are treated.
Kerry
called for blunter language to describe the problem estimated to face
20 million people worldwide. "It is not 'a form of slavery', it is
'slavery'," he said.
The TiP report is considered the benchmark
index for global anti-trafficking efforts, as it ranks 188 nations
according to their willingness and efforts to combat trafficking and
slavery. However critics argue that it is coloured by US interests.
Thailand's
relegation to tier 3 of the list is an automatic downgrade after four
years on the tier 2 watchlist, where it was repeatedly warned to make
significant improvements to its anti-trafficking law enforcement,
protect trafficked victims and punish perpetrators.
The downgrade
could cause diplomatic tensions between the two strategic political and
trade partners, and could result in economic sanctions and loss of
development aid for Thailand, which may also find itself blacklisted by
companies no longer wishing to do business with a "pariah" government.
The
report cites corruption "at all levels" as impeding significant
progress and claims that anti-trafficking law enforcement remains
insufficient compared with the overall scale of trafficking and slavery.
It also states that, despite frequent media and NGO reports detailing
instances of trafficking and slavery in sectors such as the fishing
industry, the government "systematically failed" to investigate,
prosecute or convict boat owners and captains, or officials complicit in
the crimes.
In a statement the Thai government said it disagreed
with the state department's decision but would continue to fight against
trafficking. "In 2013, Thailand made significant advances in prevention
and suppression of human trafficking along the same lines as the state
department's standards," it said. "While the latest TiP report did not
recognise our vigorous, government-wide efforts that yielded
unprecedented progress and concrete results, Thailand remains committed
to combating human trafficking."
The US downgraded Qatar to the
tier 2 watchlist after the state department concluded it had not
demonstrated sufficient willingness to address its human trafficking
problems. The report said that, despite detailed anti-trafficking
legislation and labour laws, Qatar remained a destination country for
men and women subjected to forced labour and forced prostitution, and
that "many" of its 1.2 million migrant workers faced conditions of
modern slavery when they arrived to work there.
In its analysis
the state department criticised Qatar's exploitative sponsorship system,
the arrest and detention of victims of trafficking and the failure to
implement anti-trafficking laws and protect migrant workers from
exploitation and abuse. It also highlighted the denial by government
officials that human trafficking exists in Qatar at all.
Qatar has
since made promises of reform, but workers there say little has
changed. The Qatari government did not respond to a request for comment.
Kerry
said he received several calls from foreign ministers complaining about
being included or downgraded in the report. He said the worst "zones of
vulnerability" were in countries where the rule of law was weak, but
insisted all countries needed to address human trafficking, including
the US. "Some of the worst abuses happen in places where you rarely
think to look … aboard fishing vessels and in processing plants," he
added.
The state department said the Guardian's investigations
were on a different timeline to their own. But CdeBaca added: "We
appreciate good reporting when we see it, and we feel the fight against
human trafficking needs government reporting and civil society
reporting, but it also takes dedicated journalists to play into the mix
and, while our decision-making processes were operating on a different
timeline, we certainly read the recent articles with interest."
Critics
argue the report has its limitations, though. "There are countries on
either side of US foreign policy whose rankings are very unlikely to
shift either up or down. Some friends of the US will never go below a
tier 2 and some countries that have a difficult relationship with the US
are equally unlikely to go above a tier 3," says Anne Gallagher, a UN
advisor and legal expert on international trafficking.
But
Gallagher concedes it does have impact. "A bad TiP report ranking is
like a bad report card, even if countries profess not to care, they
don't like it. You don't get an issue more political than trafficking."
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