Home
/
Isiam
/
Politics & Economics
/
US trafficking report reveals 'modern slavery' toll
US trafficking report reveals 'modern slavery' toll
Aug 7, 2025 7:29 AM

  More than 42,000 adults and children were found in forced prostitution, labor, slavery or armed conflict in 2011, a US government report has found.

  Some 9,000 more victims were identified around the world than in 2010, the state department report said.

  But the number is just a fraction of the estimated 800,000 people trafficked across borders every year.

  Conflict-wracked Syria was relegated to the category of worst offenders, while seven other states came off that list.

  Syria's Middle Eastern neighbor Lebanon and Burma were among those judged to have improved their efforts to combat what the state department terms "modern-day slavery".

  Syria was identified as a transit country for Iraqi women and girls, South East Asians and East Africans being trafficked for a life of prostitution in Europe, the Trafficking in Persons (TIP) report said.

  In addition, thousands of women from several nations have been left working as forced domestic servants inside Syria as the conflict escalates.

  At least 95 Filipina women remained trapped inside the cities of Homs and Hama at the end of 2011, the International Organization for Migration said.

  Syria's government was making "no discernible effort" to identify and protect victims of trafficking, the report said, and could now be subject to US sanctions for dropping into the bottom tier.

  The report ranks each of the world's nations for their compliance with US and global anti-trafficking laws.

  Those laws are aimed at tackling a global trade in humanity that sees an estimated 20.9 million people living in modern-day slavery at any one time, according to a new estimate by the International Labor Organization.

  Much of Western Europe and North America is regarded as "Tier 1" territory - countries whose governments fully comply with minimum standards for the elimination of trafficking.

  But even top-tier nations face problems.

  The US, which faces an ongoing struggle with sex traffickers smuggling women into prostitution from Mexico and Latin America, saw government funding for anti-trafficking measures drop during 2011.

  More money was needed for victim support, the report said, along with improved data analysis and identification services and a push to help businesses understand how to avoid employing victims of trafficking.

  The report's overall emphasis on victim support and identification would be welcomed by those working in the US and overseas, one non-governmental organization said.

  "Treating victims as victims and not as criminals is important," said Bradley Myles of Polaris Project, a US-based anti-trafficking operation. "These are victims of crime with human rights and they should be protected."

  'Systematic repression'

  Seventeen nations - mainly in Asia and North and Sub-Saharan Africa - were placed in the lowest tier in the 2012 report.

  Syria's entry to that groups places it with the likes of Cuba, Iran, North Korea and Zimbabwe in clear violation of anti-trafficking laws.

  Burma climbed out of the bottom tier to a 42-nation-strong "watch list", the report said, mainly as a result of a new effort by its government to address forced labor and the conscription of child soldiers.

  Lebanon made the fight against human trafficking a national priority, the report said, passing a new law that helped it climb a peg.

  China and Russia remained on the "watch list", with the state department remarking that China continues to practice a "systematic form of repression" known as "re-education through labor".

  Most countries on the list, 93, were ranked in Tier 2 - judged to be in breach of anti-trafficking laws but making notable efforts to end those breaches.

  Among the countries promoted to Tier 1, Nicaragua made its first appearance, one that US anti-trafficking chief Luis CdeBaca said was evidence of a positive anti-trafficking trend in Latin America.

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
Politics & Economics
Syria war: 'Worst man-made disaster since World War II'
  Six years to the day since protesters poured into the streets of Daraa, Damascus and Aleppo in a "day of rage" against the rule of Bashar al-Assad, Syria's uprising turned global war is far from over.   Six years of violence have killed close to half a million people, according to...
UN: 2m children displaced by South Sudan conflict
  The civil war in South Sudan has forced more than two million children to flee their homes, according to two UN agencies.   Children make up 62 percent of the more than 1.8 million South Sudanese refugees who have arrived mainly in Uganda, Kenya, Ethiopia and Sudan, say the UN children's...
'10 attacks a day' against refugees, shelters in 2016
  More than 2,500 refugees in Germany were attacked last year, according to a report by the interior ministry, raising fears over the safety of those who have fled war and persecution.   In a statement on Sunday, the interior minister citing police figures said that Germany recorded more than 3,500 attacks...
Palestinian women lead resistance in Budrus
  When Israeli military jeeps approached the village of Budrus last month, every resident was notified within minutes.   Through the speakers of the village's mosque, a warning was issued: Israeli forces had entered the area and were preparing to demolish a house.   Men, women and children rushed towards the site of...
Militia attacks displace 1M people in DR Congo: UN
  Militia attacks in Democratic Republic of Congo have left hundreds of thousands in desperate need of humanitarian aid, according to local officials and the United Nations.   Some 731,000 people in the country’s Kasai region, mostly women and children, have been displaced by militiamen who attack police and civilians alike, said...
UN: Mediterranean refugee deaths in 2017 top 1,000
  Some 23 refugees are feared to have drowned in the Mediterranean Sea last weekend, bringing the Mediterranean death toll this year to 1,089, the UN said Tuesday.   "43,204 migrants and refugees entered Europe by sea in 2017 through 23 April, over 80 percent arriving in Italy and the rest in...
In west Mosul, 'nowhere is safe for civilians'
  The Iraqi army on Sunday resumed operations in Mosul after a one-day pause, amid growing concerns over an escalating civilian death toll as fierce fighting reaches the city's most densely populated areas.   The offensive was briefly put on hold after local officials and residents in west Mosul said suspected US-led...
Famine declared in part of South Sudan's Unity state
  Famine has been declared in two counties of South Sudan, according to an announcement by the South Sudan government and three UN agencies, which says the calamity is the result of prolonged civil war and an entrenched economic crisis that has devastated the war-torn East African nation.   The official classification...
UNICEF: 22M children could die without urgent aid
  At least 22 million children across four conflict-ridden countries are at risk of death as a result of sickness and famine unless urgent action is taken to address the problem, UNICEF said on Tuesday, urging a 50 percent aid budget boost for those countries.   In a statement, the United Nations...
Israel-Europe gas deal sparks criticism
  An Israel-Europe gas pipeline deal aimed at turning Israel into a major energy exporter in the Mediterranean has come under criticism from Palestinians, particularly as the besieged Gaza Strip continues to suffer from a crippling power crisis.   "The pipeline agreement between Israel, Italy, Cyprus and Greece will not only benefit...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2025 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved