U.S. puts Singapore, Thailand on human trafficking watch list

THE United States today put allies Singapore and Thailand as well as Vietnam on a human trafficking watch list, accusing them of failing to prevent women from being forced into prostitution.

The move opens the way for the United States to cut off some civilian assistance, although it usually functions as a symbolic means to pressure countries to take action.

In an annual report, the State Department added a growing number of Asian nations to its watch list – Afghanistan, Brunei, Laos, Maldives, Singapore, Thailand and Vietnam.

Bangladesh, China, India, Micronesia, the Philippines and Sri Lanka remained on the list, unchanged from a year earlier.

The State Department recognized improvements in Malaysia and Fiji, keeping them on the list but removing them from the lowest category of countries that do not even meet the minimum standards on human trafficking.

North Korea, Burma and Papua New Guinea remained at that bottom level.

Taiwan was upgraded and listed as fully compliant in efforts against human trafficking. Australia, New Zealand and South Korea were also listed as fully compliant.

Explaining the downgrade for Singapore, the report said that some women from China, the Philippines and Thailand are tricked into coming to the city-state with promises of legitimate employment and coerced into the sex trade.

The report said that while Singapore launched “some significant new steps” to fight forced labor, there were no “quantifiable indicators” that the government was identifying more victims or prosecuting more culprits.

The State Department said that Thailand was a source, destination and transit point for trafficking, with ethnic minorities and citizens of neighboring countries at particular risk of sexual abuse or forced labor.

Be the first to comment

Leave a Reply