March 8, 2014
Cambodia has provided examples of “best practices” in the fight against human trafficking for a forthcoming Asean convention against the trafficking of people, experts said Friday at the close of a two-day conference in Phnom Penh on irregular migration and human trafficking.
The Asean region is one of the world’s top destinations and origins
of trafficked persons, and a total of 959 cases of human trafficking
were reported in 2012 in Cambodia alone, with 364 in Burma, 883 in
Vietnam, 594 in Thailand and 193 in Laos, said Annette Lyth, regional project manager of the U.N. Inter-Agency Project on Human Trafficking (UNIAP).
“These are the reported cases… most cases are not reported and there
are no reliable estimates,” Ms. Lyth said. “Now, we are looking at
educating people, but we also see that knowing the dangers doesn’t keep
them from migrating illegally or irregularly.”
Khine Myat Chit, senior officer in the Security Cooperation Division
at the Asean Secretariat, said the Asean convention on trafficking is
scheduled to be ratified by the end of 2015, and Cambodia has offered
some best-practice examples.
“In Cambodia, once a victim is rescued and identified and before
prosecution begins, they can return from a shelter to their homes.
That’s a very important arrangement,” she said.
In other Asean member states, Ms. Khine said, victims generally had
to stay at shelters until their court hearings, which gives them a
feeling of being confined and hinders rehabilitation. “We really admire
Cambodia in terms of providing assistance to victims; that will be in
the convention,” she said.
Corruption, she said, remained one of Cambodia’s—and the region’s—main issues when it comes to fighting traffickers.
“Cambodia is not an exception: When it comes to human trafficking,
corruption is the major challenge. At the border areas, you see busses
full of people crossing the border, and how can they cross by
themselves, without corrupt officials?” she said.
No comments:
Post a Comment