27 Million People Said to Live in ‘Modern Slavery’ 
The New York Times | 20 June 2013

Saul Loeb/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry presents Laura Anyola Tufon of Cameroon with a Trafficking in Persons Heroes’ award at an event releasing this year’s human trafficking report.
BEIJING — On Monday, we wrote about human trafficking and forced labor — or modern slavery, as it’s often called — and said the United Nations defines it as a fast-growing problem.
Two
 days later, on Wednesday in the United States, the State Department 
released a report that gives another, higher figure for how many people 
are working in slavery in our world today – as many as 27 million (as 
opposed to the International Labor Organization’s 21 million), and it 
placed three more countries among roughly a dozen in the worst offenders
 category: Russia, China and Uzbekistan, putting them in the same category as Iran and North Korea, Reuters reported.
The “Trafficking in Persons Report”,
 dated June 2013, provides over 415 pages of stories, analysis and 
photographs, showing a kind of human suffering and inhumanity that is 
hard, perhaps, to grasp as coexisting alongside the tweeting, 
iPad-tapping, well-fed comfort of much of the developed world, but is a 
reality for millions of poor people, the report made clear. It affects 
women, men, girls and boys, and includes sexual slavery as well as a 
wide range of other labor, from child soldiering to domestic servitude 
to gold mining.
In an introduction to the report, Secretary of 
State John Kerry, wrote: “Ending modern slavery must remain a foreign 
policy priority. Fighting this crime wherever it exists is in our 
national interest. Human tracking undermines the rule of law and creates
 instability. It tears apart families and communities. It damages the 
environment and corrupts the global supply chains and labor markets that
 keep the world’s economies thriving.”
Mr. Kerry spoke of the “moral obligation” to end a practice that contravenes our “human dignity.”
By identifying three more countries as so-called “Tier 3” countries on human trafficking, the U.S. is saying they are “countries whose governments do not fully comply with the minimum standards and are not making significant efforts to do so.”
This opens them up to sanctions. Will that happen?
If there’s a moral obligation to end the problem, there’s also politics, as my colleague in Washington, Steven Lee Myers, suggested.
“In
 the past, the White House has routinely waived potential sanctions for 
countries with important strategic value to the United States, including
 Kuwait, Saudi Arabia and Yemen, which the latest report again cited for
 poor records on forced labor, child labor, prostitution and, in Yemen’s
 case, the remnants of chattel slavery,” Steve wrote.
“Countries clearly at odds with American policy  including — Cuba and North Korea  — have been subject to sanctions.”
In
 the report, officials said China had shown “modest signs of interest in
 anti-trafficking reforms” but “the Chinese government did not 
demonstrate significant efforts to comprehensively prohibit and punish 
all forms of trafficking and to prosecute traffickers.”
So far, 
the White House has not commented on whether it would impose sanctions 
on the three countries. And there was no immediate comment from China, 
where key types of human trafficking include brides from other Asian 
nations, children for childless couples (especially boys) and the 
mentally disabled, for their free labor.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

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