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U.S. blasts Saudis, others on human trafficking

Key ally falls into same status as North Korea, Cuba

IMAGE: SAUDIS ON STREET
Bilal Qabalan / AFP - Getty Images file
Saudi Arabia relies on many foreign workers for its economy and some, especially those from the Philippines, Sri Lanka and Bangladesh, are victims of trafficking.
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June 3: Several U.S. allies in the Middle East are among the countries named by the State Department as not doing enough to stop trafficking of human beings. NBC's Andrea Mitchell reports.

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updated 7:39 p.m. ET June 3, 2005

WASHINGTON - Saudi Arabia and three other U.S. allies in the Middle East are among countries added to a State Department list of nations that are not doing enough to stop international human trafficking, a practice the department described as modern-day slavery.

The State Department on Friday said 14 countries could be subject to sanctions because they are not cracking down on trafficking. Eight countries were new to the list: Bolivia, Cambodia, Jamaica, Kuwait, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, Togo and the United Arab Emirates.

It cited the case of a 17-year-old orphan, Lusa, who was kidnapped from Uzbekistan and sold into a slavery ring in the UAE. She was eventually “no longer usable” as a prostitute and the emirates’ immigration service said she should serve a two-year prison sentence for entering the country illegally.

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“Trafficking in human beings is nothing less than a modern form of slavery,” Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice said as she released the report.

Saudi Arabia is a key U.S. ally whose de facto leader, Crown Prince Abdullah, visited President Bush at his Texas ranch in April. The report follows one by the State Department in September that accused the kingdom of severe violations of religious freedom.

Kuwait, Qatar and the United Arab Emirates also are allies, and the United States maintains an important military base in Qatar.

Half are children
An estimated 600,000 to 800,000 people are trafficked across international borders annually, the report said. Eighty percent are female and 50 percent are children.

John Miller, Rice’s senior adviser on human trafficking, said the State Department believes that “modern-day slavery plagues every country, including the United States.”

Miller said the report’s goal “is not to punish, but to stimulate government action to eliminate” human trafficking.

Human trafficking is driven by poverty, corruption, poor education and other factors on the supply side, the report said. Trafficking serves demands for cheap or forced labor, soldiers, prostitutes and the child sex trade, the report said.

“The child sold by his parents to the owner of a brick kiln on the outskirts of his rural Indian village is a trafficking victim,” the report said. “So is the Mexican man who legally or illegally migrates to the United States only to be beaten by his agricultural crew leader to keep him from leaving the job.”

The annual “Trafficking in Persons” report examines trafficking problems in 150 countries. It is aimed at raising public awareness of the global trafficking problem and encouraging governments to combat it.

Countries that were previously on the list and remain there this year are Myanmar, Cuba, Ecuador, North Korea, Sudan and Venezuela.


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