PH retains Tier 2 status in U.S. trafficking report - VP Binay
By OVP Media
June 20, 2012
MANILA – The Philippines has retained its Tier 2 status in the
latest Global Trafficking in Persons (GTIP) Report of the United
States Department of State, Vice President Jejomar C. Binay announced
today in Jeddah.
“As Chairman Emeritus of the Inter-Agency Council Against Trafficking
(IACAT), I am pleased to announce that the Philippines has retained
its Tier 2 status in the U.S. State Department’s Global Trafficking in
Persons Report for 2012,” Binay said.
Binay said the country’s consistent performance was the result of the
effective coordination from all member-agencies of the IACAT.
He congratulated the members of the council and thanked the
non-government organizations (NGOs) involved in the anti-trafficking
drive of the government.
“Under President Benigno Aquino III’s leadership and in a span of two
years, we have exceeded what the previous administration had
accomplished in five years. We were able to achieve 39
trafficking-related convictions in a span of 22 months compared to the
29 convictions the previous administration had from 2005 to June
2010,” the Vice President said.
He added that under President Benigno Aquino III, the country has
remained consistent in the Tier 2 category.
“Being in Tier 2 status means that we are making significant efforts
to comply with the requirements of the U.S. Trafficking Victims
Protection Act (TVPA),” he said.
“We were in Tier 2 Watch List status during the previous
administration, in danger of being placed under Tier 3, which means
being included in the list of countries that do not cooperate in the
fight against trafficking and subjected to US foreign assistance
sanctions,” he added.
Binay said that IACAT has taken note of the U.S. State Department’s
recommendations in the report.
Recommendations included in the report were for the government to
“sustain the intensified effort to investigate, prosecute, and convict
an increased number of both labor and sex trafficking offenders in the
trafficking of Filipinos within the country and abroad” and increase
funding for anti-trafficking programs of all IACAT member-agencies.
The report also noted that the government needed to “address the
significant backlog of trafficking cases by developing mechanisms to
track and monitor the status of cases filed with the Department of
Justice (DOJ),” conduct “immediate and rigorous” investigations of
government officials complicit in trafficking activities.”
Furthermore, the GTIP report recommended the strengthening of
anti-trafficking training for police recruits, front-line officers,
and police investigators, and to improve collaboration between NGOs
and law enforcement authorities.