The report helps
determine whether the United States imposes sanctions or other punishments on
countries that are seen as not doing enough to fight the practice. The report
puts countries in one of three levels, or "tiers," that represent how well the
United States views such efforts: Tier 1 for those doing a good job, down to
Tier 3 for those doing an unacceptable job.
Virtually all of the nations of Eastern, Central,
and Southeastern Europe are in Tier 2, while Russia and Tajikistan are on the
so-called "watch list" of Tier-2 countries because they could slip to Tier 3.
Uzbekistan is among four countries that have moved up. It used to be designated
as a Tier-3 country, and now is on the Tier-2 "watch list." Kazakhstan and
Kyrgyzstan are in Tier 2, except for Turkmenistan, which is listed as a "special
case" because of the lack of information from the country.
Georgia in classified as Tier 1, while Armenia
and Azerbaijan are on Tier-2 "watch lists."
Afghanistan is classified as Tier 2.
Iraq and Kosovo are listed as "special cases" due
to their political transitions.
On May 29, the UN issued a report declaring that
the rate of crimes against people and property in the Balkans has improved to
the point that the Balkans are considered safer than Western Europe. But
the State Department report says human trafficking remains a problem in the
Balkans, particularly in Moldova.
"Moldova fell to Tier 3 for the first time,
reflecting its government's failure to tackle trafficking-related corruption, as
reflected in the handling of several high-profile cases of complicity by
government officials in trafficking," said Mark Lagon, the State Department's
senior adviser on trafficking in persons. "This failure created a significant
impediment to the government's ability to fight trafficking overall."

May Lose Financial Assistance
Lagon said the State Department hopes the new
government in Moldova will root out corrupt officials, improve the country's
weak law enforcement, and make other efforts to protect victims of human
trafficking.
Until then, Moldova -- along with Fiji and Papua
New Guinea -- may lose some U.S. financial assistance that isn't involved in
trade or humanitarian aid.
In releasing the report, Secretary of State
Condoleezza Rice noted that since the United States began issuing the annual
reports in 2000, an increasing number of governments around the world have given
greater attention the problem of human trafficking.
"Today -- because of our efforts, the efforts of
our allies, and reports like the one we are releasing today -- there is much
greater global awareness about the brutality of human trafficking," she said.
"Globally, human trafficking is a multidimensional threat. It deprives people of
their human rights and dignity, it increases global health risks, it bankrolls
the growth of organized crime, and it undermines the rule of law."
But Rice said the more governments delve into the
problem, the more trouble they find. Certainly, she said, traffickers have
always found ways to kidnap and transport people for labor and prostitution, and
there's never been a shortage of victims in regions such as Southeastern Europe,
India, China, and the Philippines.
But Rice said that even in countries where such
practices are uncovered, the people responsible for this 21st-century slavery
too often go free.
"For the first time, in this year's report we
closely examined prosecution data and made a disturbing discovery," Rice said.
"Although more countries are addressing sex trafficking through prosecution and
convictions, the petty tyrants who exploit their laborers rarely receive serious
punishment. We see this as a serious shortcoming, and as we move our efforts
forward, we and our allies must remember that a robust law enforcement response
is essential."

Read the full report
NGOs Not Properly Trained
What's equally disturbing is that nongovernmental
organizations (NGOs) -- which frequently offer the first refuge for victims who
manage to escape the traffickers -- aren't trained or otherwise equipped to
handle the victims.
Lagon said that last winter he met two young
Romanian women at a shelter in Bucharest for survivors of sex trafficking in
Western Europe. They finally escaped to the care of an NGO in the West, then
were repatriated to the Bucharest shelter. But Lagon said that once the two
women were back in their native country, one was eventually found to have an
advanced case of tuberculosis, and the other was suffering from severe syphilis.
"Why weren't these women given proper medical
attention before they were repatriated? The time loss made their conditions
immensely worse," Lagon said. "Despite increased attention by law enforcement to
sex trafficking, we are not seeing -- as the findings of this report [show] --
significant victim protection and victim services provided. This trend has to be
reversed or we'll never be able to help significant numbers of victims become
survivors. The dehumanized must be restored to their full humanity."
Lagon said the purpose of the report is to
diagnose the problem of human trafficking and, from year to year, to track
progress -- or lack thereof -- in combating it. In compiling the report, he
said, he's highlighted five trends in worldwide human trafficking that need
special attention by governments.
"Weak prosecution of labor-trafficking offenses.
Secondly, weak trafficking-victim protection. Third, forced labor creeping into
new growth industries. Fourth, domestic servitude, and luckily problems there
are gaining recognition," Lagon said. "And fifth, closing a window of
vulnerability for migrant workers is an imperative."
But Lagon said the thread that unites these five
trends is something even more disturbing -- the demand for slave laborers and
sex workers.