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U.S. Keeps Armenia On Human Trafficking 'Watch List'

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  • U.S. Keeps Armenia On Human Trafficking 'Watch List'

    U.S. KEEPS ARMENIA ON HUMAN TRAFFICKING 'WATCH LIST'
    By Emil Danielyan

    Radio Liberty, Czech Rep.
    June 6 2006

    The United States has placed Armenia on its human trafficking
    "watch list" for a second consecutive year, citing the Armenian
    government's failure to take tough action against prostitution rings
    and law-enforcement officials allegedly connected with them.

    In its annual Trafficking in Persons Report released Monday, the U.S.
    State Department said Armenia remains a "major source and, to a
    lesser extent, a transit and destination country for women and girls
    trafficked for sexual exploitation largely to the United Arab Emirates
    and Turkey."

    "While the government increased implementation of its anti-trafficking
    law, it failed to impose significant penalties for convicted
    traffickers," reads the report. "The government failed to vigorously
    investigate and prosecute ongoing and widespread allegations of public
    officials' complicity in trafficking."

    The report covering the entire world is a further blow to the
    credibility of Yerevan's assurances that it is doing its best to tackle
    the problem. Armenian officials point to a toughening of punishment
    against the practice and a rise in the number of relevant criminal
    cases brought by law-enforcement bodies.

    The Armenian Prosecutor-General's Office estimates that criminal groups
    sent at least 140 Armenian women abroad, mainly to the UAE, for sexual
    exploitation last year. It says it opened 30 trafficking-related cases
    in the course of 2005, resulting in 14 prosecutions and 17 convictions.

    The State Department dismissed these figures, saying that both Armenian
    prosecutors and courts remain too lenient towards traffickers. "During
    the reporting period, only a few convictions resulted in actual
    imprisonment; the remaining offenders received suspended sentences,
    corrective labor and fines," says its report.

    "Lack of public confidence and allegations of official complicity
    continued to hurt the credibility of the government's anti-trafficking
    efforts."

    The report specifically mentions media reports that accused a senior
    prosecutor of closely collaborating with Armenian prostitution rings
    active in the UAE. A series of investigative reports that appeared
    in the Hetq.am online publication last year quoted several unnamed
    Armenian prostitutes in Dubai as saying that they and their notorious
    pimp paid the official, Aristakes Yeremian, thousands of dollars
    in bribes.

    Yeremian strongly denied the allegations in an RFE/RL interview in
    April 2005. He said he met Armenian pimps in Dubai in September 2004
    only to "question" and warn them against continuing their illegal
    activities. He was cleared of any wrongdoing in an official inquiry
    conducted by the Prosecutor-General's office earlier this year.

    Prosecutor-General Aghvan Hovsepian ordered the inquiry following
    an embarrassing "interim assessment" of the situation with human
    trafficking in Armenia which was released by the State Department
    on February 1. The document noted that "a government official, who
    has been frequently criticized by victims and NGOs for trafficking
    complacency, remains in his position within the Prosecutor General's
    anti-trafficking task force."

    The authorities largely ignored the problem of human trafficking until
    the State Department included Armenia in 2002 into its Tier 3 group of
    nations which Washington believes are doing little to prevent illegal
    cross-border transport of human beings and can therefore be stripped
    of U.S. economic assistance. Armenia was removed from the blacklist
    and upgraded to the Tier 2 category the next year after what the State
    Department described as "significant efforts" taken by its government.

    However, the department went on to downgrade the country to a Tier 2
    "watch list" in June 2005, citing the Armenian authorities' "failure
    to show evidence of increasing efforts to combat trafficking over
    the past year." Its latest report draws very similar conclusions.

    Furthermore, the 2006 report expresses concern at a "dramatic" increase
    in profits reportedly made by the Armenian traffickers over the past
    year. It also notes that Armenian law-enforcement bodies and courts
    are often hostile toward trafficking victims. "Some victims continue
    to receive poor treatment during court cases, reducing the likelihood
    of future victims willing to come forward to testify against their
    traffickers," it says.
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