2 bn people not adequately protected from human
trafficking by national legislation: UNODC report
trafficking by national legislation: UNODC report
Vienna: Trafficking in children has gone up by five per
cent with one in three known victims of human trafficking is a child, according
to 2014 Global Report on Trafficking in Persons released on Monday by the UN
Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC).
The report states that there is five per cent increase in
child trafficking when compared to the 2007-2010 period. Girls make up two out
of every 3 child victims, and together with women, account for 70 per cent of
overall trafficking victims worldwide.
The report also highlights that there is no place in the
world where children, women and men are safe from human trafficking.
No country is immune – there are at least 152 countries
of origin and 124 countries of destination affected by trafficking in persons,
and over 510 trafficking flows criss-crossing the world.
Trafficking mostly occurs within national borders or
within the same region, with transcontinental trafficking mainly affecting rich
countries.
In some regions –
such as Africa and the Middle East – child trafficking is a major concern, with
children constituting 62 per cent of victims.
Trafficking for forced labour – including in the
manufacturing and construction sectors, domestic work and textile production –
has also increased steadily in the past five years. About 35 per cent of the
detected victims of trafficking for forced labour are female.
There are, however, regional variations: victims in
Europe and Central Asia are mostly trafficked for sexual exploitation, whereas
in East Asia and the Pacific forced labour drives the market. In the Americas,
the two types are detected in almost equal measure.
Most trafficking flows are interregional, and more than 6
out of 10 victims have been trafficked across at least one national border. The
vast majority of convicted traffickers - 72 per cent – are male and citizens of
the country in which they operate.
The report highlights that impunity remains a serious
problem: 40 per cent of countries recorded few or no convictions, and over the
past 10 years there has been no discernible increase in the global criminal
justice response to this crime, leaving a significant portion of the population
vulnerable to offenders.
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