TAJIKISTAN: National Conference on Human Trafficking Opens in Dushanbe
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Frederic Chenais, acting chief of mission for IOM Tajikistan, opened the conference on human trafficking |
Dushanbe, May 4, 2004 (IRIN) - A national conference on human
trafficking opened in the Tajik capital, Dushanbe, on Tuesday, the first of its
kind in the mountainous Central Asian state.
"Over half a million Tajiks regularly leave the country to seek work abroad and
the risk of being trafficked is increasing with alarming rates," Nigina
Mamadjanova, counter trafficking focal point for the International Organization
for Migration (IOM) office in Tajikistan told IRIN.
Although generally targeting women to work in the sex industry in Turkey,
Kazakhstan, Russia and the Gulf states, many Tajik men have also fallen victim
to traffickers in the form of forced labor, she maintained.
Organized by the IOM, in cooperation with the Tajik government, the two-day
event brings together a host of participants and experts, including
representatives from Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Uzbekistan, and the United States,
as well as NGOs and other international organizations working on the protection
of migrants' rights.
While there are no exact figures on the number of people being trafficked, the
issue remains a source of concern for the government and NGOs on the ground
given the number of Tajik migrants leaving the country through illegal means.
According to Mamadjanova, the main goal of the conference is to raise the level
of awareness. "Only through an information campaign can the population receive
the necessary information it needs about the dangers of trafficking," the IOM
official said, noting a mechanism of reintegration and assistance for the
victims of trafficking needed to be developed-- including psychological
rehabilitation.
In an effort to raise such awareness, Internews, an international non-profit
group supporting open media worldwide, has been working closely with the IOM
training media professionals on how to produce social advertisements for radio
and TV spots. "These spots are now broadcast regularly by 14 independent TV
stations in Tajikistan, and also by three independent radio stations," Franz
Wennberg, country director for the NGO told IRIN in Dushanbe, noting that the
public announcements also included phone numbers to hot lines where additional
information could be sought.
"One of the problems for many Tajiks is how little they are informed about what
awaits them in Russia [the primary destination for Tajik labor migrants], and
also about their legal rights and obligations," Wennberg explained. "This lack
of knowledge obviously makes it easier for corrupt state officials and criminal
structures to harass and exploit Tajik labour migrants," he added, noting the
information campaigns by Internews and the IOM were working to mitigate that.
But despite the challenge, over the past three years Tajikistan has made strong
inroads in combating the global problem, Mamadjanova maintained. The
impoverished former Soviet republic was the first country among the CIS
(Commonwealth of Independent States) countries to sign the UN Convention against
Transnational Organized Crime and two additional protocols and ratified on May
29, 2002. Subsequently, Tajikistan prepared draft legislation on the trafficking
in persons which was now in its last stage of consideration.
According to one IOM report, over 700,000 women and children are trafficked
across borders each year worldwide. CIS countries are becoming the most
important geographical source of trafficking in women in Asia, with the Central
Asian states of Tajikistan, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Uzbekistan and Turkmenistan
being no exception.
Following the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991, economic hardship and
widespread unemployment made the desire to emigrate abroad even stronger,
providing a more conducive environment for traffickers to recruit, cheat, abuse
and exploit their victims.
IRIN is the acronym for the Integrated Regional Information Networks of the United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs. Reprinted by permission.