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Armenian official upbeat on fight against human trafficking

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  • Armenian official upbeat on fight against human trafficking

    Armenian official upbeat on fight against human trafficking

    Ayots Ashkhar, Yerevan
    17 Jun 04

    An interview with the head of the Armenian government's Migration
    and Refugees Department, Gagik Yeganyan. He comments on the Armenian
    section of the latest annual US State Department report on human
    trafficking.

    [Gagik Yeganyan] The fact that according to the US State Department,
    Armenia is among the countries of the second group is satisfactory. It
    is also good for Armenia that the report said if Armenia continues
    its fight against trafficking in the same way and with the same
    consistency, it cannot be ruled out that the country may be included
    in the first group in the future. The countries which fight this
    phenomenon with all their possible means are included in this group.

    [Passage omitted: Details of the report]

    [Ayots Ashkhar correspondent] Mr Yeganyan, what kind of work has been
    launched in Armenia to organize a fight against human trafficking?

    [Yeganyan] In the report drawn up four years ago, our country was in
    the third group. This assessment of Armenia was like a cold shower,
    as their approach was very strict and unexpected. In any case, we
    were not disappointed ending up in such a situation, but were given
    an incentive and concentrated all our efforts on making the fight
    against trafficking more organized. The point is that inclusion in
    this or that group is not determined by the volume of trafficking. The
    assessment depends on the effectiveness of steps taken against this
    evil. Slave trade was annihilated in the previous century. This is
    why isolated cases of this phenomenon are considered to be a slap in
    the face of all mankind.

    In Armenia, the fight against human trafficking started with the
    formation of an interdepartmental group on an instruction from
    the prime minister. The group was instructed to develop a national
    strategic programme of the fight against trafficking. The document was
    ready this January and was approved by the government. Systematized
    approaches form the basis of the fight, which makes it possible
    not only to eliminate the consequences of trafficking, but also to
    stamp it out, to take relevant retaliatory steps and to rule out the
    conditions that generate it.

    It is clear to the world that in Armenia, not only do we understand
    the importance of fighting trafficking, we also take certain effective
    steps. Naturally, in parallel with our country's integration into
    European structures, progress will become more evident, which is why
    doubts about its irreversibility may not be well-founded.

    [Correspondent] What are the signs of human trafficking in Armenia?

    [Yeganyan] About 600,000-800,000 people are involved in the trafficking
    process in the world every year. Human trafficking is aimed mainly at
    the sexual exploitation of women and children. Only isolated cases
    have been registered in Armenia. In fact, in our country there is
    no stratum or a group which would use the results of trafficking. In
    our country, there is no stratum of people who would want to pay for
    such services. Just two cases of trafficking have been registered
    in our country: a group of Uzbek women using false passports tried
    to cross the border of the United Arab Emirates from Armenia. They
    did not manage to do this and decided to work as prostitutes in our
    country. The second group was also from Uzbekistan - young girls
    decided to work as prostitutes in our country. Fortunately, Armenia
    is not the best country for such activities. Three years ago, the
    International Organization for Migration carried out research and
    discovered 58 cases when Armenians were trafficked mainly in Arab
    countries and Turkey. I am sure that not all the registered cases may
    be regarded as human trafficking. Many people understand why they
    go there. Simply people involved in such conditions, when they are
    exposed, present the situation as trafficking.
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