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Yerevan To Adopt New Anti-Trafficking Plan

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  • Yerevan To Adopt New Anti-Trafficking Plan

    YEREVAN TO ADOPT NEW ANTI-TRAFFICKING PLAN
    By Karine Kalantarian

    Radio Liberty, Czech Rep.
    Sept 5 2007

    The Armenian authorities have stepped up the prosecution of individuals
    involved in human trafficking and will soon adopt a new three-year plan
    of actions against the illegal practice, officials said on Wednesday.

    A similar program was already launched in 2004 and supposedly completed
    at the end of last year.

    The Armenian government began tackling the problem under pressure
    from the United States which has repeatedly described Armenia has a
    major source of illegal transport of women for sexual exploitation
    abroad. But despite its efforts, Armenia remains on a special "watch
    list" of nations which the U.S. State Department says are not doing
    enough to combat trafficking.

    Speaking at a seminar in Yerevan, senior Armenian officials insisted
    that the government has already made progress in reducing the scale
    of the practice. Deputy Foreign Minister Armen Bayburtian said it
    is currently discussing and will approve the new anti-trafficking
    program later this month.

    According to Deputy Prosecutor-General Mnatsakan Sargsian, the number
    of trafficking-related criminal cases more than doubled to 32 between
    2004 and 2006. He said law-enforcement bodies opened 20 such cases
    in the first half of this year.

    Sargsian did not specify the number of individuals imprisoned or
    fined for such crimes.

    In an annual global report on human trafficking released last year,
    the State Department said that the Armenian authorities "failed to
    impose significant penalties for convicted traffickers" and that
    only a handful of them ended up in jail. Report also pointed to an
    independent journalistic investigation that implicated a member of
    a special anti-trafficking unit at the Prosecutor-General's Office
    in extorting bribes from Armenian pimps and prostitutes operating in
    the United Arab Emirates.

    The Prosecutor-General's Office said earlier in 2006 that it has
    investigated the allegations and found them baseless.

    Dzyunik Aghajanian, another senior Foreign Ministry official
    attending the seminar, said Washington exaggerates the seriousness
    of the problem in Armenia for political reasons. "We really have
    [trafficking-related] problems in terms of public awareness and in
    relation to the law-enforcement and judicial systems," she said. "But
    they are not so serious as to justify our classification [by the
    State Department.] Very often such classifications have a certain
    political subtext."

    Bayburtian, for his part, claimed that the U.S. and other Western
    donors are not always helping Armenia to fight against local
    prostitution rings. "We see numerous duplications and other forced
    actions that do not take into sufficient consideration the country's
    priorities. This somewhat hinders the effectiveness of our efforts both
    at the local and international levels," he said without elaborating.
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