Drafting and coordinating a report that evaluates foreign governments' anti-trafficking actions has challenged us and our partners at home and abroad as we strive for accuracy and fairness. Hewing to the letter and spirit of the Trafficking Victims Protection Act, we place a premium on prompting improvements in behavior through cooperation and engagement with like-minded governments throughout the world. But inaction on behalf of victims must be highlighted and comes with a cost.
We want to thank our colleagues within the Department of State and in other U.S. Government Departments who helped refine and coordinate this report. We thank our colleagues in foreign embassies here in Washington and in governments around the world who gave their considerable time and attention to our requests for information, and most importantly, their cooperation in fighting trafficking in persons. We thank the victims whose stories contributed to this report, and the NGOs working to end this scourge. But most of all, we want to thank you, the reader, for taking the time to review the report. We hope you will be moved in some way to contribute to the global effort to eradicate modern-day slavery.
We feel privileged to have worked on a report of such tremendous import and are proud to have been entrusted to draft it by Secretary Powell. It is our fervent hope that through the report's detailed depiction of human trafficking the world over, it will encourage necessary reforms. It is our hope that traffickers will be punished for their barbaric behavior. It is our hope that more victims will find a hand extended to help them through the trauma of rape, enslavement, and dehumanizing conditions to the hope of a new future.
The distance from Washington to the world's darkest and most inaccessible sites of modern-day slavery is getting shorter.
The Staff
U.S. Department of State, Office to Monitor and Combat Trafficking in Persons
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Feleke T. Assefa |
James C. Linton |
Gannon Sims |