U.S. Talks Tough On Sex Slave Trade
12 Countries Accused Of Not Fighting Trafficking
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"The U.S. government opposes prostitution," a State Department report on global human trafficking said. "These activities are inherently harmful and dehumanizing."
According to some estimates, thousands of foreign women, many from Eastern Europe, will engage in sex work in Germany during the four-week tournament that begins Friday.
The United States called Germany a "source, transit and destination country" for sex workers and other exploited people. The 2006 Trafficking in Persons Report still gave Germany its highest overall rating for compliance with effort to stop trafficking and noted German efforts to combat exploitation during the World Cup.
"Nonetheless, due to the sheer size of the event, the potential for increased human trafficking during the games remains a concern," the report said.
As many as 800,000 people are bought and sold across national borders annually or lured to other countries with false promises of work or other benefits, the State Department said in its annual survey of international human trafficking. Most are women and children.
The report lists Iran and Syria among the dozen nations.
Apart from crucial Arab ally Saudi Arabia and the Central American nation of Belize, the rest of the list of violators reads like a catalog of nations at perpetual odds with the Bush administration: Myanmar, Cuba, Iran, Laos, North Korea, Sudan, Syria, Uzbekistan, Venezuela, Zimbabwe.
Countries that fail to crack down can be subject to a variety of sanctions, including the cutting off of aid.
Two countries have been sanctioned since the reports began, Equatorial Guinea and Venezuela.
The German government, while defending its policy of legalized prostitution, emphatically denies that it condones human trafficking and says it has intensified efforts to combat it.
Germany's sex-industry entrepreneurs have made no secret of their expectation of a boom as hundreds of thousands of visitors arrive for the World Cup. At the four-story, 40-bedroom Atriums brothel which opened in Berlin last fall, manager Egret Krumeich predicted business — normally 130 clients a day — could double or triple during the 32-nation soccer tournament.
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