Hillary Rodham Clinton
Secretary of State
Benjamin Franklin Room
Washington, DC
June 16, 2009
SECRETARY CLINTON: Good morning. We are delighted to have
with us this morning some key members of Congress who have
cared about and worked on this important issue for a number
of years. This is the first time we have introduced the report
in this way, because we want to demonstrate that this truly
is a partnership between the State Department and the Congress.
If it weren’t for the Congress, we wouldn’t have
the legislation, we wouldn’t have the follow-up, we
wouldn’t have the kind of outreach that these members
and others have been doing. And I’m very grateful that
they could take time out of their very busy schedules to be
here with us.
You’ll hear from two of them in a moment, but let
me introduce here Carolyn Maloney from New York, Ben Cardin
from Maryland. We have Eddie Bernice Johnson from Texas,
Chris Smith from New Jersey, Ileana Ros-Lehtinen from Florida,
and I think that’s all of our members who are here
with us. There may be some others who will come later, and
then I’ll be introducing some of the other speakers
in a moment.
This is one of the really significant days in the calendar
for our country and particularly for the State Department.
We have so many people who have been affected by this significant
issue over the years. And it is especially fitting that
we would hold this announcement here on the 8th floor where
we have a great diplomatic history of so many important
events in our nation.
And I’m especially pleased that our new Ambassador
Luis CdeBaca, the new director of the Office to Monitor
and Combat Trafficking in Persons here at the State Department
was confirmed in time for him to be part of this ceremony,
Senator Cardin. (Applause.) Previously, Lou led the fight
against slavery at the Department of Justice. He’s
also been a valued member of the team on the House Judiciary
Committee with Chairman Conyers. And thanks to him, hundreds
of trafficking survivors are now living productive and healthy
lives in our own country, while their abusers are behind
bars.
We’re also joined by two very special guests from
the frontlines of the fight against trafficking. We have
Mariliana Morales Berrios, who runs a foundation that assists
victims in Costa Rica, and Vera Lesko, who opened the first
shelter in Albania for trafficked women and girls. These
two women represent nine women and men who we are celebrating
this year for their courage in the fight against trafficking.
And we are so grateful that they could join us today. (Applause.)
Around the world, millions of people are living in bondage.
They labor in fields and factories under brutal employers
who threaten them with violence if they try to escape. They
work in homes for families that keep them virtually imprisoned.
They are forced to work as prostitutes or to beg in the
streets, fearful of the consequences if they fail to earn
their daily quota. They are women, men, and children of
all ages, and they are often held far from home with no
money, no connections, and no way to ask for help.
This is modern slavery, a crime that spans the globe, providing
ruthless employers with an endless supply of people to abuse
for financial gain. Human trafficking is a crime with many
victims: not only those who are trafficked, but also the
families they leave behind, some of whom never see their
loved ones again.
Trafficking has a broad global impact as well. It weakens
legitimate economies, fuels violence, threatens public health
and safety, shatters families, and shreds the social fabric
that is necessary for progress. And it is an affront to
our basic values and our fundamental belief that all people
everywhere deserve to live and work in safety and dignity.
The Obama Administration views the fight against human trafficking,
both at home and abroad, as a critical part of our foreign
policy agenda. The United States currently funds 140 anti-trafficking
programs in nearly 70 countries, as well as 42 domestic
task forces to address the challenge here. We are proud
of the work we do, but we know we have much more ahead of
us. Economic pressure, especially in this global economic
crisis, makes more people susceptible to the false promises
of traffickers.
Today, the State Department releases our annual report on
trafficking in persons. It underscores the need to address
the root causes of trafficking, including poverty, lax law
enforcement, and the exploitation of women.
The Trafficking Report is not an indictment of past failures,
but a guide for future progress. It includes examples of
steps taken against trafficking worldwide – for example,
in Congo, where an army officer was convicted in a ground-breaking
case for forcing children to serve as soldiers; or in Colombia
where the government has pioneered a comprehensive operations
center that tasks agents to investigate trafficking allegations
and ensure that victims receive rehabilitative services,
or in Jordan where the Ministry of Labor has established
a fund to provide trafficking victims with food, housing,
and legal aid.
With this report, we hope to shine the light brightly on
the scope and scale of modern slavery so all governments
can see where progress has been made and where more is needed.
Trafficking thrives in the shadows, and it can be easy to
dismiss it as something that happens to someone else, somewhere
else. But that’s not the case. Trafficking is a crime
that involves every nation on earth, and that includes our
own.
Trafficking and forced labor are grave problems here in
the United States. And we’ve been reminded of this
in recent weeks, where authorities uncovered a scheme to
enslave foreign workers as laborers for hotels and construction
sites in 14 Midwestern states.
To coincide with this year’s Global Trafficking in
Persons Report, the Department of Justice is releasing its
own report, which describes the problem of human trafficking
in the United States and offers recommendations for how
we can do a better job of fighting it.
We’re grateful for the DOJ work. It will help us advance
our struggle against trafficking in our own country. And
we are committed to working with all nations collaboratively.
In recent years we’ve pursued a comprehensive approach
reflected by the three Ps: prosecution, protection, and
prevention. Well, it’s time to add a fourth: partnership.
The criminal network that enslaves millions of people crosses
borders and spans continents. So our response must do the
same. So we’re committed to building new partnerships
with governments and NGOs around the world, because the
repercussions of trafficking affect us all.
I know that there are many of you in this room this morning
who have been stalwart advocates in the fight against trafficking.
And Chris Smith, you’ve got the copy of the report
here. Let me just hold it up. This is a really wonderful
piece of work, beautifully presented. I especially want
to thank everyone in the State Department. Certainly, the
– TIPS office, but others who helped produce this
report. And I hope it is read and studied for the guidance
it provides so that we together, in partnership, can continue
to make progress against this terrible, terrible scourge.
Thanks, Chris.
Now, I’d like to welcome a former colleague from the
Senate. Ben Cardin is co-chair of the Helsinki Commission,
and in that capacity he has pledged to make the fight against
human trafficking a top priority.
Senator Ben Cardin. (Applause.)
SENATOR CARDIN: Well, Secretary Clinton, first I want to
thank you for your leadership on this issue. You have brought
this issue to the national and international forums, and
we thank you for that. It’s a priority of the United
States – (applause) – it’s a priority
because of Secretary Clinton. And thank you for giving us
Ambassador CdeBaca. We are very pleased that we could get
that nomination through. (Applause.) We have a person who
will, again, stand up for these issues around the world.
Look, our goal is simple: We want to end trafficking. We
want to end this modern slavery. That’s our goal.
And the United States is going to provide the leadership.
We know that trafficking is connected to organized crime.
So it’s not an isolated episode. It’s part of
a systemic problem that we have around the world, and we
have to root it out. We know that we can do better. We know
those who are trafficked are victims and need to be treated
as victims.
I am proud of the leadership in the United States. I am
proud of the work in the Helsinki Commission to bring this
to the international attention. When Secretary Clinton was
Senator Clinton, she served on the Helsinki Commission and
was a strong voice on this issue, helping to promote it
internationally. Chris Smith brought this issue to the attention
of the commission and the international community by filing
legislation in Congress and filing resolutions in the international
parliamentary assembly. The U.S. took the leadership. And
as a result, the OSCE, 56 states, have passed strong commitments
to deal with trafficking, have established a special representative
to combat trafficking. That’s the type of strategies
we need.
Madame Secretary, let me just tell you, this report, this
TIP report is critically important to all of us. I have
already read the section on Belarus. Why? Because Chris
and I are going to be in Belarus in a couple weeks, and
we’re going to talk to the leaders of Belarus about
being on Tier 2 and how they can improve what they’re
doing on trafficking. This is the objective yardstick that
we use when we meet with leaders from other countries. And
the United States has provided the leadership. I am proud
of the work that has been done. Now it’s time for
us to follow through on the information that’s contained
in this report so that we can, in fact, end this modern-day
slavery. (Applause.)
SECRETARY CLINTON: I am very pleased that we’ve been
joined by Congresswoman Sheila Jackson-Lee from Texas. Thank
you so much for being here, Sheila. (Applause.) Our next
speaker is the ranking member of the House Committee on
Foreign Affairs. She’s been a tenacious advocate for
immigrant women, refugees, and other vulnerable populations.
She’s been a leader on human trafficking both in Congress
and through her support of programs in her home district,
including the Human Trafficking Center at the University
of St. Thomas.
Representative Ros-Lehtinen. (Applause.)
MS. ROS-LEHTINEN: Thank you, Madame Secretary. Thank you.
Thank you so much, Secretary Clinton and Ambassador CdeBaca.
It’s an honor to stand with you today to address this
important issue of the scourge of human trafficking. As
we know, hundreds of thousands of innocent human beings
are trafficked across international borders each and every
year. And of these, an estimated 80 percent are women and
half are children. The numbers, however, do not convey the
human horrors that lay behind those statistics. These crimes
know no borders.
In Iran, children are forced into sexual slavery, involuntary
servitude, while Iranian girls are trafficked into Pakistan
and numerous other countries. In Syria, women are trafficked
from South and Southeast Asia and are forced to work as
domestic servants, and women from Eastern Europe and Iraq
are forced into prostitution. In our own hemisphere, Cuba
has shamefully been promoting itself as a destination for
sexual tourism that exploits large numbers of Cuban girls
and boys, some as young as 12. And the list goes on and
on.
And I’m proud of the leading role that our United
States Congress, this Department of State, under Secretary
Clinton’s leadership, has played in moving the fight
against human trafficking from a non-issue to a priority
for the United States Government. When the original Trafficking
Victims Protection Act was introduced a decade ago, these
issues did not have a lot of attention paid to them. But
thanks to that legislation and thanks to the efforts of
the State Department’s office to monitor and combat
trafficking in persons, foreign governments know that inaction
will no longer be met with silence.
This annual release of the Trafficking In Persons Report
is critically important as a reckoning, as a resource, and
as a challenge. As a reckoning, the report’s tier
placements are an indispensible form of truth-telling that
has been the catalyst for action for numerous governments
around the world. As a resource, the country narratives
and other information in the report provide insight into
facts and trends that are necessary to any real understanding
of the problems that we are confronting. And by highlighting
the continuing defiance of certain regimes and the widespread
victimization of so many vulnerable people, the trafficking
report represents a challenge to us all. There is much work
to be done.
Secretary Clinton, Ambassador CdeBaca, we stand ready to
work with you in this important work of protecting and promoting
the human dignity of trafficking victims around the world.
Mucha gracias. (Applause.)
SECRETARY CLINTON: Thank you very, very much, Ileana. In
2000, Ambassador CdeBaca used his hard-won knowledge of
trafficking to help write the Trafficking Victims Protection
Act. And I see our first-ever Ambassador for Global Women’s
Issues Melanne Verveer there because in the First Lady’s
Office in those days, we were working to draft that legislation
and work with the Congress to get it passed. It overhauled
and updated our nation’s approach to modern slavery.
It gave prosecutors new tools to bring traffickers to justice.
It gave governments new guidance for how to help trafficked
people start a new life.
And this legislation also established the report we are
releasing today. So in a very real sense, Luis has come
full circle. He helped to draft the legislation that required
the report, and today, I’m very proud that he is our
director who is unveiling the report. (Applause.)
AMBASSADOR CDEBACA: Thank you, Madame Secretary, although
I think there is a few things that I might have asked Congressman
Smith and others to put in if I had known – (laughter)
– that nine years later, I’d be here.
Nine years ago, the annual trafficking report started as
a modest summary, 82 countries. It has grown to a detailed
and accurate assessment of governments’ anti-trafficking
efforts around the world, this year ranking 175 countries.
But more importantly, it has become a diagnostic tool that
informs and guides our efforts as we seek to build a global
partnership to combat modern slavery.
The successes are clear. Some former Tier 2 Watch List countries
are now Tier 1. They have become models through their efforts
for their regions and for the world. In this vein, I’m
particularly heartened to see, for instance, how Nigeria
started a dedicated counter-trafficking police and prosecution
unit. We can all learn from their growing success in working
with nongovernmental organizations and victims.
Such anti-trafficking units work best when they incorporate
survivors and NGOs as part of the team. I’m glad that
we are joined today by a number of people from the nongovernmental
community, but also by members of the Justice Department’s
Trafficking Prosecutions Unit and by Deputy Sheriff Chris
Burchell from San Antonio, who is helping form such units
across the state of Texas.
Huge challenges remain for us all. Some governments have
yet to respond to the global call for victim protections
or for effective law enforcement efforts against these crimes.
As the UN Office on Drugs and Crime stated in its recent
report on global human trafficking, two out of every five
countries have yet to achieve a single conviction of a human
trafficker. Our own TIP Report data show for a second year
that less than 10 percent of all convictions are for labor
trafficking worldwide. Despite reliable estimates, the labor
trafficking is the largest form of trafficking in the world.
All countries can do a better job and must do a better job
of addressing forced labor, while also remaining vigilant
against the scourge of the sex traffickers.
Prosecutions can be a blunt tool, but they do matter. When
labor violations are dealt with just as administrative issues,
abusers factor in fines as a cost of doing business, and
abused workers are easily disposed of. When a country interprets
sex trafficking as just moving prostitutes, instead of incorporating
the effect of abuse and coercion, there often result light
sentences in incarceration of the victims – risks
that the traffickers are willing to take.
One important point in this year’s report, especially
in a time of crisis, foreign workers are too often held
not just by brute force, but through exorbitant recruiting
fees that can result in debt bondage. Last year, Congress
closed loopholes in some of our Pacific possessions the
traffickers who had historically used to exploit people
as garment workers, waitresses, and enforced prostitution.
Congress also gave us welcome criminal tools to ensure that
fraudulent promises don’t expose workers to servitude
and mandated that visa recipients receive information about
their rights before they travel to the United States. We
welcome those tools, and we will use them.
To echo Secretary Clinton’s call today, we offer partnership
to meet the challenges: partnership with foreign governments,
NGOs, international organizations, and international development
agencies. We must build on our common interests to attack
this phenomenon in partnership.
A number of such partners have been featured in the report
as TIP heroes. We are joined by some of them, who the Secretary
will introduce, but several of them were unable to be with
us here today.
For instance, Major George Vanikiotis, a Greek police commander,
has dedicated his life to breaking up the trafficking rings
that so often plague Southeastern Europe.
Indonesian hero, Elly Anita, a trafficking survivor herself,
advocates fiercely to liberate Indonesian contract laborers
in the Middle East.
When he overheard a bar patron boasting about a high-end
prostitution ring, hero Inacio Sebastiao Mussanhane, a Mozambican
lawyer who was living in South Africa, didn’t just
walk away. He risked his life to rescue the women. Though
a civilian, he posed as a John to infiltrate the organization
so he could take the evidence to the police. Those men are
now standing trial in South Africa. (Applause.)
Our Canadian hero, Professor Benjamin Perrin also uncovered
a trafficking ring and secured important government protections
for trafficking victims as an advocate.
Hero Sunitha Krishnan of India has rescued thousands of
children and women from exploitation and provides them welcome
opportunities to reclaim their lives.
Hero Aida Abu Ras, a Jordanian anti-trafficking activist,
is a fierce advocate for the rights of foreign domestic
workers, often so vulnerable as they labor behind closed
doors.
And in Malaysia, hero Alice Nah works tirelessly to urge
government officials to identify and protect refugees and
migrant workers who are victimized by traffickers.
This year’s report also memorialized prostitution
survivor Norma Hotaling, who passed away this year from
cancer. Norma was an active participant in the first NGO
focus groups convened over 10 years ago as part of the effort
that Secretary Clinton mentioned. From those humble beginnings,
without many of the victim protections and collaborative
anti-trafficking models that have become the global standard
today, and Norma never stopped working towards a world free
from exploitation.
We are humbled by their heroism, and we are honored to be
joined with them today.
Madame Secretary. (Applause.)
SECRETARY CLINTON: Thank you. Thank you very much, Lou.
And on behalf of the entire State Department, we want to
extend our appreciation and admiration to all of this year’s
heroes who could not join us today.
Several years ago, Vera Lesko began asking what happened
to the large numbers of Albanian girls who were disappearing
from their homes and neighborhoods every year. The more
she learned about sex trafficking, the more determined she
became to help stop it. She founded an anti-trafficking
organization called The Hearth, which opened the first shelter
in Albania for trafficked women and girls. She offered them
not only a safe place to stay, but also comprehensive services,
including legal and medical help, job training, education,
and family support.
Her commitment to her work has come with costs and dangers.
Vera has been attacked and beaten several times by those
people who benefit from the illegal trade in women and girls.
She even had to send her daughter to live abroad for her
safety. But nothing has stopped Vera from continuing to
advocate for the women and girls of Albania and their right
to live in peace and safety. Thank you so much, Vera. (Applause.)
Just as Vera was beginning her work in Albania, another
woman was starting down the same path on the other side
of the world. Mariliana Morales Berrios created her anti-trafficking
organization, the Rahab Foundation in Costa Rica, more than
a decade ago. Her goal was to help trafficking victims and
their families put their ordeal behind them and start new
lives. The Rahab Foundation provides counseling, education,
and job training. It works to stop trafficking before it
starts by training government leaders, police, young people,
tourism workers, in how to identify, investigate, and successfully
intervene when trafficking occurs. Her commitment and that
of her staff have helped so many women, girls, and families
throughout Costa Rica. I’d like to invite her to say
a few words on behalf of all of this year’s courageous
leaders in the fight against traffic. Thank you. (Applause.)
MS. BERRIOS: (Via interpreter). Thank you so much, Madame
Secretary, for this award. I’m deeply honored to be
here with Vero Lesko of Albania, my fellow. And she’s
a fellow anti-trafficking hero like myself when we are here
representing seven other anti-trafficking heroes recognized.
These are heroes who have been recognized in this year’s
TIP report from across the globe.
Although we fight against human trafficking in different
ways, we have the same goal: to defeat this crime. And we
trust in God’s grace that He will help us achieve
that. We want to return dignity to human beings. I am the
voice of many women, children, and men who are victims of
trafficking. I am also the voice of many NGOs worldwide
who work without any resources. And I’m very grateful
to God for this opportunity to be able to shed light on
the work that these NGOs do, who are heroes also for the
work that they do without any resources.
And being here, I would like to call upon all governments
to designate more resources, both human resources as well
as financial resources, so that we can make progress on
this fight against trafficking. We can form an ideal partnership
because governments have the resources, while we have the
passions, the will to work, and the will to work 24 hours
a day.
First of all, then, I would like to thank God for this award,
to my great team in San Jose, because without them, it would
not be possible for me to be here, and to my family for
putting up with a mother who has to spend her evenings and
nights in the streets, and my husband, who is around here
somewhere, who has taken on the financial burden of allowing
me to do this. (Laughter.)
SECRETARY CLINTON: Where is your husband? (Applause.)
MS. BERRIOS: (Via interpreter). There are many lives behind
these awards. But today, I want to leave you with this thought:
to think about the victims, all of the victims who have
died without a voice to speak for them.
Thank you very much to all of you and may God bless you.
(Applause.)
SECRETARY CLINTON: Thank you so much, Mariliana, and thanks
to your husband as well, a good partnership. And thanks
to all of you for joining us. This is a wonderful event
every year, but it just reminds us of how much work we have
ahead of us. This morning I sent a cable communicating to
the staff of the State Department here and around the world
how critical this issue is to the foreign policy priorities
of the State Department and the Obama Administration. Human
trafficking demands attention and commitment and passion
from all of us. We are determined to build on our past success
and advance progress in the weeks, months, and years ahead.
I ask you just to do one thing for us, and that is become
advocates for both of these reports. (Applause.) Make sure
that you read the Department of Justice report. We are including
more information about the United States in our report.
I believe when you shine a bright light you need to shine
it on everyone, and we will rank ourselves. We believe we’re
Tier 1, but we will rank ourselves next year in the report
so that we have done our duty as well.
But then, please read this. And those of you working in
the State Department, USAID, our missions around the world,
please take this and talk with your counterparts in governments,
in countries that are willing to partner with us to make
the changes that are outlined in this report. There are
so many good ideas. Yes, it does cost some resources, but
the consequences of trafficking for any society are so much
more expensive and devastating.
Thank you all very much. (Applause.) I’ve been reminded,
we’ve got to give the awards out so – (applause).
And please, come and greet our guests. And I know the members
of Congress have to leave for important matters, but come
talk to the ambassador and any members who can stay, introduce
yourselves, because this is part of the team that we have
to go after the scourge of trafficking.
Thank you all very much. (Applause.)