Ghana Risks Losing U.S. Aid Over Modern Slavery
The Government of United State of America (USA) has charged Ghana to end modern day slavery immediately or face the consequences of her lackadaisical attitude towards the fight against the crime.
This may include cutting off military assistance to Ghana and also reduce aid support amounting over $140 million per year.
Per its ratings,
Ghana is classified as a Tier 2 Watch List country, meaning that the
government does not fully meet the minimum standards for the elimination
of trafficking in persons and also failed to provide evidence of
increasing efforts to combat forced labour, child labour and sex
trafficking of children and adults in the past year.
The White House,
mincing no words warned President Mahama that: "Without significant
progress in combating trafficking in persons, Ghana risks losing U.S.
support for programs in agriculture, education, security, governance,
health and economic growth".
The U.S. government
is funding several programs in Ghana to address trafficking and child
labor. In June 2015, President Mahama and then-Ambassador Gene Cretz
signed the Child Protection Compact (CPC) Partnership.
The CPC Partnership
is a jointly developed, multi-year plan aimed at bolstering current
efforts of the government of Ghana and Ghanaian civil society to address
child sex trafficking and forced child labour within Ghana. The
Partnership awarded $5 million in U.S. foreign assistance to the
International Organization for Migration (IOM) and Free the Slaves, NGO
to combat forced child labour and child sex trafficking in the Volta,
Central, and Greater Accra regions over the next four years.
In a statement
released from the office of U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry amidst
the 2016 Trafficking in Persons Report by the US government, which was
published at the Embassy of United State in Accra, it said: "The 2016
TIP Report includes narratives for 188 countries and territories,
including the United States. The goal of the report is to stimulate
action and create partnerships around the world in the fight against
modern slavery".
According to the
American government: " for the second year in a row, Ghana is classified
as a Tier 2 Watch List country, meaning that the government does not
fully meet the minimum standards for the elimination of trafficking in
persons and failed to provide evidence of increasing efforts to combat
severe forms of trafficking in the past year".
The statement was
emphatic that any country ranked on the Tier 2 Watch List for two
consecutive years must be downgraded to Tier 3 in the third year unless
it shows sufficient progress to warrant a Tier 2 or Tier 1 ranking. A
Tier 3 ranking indicates a government does not fully comply with the
minimum standards for the elimination of trafficking in persons and is
not making significant efforts to do so.
It said: "Ghana
could be subject to an automatic downgrade to Tier 3 in the 2017 TIP
Report. If Ghana is downgraded to Tier 3 in 2017, it will become subject
to restrictions on U.S. assistance, including development aid and the
Millennium Challenge Corporation (MCC) Compact.
The United States
currently provides more than $140 million per year in development aid to
Ghana ". Commenting on the report, U.S. Ambassador to Ghana, Robert
Jackson said: "The Trafficking in Persons report recognizes the
trafficking problems we all know exist in Ghana--forced labour, child
labour and sex trafficking of children and adults.
It is important to
note, however, that it is not the quantity of trafficking in any given
country that is being evaluated. Trafficking exists everywhere,
including in the United States. Rather, the ranking assesses the efforts
made by government to prevent trafficking, prosecute criminals and
protect victims" the statement lamented.
"No one wants Ghana
to slip to Tier 3 next year," said Ambassador Jackson. "Not only is
such a move catastrophic for the victims of trafficking, but it would
also be disastrous to our development efforts in all areas: agriculture,
education, security, governance, health and economic growth.
He said the
government of Ghana must increase its anti-trafficking efforts, for the
immediate benefit of Ghanaian trafficking victims and the long-term
benefit of all Ghanaians.
He continued:
"Unfortunately, despite some investigations and awareness campaigns, the
government of Ghana did not demonstrably commit to anti-trafficking
efforts in 2015. As such, Ghana is placed on the Tier 2 Watch List for
the second consecutive year. Ghana must increase the resources it
invests in anti-trafficking enforcement and protection activities and
track and report the results of its efforts.
This includes
investigating trafficking cases; prosecuting and convicting traffickers;
and providing assistance, protection and care for adult and child
victims of trafficking.
"The TIP Report
recognizes that the Ghanaian government investigated and prosecuted some
trafficking and trafficking-related crimes, including allegedly
fraudulent labour recruiters and suspected child traffickers; conducted
public awareness activities aimed at informing the public about the
risks of human trafficking; and provided funding to support two meetings
of the Human Trafficking Management Board.
"However, key
factors in Ghana's Tier 2 Watch List ranking include no demonstrable
increase in prosecution efforts or assistance to victims; zero
trafficking convictions in 2015; a decrease in the number of victims
identified in the past year; inadequate funding and training for law
enforcement and prosecutors; inadequate funding for victim protection
and support services; insufficiently stringent penalties for
trafficking; and reports of increased of corruption and bribery in the
judicial system, which hindered anti-trafficking measures" the American
Ambassador to Ghana told the Flagstaff House.
On the way forward
the report provided specific recommendations to further the government
of Ghana's anti-trafficking efforts over the next year. These
recommendations include: Increase funding, support for police and
immigration service efforts to investigate, and police and attorney
general prosecutors to prosecute trafficking offenses--especially
internal labour and Sex trafficking of children and convict and punish
trafficking offenders.
It called on the
Mahama-led administration to develop and implement systematic methods of
collecting and reporting data on investigations, prosecutions, victims
identified, and assistance provided.
"Develop and
implement systematic procedures for law enforcement, social welfare
personnel, and labour inspectors to proactively identify trafficking
victims among vulnerable populations -such as women in prostitution,
migrant workers, and children working in agriculture, mining, fishing,
and pottering and refer them to protective services.
"Provide training to prosecutors and judges on the appropriate implementation of the Anti-Trafficking Act" he noted.
The American
government told Ghanaian authorities to provide support for
government-operated shelters for children and adults and training of
staff in victim care and Increase efforts to regulate the activity of
licensed and unlicensed recruitment agencies and investigate and
prosecute agencies suspected of participating in human trafficking of
Ghanaian migrant workers.
It stressed: "Amend
the anti-trafficking act legislative instrument so that it provides
sufficiently stringent penalties for all trafficking offenders". The USA
government highlighted that her Department of Labour's Mobilizing
Community Action and Promoting Opportunities for Youth in Ghana's
Cocoa-Growing Communities (MOCA) project is providing $4.5 million to
empower 40 cocoa-growing communities in the Ashanti and Western Regions
to design and implement Community Action Plans (CAPs) to address child
labour at the community level.
Also USDOL projects
include $1.5 million to assess the prevalence of child labour in the
cocoa sectors of Côte d'Ivoire and Ghana; $3 million to assess the
effectiveness of interventions in these sectors;
and $5 million to
develop and implement strategies to reduce child labour and improve
working conditions in artisanal and small-scale gold mining.
USAID Ghana's
Sustainable Fisheries Management Project, a $24 million project aimed at
rebuilding marine fisheries stocks and catches through adoption of
responsible fishing practices, also includes deliberate steps towards
reducing child labour and trafficking in the Central Region of Ghana
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