Human trafficking challenges for CARICOM states

Jun 25, 2013

BRIDGETOWN, Barbados -THE LATEST Trafficking In Persons (TIP) report by the United States Department of State, valuable as it is,  is a reminder that countries of the Caribbean region are back in that cycle of recurring admonition from Washington as lacking in vigorous commitment to combat this horrible crime against humanity.
There is no doubting the fact that  in the United States, not just the CARICOM region but nations across the global community have a strong ally  to arrest the crime of trafficking in persons, among them being women and even young children as victims of sex exploitation and slave labour.
What, however, remains a difference of significance in annual TIP reports from the State Department from those generally released by the United Nations is that the world body avoids being judgmental and is more realistic when offering  global appraisals of official efforts to face up to this shocking, inhumane, degrading crime  across continents.

You may also be interested in:

Hipolina Joseph leads the consultations on National Youth Policy Discussions
Stakeholders Engage in Consultations to Strengthen National Youth Policy
The Department of Youth Development and Sports, through its Youth Unit, has commenced a four-day series of half-day closed stakeholder consultations aimed at strengthening the development and imple
caricom_admin
Capacity Workshop
Regional Workshop Strengthens Caribbean Capacity on Genetic Resources
Regional policymakers, scientists, and biodiversity experts gathered from March 3-5, 2026, at The University of the West Indies (UWI), St.
caricom_admin