Identifier
Created
Classification
Origin
09BRIDGETOWN529
2009-08-31 21:06:00
UNCLASSIFIED
Embassy Bridgetown
Cable title:  

St. Vincent Eager to Cooperate on Anti-TIP Measures

Tags:  KTIP PHUM EAID PREL XL 
pdf how-to read a cable
VZCZCXYZ0000
RR RUEHWEB

DE RUEHWN #0529/01 2432106
ZNR UUUUU ZZH
R 312106Z AUG 09
FM AMEMBASSY BRIDGETOWN
TO SECSTATE WASHDC 7726
UNCLAS BRIDGETOWN 000529 

SIPDIS

DEPT FOR WHA/CAR AND G/TIP

E.O. 12958: N/A
TAGS: KTIP PHUM EAID PREL XL
SUBJECT: St. Vincent Eager to Cooperate on Anti-TIP Measures

-------
Summary
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UNCLAS BRIDGETOWN 000529

SIPDIS

DEPT FOR WHA/CAR AND G/TIP

E.O. 12958: N/A
TAGS: KTIP PHUM EAID PREL XL
SUBJECT: St. Vincent Eager to Cooperate on Anti-TIP Measures

--------------
Summary
--------------


1. The Office to Counter Trafficking in Persons (G/TIP) consultant's
August 24-27 meetings with Vincentian government (GOSVG) and NGO
representatives revealed receptiveness to further anti-TIP
cooperation, from expanded legislation beyond the Organization for
Eastern Caribbean States (OECS) model currently under review, to
police training and public awareness campaigns. Despite the GOSVG's
negative reaction to G/TIP's watch-list ranking, government
interlocutors, including Prime Minister Ralph Gonsalves, vowed to
cooperate with the USG in an effort to take a proactive approach to
tackling TIP, to include developing measures to ensure that proper
mechanisms are in place to respond to reports of trafficking. End
Summary.

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Moving Forward, Quickly
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2. G/TIP consultant and PolOff's three-hour meeting with PM Ralph
Gonsalves resulted in a positive affirmation that, while the GOSVG
was taken aback by the Tier 2 Watchlist ranking in the 2008 TIP
Report, the government is willing to cooperate fully on any anti-TIP
activities deemed productive by the USG. Gonsalves did not hide his
frustration regarding the Report's ranking, questioning the
Department's investigation techniques and bashing the USG for
publicizing its findings without prior consultation with the GOSVG.
He further recounted repeatedly his discussions, following the
Report's release, with the Charge d'Affaires and A/S Shannon,
referring also to his letter to the Secretary which he circulated
throughout the UN General Assembly. Beyond his apparent angst,
however, the PM, who was accompanied by his National Security
Advisor and former party leader, Sir Vincent Beache, said the GOSVG
was ready to move forward with any technical and other assistance
that could be provided. The PM was especially open to the idea of
tailoring and expanding current laws to deal with TIP, to ensure
proper mechanisms would be in place should any cases of TIP arise.


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No Reports, but Possibilities
--------------


3. All other government interlocutors, including the Police
Commissioner's office, Public Prosecutor, Immigration department,
and most NGOs, claimed that no evidence of TIP had ever formally

surfaced in St. Vincent, nor had any cases been brought to the
attention of the GOSVG. Despite the absence of TIP cases, all
agreed that a better understanding of the definition of trafficking
is needed, and that future public discussions could benefit that
understanding -- in fact, most of the contacts we met with were
unaware of definitions of TIP beyond transnational prostitution.
NGO and GOSVG representatives alike also believed that preventative
measures should be put in place to thwart potential future TIP
activities. The Ministry of National Mobilization went so far as to
read aloud its official four-point position, reiterating its
willingness to take a proactive approach and cooperate with other
countries to fight TIP effectively.


4. As G/TIP consultant and PolOff clarified the broader definition
of TIP to include domestic charges, and the potentiality of cases
due to the lack of proper legislation and awareness, police and
intelligence officials began to identify possible cases. In
particular, one officer noted, a recent drug raid revealed that
minors may have been forced into the production of cannabis, using
impoverished teenagers to cart electric generators and fuel to
production sites in the island's mountainous interior. The Police
Commissioner was quick to point out, however, that such claims could
have been made by defendants hoping to avoid prosecution by claiming
they had been trafficked. According to the Police Commissioner's
office, no further investigations or interviews were conducted in
that case to ascertain whether the minors were actually victims of
TIP -- and no prosecutions were undertaken.


5. Separately, the Human Rights Association (HRA) NGO claimed that
women from other countries (most notably Costa Rica) had been
brought into St. Vincent under false pretences to work in the sex
industry there. The NGO also alleged that the women had their
passports seized. Additionally, HRA maintained that cases of
parents exploiting their own children for sex as a means of income
had been seen in the courts, but were brought to court as rape
charges vice trafficking cases. Although these allegations were not
corroborated by the Attorney General's Chambers, police, or
Immigration, HRA did vow to tabulate cases brought to court for USG
review. Given such supposed occurrences, HRA agreed that more TIP
awareness was needed and advised that, should training occur, the
OECS Secretariat and Judicial Education Institute -- both located in
nearby St. Lucia -- should be included. In-country seminars, held
as town halls and on the radio, and police training were other
possible areas highlighted by the NGO.

--------------
Reviewing Legislation
--------------


6. Legislative Consultant to the Attorney General Peter Purseglove
(a UK national who works under contract for the GOSVG) said that the
Attorney General's Chambers is currently reviewing the OECS model
legislation on Human Trafficking, in addition to the UN's
Transnational Crime Convention (aka Palermo Protocol). He seemed
confident that the Palermo Protocol would be ratified by the end of

2009. Purseglove believed that further tailoring of the OECS model
to St. Vincent's situation would be required, and appeared amenable
to future cooperation with the USG on the drafting of TIP-specific
legislation. Public Prosecutions Director R. Colin Williams agreed
separately that legislation has to be dynamic, and was certain that
the GOSVG as a whole would concur. In an earlier meeting, Acting
Chief Immigration Officer Beverly Walker alluded to the importance
of having anti-TIP legislation harmonized throughout the region, to
ensure that those deported by St. Vincent would not be able to evade
prosecution elsewhere.

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Comment: Receptivity Abounds
--------------


7. Each meeting confirmed that anti-TIP cooperation would be
welcomed by the GOSVG and NGOs alike. All hoped that such
cooperation could be quickly forthcoming, and that the USG would do
more to help guide its anti-TIP-related contacts on what actions
should be taken should cases emerge. On the basis of these
discussions, there are a number of areas for cooperation that appear
ripe for exploration, from police training and legislation drafting,
to education and public awareness. Post will follow up on the
claims made by the Human Rights Association and include, as
appropriate, its findings within the 2009 Report. End Comment.