BEIJING, July 12 (Xinhua) -- The Chinese government
announced Wednesday it has submitted for approving a plan to fight human
trafficking to meet its obligations to a 2004 agreement among six Asian
countries.
At a meeting here of the Coordinated Mekong
Ministerial Initiative Against Trafficking (COMMIT), Wan Yan, a member of the
COMMIT China office, said, "We have submitted the action plan and are awaiting
approval. If passed, the plan will help to clarify the responsibilities of all
the relevant ministries in combating human trafficking."
The governments of China, Cambodia, Laos, Myanmar,
Thailand and Vietnam adopted a comprehensive and strategic Sub-regional Plan of
Action to jointly combat human trafficking in 2004, under which member states
each devise a national plan of action.
"Many thousands of people have been rescued and
safely returned in the past five years," said Susu Thatun, the program manager
of UN Inter-Agency Project on Human Trafficking in the Greater Mekong
Sub-region.
Susu said in late 1990s, many countries opened their
borders to encourage economic development, but this also made human trafficking
easier.
The six members belong to the Greater Mekong
Sub-region, one of the world's most rampant human trafficking areas.
The United Nations reckons tens of thousands women
and children are abducted and sold each year in the region.
"No government could singly solve the transnational
trafficking problems except to cooperate through agreed issues, and
multi-miniterial cooperation is the only way to fight against the crime," Wan
Yan said.
Many Asian governments are trying to stem the problem
but are not doing enough, Susu said, hoping they could speed up a little in
future.
Commenting China's role in the battle, Susu said
"China can become a true leader in combating human trafficking, given its
economic power and international influence."
Since 2005, the Chinese government have carried out
the principles COMMIT process made, including to hold high level meeting on
discussion of framework and components for the national plan of action against
human trafficking; strengthening communication, cooperation and information
sharing; launching campaign of combating cross-border trafficking jointly with
neighboring countries.
UN definition says that human trafficking refers to
the transportation of persons for sexual exploitation, forced labour or other
illicit activities. Enditem