US Report On Human Trafficking In Hong Kong 'biased'

"); jQuery("#212 h3").html("

Related News Programmes

"); });

2022-07-20 HKT 11:49

Share this story

facebook

  • US Secretary of State Antony Blinken launches the 2022 Trafficking in Persons Report. File photo: AFP

    US Secretary of State Antony Blinken launches the 2022 Trafficking in Persons Report. File photo: AFP

The government on Wednesday objected to a United States report on human trafficking, describing it as “biased and unfair”.

In the 2022 Trafficking Persons Report, the US State Department said the Hong Kong government “does not meet the minimum standards for the elimination of trafficking”, and gave the SAR its second-worst “Tier 2 Watch List” rating.

It said authorities here “did not prosecute or convict any labour traffickers, and sentenced criminals convicted for crimes related to sex trafficking to inadequate penalties”.

The report added that despite the screening of thousands of vulnerable people for trafficking indicators, it identified only one victim.

In response, the government said in a statement that "trafficking in persons is never a prevalent problem in Hong Kong and there has never been any sign that Hong Kong is being actively used by syndicates as a destination or transit point for trafficking in persons.”

Authorities said they have been making proactive and multi-pronged efforts in the fight against human trafficking, and injected an enormous amount of resources to combat trafficking and to enhance the protection and well-being of foreign domestic helpers here.

The statement said that authorities here had maintained its anti-trafficking efforts despite the challenges of the Covid-19 pandemic in the past two years. It went on to point out that coverage of the initial screening of victims has been extended since the end of 2019 to cover all cases involving people vulnerable to trafficking risks, including illegal immigrants, sex workers, illegal workers, foreign domestic helpers and imported workers.

"Facts speak louder than words. Despite the intensified screening efforts, only a handful of trafficking-in-persons victims were identified. The very small number and percentage of victims identified thus far has once again reinforced our observation that trafficking in persons is never a prevalent problem in Hong Kong,” the government said.

“It is baseless and unfair to cast doubt on the quality of our screenings and discredit our screening procedure merely because of the low number of victims so identified,” it added.

RECENT NEWS

Circle CEO Says China Could Launch Yuan Stablecoin In 3 To 5 Years As Trade Grows

Circle CEO Jeremy Allaire predicts that China could roll out a yuan stablecoin within three to five years to expand the... Read more

Naver IPO Timeline Set As Dunamu Merger Targets Nasdaq Debut

Preparations for a Naver IPO are underway following an agreement between Naver Financial and cryptocurrency exchange op... Read more

TransUnion Urges Lenders To Rethink Credit Risk For Gig Workers In Hong Kong

TransUnion is urging lenders to update their risk assessment models, revealing that gig workers in Hong Kong exhibit st... Read more

Citi And Endowus Roll Out HK$4,000 Wealth-Linked Credit Card Campaign

Citi and digital wealth platform Endowus have launched a joint credit card promotion in Hong Kong, expanding the Citi E... Read more

Aspire Secures SFC License In Hong Kong To Launch SME Yield Product

Singapore-headquartered fintech Aspire has secured three financial licenses from the Securities and Futures Commission ... Read more

Why Stablecoins May Become The Backbone Of 24/7 Global Trade

Stablecoin transaction volumes surged 72% in 2025, reaching a record US$33 trillion and signalling growing institutiona... Read more