Due Diligence on Supply Chains: Detecting Human Trafficking in Southeast Asia.

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Due Diligence on Supply Chains: Detecting Human Trafficking in Southeast Asia www.kroll.com

A number of recent headlines have highlighted the need for investors active in emerging markets to undertake thorough due diligence of supply chains. Inaction could not only result in legal repercussions for investors, but also seriously affect reputation and brand value. In this thought piece, Kroll explores the importance of thoroughly understanding supply chains in order to avoid unknowingly becoming complicit in human trafficking. Southeast Asia is one of the most exciting and lucrative areas for business and investment opportunities for U.S. and European investors. The region, led by countries such as Indonesia, Vietnam, Thailand, and Malaysia, has fared better than most in the subdued global economy in 2013. With the opening up of the longisolated but anticipated profitable market of Myanmar and potentially Papua New Guinea as well the region continues to offer attractive business and investment opportunities. However, as part of a robust due diligence process, investors should be made aware of the legal, financial, and reputational risks associated with inadvertent complicity in human trafficking. Despite increased efforts to combat it, human trafficking is perceived as the third largest illicit trade globally, after the illicit trade of arms and drugs. The International Labor Organization (ILO) estimates traffickers annual profits to be as high as US$32 billion. Out of an estimated 21 million victims of human trafficking worldwide, more than half are estimated to come from the Asia-Pacific region....human trafficking is perceived as the third largest illicit trade globally, after the illicit trade of arms and drugs. Contrary to popular and sensationalist belief, most victims are not trafficked into the commercial sex industry. According to a 2005 ILO report, out of an estimated 9.5 million victims of forced labor in Asia, less than 10 percent were trafficked for sexual exploitation. 1 Rather, Human trafficking violates a number of international legal conventions on labor and human rights, as well as national and sub-national laws. The United Nations (UN) Palermo Protocol, which took effect in 2003, has been signed by 117 countries and has led to widespread national-level legislation by signatories. National anti-trafficking laws have been passed in nearly all countries in Southeast Asia. Myanmar recently repealed an antiquated law that condoned the use of forced labor by government officials and has put an annual national plan of action in place to address the issue. most victims find themselves pressed into bonded and forced labor for numerous industries including agriculture, fishing and seafood, garments and textiles, construction, hospitality and tourism, and mining and logging. The problem is particularly prevalent in Southeast Asia as many countries in the region are a key source of labor for these industries. Because forced labor frequently occurs deeper in the supply chain, it is important to assess and investigate the potential use of bonded or forced labor by subcontractors and recruitment agencies. Increased scrutiny is of particular significance in light of recent legislation such as the California Transparency in Supply Chains Act. As of January 1, 2012, this act requires all retailers with more than US$100 million in global sales to publicly disclose their efforts to monitor and combat human trafficking in their supply chains. The law applies to more than 3,200 corporations that do business in California, which has the potential to affect interests and policies along each of those companies supply chains. 2 Avoiding unintended involvement in human trafficking and any attendant sanctions, such as fines for violating international or national anti-trafficking laws requires a vigilant and proactive approach in managing the legal and reputational risks to a business. This is particularly challenging in emerging markets where political and legal frameworks are often underdeveloped. Asia Human Trafficking - 1

The Southeast Asian context The 2013 U.S. Department of State Trafficking in Persons Report serves as an annual report card on the efforts of countries to combat human trafficking and complying with the minimum standards of the U.S. Trafficking Victims Protection Act (TVPA). The report relegated Cambodia to Tier 2 Watch List, joining Thailand and Myanmar in this tier, for failing to improve on its efforts to combat human trafficking. Placement on Tier 2 Watch List for three consecutive years results in an automatic downgrade to Tier 3, which can lead to economic sanctions such as the blocking of World Bank aid. Other countries in the region, such as Vietnam, Indonesia, and the Philippines, were ranked as Tier 2 in the most recent report for failing to comply with the minimum standards, but are making strides to bring themselves into compliance. While most of Southeast Asia s emerging markets are recognized as source countries of trafficking victims, the rapid economic growth in the region has also led to numerous markets emerging as destinations for trafficking victims. Trafficking chains exist across a wide spectrum of business sectors and can range from highly complex global and national operations to smaller local cottage industries. The risks are particularly high in industries that are labor-intensive and rely on seasonal work. These industries include agriculture, construction, garments and textiles, fishing and seafood, and mining and logging. Forms of human trafficking involvement»» Companies may be implicated in human trafficking in a number of ways, including engaging directly with trafficking victims through the recruitment, harboring, transportation, or receipt of a person who has been trafficked for purposes of exploitation. In 2012, one of New Zealand s biggest seafood enterprises, Sanford, was named in an investigative report for hiring foreign-chartered fishing vessels that relied on forced labor. The report garnered extensive global media coverage and led some of Sanford s largest clients, including U.S. retailers Safeway and Wal-Mart, to investigate their fish supply chains, while also implicating retailers Whole Foods and Costco, and restaurant chain P.F. Chang s. The allegations prompted the CEO of the largest U.S importer of New Zealand fish, Mazzetta Company, to send a letter to Sanford s managing director demanding changes. Sanford has since admitted underpaying the foreign crew, blaming its Indonesian labor agent for underpaying 100 workers by NZD 885,000 and ordered the agency to publish newspaper notices to help track down affected crew workers. Activists estimate that further investigation into the industry could lead to more than NZD 13 million in underpayments. 4 Trafficking chains exist across a wide spectrum of business sectors and can range from highly complex global and national operations to smaller local cottage industries.»» Companies may also be at risk of engaging directly with traffickers who may use a company s premises, products, or services for the purposes of trafficking or exploiting victims. This is particularly relevant in the transport, hospitality, tourism, and information technology sectors.»» The most likely form of involvement comes from companies being indirectly linked with trafficking along the supply chain through the actions of partner companies, suppliers, contractors, labor brokers, or employment agencies. A company can be indirectly linked to trafficking through the use of forced or bonded labor, or the use of source materials, goods, and services that come from victims of trafficking. Asia Human Trafficking - 2

The legal risks of complicity include violating international and national laws. This could result in legal action, sanctions, and fines that require costly remedial action. Even in the absence of legal action, participation in human trafficking poses serious reputational risks for a company. Regardless of the scale of involvement, claims of human trafficking can cause serious damage to a brand and attract negative press from the media, consumer activists, and NGOs, affecting investor relations and consumer demand, and potentially leading to restrictions that could endanger commercial partnerships. A closer look at Thailand s fishing Industry Thailand is one of the largest exporters of fish and fishery products in the world, producing exports valued at US$7.3 billion in 2011. Thailand is the third largest exporter behind China and Norway and supplies consumers in the U.S., Japan, and Europe. It is estimated that 8 percent of Thai seafood exports go to supermarkets and restaurants in the U.S., making it the second largest exporter to the U.S. after Japan. 6 Thailand s economic growth and relative prosperity have led to a shortage of workers in industries that depend on a low-skilled and labor-intensive workforce. This has prompted an influx of migrant workers from neighbouring countries, such as Myanmar, Cambodia, and Laos, to fill this void. The fishing industry is one of the key industries that employ migrant workers, many of whom are undocumented. It is estimated that more than 200,000 migrants work on Thai fishing vessels and thousands more in related industries. A recent Human Rights Watch report estimates that the land-based sectors of the fishing industry employ more than 250,000 migrants from Myanmar alone, a number that has almost certainly risen in the wake of increased persecution of Rohingya ethnic groups in Myanmar. The risk of human trafficking is extremely high in this industry, where undocumented migrants, many as young as 16, are forced onto fishing boats for long periods of time and subject to arduous, often violent working conditions without pay. Reports suggest that fishing companies buy Rohingya men for between THB 10,000-20,000 (US$320 - $640) from traffickers; a recent Reuters investigation has even implicated Thai authorities in aiding and profiting from these smuggling networks. 7 Rapid economic growth has led to a construction boom across the region leading to increased demand and opportunities for low-skilled migrant laborers. The fishing industry remains one of the key areas of concern for human trafficking, leading the U.S. Department of State to place Thailand on its Tier 2 Watch List for a fourth consecutive year. The scale and exposure of the issue in Thailand may increase consumer and government pressure for companies to commit to conclusively demonstrating that supply chains are free from trafficking and other human rights violations. High-risk sectors For companies and investors operating or looking to expand into Southeast Asia, it is important to assess the risks of complicity in human trafficking in relevant industries. Industries in which human trafficking has been identified as a significant problem include: Agriculture Agriculture is a key export industry for many countries in the region. Markets such as Myanmar are seen to have huge agricultural potential, but given the significant relationship between human trafficking and agricultural production, due diligence and risk assessment is imperative to mitigating risk. Construction Rapid economic growth has led to a construction boom across the region leading to increased demand and opportunities for low-skilled migrant laborers. Foreign Asia Human Trafficking - 3

laborers are subject to extreme working conditions, abuse, and pay withholdings in the form of forced overtime or forced savings. While organizations such as the ILO extensively document labor abuses, there is significantly less research into the recruitment practices in the industry, which poses additional challenges in ensuring compliance. Garments and Textiles The garment and textile industry remains a key export sector for many countries in the region. Countries such as Vietnam, Cambodia, Thailand, Indonesia, and increasingly Myanmar, are central to the supply chains of numerous international brands. Reports alleging human trafficking or conditions of forced labor have not only affected the first tier of supply chains, but also subcontractors and even home-based workshops operating on the fringes of the formal economy. The growing global interconnectedness between companies, suppliers, and subcontractors requires vigilance and ensuring basic standards and compliance measures to mitigate the risk of complicity. Hospitality and Tourism Many countries in Asia are major destinations for tourists, and the tourism and hospitality industry is never far from the spotlight of human trafficking, particularly for commercial sexual exploitation. Resorts, hotels, clubs, and increasingly tour operators, cafes, and restaurants, are frequently caught up in reports of prostitution rings or criminal activity linked to sexual tourism. International organizations and the tourist industry have taken preventive steps, such as the adoption of The Code to implement anti-trafficking training and policies; there has also been increased attention on the vulnerability of temporary and migrant workers working in the industry. Mining and Logging Many countries in the region, particularly Indonesia and Myanmar, are major source countries for mining and logging operations. There are increasing reports of forced and bonded labor within the industry, but geographic remoteness of these operations poses additional challenges to ensuring compliance. 1 David A. Feingold, Think Again: Human Trafficking, Foreign Policy, 2005, 26. 2 Benjamin Skinner, The Fishing Industry s Cruelest Catch, Business Week, 2013, http://www.businessweek.com/articles/2012-02-23/the-fishing-industrys-cruelest-catch. 3 Ibid. 4 Michael Field, Fishing Company Admits Underpaying Foreign Crew, Stuff.co.nz, February 17, 2013, http://www.stuff.co.nz/business/industries/8314678/fishing-company-admits-underpaying-foreign-crew. 5 Environmental Justice Foundation, Sold to the Sea: Human Trafficking in Thailand s Fishing Industry, 2013, 12, http://ejfoundation. org/sites/default/files/public/sold_to_the_sea_report_lo-res-v2.pdf. 6 Jason Szep and Stuart Grudgings, Special Report: Thai Authorities Implicated in Rohingya Muslim Smuggling Network, Reuters, 2013, http://www.reuters.com/article/2013/07/17/us-myanmar-exodus-specialreport-idusbre96g02520130717. 7 Ibid. Asia Human Trafficking - 4

Kroll consulting services Kroll is engaged on an ongoing basis undertaking various aspects of due diligence on potential partners for investors moving into Asia. Kroll in Southeast Asia, headquartered in Singapore, is active in all of the countries described in this report. As part of that due diligence process, Kroll suggests that investors assess the likely risk to their business from unwitting complicity in the human trafficking trade and consider a discreet and independent audit of supply chains to assess and mitigate against such risk Contact Us Kroll Offices - New York 600 Third Avenue New York, New York 10016 Toll Free: 888-209-9526 Phone: 212-593-1000 Fax: 212-593-2631 Boston 10 High Street Boston, Massachusetts 02110 Toll Free: 877-350-7878 Phone: 617-350-7878 Fax: 617-350-7901 Chicago 311 South Wacker Drive Suite 6450 Chicago, Illinois 60606 Toll Free: 800-756-1575 Phone: 312 345 2750 Fax: 312 345 2751 www.kroll.com Los Angeles 555 S. Flower Street 6th Floor Los Angeles, California 90071 Toll Free: 877-505-5340 Phone: 213-443-6090 Fax: 213-443-6050 Miami 1395 Brickell Avenue Suite 1150 Miami, Florida 33131 Phone: 305-789-7100 Fax: 305-789-7159 San Francisco 475 Sansome Street Suite 510 San Francisco, California 94111 Phone: 415-743-4800 Fax: 415-743-4811 Washington, DC 1707 L St., NW Suite 750 Washington, DC, 20036 Phone: 202 833 6860 Fax: 703-860-0436 Kroll Offices - United Kingdom London (Europe, Middle East & Africa Headquarters) Nexus Place 25 Farringdon Street London EC4A 4AB United Kingdom Phone: 44 (0) 207 029 5000 Fax: 44 (0) 207 029 5001 Kroll Offices - Japan Tokyo 24/F NBF Hibiya Building, 1-7 Uchisaiwaicho 1-chome Chiyoda-ku Tokyo 100-0011 Japan Phone: 81 3 3509 7100 Fax: 81 3 3509 7130 Kroll Offices - Singapore Singapore 30 Cecil Street #19-05/06 Prudential Tower Singapore 049712 Singapore Phone: 65 6645 4520 Fax: 65 6645 4524