Article I
Definitions
§100 “Trafficking in persons” shall
mean the recruitment, transportation, transfer, harboring
or receipt of a person by means of the threat or use
of force or other means of coercion, or by abduction,
fraud, deception, abuse of power or of a position of
vulnerability, or by the giving or receiving of payments
or benefits to achieve the consent of a person having
control over another person, for the purpose of exploitation.1
§101 “Child” shall
mean any person under eighteen years of age.2
§102 “Exploitation”
shall mean3:
keeping a person in a state of slavery;
subjecting a person to practices similar to slavery;
compelling or causing a person to provide forced labor
or services;
keeping a person in a state of servitude, including
sexual servitude;
exploitation of the prostitution of another;
engaging in any other form of commercial sexual exploitation,
including but not limited to pimping, pandering, procuring,
profiting from prostitution, maintaining a brothel,
child pornography;
illicit removal of human organs.
§103 “Slavery” shall mean the status
or condition of a person over whom any or all the powers
attaching to the right of ownership are exercised.
§104 “Practices similar to slavery”
are defined in the Supplementary Convention on the Abolition
of Slavery, the Slave Trade, and Institutions and Practices
Similar to Slavery4 and include, in general, debt bondage,
serfdom, forced or servile marriages and delivery of
children for exploitation.5
§105 “Forced labor”
shall mean labor or services obtained or maintained
through force, threat of force, or other means of coercion
or physical restraint.
§106 “Servitude” shall
mean a condition of dependency in which the labor or
services of a person are provided or obtained by threats
of serious harm to that person or another person, or
through any scheme, plan, or pattern intended to cause
the person to believe that, if the person did not perform
such labor or services, that person or another person
would suffer serious harm.
§107 “Illicit removal of
organs” refers to the unlawful conduct, and not
to legitimate medical procedures for which proper consent
has been obtained.
§108 “Abuse of a position of vulnerability”
shall mean such abuse that the person believes he or
she has no reasonable alternative but to submit to the
labor or service demanded of the person, and includes
but is not limited to taking advantage of the vulnerabilities
resulting from the person having entered the country
illegally or without proper documentation, pregnancy,
any physical or mental disease or disability of the
person, including addiction to the use of any substance,6
or reduced capacity to form judgments by virtue of being
a child.
§109 Coercion shall include violent
as well as some forms of non-violent or psychological
coercion, including:
threats of serious harm to or physical
restraint against any person;
any scheme, plan, or pattern intended to cause a person
to believe that failure to perform an act would result
in serious harm to or physical restraint against any
persons;
or the abuse or threatened abuse of the legal process.
§110 Debt bondage shall mean the status or condition
of a debtor arising from a pledge by the debtor of his
or her personal services or those of a person under
his or her control as a security for debt, if the value
of those services as reasonably assessed is not applied
toward the liquidation of the debt or the length and
nature of those services are not respectively limited
and defined.
§111 Terms not defined in this
Article shall be interpreted consistent with their use
elsewhere in domestic law.
Article II
Criminal Offenses and Related Provisions
§200 Trafficking in Persons7
Whoever engages in [or conspires to engage in, or attempts
to engage in, or assists another person to engage in
or organizes or directs other persons to engage in]8
“trafficking in persons” as defined in Section
100 shall
be sentenced to any term of years or life imprisonment,9
be subject to forfeiture of property under Section 206,
and
be ordered to pay full restitution to the trafficked
person or persons under Section 205.10
The recruitment, transportation, transfer, harboring,
or receipt of any child, or the giving of payments or
benefits to obtain the consent of a person having control
of a child, for the purpose of exploitation shall constitute
trafficking in persons irrespective of whether any of
the means described in Section 100 have been established.11
§201 Unlawful Withholding of Identification Papers12
Any person who, acting or purporting to act as another
person’s employer, manager, supervisor, contractor,
employment agent, or solicitor of clients [such as a
pimp], knowingly procures,13 destroys, conceals, removes,
confiscates, or possesses any passport, immigration
document, or other government identification document,
whether actual or purported, belonging to another person
shall be fined under this title and imprisoned not more
than five years.14
§202 Transporting a Person for the Purpose of Exploiting
Such Person’s Prostitution15
Whoever knowingly transports [or conspires
to transport, or attempts to transport or assists another
person engaged in transporting] any person across an
international border for the purpose of exploiting that
person’s prostitution,16 shall be punished in
accordance with (b).17
Persons convicted of the crime of transporting
a person for the purpose of that person’s prostitution
shall be imprisoned not more than ten years, but the
presence of any one of the following aggravating factors
can permit a longer sentence up to a maximum of 20 years:
transporting two or more persons at the same time;
permanent or life-threatening bodily injury to a person
transported;
transportation of one or more children; or
transporting as part of the activity of an organized
criminal group.
§203 Restitution18
Where a defendant is convicted of trafficking in persons
under Section 200, the court shall order the defendant
to pay restitution to the victim.
Restitution shall compensate the victim
for:
costs of medical and psychological treatment;
costs of physical and occupational therapy and rehabilitation;
costs of necessary transportation, temporary housing,
and child care;
lost income;
attorney’s fees and other costs such as victim
advocate fees;
the greater of the (a) gross income or value to the
defendant of the victim’s services or labor or
(b) the value of the victim’s services as guaranteed
under [insert reference to appropriate labor standards
laws];
compensation for emotional distress, pain, and suffering;
and
any other losses suffered by the victim.
Restitution shall be paid to the victim promptly upon
the conviction of the defendant, with the proceeds from
property forfeited under Section 204 applied first to
payment of restitution. The return of the victim to
her or his home country or other absence of the victim
from the jurisdiction shall not prejudice the victim’s
right to receive restitution.
§204 Forfeiture
All property, including but not limited to money, valuables,
real property and vehicles, of persons convicted of
the crime of trafficking in persons under Section 200
that was used or intended to be used, or was obtained
in the course of the crime, or benefits gained from
the proceeds of the crime, shall be forfeited to the
State.19 [Overseas assets of persons convicted of trafficking
in persons shall also be subject to forfeiture to the
extent they can be retrieved by government.]
§205 Sentencing Guidelines
As factually appropriate, the following
adjustments to the minimum sentence, or enhancements
to the sentence of a person convicted of the crime of
trafficking in persons shall apply20:
if the convicted person used, threatened use, or caused
another to use or threaten use of a dangerous weapon,
2 years shall be added to the minimum sentence;
if a trafficked person suffers a serious
bodily injury, or if the convicted person commits a
sexual assault against a trafficked person, 5 years
shall be added to the minimum sentence;
if the trafficked person has not attained
the age of 18 years, 5 years shall be added to the minimum
sentence;
if, in the course of trafficking or
subsequent exploitation, the convicted person recklessly
caused a trafficked person to be exposed to a life threatening
illness, or if the convicted person intentionally caused
a trafficked person to become addicted to any drug or
medication, 5 years shall be added to the minimum sentence;
if a trafficked person suffers a permanent
or life threatening injury, 10 years shall be added
to the minimum sentence;
if a trafficked person dies as a result
of the trafficking, the sentence shall be between 20
years and life imprisonment;
if the trafficking was part of the activity
of an organized criminal group [as defined at (insert
reference to law defining “organized criminal
group” in accordance with the UN Convention on
Transnational Organized Crime)], 3 years shall be added
to the minimum sentence; or
if the trafficking was part of the activity
of an organized criminal group [as defined at (insert
reference to law defining “organized criminal
group” in accordance with the UN Convention on
Transnational Organized Crime)], and the convicted person
organized the group or directed its activities, 5 years
shall be added to the minimum sentence.21
if the trafficking occurred as the result
of abuse of power or position of authority, including
but not limited to a parent or guardian, teacher, children’s
club leader, or any other person who has been entrusted
with the care or supervision of the child, {3} or {5}
years shall be added to the minimum sentence.
Definitions– For the purposes
of this section:
“Dangerous weapon” shall mean (i) an instrument
capable of inflicting death or serious bodily injury;
or (ii) an object that is not an instrument capable
of inflicting death or serious bodily injury but (I)
closely resembles such an instrument; or (II) is used
in such a way that it creates the impression that the
object is an instrument capable of inflicting death
or serious bodily injury.
“Serious bodily injury”
shall mean injury involving extreme physical pain or
the protracted impairment of a function of a bodily
member, organ or mental faculty; or requiring medical
intervention such as surgery, hospitalization, or physical
rehabilitation.
“Sexual assault” shall mean
causing another to engage in a sexual act by using force
against that person, threatening or placing that person
in fear that any person will be subjected to death,
serious bodily injury, or kidnaping, and engaging in
a sexual act with an incapacitated person, or a person
who cannot express consent or with a minor that constitutes
statutory rape under domestic law.
“Permanent or life-threatening
bodily injury” shall mean injury involving a substantial
risk of death; loss or substantial impairment of the
function of a bodily member, organ or mental faculty
that is likely to be permanent; or an obvious disfigurement
that is likely to be permanent. Maltreatment to a life-threatening
degree, such as by denial of food or medical care that
results in substantial impairment of function, constitutes
life-threatening bodily injury.
“Life-threatening illness”
shall mean any illness [whether treated or untreated]
that involves a substantial risk of death, and includes
at a minimum HIV infection and tuberculosis.
[“Organized criminal group”
shall mean a structured group of three or more persons,
existing for a period of time and acting in concert
with the aim of committing one or more offenses established
under this section in order to obtain, directly or indirectly,
a financial or other material benefit.22]
§206 Consent or Past Sexual Behavior History of
Victim is Irrelevant23
In a prosecution for trafficking in persons under Section
200, the alleged consent of a person to the intended
or realized exploitation is irrelevant once any of the
means or circumstances set forth in Section 100 is established.24
In a prosecution for trafficking in
persons under Section 200, evidence of a victim’s
past sexual behavior is irrelevant and inadmissible
for the purpose of proving that the victim engaged in
other sexual behavior, or to prove the victim’s
sexual predisposition.25
§207 Legal Age of Consent to Sex Not a Defense
in Trafficking
Age of consent to sex, legal age of marriage, or other
discretionary age shall not be used as a defense to
trafficking.
§208 Victim Immunity [Exemption] from Prosecution26
A victim of trafficking is not criminally liable for
any migration-related offense, prostitution, [insert
other crimes and references as appropriate], or any
other criminal offense that was a direct result from
being trafficked.
§209 Extradition
Countries should extradite persons charged with trafficking
in persons on substantially the same terms and to substantially
the same extent as persons charged with serious crimes.27
Article III
Assistance and Protection for Victims
§300 Protection for the Safety of Victims28
Investigative, prosecutorial, and other appropriate
authorities shall take all steps necessary to identify
victims of trafficking. Once victims are identified,
these authorities shall provide reasonable protection
to victims of trafficking to prevent recapture by the
traffickers and their associates, secure the victim
and the victim’s family [if they reside in (country
name)] from threats, reprisals or intimidation by the
traffickers and their associates, and ensure the victim
has an opportunity to consult with a victim advocate
or other appropriate person to develop a safety plan.29
§301 Witness Protection
Victims of trafficking who are witnesses or potential
witnesses may be eligible for applicable witness relocation
and protection programs for victims of organized criminal
activity or other serious offenses, if it is determined
that an offense involving a crime of violence directed
at the witness or potential witness if likely to be
committed. The programs may include:
relocation
new identity, documents establishing identity
new residence
employment or work permits
protection of confidentiality of identity and location
§302 Protection for the Privacy
of Victims30
In a prosecution for trafficking in persons under Section
200, or unlawful use of documents under Section 201,
the identity of the victim and the victim’s family
should be kept confidential by ensuring that names and
identifying information of the victim and victim’s
family are not released to the public, including by
the defendant.
§303 Information for Victims31
The [Ministry of Justice] and/or [court]
and/or [other appropriate authority] shall inform victims
of trafficking, in a language they can understand, of
their legal rights and the progress of relevant court
and administrative proceedings, as appropriate, including
but not limited to prosecution of the criminal offenders,
proceedings for the return of the victim to their country
of citizenship or lawful residence, and procedures for
seeking legal immigration status under section 305.
§304 Opportunity for Presentation of Victim’s
Views and Concerns32
The [Ministry of Justice] and/or [court] and/or [other
appropriate authority] shall provide an opportunity
to a victim of trafficking, if the victim desires it,
to present the victim’s views and concerns at
appropriate stages of criminal proceedings against traffickers,
in a manner not prejudicial to the rights of the defendant.
An interpreter who speaks a language the victim understands
should be made available to the victim [during the course
of legal proceedings].
§305 Support for Victims33
Within [one year] of the enactment of this legislation,
the [appropriate authority] in conjunction with [other
appropriate authorities] shall develop plans, in consultation
with non-governmental organizations and other elements
of civil society, for the provision of appropriate services,
from governmental and non-governmental sources, for
victims of trafficking and dependent children accompanying
the victims, including34:
appropriate housing, taking into account
the person’s status as a victim of crime and including
safe conditions for sleeping, food and personal hygiene;
psychological counseling in a language the victim can
understand;
medical assistance in a language the victim can understand;
other material assistance as appropriate;
employment, educational, and training opportunities;
and
legal assistance or legal information in a language
the victim understands.
Victims of trafficking shall be eligible to work and
to receive proof of work authorization [for the duration
of their presence in (country name)] OR [in the manner
prescribed in (insert reference to appropriate existing
law)].
Victims of trafficking and their accompanying
dependent children shall be entitled to receive social
benefits [in the same manner as refugees] OR
[for the duration of their stay in (country name)] OR
[in the manner prescribed in (insert reference to appropriate
existing law)].
Residence in shelters or other facilities established
under this section shall be voluntary, and victims may
decline to stay in shelters.
Victims shall have the option to communicate with and
receive visits from family, friends, attorneys, and
advocates.35
Absent exigent circumstances, victims
of trafficking, once identified as such, shall not be
housed in prisons or other detention facilities for
accused or convicted criminals. Child victims of trafficking,
once identified as such, shall not be housed in prisons
or other detention facilities for accused or convicted
criminals under any circumstances.
The authorities described in (a) shall
take into account the age, gender, and special needs
of victims and accompanying dependent children in formulating
plans to provide services to them and in delivering
such services.
Plans developed in accordance with (a)
shall be submitted for approval to [insert appropriate
authority], which authority shall also undertake periodic
reviews of the plans and their implementation to ensure
compliance with the requirements of this Article and
to ensure that all victims are treated with respect
for their human rights and dignity.
§306 Immigration Status of Victims36
The [authority with responsibility for issuing visas
or temporary residence permits] shall provide victims
of trafficking and accompanying dependent children with
appropriate visas or other required authorization to
permit them to remain in [name of country] for the duration
of the criminal prosecution against the traffickers,
provided that the victim is willing to comply with reasonable
requests, if any, to assist in the investigation or
prosecution of the traffickers.
[Victims of trafficking shall be eligible
for permanent residence in [country name][in the manner
prescribed in (insert reference to appropriate existing
law)], provided they have complied with reasonable requests,
if any, for assistance in the investigation or prosecution
of acts of trafficking. Dependent children accompanying
the victim also shall be eligible for permanent resident
status in [country name][in the manner prescribed in
(insert reference to appropriate existing law.)]
[A victim’s spouse and children,
and in the case of child victims, the parents or guardian,
and the victim’s siblings, shall be eligible to
join the victim in [country name] as part of the victim’s
initial application for temporary or permanent residence
under (a) or (b).]
§307 Assistance for Citizen/Permanent Resident
Victims Abroad37
The [Ministry of Foreign Affairs], through
its diplomatic missions and consular offices abroad,
where practicable, shall offer assistance to citizens
of or persons holding permanent residency in [name of
country] who are victims of trafficking in persons located
abroad, including but not limited to:
assistance in understanding the laws
of the foreign country to which they have been trafficked,
including their rights as victims, options for reporting
the crime, and opportunities for seeking restitution
or other benefits that are available under the laws
of that country;
assistance in obtaining emergency services,
including but not limited to medical care and counseling;
at the request of either the victim
or the appropriate authorities in the other country,
replacement or provision of passports and other travel
documents necessary for the victim to return to [name
of country] without undue or unreasonable delay;
material assistance in returning to
their [last] place of residence in [name of country][in
the same manner provided for other citizens or persons
with right of permanent residency who become stranded
abroad][when the country to which the victim was trafficked
does not provide such assistance].
The [Ministry of Foreign Affairs], through
its diplomatic missions and consular offices abroad,
shall publish and disseminate information on the rights
of victims of trafficking under the laws of [name of
country] and the country or countries for which the
diplomatic mission has responsibility both to the appropriate
authorities in that country and to possible victims
of trafficking who are citizens of [name of country].
In the case of diplomatic missions and consular offices
of countries of destination for trafficking victims,
such information shall be provided to appropriate authorities
and to potential trafficking victims who are citizens
or lawful residents of the country for which the mission
or office has responsibility.
Diplomatic missions of [name of country]
abroad shall appoint an officer to be responsible for
implementing and supervising plans and ensuring the
provision of services required under this section.
The [Ministry of Foreign Affairs] in
cooperation with [other appropriate authorities] shall
develop plans within [six months or other time period]
of the adoption of this section for the safe, orderly
return without undue or unreasonable delay of citizens
or persons holding permanent residency in [name of country].
§308 Verification of Citizen/Permanent
Resident Status and Age
Upon request by the appropriate authority or representative
of another State, the [appropriate authority] shall,
without undue or unreasonable delay, verify whether
a person who is a victim of trafficking in persons is
a citizen, or national of, or holds permanent residency
in [name of country].38
Upon request by the appropriate authority
or representative of another State, the [appropriate
authority] shall, without undue or unreasonable delay,
verify 1) the age of a person who is a victim of trafficking
in persons and who is suspected of being a minor and
2) whether the victim is a citizen, national of, holds
permanent residency in [name of country], or any other
immigration status the victim may have in [name of country].
The [appropriate authority] shall designate
an appropriate officer to respond to inquiries described
in (a) and (b).
§309 Return of Victims to the Country of Citizenship/Permanent
Residence39
Within [six months or other time period] of the enactment
of this legislation, the [appropriate authority] in
conjunction with [other appropriate authorities] shall
develop plans for the safe return to their country of
citizenship or a country in which they hold permanent
residency. Where possible, the appropriate authorities
shall work closely with international organizations
and NGOs in this process.
Plans developed under (a) shall take
into account the right of victims to seek temporary
or permanent residence under the provisions of Sections
306(a) and (b) and other rights guaranteed under other
applicable laws.
§310 Victims Unable to Prove Citizenship Status
Through Normal Means40
Victims of trafficking abroad who claim to be citizens
or persons holding permanent residency in [name of country],
but whose identity cannot be verified through ordinary
means, can establish their right to return to [name
of country] by demonstrating significant connections
to this country through such factors as:
place of birth;
presence of family members;
presence of friends;
significant knowledge of specific geographical areas
or neighborhoods;
long-term residence in this country;
native-speaker level understanding of spoken [insert
name of national language or languages]; or
any other means.
The list of factors in (a) is not exhaustive,
and not every factor is required to make the determination.
Determinations under this section are to be made with
due concern for compassion and justice to victims. The
fact that the victim would not be eligible for citizenship
based on the showing made under this section shall not
be a bar to reentry.
[Diplomatic missions abroad shall delegate
a specific diplomat to make determinations under this
section. Victims may appeal an adverse determination
to the [Minister of Justice or other appropriate authority].]
Where the appropriate authority determines
an individual is eligible to reenter [name of country]
under this section, the diplomatic mission abroad shall
issue a [Certificate of Identity], permitting reentry.
§311 Services for Returned Victims of Trafficking
Victims of trafficking who return from abroad shall
have access to educational and training programs provided
by any governmental or private entity without being
differentiated from other participants on the basis
of having been trafficked;
Diplomatic missions and consular offices
in destination countries shall provide assistance to
returned victims of trafficking in securing restitution
for their losses under the laws of the destination country[,
and every such mission and office shall designate an
officer to take responsibility for providing this assistance].
§312 Appropriate Implementation for Child Victims
The provisions of Article III shall be provided to trafficking
victims who are children in a manner that is in the
child’s best interests and appropriate to their
situation. Child trafficking victims shall be provided
with appropriate services, which may include understanding
of their rights, privacy, housing, care, and age-appropriate
support and rights specified in Article III. Special
programs should be developed to accommodate child witnesses
including:
testimony of minor conducted outside court setting or
by video
all testimony and court proceedings take place with
parent, legal guardian or foster parent present
whenever safe and possible, children should be reunited
with family members either in country of origin or destination
country
special mental and physical medical care tailored to
the child’s needs
upon return to the country of origin or resettlement
in a new country, child victims of trafficking should
be guaranteed education which at least matches the general
standard of education in the country
Article IV
Misuse of Commercial Transportation
§400 Responsibilities of International Transportation
Companies41
International transportation companies must verify that
every passenger possesses the necessary travel documents,
including passports and visas, to enter the destination
country and any transit countries.
The requirement in (a) applies both
to staff selling or issuing tickets, boarding passes
or similar travel documents and to staff collecting
or checking tickets prior to or subsequent to boarding.
Companies which fail to comply with
the requirements of this section will be fined [insert
appropriate amount]. Repeated failure to comply may
be sanctioned by revocation of licenses to operate in
accordance with [applicable law][insert reference to
law governing revocation of licenses].
§401 Liability of International Transportation
Companies42
When a transportation company knowingly transports victims
of trafficking into the country, that company shall
be liable for costs associated with providing accommodation
and meals for the victim and any accompanying dependent
children for the duration of the victim’s stay
in facilities designated under Section 305 and shall
bear the costs of their transportation either [to the
national border] [or] [to the victim’s point of
departure] [or] [to a port of entry of the country of
which the victim is a citizen or in which the victim
holds residency][whichever is appropriate under the
circumstances].
§402 Role of Government
Governments should take steps to educate
citizens about sex tourism. It should warn citizens
that traveling to another country to engage in sex with
a minor or a trafficked person may be a crime in the
destination country or in the home country, or may constitute
child abuse. These steps should include:
cooperating with airline industry, hotel
industry, taxi industry, and others to jointly produce
educational materials alerting them to evidence of sex
tourism by their customers and warning them against
facilitating such behaviors
warning citizens and employees in the industries mentioned
in §402(1) that a crime may be committed when someone
engages in sex with a minor, sex tourism, or frequents
a brothel holding trafficked women and children
giving up to date information about the links between
HIV/AIDS and other STDs and trafficking.
§403 Measures to Ensure the Safety of Children
Traveling Unattended Across International Borders43
Operators or crews of commercial vehicles, including
airplanes, trains, and buses, shall hold the travel
documents of children traveling into [name of country]
without a parent, guardian, or other responsible adult
from the time the child boards the vehicle and shall
surrender the documents upon arrival to the appropriate
immigration authority.
At every port of entry, the [immigration
authority] should, if practicable, provide officers
to meet children traveling without a parent, guardian,
or other responsible adult, receive the child’s
travel documents from the operator of the commercial
vehicle, and assist the child in passing through immigration
and customs inspections. The officer shall surrender
the child only to a parent, guardian, or other responsible
adult upon presentation of [appropriate identifying
documents], and shall obtain a receipt indicating final
destination, purpose of travel, and identification and
address information of the receiving adult.
Operators or owners of commercial vehicles
delivering children traveling without a parent, guardian,
or other responsible adult into [name of country] shall
pay a fine of [insert appropriate amount] for every
child that arrives without necessary travel documents.
Article V
Prevention of Trafficking
§500 National Task Force for Prevention of Trafficking44
The [President, Prime Minister, or other appropriate
authority] shall establish an inter-agency task force
to develop and implement a National Plan for the Prevention
of Trafficking in Persons. Such a task force should
include all aspects of trafficking, including sex trafficking
and labor trafficking.
The [Prime Minister or other appropriate
authority] shall appoint the members of the task force,
which shall include at a minimum the [representatives
of] the Minister of Justice, Foreign Affairs, Labor,
Interior, [insert other ministries as appropriate] and/or
other appropriate high-level government officials [including
officials with responsibility for law enforcement, immigration,
and human and social services].
The task force shall carry out the following
activities either directly or via one or more of its
constituent ministries as appropriate:
Develop the National Plan for the Prevention of Trafficking
in Persons.
Coordinate the implementation of the Plan.
Coordinate the collection and sharing of trafficking
data among government agencies. All data collected shall
respect the privacy of victims of trafficking.
Coordinate the sharing of information between agencies
for the purposes of:
determining whether individuals crossing or attempting
to cross the international border of [name of country]
with travel documents belonging to other persons or
without travel documents are perpetrators or victims
of trafficking in persons45; and
detecting criminal groups engaged in trafficking.
Identify and engage in efforts to facilitate cooperation
with foreign countries, particularly those which are
a significant source of victims, transit location, or
destination of victims. This cooperation shall aim to
strengthen bilateral, multilateral, local, and regional
capacities to assist trafficking victims, prevent trafficking,
prosecute traffickers, and assist in the appropriate
reintegration of victims of trafficking.46
Establish policies to enable [name of country]’s
government to work with non-governmental organizations
and other elements of civil society to prevent trafficking
and provide assistance to victims.
§501 Data Collection and Dissemination47
The [appropriate authority] shall, in cooperation with
[or other appropriate authorities] collect and periodically
publish statistical data on trafficking.48
The [responsible authority] shall elicit the cooperation
and assistance of other government agencies, non-governmental
organizations, and other elements of civil society as
appropriate to assist in the data collection required
under (a).
The appropriate authorities in each
agency that play a vital role in addressing trafficking
shall make best efforts to collect information relevant
to tracking progress on trafficking, including but not
limited to:
numbers of arrests, prosecutions, and
successful convictions of traffickers and those committing
trafficking related crimes (pimping, pandering, procuring,
maintaining a brothel, visa fraud, document fraud, and
other crimes related to trafficking)
statistics on the number of victims, including age,
method of recruitment etc.
trafficking routes and patterns (country of origin,
transit countries)
method of transportation (car, boat, plane, foot)
border crossing issues (with fraudulent documents, without)
§502 Training49
The [appropriate authority/authorities] shall [provide][strengthen]
training for law enforcement, immigration, and other
relevant officials in addressing trafficking in persons.
Such training shall focus on
methods used in identifying victims of trafficking;
methods for prosecuting traffickers;
methods for protecting the rights of victims, taking
into account the need to consider human rights and special
needs of women and children victims, and that victims
should be treated as victims rather than criminals;
and
methods for promoting the safety of victims, including,
for example, the training of police and immigration
officers to recognize victims of trafficking quickly.
The [responsible authority] shall seek the input and/or
participation of appropriate non-governmental organizations
and other relevant organizations in the preparation
and presentation of training called for in this Section.
§503 Public Awareness50
For those at risk of becoming trafficking victims: The
[Ministry of Education or other appropriate authority]
in cooperation with [other appropriate government agencies]
and [appropriate non-governmental organizations or other
elements of society] shall prepare public awareness
programs designed to educate potential victims of trafficking
in persons and their families of the risks of victimization.
Such public awareness programs shall include but shall
not be limited to:
information about the risks of becoming
a victim, including information about common recruitment
techniques, use of debt bondage, and other coercive
tactics, risk of maltreatment, rape, exposure to HIV/AIDS
and other sexually transmitted diseases, and psychological
harm related to victimization in trafficking cases;
and
information about potential victims rights in [name
of country] and in major destination countries and under
international law, as well as methods for reporting
suspected recruitment activities.
For Trafficked Persons: The [Ministry
of Justice or other appropriate authority] in cooperation
with [other appropriate government agencies] and [appropriate
NGOs or other elements of society] shall prepare and
disseminate educational materials designed to inform
victims of trafficking in [name of country] of their
rights, the measures in place to ensure their safety,
recovery, and safe return to their home countries, and
how to contact appropriate law enforcement authorities.
Such materials shall include, as appropriate, pamphlets,
brochures, posters, advertisements in mass media, and
any other methods appropriate for reaching victims of
trafficking.
General Public Awareness: The [Ministry
of Justice or other appropriate authority] in cooperation
with [other appropriate government agencies] and [appropriate
non-governmental organizations or other elements of
society] shall prepare and disseminate public awareness
materials designed to discourage the demand that fosters
the exploitation of persons, especially women and children,
and that leads to trafficking.
Such materials may include information
on the impact of trafficking on individual victims,
aggregate information on trafficking world-wide and
domestically, as well as warnings of the potential for
criminal consequences for taking part in trafficking.
[Such materials may include, as appropriate, pamphlets,
brochures, posters, advertisements in mass media, and
any other appropriate methods.]
Privacy limitation: Materials described in this section
may include information on the impact of trafficking
on individual victims. However, any information on the
experiences of individual victims
shall preserve the privacy of the victim and the victim’s
family.
All public awareness programs established under (a)
– (c) shall be evaluated periodically to ensure
their effectiveness.
§504 Exclusion of Persons Implicated in Trafficking51
The [appropriate authority] shall periodically identify,
in a public report, every person who is a trafficker
of persons, or who has knowingly assisted or conspired
with another to to traffic in persons.
Persons identified in reports under
(a), or whom an overseas consular official knows or
has reason to believe is a trafficker of persons, or
who has knowingly assisted or conspired with a trafficker
to traffic in persons, shall not receive an entrance
or transit visa.
The visas of persons identified in reports
under (a) shall be revoked.
§505 Border Inspections52
The [appropriate authority] shall implement policies
to screen persons entering or leaving the country to
determine if they are victims of trafficking in persons.
Such screening shall be undertaken with
consideration for the right of individuals to travel,
and shall not result in undue invasion of the individual’s
privacy or undue restriction of the individual’s
freedom of movement.
§506 Applicability of Labor Standards
Standards for working conditions specified in [insert
reference to appropriate law] shall apply equally to
persons with or without the legal right to work in [this
country].
The [Ministry of Labor] shall investigate
complaints of unlawful working conditions without regard
to the immigration status of complainants and without
regard to the nature of the work or services involved.
Article VI
Security and Control of Documents
§ 600 Integrity of Travel and Identity
Documents53
The [appropriate authority or authorities] shall appoint
a [commission] to monitor the quality of travel and
identity documents issued by that authority to ensure
that they comply with International Civil Aviation Organization
standards and that they cannot easily be misused and
cannot readily be falsified or unlawfully altered, replicated,
or issued.
The tasks of the [commission] shall
include, but not be limited to:
monitoring technical developments in the field of anti-counterfeiting
in order to recommend improvements to such documents
as they develop;
monitoring the issuance of travel documents abroad,
with attention to patterns of abuse such as misrepresentation,
corruption and fraud;
monitoring the issuance of travel documents domestically,
with attention to patterns of abuse such as misrepresentation,
corruption and fraud; and
forwarding examples of abuse described in paragraphs
(2) and (3) to the appropriate authorities for investigation.
§601 Verification of Legitimacy
and Validity of Documents54
Upon request by the appropriate authority
or representative of another State, the [appropriate
authority/authorities] shall verify within a reasonable
time the legitimacy and validity of travel or identity
documents issued or purported to have been issued by
[such authority] and suspected of being used for trafficking
in persons.
The [appropriate authority/authorities]
shall designate an appropriate officer to respond to
inquiries described in (a) or to establish procedures
for responding to such inquiries in a regular and timely
fashion.
Interpretive Notes
1 Protocol to Prevent, Suppress and
Punish Trafficking in Persons, Especially Women and
Children, Supplementing the United Nations Convention
Against Transnational Organized Crime, (“Protocol”),
G.A. res. 55/25, annex II, 55 U.N. GAOR Supp. (No. 49)
at 60, U.N. Doc. A/45/49 (Vol. I) (2001), Art. 3(a).
2 Id., Art. 3(d).
3 Id., Art. 3(a).
4 United Nations Treaty Series vol.
266, p. 3, Sec. 1, Art. 1.
5 See Interpretive Notes (travaux preparatoires)
to the UN Protocol, which states, “...where illegal
adoption amounts to a practice similar to slavery as
defined in article 1, paragraph (d), of the Supplementary
Convention on the Abolition of Slavery, the Slave Trade,
and Institutions and Practices Similar to Slavery, it
will also fall within the scope of the Protocol.”
6 The reference to substance addiction
is intended to combat traffickers’ intentionally
causing victims to become addicted to substances as
a means of exerting coercive control over them.
7 Protocol, Art. 5 (State Parties obliged
to criminalize intentional trafficking in persons).
8 Id., (State Parties are obliged to
criminalize attempting to commit, participating as an
accomplice, and organizing or directing others to commit
an offense). The bracketed language will not be necessary
if the laws of the state party include general provisions
for conspiracy, attempts, and accomplice liability that
apply to all crimes.
9 The range of sentences appropriate
for traffickers may vary greatly depending on the facts
of a particular case. Section 205 sets forth a list
of factors that should be considered by a court in determining
the length of sentence that should be imposed. Countries
that have plea bargaining may want a higher range (10
to 20 years) for trafficking. Those that do not may
be more comfortable with 5 to 10 year ranges.
10 Id., at Art. 6(6), (State Parties
obliged to ensure victims’ opportunity to obtain
compensation for damages suffered).
11 Id., at Art. 3(c).
12 The UN Protocol does not require
criminalization of this activity, but this suggested
provision may prove useful in combating trafficking
in persons.
13 The procuring of such documents is
prohibited to allow prosecution of travel agents and
visa brokers who knowingly arrange visas, passports,
and plane tickets to facilitate trafficking.
14 See Kosovo Regulations, Ch. I, §
3; see also 18 U.S.C. § 1592.
15 The UN Protocol does not require
criminalization of prostitution, but the suggested language
may prove useful in combating trafficking in persons.
16 Exploiting the prostitution of another
can be defined as obtaining of a financial or other
benefit from the prostitution of another person.
17 While some countries would prosecute
the offense of transporting a person for the purpose
of prostitution regardless of whether the offender receives
any financial or other benefit, other countries would
require proof of exploitation of the prostitution of
another person.
18 Protocol, Art. 6 § (6) (State
Parties required to provide measures to enable victims
of trafficking to obtain compensation). Modeled on U.S.
restitution statutes, 18 U.S.C. §§1593, 3663.
19 States may choose to include in their
statutes additional detail on the disposition of properties
forfeited under this provision. The following disposition
is recommended: “This property shall be sold at
auction by [insert appropriate authority] and the proceeds
used to fulfill restitution to the victim ordered under
Section 203 with one-half of excess funds dedicated
to the support of victim services provided in accordance
with Section 305 and one-half directed to the support
of agencies dedicated to investigating or prosecuting
trafficking.” For those countries that do not
have asset forfeiture provisions, civil remedies may
be an appropriate alternative. For those countries that
do not have asset forfeiture provisions, civil remedies
may be an appropriate alternative.
20 Trafficking in persons is a serious
crime that should be punished accordingly. The laws
of numerous countries provide for significant periods
of incarceration for convicted traffickers. For example,
U.S. law was recently amended to increase basic penalties
for trafficking-related crimes from 10 to 20 years.
Enhanced penalties are warranted in particular circumstances,
such as where trafficking causes injury, illness, or
death. Such enhancements are consistent with the Protocol’s
purpose of protecting victims of trafficking. See Protocol,
Art. 2(a) and (b). The TVPA states that sex trafficking
through the use of force, fraud, or coercion should
be punished on par with sexual assault. In articulating
minimum standards for the elimination of severe forms
of trafficking in persons, § 108(a)(2) of the TVPA
states, “the government of the country should
prescribe punishment commensurate with that for grave
crimes, such as forcible sexual assault[]” for
many forms of trafficking, including any trafficking
for the purpose of a commercial sex act. TVPA §
108(a)(2). For an example of a similar enhancement,
see Regulation No. 2001/4 on the Prohibition of Trafficking
of Persons in Kosovo, (“Kosovo Regulations”)
Ch. I, § 2.2 (United Nations Interim Administration
Mission in Kosovo, January 12, 2001). Governments should
adapt these enhancements in a manner consistent with
their own law and its treatment of serious crimes.
21 Enhanced penalties where the trafficking
was part of the activities of an organized criminal
group or where the defendant organized or directed such
a group is consistent with the status of the Protocol
as a supplement to the United Nations Convention Against
Transnational Organized Crime. Protocol, Art. 1 §
1. For an example of a similar enhancement, see Kosovo
Regulations, Ch. I, § 2.3.
22 United Nations Convention against
Transnational Organized Crime, (“Convention”)
A/RES/55/25, Article 2 (a). This definition is only
necessary if the enacting country has not previously
inserted the Convention’s definition of “organized
criminal group” into its domestic law.
23 Similar provisions may be useful
to add in criminal prosecutions other than for trafficking
in persons, such as in cases of sexual assault.
24 Protocol, Art. 3(b).
25 Id., Art. 2(b) (purpose of Protocol
is to protect and assist victims while respecting their
human rights); Art. 6(a) (State Parties obliged to protect
privacy of victim). See also Fed. R. Evid. 412.
26 Trafficking involves force, coercion,
deception, and or other similar means to obtain or maintain
the labor or services of the victims. These means should
negate the intent necessary to impose criminal liability
on the victim for acts that result from the trafficking.
In some cases, however, victims have been prosecuted
for acts that resulted directly from having been trafficked.
This provision is intended to prevent such prosecution,
and is modeled on Kosovo Regulations, Ch. III, §
8, except that the phrase “if the person provides
[evidence]” is omitted in order to avoid placing
the burden of persuasion on the victim.
27 As Congress wrote in Finding number
24 in the Victims of Trafficking and Violence Protection
Act of 2000, Pub. L. No. 106-386, 114 Stat. 1464: “Trafficking
in persons is a transnational crime with national implications.
To deter international trafficking and bring its perpetrators
to justice, nations including the United States must
recognize that trafficking is a serious offense. This
is done by prescribing appropriate punishment, giving
priority to the prosecution of trafficking offenses,
and protecting rather than punishing the victims of
such offenses. The United States must work bilaterally
and multilaterally to abolish the trafficking industry
by taking steps to promote cooperation among countries
linked together by international trafficking routes.
The United States must also urge the international community
to take strong action in multilateral for a to engage
recalcitrant countries in serious and sustained efforts
to eliminate trafficking and protect trafficking victims.”
28 Id., Art. 6(5) (State Parties obliged
to “endeavour to provide for the physical safety
of victims while they are within its territory”).
29 See id., Art. 6(3). The reference
to consultation with victim advocates or other appropriate
persons includes non-governmental victim advocates.
30 Protocol, Art. 6(1) (State Parties
obliged to protect privacy and identity of victims to
the extent possible under domestic law).
31 Id., Art. 6(2)(a) (State Parties
obliged to provide information on relevant court and
administrative hearings as appropriate).
32 Id. Art. 6(2)(b) (State Parties obliged
to provide assistance to enable victims to present their
views and concerns as appropriate).
33 Id., Art. 6(3) (State Parties obliged
to consider providing such services to victims). In
providing such services, State Parties are urged to
cooperate with NGOs and other elements of civil society.
Much of this section is modeled on the Romanian Trafficking
Law, Ch. 5. The general goal of this section is to ensure
that the human rights of victims are protected, as called
for in the Preamble to the UN Protocol, and as generally
incorporated throughout the Protocol. This section is
intended for source, transit, and destination countries.
34 It is recognized that countries have
varying amounts of resources and that some plans will
take longer to implement than others, or that implementation
may depend on the availability of foreign financial
support.
35 Regulations may be appropriate to
state that where victims reside in shelters or other
facilities established under this section, reasonable
restrictions on the time, place, or manner of such communications
may be imposed. Prior to receiving visitors, victims
should be counseled that they have the right to refuse
to see the traffickers or the traffickers’ associates.
36 Id., Art. 7 (State Parties obliged
to consider permitting victims to remain either permanently
or temporarily).
37 Id., Art 8(1), (4). This section
is largely modeled on the Romanian Trafficking Law,
Ch. V, Arts. 28-30.
38 Protocol, Art. 8(3).
39 Id., Art. 8(2).
40 For a discussion of the difficulties
faced by persons who are unable to establish citizenship,
particularly hill tribe and long-term refugee women
from Thailand, and the recommendations on which this
section is based, see Human Rights Watch, Owed Justice:
Thai Women Trafficked into Debt Bondage in Japan, 118-123,
200 (2000).
41 Protocol, Art.11(3)-(4) (State Parties
obliged to adopt measures to prevent commercial carriers
being used in the trafficking in persons).
42 Modeled on Romanian Trafficking Law,
Ch. VI, Art. 47.
43 Traffickers of children often use
fictitious travel documents to enable children to board
aircraft and then destroy the fictitious documents enroute.
See Carron Somerset, What the Professionals Know: The
Trafficking of Children into, and through the UK for
Sexual Purposes, pp. 22, 44 (ECPAT UK, Nov. 2001) available
at www.antislavery.org/ homepage/resources/Children
PDF.
44 Modeled on U.S. law, Victims of Trafficking
and Violence Protection Act of 2000, Pub. L. No. 106-386,
114 Stat. 1464, 1473-4.
45 Protocol, Art. 10 (1)(a).
46 Id., Art. 9(4).
47Id., Art. 9(2), 10(1)(b)-(c).
48 Such data should include but not
be limited to: (1) numbers and nationalities of persons
trafficked into or out of or transiting through [name
of country] in the course of being trafficked and the
source, transit, or destination country or countries
of such persons; (2) purposes for which the persons
were trafficked including those set forth in Section
102; (3) means and methods used by criminals for the
purpose of trafficking in persons, including the recruitment
and transportation of victims, routes, and links between
and among individuals and groups engaged in such trafficking;
(4) age and gender of victims; (5) size, organization,
and composition of criminal organizations engaged in
trafficking; and (6) types of travel documents that
individuals have used or attempted to use to cross an
international border for the purpose of trafficking
in persons. In implementing (a), the [responsible authority]
shall establish categories for the reporting of aggregate
data including but not limited to those defined in (a).
49 Id., Art. 10(2).
50 Id., Art. 9(5).
51 Id., Art. 11(5).
52 For a discussion of how attempts
to identify victims based on stereotypical thinking
result in abridgement of freedom to travel, see Owed
Justice 196-200.
53 Protocol, Article 12.
54 Id., Art. 13.