US Traffickingin Persons Report 2012: Oman is
a destination and transit country for men and women, primarily from India,
Pakistan, Bangladesh, Sri Lanka, the Philippines, and Indonesia, who are
subjected to conditions indicative of forced labor and, to a lesser extent,
forced prostitution. Most migrants travel willingly and legally to Oman with
the expectation of employment in domestic service or as low-skilled workers in
the country’s construction, agriculture, or service sectors. Some subsequently
face conditions indicative of forced labor, such as the withholding of
passports and other restrictions on movement, nonpayment of wages, long working
hours without food or rest, threats, and physical or sexual abuse. Government
sources note that runaway domestic workers are also susceptible to coercion
into forced prostitution. Unscrupulous labor recruitment agencies and their
sub-agents in migrants’ original communities in South Asia, as well as labor
brokers in the United Arab Emirates (UAE), Oman, and Iran, may deceive workers
into accepting work that constitutes forced labor. Many of these agencies
provide false contracts for employment either with fictitious employers or
fictitious wages and charge workers high recruitment fees (often in an amount
exceeding the equivalent of $1,000) at usurious rates of interest, leaving
workers vulnerable to trafficking. Oman is also a destination and transit
country for women from China, India, Morocco, Eastern Europe, and parts of
South Asia who may be forced into commercial sexual exploitation, generally by
nationals of their own countries. The majority of women identified as sex
trafficking victims are from countries in East Africa, namely Ethiopia,
Somalia, Kenya, Uganda, and Burundi. Male Pakistani laborers and others from
India, Bangladesh, Sri Lanka, and East Asia transit Oman en route to the UAE;
some of these migrant workers are exploited in situations of forced labor upon
reaching their destination.
The Government of Oman does not
fully comply with the minimum standards for the elimination of trafficking;
however, it is making significant efforts to do so. The government continued to
prosecute suspected sex trafficking offenders and sentence convicted sex
traffickers to imprisonment; however, it failed to ensure that some trafficking
victims were not punished for prostitution they that may have engaged in at the
outset of their victimization by sex traffickers. The government failed to
report any criminal prosecutions or punishment of labor trafficking offenders.
The government continued to refer and assist victims of trafficking to a
government-run shelter for trafficking victims. Nonetheless, Omani authorities
continued to lack formal procedures to proactively identify trafficking victims
among those detained for immigration violations. As a result, the government
may not have adequately identified victims of forced labor or punished their
traffickers. The government continued to provide anti-trafficking training to
its law enforcement.
Recommendations
for Oman: Continue
to investigate and prosecute trafficking offenses and sentence convicted
traffickers to imprisonment; make greater efforts to investigate and prosecute
forced labor offenses, including those perpetrated by recruitment agents and
employers; ensure that victims of trafficking are not punished for acts
committed as a direct result of being trafficked; institute formal procedures
for identifying trafficking victims among all vulnerable populations, such as
illegal immigrants; refer all suspected victims of trafficking, including
victims of both forced labor and forced prostitution, to a shelter, regardless
of whether there is a corresponding prosecution of an alleged offender; as a
measure to prevent labor trafficking, enact and enforce penalties for employers
who withhold their employees’ passports; increase and enforce legal protections
for domestic workers, including coverage under the labor laws of Oman; continue
training government officials in all relevant departments to recognize and
respond appropriately to human trafficking crimes; and increase public
awareness campaigns or other prevention programs to reduce the demand for
forced labor and commercial sex acts.
Prosecution
The Government of Oman
sustained modest anti-trafficking law enforcement efforts during the reporting
period. Through its Royal Decree No. 126/2008, also known as the Law Combating
Human Trafficking, issued in 2008, the Omani government prohibits all forms of
trafficking and prescribes punishments of three to 15 years’ imprisonment, in
addition to financial penalties, for trafficking crimes. These punishments are
sufficiently stringent and commensurate with penalties prescribed for other
serious crimes, such as rape. A legally-enforceable government circular
prohibits employers from withholding migrant workers’ passports, a practice
known to contribute to forced labor. Although the circular does not specify
penalties for noncompliance, courts frequently enforced this prohibition by
requiring employers to return passports to their employees; the government did
not report the number of such cases during the reporting period. Withholding of
employees’ passports remains widespread among employers in Oman, including
government officials. The government failed to report on investigations and
prosecutions of trafficking offenses in this reporting period that did not lead
to convictions or acquittals. During the reporting period, the Government of
Oman prosecuted and convicted twelve individuals for sex trafficking offenses,
an increase over the number of convictions for sex trafficking reported last
year. Each offender received a sentence of three to three-and-a-half years’
imprisonment and a fine in an amount equivalent to $13,000. Another individual
was convicted of failing to report a crime of trafficking in persons and
sentenced to three months in prison and a fine in an amount equivalent to $50.
Despite these convictions, the victims in these cases received six-month prison
sentences for prostitution and were then deported. The government did not
report any prosecutions or convictions of labor trafficking offenders. All
Royal Oman Police officers receive training as cadets on human rights issues,
including how to recognize trafficking in persons.
Protection
The government’s efforts to
identify and protect victims of trafficking remained weak. The Royal Oman
Police continued to operate and fund a permanent shelter, which opened in
January 2011, that can accommodate up to 50 men, women, and children who are
victims of forced labor or sex trafficking. Victims in this shelter may not
leave the premises unchaperoned, but they can readily access shelter employees
to accompany them offsite. The shelter remains underutilized due to strict
government entry requirements; most victims are cared for by shelters run by
the embassies of their home countries. The Public Prosecution only refers
trafficking victims to the government shelter if it determines the case against
the alleged offender(s) will go to trial; it remains unclear where the victims
are housed prior to this decision. During the reporting period, the Public
Prosecution – the only entity who can refer victims to the shelter – referred
14 identified victims of sex trafficking to the government care facility for
assistance, a decrease from the 24 victims the government referred to its
shelter last year. There were no reports of child victims or victims of labor
trafficking referred to the shelter during this reporting period. The
government continued to lack formal procedures to proactively identify victims
of trafficking among all vulnerable groups, including migrants detained for
immigration violations and women in prostitution. Due to a lack of
comprehensive victim identification procedures, the Government of Oman failed
to ensure that migrant workers subjected to forced labor or sex trafficking
were not inappropriately incarcerated, fined, or otherwise penalized for
unlawful acts committed as a direct result of being trafficked. Government
authorities report that victims can be identified through the government’s
24-hour hotline, during the course of prosecution by trained prosecutors and
police, or through random labor inspections of workplaces; however, government
authorities have never reported the identification of a labor trafficking
victim. The government encouraged suspected trafficking victims to assist in
trafficking investigations and prosecutions, but it did not provide them with a
standard legal alternative to removal to countries in which they may face
retribution or hardship. Some victims, however, were permitted to stay in Oman
on a case-by-case basis. Victims were not permitted to work while awaiting
court proceedings.
Prevention
The government sustained modest
efforts to prevent human trafficking during the reporting period. It continued
to distribute brochures in numerous languages, highlighting the rights and
services to which workers are legally entitled, to source country embassies and
to new migrant laborers upon arrival in the country at airports, recruitment
agencies, and in their places of work. In a move to prevent forced labor, the
government amended provisions in the Omani labor law in October 2011 by issuing
Royal Decree 113/2011, which requires employers to pay all wages by electronic
deposit to the employee’s local bank account; fines are prescribed for
violations of this law, though the government did not report conducting
investigations or imposing fines under this law during the reporting period.
The government continued to operate an anti-trafficking hotline, but the
government did not report how many calls the hotline received during the
reporting period. The government also requires that all employers post labor
law regulations in the languages of their workers in prominent locations at
worksites. In addition, the government continued its public awareness campaign,
which included the placement of at least one article or editorial about the
labor law and trafficking issues in the press each month. There were no
reported efforts by the government to reduce the demand for commercial sex acts
in Oman.
هناك تعليقان (2):
شكرا ..)وفى انتظار كل جديد
شكرا ..وفى انتظار كل جديد..))
إرسال تعليق