US Traffickingin Persons Report 2012: Qatar
is a destination country for men and women subjected to forced labor and, to a
lesser extent, forced prostitution. Men and women from Nepal, India, Pakistan,
Bangladesh, the Philippines, Indonesia, Vietnam, Sri Lanka, Ethiopia, Sudan,
Thailand, Egypt, Syria, Jordan, and China voluntarily migrate to Qatar as
low-skilled laborers and domestic servants, but some subsequently face
conditions of involuntary servitude. These conditions include threats of
serious physical or financial harm; withholding of pay; charging workers for
benefits for which the employer is responsible; restrictions on freedom of
movement, including the confiscation of passports, travel documents, and the
withholding of exit permits; arbitrary detention; threats of legal action and deportation;
threats of filing false charges against the worker; and physical, mental, and
sexual abuse. In some cases, arriving migrant workers have found that the terms
of employment in Qatar are different from those they agreed to in their home
countries; businesses and individuals in Qatar reportedly promised migrants
employment opportunities that never materialized. Many migrant workers arriving
for work in Qatar have paid exorbitant fees to recruiters in their home
countries – a practice that makes workers highly vulnerable to forced labor
once in Qatar. In limited cases, Qatar is also a destination for women who
migrate for legitimate purposes and subsequently become involved in
prostitution, but the extent to which these women are subjected to forced prostitution
is unknown. Some of these victims may be runaway domestic workers who have
fallen prey to forced prostitution by individuals who exploit their illegal
status.
The Government of Qatar does
not fully comply with the minimum standards for the elimination of trafficking,
but is making significant efforts to do so. The government demonstrated
evidence of increasing efforts to address human trafficking over the year,
particularly through the passage of an anti-trafficking law that prohibits all
forms of trafficking and prescribes sufficiently stringent penalties, as well
as improved identification of trafficking victims. Furthermore, in late 2010,
the Qatari government launched its “National Plan for Combating Human
Trafficking for 2010-2015,” which the government continues to implement with a
budgetary commitment the equivalent to $6,487,195 in 2011. The Qatari
government also improved its protection measures to proactively identify
victims of trafficking through implementation of a national referral mechanism.
Nonetheless, the government has yet to demonstrate increased action to
investigate, prosecute, and punish trafficking offenders for forced labor and
forced prostitution.
Recommendations
for Qatar: Implement
the new anti-trafficking legislation by increasing efforts to investigate,
prosecute, convict, and punish trafficking offenses under the law; collect,
disaggregate, analyze, and disseminate counter-trafficking law enforcement
data; institute and consistently apply formal procedures to identify victims of
trafficking among vulnerable groups, such as those arrested for immigration
violations or prostitution; enforce the sponsorship law’s criminalization of
passport-withholding and mandate employees receive residence cards within one
week as a means of preventing trafficking abuses; abolish or significantly
amend provisions of Qatar’s sponsorship law to prevent the forced labor of
migrant workers or implement other provisions that make up for the law’s
shortcomings; and continue implementation of the “National Plan for Combating
Human Trafficking for 2010-2015.”
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QATAR (Tier 2)
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Prosecution
The Government of Qatar made
significant efforts to combat its human trafficking problem over the year. In
October 2011, the government approved a comprehensive anti-trafficking law, Law
No. 15, which prohibits all forms of trafficking and prescribes penalties of no
more than seven years’ imprisonment and up to the equivalent of $82,000 in
fines, with prescribed penalties of no more than 15 years’ imprisonment under
aggravating circumstances. These penalties are sufficiently stringent and
commensurate with other serious crimes, such as kidnapping. Despite the passage
of the new anti-trafficking law in 2011 and existing laws that could be used to
punish trafficking offenders, the government did not report any clear efforts
to investigate, prosecute, or punish trafficking offenses during the reporting
period. Qatar also prohibits employers’ withholding of workers’ passports under
the 2009 Sponsorship Law, though the law was not rigorously enforced during the
reporting period. According to Qatar University’s Social and Economic Survey
Research Institute, a June 2011 study found that 91 percent of expatriate
workers surrendered their passports to employers. During the reporting period,
the Qatar Foundation to Combat Human Trafficking (QFCHT) – Qatar’s national
coordinating body for anti-trafficking activities – along with the Ministries
of Interior and Justice, conducted a variety of anti-trafficking trainings
targeting law enforcement personnel. The government did not report any
investigations, prosecutions, convictions, or sentences of government personnel
for complicity in trafficking offenses.
Protection
The Qatari government made
progress in protecting victims of trafficking during the reporting period.
Government personnel introduced systematic procedures to proactively identify
victims of trafficking among vulnerable populations, such as foreign workers.
The government acknowledged the existence of a labor trafficking problem in the
country, yet some officials do not equate involuntary labor exploitation with
human trafficking. Under provisions of Qatar’s sponsorship law, sponsors have
the unilateral power to cancel workers’ residency permits, deny workers’
ability to change employers, report a worker as a runaway to police
authorities, and deny workers permission to leave the country. As a result,
sponsors may restrict workers’ movements and workers may be afraid to report
abuses or claim their rights, which contribute to their forced labor situation.
In addition, domestic servants are particularly vulnerable to trafficking since
they are isolated inside homes and are not covered under the provisions of the
labor law. Victims of trafficking were often punished for unlawful acts they
committed as a direct result of being trafficked; specifically, Qatari
authorities regularly arrested, detained, and deported potential trafficking
victims for immigration violations and running away from their employers or
sponsors, though Ministry of Interior officials interviewed all those sent to
the deportation center and are required to determine whether the workers were
victims of trafficking and offer them protection. Victims occasionally
languished in detention centers for up to six months when their employers
failed to return their passports, failed to purchase them a plane ticket to
their country of origin, or filed false charges of theft against them; the
costs of legal representation under these circumstances are borne by the
worker, but are often waived due to inability to pay.
During the reporting period,
the QFCHT, in coordination with the Ministry of Public Health, conducted a
workshop for medical staff and social workers on identifying human trafficking
victims among the patients they serve. The QFCHT also distributed a manual to
law enforcement, immigration authorities, and social service providers on how
to proactively identify victims of trafficking. Additionally, in 2011, the
government established a national victim referral system to coordinate victim
identification and referral efforts between government authorities and
non-government organizations; however, it is unclear how effective this
newly-established system was at the end of the reporting period. The
government’s trafficking shelter, operated by the QFCHT, reported assisting 451
migrant workers and 33 victims of trafficking in 2011; government officials,
including police, public prosecutors, and other government ministry officials,
referred 51 of these cases to the QFCHT. Unlike previous years, trafficking
victims were able to access the shelter even if their employers had filed
charges against them. Victims have the right to leave the shelter without
supervision. While migrant workers identified as trafficking victims could
receive legal assistance from shelter authorities, some employers and sponsors
threatened victims in an attempt to keep them from seeking legal redress. The
500,000 foreign workers in domestic service in Qatar remained unprotected by
Qatari labor law, and therefore faced difficulties seeking legal redress for
abuses through civil court action. Civil suits could only be filed for a
sponsor’s failure to meet his/her financial obligations to the domestic worker;
in practice, civil suits were rare, but have increased in number. The Qatari
government sometimes offered temporary relief from deportation to enable
identified victims to testify as witnesses against their employers, though it
did not offer most foreign trafficking victims legal alternatives to their
removal to countries where they may face retribution or hardship.
Prevention
Qatar made limited progress in
preventing trafficking in persons during the reporting period. The government
did not reform Qatar’s migrant worker sponsorship law, which contributes to
conditions of forced labor in the country by allowing sponsors to restrict
workers’ movements. The government reported that it routinely inspected and
monitored recruitment companies and actively sought to punish companies that
were found making fraudulent offers or imposing exorbitant fees in selling
visas. In October 2011, the government reported convicting and fining a sponsor
the equivalent of $220,000 on multiple counts of visa-selling, which is
prohibited under Qatari immigration law with punishment up to three years’
imprisonment or fines equivalent to $13,736 per violation. The government did
not, however, systematically investigate companies to prevent passport
withholding, exacerbating migrants’ vulnerability to trafficking; employers
often made their employees sign waivers allowing them to hold passports.
Although the sponsorship law requires an employer to secure a residence card
for laborers within seven days, reports indicated that this sometimes does not
happen; this restricts migrant workers’ mobility and impedes their ability to
access health care or lodge complaints at the labor department. In an effort to
reduce the demand for commercial sex acts and prevent child sex tourism of
Qataris traveling abroad, the government publicly called for adherence with
Islamic principles in an effort to reduce the demand for commercial sex acts.
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