The Asian Development Bank estimates that 1.8
million people – one percent of the population – are bonded laborers. In
extreme scenarios, when bonded laborers attempt to seek legal redress, landowners
have kidnapped them and their family members. Boys and girls are also bought,
sold, rented, or kidnapped to work in organized, forced begging rings, domestic
servitude, and prostitution. Recent press stories reported on the violence in
child domestic servitude, including sexual abuse, torture, and death. Illegal
labor agents charge high fees to parents with false promises of decent work for
their children, who are later exploited and subject to forced labor in domestic
servitude, unskilled labor, small shops, and other sectors. Disabled children
and adults are forced to beg in Iran. Girls and women also are sold into forced
marriages; in some cases their new “husbands” move them across Pakistani
borders and force them into prostitution. NGOs and police reported markets in
Pakistan where girls and women are bought and sold for sex and labor. Non-state
militant groups kidnap children or coerce parents with fraudulent promises into
giving away children as young as 12 to spy, fight, or die as suicide bombers in
Pakistan and Afghanistan. The militants often sexually and physically abuse the
children and use psychological coercion to convince the children that the acts
they commit are justified. News organizations, NGOs, and international
organizations reported that the 2010 floods contributed to increased
trafficking in Pakistan.
Many
Pakistani women and men migrate voluntarily to the Gulf States, Iran, Turkey,
South Africa, Uganda, Greece, and other European countries for low-skilled
employment such as domestic work, driving, or construction work; once abroad,
some become victims of labor trafficking. False job offers and high fees
charged by illegal labor agents or sub-agents of licensed Pakistani overseas
employment promoters increase Pakistani laborers’ vulnerabilities and some
laborers abroad find themselves in involuntary servitude or debt bondage.
Employers abroad use practices including restrictions on movement, nonpayment
of wages, threats, and physical or sexual abuse. Moreover, traffickers use violence,
psychological coercion, and isolation, often seizing travel and identification
documents as a means to coerce Pakistani women and girls into prostitution in
the Middle East. There are reports of child sex trafficking between Iran and
Pakistan. Pakistan is a destination for men, women, and children from
Afghanistan, Iran, and, to a lesser extent, Bangladesh, who are subjected to
forced labor and prostitution. Many traffickers who force Pakistanis into
prostitution or labor abroad know their victims personally.
The
Government of Pakistan does not fully comply with the minimum standards for the
elimination of human trafficking victims., but is making significant efforts to
do so, despite the severe floods the country experienced in 2010. The
government continued its programs to prevent and combat bonded labor, but did
not criminally convict any bonded labor offenders or officials who facilitated
trafficking in persons. The government continued to lack adequate procedures to
identify trafficking victims among vulnerable populations and adequate
protection for these
Recommendations for Pakistan
Significantly
increase law enforcement activities, including imposing adequate criminal
punishment for labor and sex traffickers, as well as labor agents who engage in
illegal activities.
Vigorously
investigate and prosecute government officials suspected of being complicit in
trafficking and convict public officials at all levels who participate in or
facilitate human trafficking, including bonded labor.
Strengthen counter-trafficking legislation,
including by amending the Prevention and Control of Human Trafficking Ordinance
(PACHTO) to include all forms of transnational and internal trafficking;
Raise awareness and increase enforcement of
the provisions of the Bonded Labor System (Abolition) Act (BLSA) among law
enforcement officers.
Sensitize government officials to the
differences between human trafficking and smuggling; improve methods for
identifying victims of trafficking, especially among vulnerable persons.
In light of the ongoing devolution process,
strengthen provincial labor departments’ capacity to combat bonded labor
through training, awareness-raising, improving communication between provincial
and district offices, and improving transportation for inspectors in remote
districts with high levels of bonded labor.
In light of the devolution process, ensure
that the federally-run Centers continue to be managed as places where victims
can receive assistance.
Undertake
local-language awareness campaigns on human trafficking, targeted to parents
who sell their children; and improve efforts to collect, analyze, and
accurately report counter-trafficking data.
Prosecution
The
Government of Pakistan made less progress in law enforcement efforts to combat
human trafficking than in the previous year. On July 29, 2010, floods of
unprecedented proportions began in Pakistan, affecting approximately 20 million
people. During this period, most government officials focused their entire
attention on disaster relief and recovery; as a result, the government’s
ability to prosecute counter-trafficking crimes and provide data was hampered.
Several sections in the Pakistan Penal Code, as well as provincial laws,
criminalize forms of human trafficking such as slavery, selling a child for
prostitution, and unlawful compulsory labor, prescribing punishments for these
offenses that range from fines to life imprisonment. Pakistan prohibits all
forms of transnational trafficking in persons, and appears to cover some
non-trafficking offenses as well, through PACHTO; the penalties range from
seven to 14 years’ imprisonment. Government officials and civil society
reported that judges have difficulty applying PACHTO and awarding sufficiently
stringent punishments, because of confusion over definitions and similar
offenses in the Pakistan Penal Code. In addition, the BLSA prohibits bonded
labor, with prescribed penalties ranging from two to five years’ imprisonment,
a fine, or both. Pakistani officials have yet to record a single conviction under
this law. Prescribed penalties for above offenses vary widely; some are
sufficiently stringent and commensurate with those for other serious crimes,
such as rape. Other penalties are not sufficiently stringent.
During
2010, the government reported that it convicted 310 offenders under PACHTO – 75
fewer than in 2009. The majority of these cases resulted in penalties of either
no jail time or imprisonment of less than six months, which are far less than
PACHTO’s prescribed minimum penalties. However, at least five cases resulted in
six months’ to two years’ imprisonment; nine cases resulted in two to 10 years’
imprisonment, and one case resulted in 10 to 14 years’ imprisonment. The
Federal Investigation Agency (FIA) reported that in 2010, a human trafficker
who was wanted to stand trial in Pakistan for 30 cases filed under PACHTO was
extradited from Italy. Government officials sometimes conflated human smuggling
and human trafficking. Furthermore, the FIA’s anti-trafficking cells dealt with
undocumented migration and smuggling, in addition to human trafficking. The
government reported that it also took law enforcement actions against
traffickers under the vagrancy ordinances. Under various sections in the penal
code, the government prosecuted at least 68 traffickers in 2010: six for sex
trafficking and 38 for labor trafficking, and 24 for either labor or sex
trafficking. In a publicized case, an additional sessions judge in November
2010 acquitted the former Lahore Bar Association president and his two family
members of torturing their 12-year-old maid to death, ruling that the girl’s
death was the result of an infection.
Some
feudal landlords are affiliated with political parties or are officials
themselves and use their social, economic, and political influence to protect
their involvement in bonded labor. Furthermore, police lacked the personnel,
training, and equipment to confront landlords’ armed guards when freeing bonded
labors. Additionally, media and NGOs reported that some police received bribes
from brothel owners, landowners, and factory owners who subjected Pakistanis to
forced labor or prostitution, to ignore these illegal human trafficking
activities. In 2010, 70 officials were disciplined and 26 were given minor
sentences, including: restrictions on conducting immigration work; compulsory
retirement; removal from service; and demotion. Eight officials were either
removed from the service or given compulsory retirement; some of these
officials may have facilitated human trafficking.
In
Sindh province, individuals had the opportunity to report labor problems to
district vigilance committees (DVC) for resolution, though none did. Landlords
and brick kiln owners often had seats on the DVCs, however, preventing the
committees’ effectiveness in providing remedies. In other cases, DVCs were
dormant. The FIA trained 214 officials to address transnational trafficking
issues at the FIA Academy. The FIA also lectured on transnational trafficking
at the police training colleges.
Protection
The
Government of Pakistan made some limited progress in its efforts to protect
victims of human trafficking. The government continued to lack adequate
procedures and resources for proactively identifying victims of trafficking
among vulnerable persons with whom they come in contact, especially child
laborers, women and children in prostitution, and agricultural and brick kiln
workers. According to the FIA, the majority of the 16,530 Pakistani nationals
who were deported from other countries during 2010 were identified as victims
of trafficking.
The FIA
has a process to refer trafficking victims to protective services, although
universal application of this process remains problematic. There is no
coordinated process to refer victims of internal trafficking to protective
services, and access to protective services varies within the country. There
were reports that women were abused in some government-run shelters. Shelters
faced resource challenges and were sometimes crowded and under-staffed. While
female trafficking victims could access 26 government-run and funded Shaheed
Benazir Bhutto Centers and the numerous provincial government “Dar-ul-Aman”
centers offering medical treatment, vocational training, and legal assistance,
the majority of the women assisted by these facilities were not trafficking
victims. The quality of the Dar-ul-Aman facilities vary from district to
district within the provinces. The quality and level of service in Punjab is
stronger than in other provinces. Since 2009, the government, with the support
of a local NGO, has operated a rehabilitation center for boys who have been
recovered from militant or extremist groups in the Malakand district. As of
March 2010, 150 boys were staying at the facility. In 2010, a second similar
facility for girls was opened; as of March 2010, five girls were staying in
that facility. In 2010, the FIA reported that in partnership with NGOs, it
provided some medical support, transportation, shelter, and limited legal
services to some Pakistani victims of trafficking who were deported to
Pakistan.
The
federal government, as part of its National Plan of Action for Abolition of
Bonded Labor and Rehabilitation of Freed Bonded Laborers, continued to provide
legal aid to bonded laborers in Punjab and Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, and expanded services
to Balochistan and Sindh provinces. The Sindh provincial government continued
to implement its $116,000 project (launched in 2005), which provided
state-owned land for housing camps and constructed 75 low-cost housing units
for freed bonded laborer families. The government encouraged foreign victims to
participate in investigations against their traffickers by giving them the
option of early statement recording and repatriation or, if their presence was
required for the trial, by permitting them to seek employment. The government
did not provide foreign victims with legal alternatives to removal to countries
where they may face hardship or retribution. In some instances, trafficking
victims were detained at police stations, borders, or in airport receiving
facilities. Identified foreign victims of trafficking reportedly were not
prosecuted or deported for unlawful acts committed as a direct result of being
trafficked; however, not all trafficking victims were identified and adequately
protected. Pakistani adults and children who were deported from other
countries, some of whom may have been trafficking victims, were detained and
fined up to $95, higher than one month’s minimum wages. Due to insufficient
shelters, police sometimes placed freed bonded laborers in a police station for
one night before presenting them to a judge. In July 2010, the Regional Police
Office in Hyderabad and an NGO established Pakistan’s first anti-bonded labor
cell in Mirpukhas, Sindh. The cell is in its nascent stage, but will permit
bonded laborers to file police reports and obtain legal advice. In January
2011, the federal Ministry of Labor and Manpower hosted several
provincial-level training seminars for local labor officers, designed to
increase the effectiveness of labor officers in registering violations against
landowners and brick kiln owners who use bonded, forced, or child labor.
Prevention
The Pakistani
government made limited progress in its efforts to prevent human trafficking.
The Punjab provincial government continued implementation of its project to
eliminate bonded labor in brick kilns (launched in 2008). There were reports
that this project helped 3,237 bonded laborers obtain identity cards and 1,906
bonded laborers obtain no-interest loans in the reporting period. The
government also reported the establishment of 110 more on-site schools, for a
total of 170. During the reporting period, the Sindh Department of Labour
registered 710 brick kilns, a first step in guaranteeing that labor laws are
applied to work sites, and a labor officer from district Larkana in Sindh
registered 127 of these kilns. The government’s inter-agency task force on
human trafficking met a few times in the reporting period. The FIA met with
NGOs and international organizations during the year to discuss trafficking and
smuggling prevention. Some FIA officials participated in NGO-run awareness
campaigns, and the government donated radio air time for the FIA to broadcast
public service announcements on human trafficking and human smuggling. In
November 2010, the Ministry of the Interior (MOI) designed a plan to monitor
and track human trafficking cases, as well as to provide victims with
identification and services. The MOI is in the process of rolling out the plan
to the district level police officers and the FIA. According to UNICEF, only 27
percent of children are registered at birth, as of 2009. The National Database
and Registration Authority continued campaigns to register women in rural areas
and internally displaced people to receive ID cards. In 2010, all 250 Pakistani
UN Peacekeeping Mission forces received training from various government
training academies that included combating human trafficking. The government
took measures to reduce the demand for commercial sex acts by prosecuting, but
not convicting, 74 clients of prostitution. The FIA continued its quarterly
meeting with civil society organizations and the anti-trafficking units to
discuss best practices for trafficking victim identification and to increase
the links between law enforcement and civil society organizations. Pakistan is
not a party to the 2000 UN TIP Protocol.
Dear Shahid Rashid sahib nice write up
ReplyDeletemay i have your contact no want to appreciate in person and discuss few other areas of TIP.
Thanks and Regards
M Aftab
03335136714