Identifier
Created
Classification
Origin
07DOHA260
2007-03-08 09:25:00
UNCLASSIFIED//FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY
Embassy Doha
Cable title:  

QATAR: INPUT FOR THE SEVENTH ANNUAL TRAFFICKING IN

Tags:  PHUM KCRM KWMN SMIG KFRD PREF ELAB QA 
pdf how-to read a cable
VZCZCXRO9403
RR RUEHDE RUEHDIR RUEHHM RUEHJO
DE RUEHDO #0260/01 0670925
ZNR UUUUU ZZH
R 080925Z MAR 07
FM AMEMBASSY DOHA
TO RUEHC/SECSTATE WASHDC 6314
INFO RUEHZM/GULF COOPERATION COUNCIL COLLECTIVE
RUEHXI/LABOR COLLECTIVE
RUEHLM/AMEMBASSY COLOMBO 0090
RUEHHI/AMEMBASSY HANOI 0004
RUEHJA/AMEMBASSY JAKARTA 0055
RUEHKT/AMEMBASSY KATHMANDU 0142
RUEHML/AMEMBASSY MANILA 0150
RUEHGO/AMEMBASSY RANGOON 0023
RUEHRH/AMEMBASSY RIYADH 0453
RUEHCG/AMCONSUL CHENNAI 0139
RUEHCI/AMCONSUL KOLKATA 0004
UNCLAS SECTION 01 OF 14 DOHA 000260 

SIPDIS

SENSITIVE
SIPDIS

STATE FOR G/TIP, G, INL, DRL, PRM, IWI, NEA/ARPI, NEA/RA,
USAID

E.O. 12958: N/A
TAGS: PHUM KCRM KWMN SMIG KFRD PREF ELAB QA
SUBJECT: QATAR: INPUT FOR THE SEVENTH ANNUAL TRAFFICKING IN
PERSONS (TIP) REPORT

REF: STATE 06 202745

DOHA 00000260 001.2 OF 014


UNCLAS SECTION 01 OF 14 DOHA 000260

SIPDIS

SENSITIVE
SIPDIS

STATE FOR G/TIP, G, INL, DRL, PRM, IWI, NEA/ARPI, NEA/RA,
USAID

E.O. 12958: N/A
TAGS: PHUM KCRM KWMN SMIG KFRD PREF ELAB QA
SUBJECT: QATAR: INPUT FOR THE SEVENTH ANNUAL TRAFFICKING IN
PERSONS (TIP) REPORT

REF: STATE 06 202745

DOHA 00000260 001.2 OF 014



1. (U) The following is post's input for the seventh annual
Anti-Trafficking in Persons Report. Answers are keyed to
reftel questions.


2. (SBU) Paragraph 27. Overview of a country's activities to
eliminate trafficking in persons:


A. (SBU) Is the country a country of origin, transit, or
destination for internationally trafficked men, women, or
children?

- Qatar is a country of destination and transit for
internationally trafficked men and women.

Provide, where possible, numbers or estimates for each group;
how they were trafficked, to where, and for what purpose.

- There are no firm estimates of the total numbers of men and
women trafficked into the country; most came willingly to
work as laborers and domestic workers.

Does the trafficking occur within the country's borders?

- Yes, and in some cases, across borders.

Does it occur in territory outside of the government's
control (e.g. in a civil war situation)?

- N/A.

Are any estimates or reliable numbers available as to the
extent or magnitude of the problem?

- Thousands.

What is (are) the source(s) of available information on
trafficking in persons or what plans are in place (if any) to
undertake documentation of trafficking?

- Sources of information on trafficking in persons include
other diplomatic missions, government officials, commercial
contacts, international organizations, local and regional
media, and contacts at quasi-independent NGOs.

How reliable are the numbers and these sources?

- While the reliability of sources cannot always be
ascertained, cross-referencing information among various
sources helps to promote accuracy in information gathering.

Are certain groups of persons more at risk of being
trafficked (e.g. women and children, boys versus girls,
certain ethnic groups, refugees, etc.)?

- Foreign laborers, mostly male, and domestic workers, male

and female, are most at risk of being trafficked.


B. (SBU) Please provide a general overview of the trafficking
situation in the country and any changes since the last TIP
Report (e.g. changes in direction).

- Since the last TIP Report, there has been marked progress
in government efforts to address trafficking in persons,
although not all the progress has been quantifiable. The
government has acknowledged that trafficking within the
expatriate labor sector is a problem and is drafting
legislation to combat it. A comprehensive anti-trafficking
law, when enacted, would address prosecution, protection,
prevention, and compensation. A new sponsorship law that is
currently being circulated within the government purportedly
would give more rights to expatriate workers and more
responsibility to sponsors. The National Human Rights
Committee (a quasi-governmental organization) has concluded
that the largest hindrance to criminalizing TIP violations is
ignorance of the current law by all parties. To combat this,

DOHA 00000260 002.2 OF 014


the committee has organized a series of workshops for
lawyers, judges, prosecutors, and law educators that will
highlight TIP and the existing Qatari laws to combat it. The
workshops begin in March 2007. It hopes as an outcome to
enable victims to bring criminal charges against the
traffickers and to have the criminal court be able to fairly
adjudicate those cases according to the criminal law.

- Current legislation guiding the sponsorship of expatriate
laborers and domestic workers has created conditions that in
many cases lead to situations constituting forced labor or
slavery. Expatriate laborers are not allowed to leave the
country without a signed exit permit or to change employment
without a written release from their sponsor. The sponsors
have also been known to withhold the passports of the
workers. The dependence of foreign laborers on their employer
for residency rights, plus the inability to change employment
or travel, leaves them vulnerable to abuse. Some sponsors
have used this power against their workers. They have
withheld their consent to force foreign employees to work for
longer periods to avoid having to pay a salary owed to the
worker and to extract money from the laborer. Many workers
ended up in Qatar's Deportation Detention Center due to their
employer's refusing to pay back wages, withholding their
passports, or failing to renew their work visas. Nepalese
officials reported
that as many as 1000 Nepalese workers have been held at the
same time at the Deportation Detention Center during the year
and many have been awaiting repatriation for several months.
Law enforcement officials apprehended many of the workers
because they had expired work visas that are supposed to be
renewed by the sponsor.

- The country also was a destination for women from East
Asia, South Asia, and Africa who come to the country to work
as domestic servants. Some report that they have been forced
into domestic servitude and sexual exploitation. During the
year, the embassies of the Philippines, Indonesia, and Sri
Lanka received a combined total of more than 3400 complaints
from male and female workers; more than 900 from housemaids
alleging mistreatment by their employers. The Nepalese
Embassy reported that they received between 14-20 complaints
per day. Complaints included sexual harassment, delayed and
non-payment of salaries, forced labor, contract switching,
holding of passports, poor accommodation, non-repatriation,
physical torture or torment, overwork, imprisonment, and
maltreatment. Abused domestic servants usually did not press
charges for fear of losing their jobs. According to
Indonesian officials, 30 to 50 Indonesian housemaids ran away
from their sponsors each month during the year.

- The Nepalese Embassy reported that an unknown number ("no
less than 20") of residents had been recruited for positions
as domestic workers (house boys) in Qatar and after arrival,
were trafficked into Saudi Arabia to serve as farm laborers.
The workers were held incommunicado in Saudi Arabia for
periods of more than one year.

- Regarding the former child camel jockey problem, an
interagency committee was formed by the government to ensure
the implementation of the law banning the use of children as
camel jockeys. The committee conducted several visits to the
camel racing tracks in 2006 and found no violations.

Also briefly explain the political will to address
trafficking in persons.

- Although there is political will to address trafficking in
persons, that will is constrained by pressures from the
business community not to amend sponsorship regulations.

Other items to address may include: What kind of conditions
are the victims trafficked into?

- Trafficking victims often have to endure poor
accommodations and have extremely limited freedom of
movement. Many live in fear of arrest, detention and/or

DOHA 00000260 003.2 OF 014


deportation if they fail to remain in service of their
employers.

Which populations are targeted by the traffickers?

- South- and East-Asian domestic workers and laborers in
countries with generally high unemployment rates and low
standards of living are primary targets for traffickers.

Who are the traffickers?

- Exporting and domestic recruiting agencies and Qatari
sponsors.

What methods are used to approach victims? (Are they offered
lucrative jobs, sold by their families, approached by friends
of friends, etc.?)

Victims are often offered fair wages and benefits for work in
Qatar by source country recruiting agencies.

What methods are used to move the victims (e.g., are false
documents being used?).

- Most often victims arrive willingly with valid travel
documents, usually having paid a large fee to a labor agency
in the sending country.


C. (SBU) What are the limitations on the government's ability
to address this problem in practice?

- There are cultural and socio-economic limitations in
addressing this problem in practice.

For example, is funding for police or other institutions
inadequate?

- Funding is not a problem.

Is overall corruption a problem?

- Overall corruption is not a problem in this area.

Does the government lack the resources to aid victims?

- No, but employment of resources is a problem.


D. (SBU) To what extent does the government systematically
monitor its anti-trafficking efforts (on all fronts --
prosecution, prevention and victim protection) and
periodically make available, publicly or privately and
directly or through regional/international organizations, its
assessments of these anti-trafficking efforts?

- Although the government has identified various agencies to
implement anti-trafficking reforms, it does not effectively
monitor its anti-trafficking efforts. When requested, the
government does make available its assessments of its
anti-trafficking efforts to the requesting organization.


3. (U) Paragraph 28. PREVENTION.


A. (SBU) Does the government acknowledge that trafficking is
a problem in the country? If not, why not?

- The government has an uneven record in acknowledging TIP.
Most stakeholders admit that child labor, some trafficking of
female domestic workers, and limited trafficking for sexual
exploitation occur, but few acknowledge the problems
experienced by laborers as potential trafficking issues.
Officials often characterize situations of exploitation or
coerced labor as labor disputes falling under the purview of
the labor law. This perception seems to be slowly changing
among government stakeholders, however.


B. (SBU) Which government agencies are involved in
anti-traficking efforts and which agency, if any, has the

DOHA 00000260 004.2 OF 014


lead?

- Officials from the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Ministry of
Interior, Ministry of Civil Service and Housing (Labor
Department),Supreme Judicial Council, General Health
Authority, General Prosecution, National Human Rights
Committee, the Qatar Foundation for Women and Children
Protection and the Supreme Council for Family Affairs are all
involved in anti-trafficking efforts. As of February 2007,
the Supreme Council for Family Affairs has the lead in
anti-trafficking efforts.


C. (SBU) Are there, or have there been, government-run
anti-trafficking information or education campaigns?

- Yes.

If so, briefly describe the campaign(s),including their
objectives and effectiveness.

- The National Office for Combating TIP continued to carry
out its media action plan. Activities have included the
publication and distribution of informational brochures in
several targeted languages, distribution of posters in
different languages, radio and TV interviews in local and
regional media outlets, TV and radio commercials, and a media
campaign entitled "No to Trafficking." While the focus has
been primarily on women and children, the plight of abused
and forced labor was also addressed.

- The Office has directed educational institutes and training
centers in Qatar to include the concept of TIP, its reasons
and its negative effects on society in their curriculum. The
TIP National Coordinator developed a curriculum on TIP in
cooperation with the legal expert at the Human Rights Office
of the Ministry of the Interior to be taught at the Supreme
Judicial Council and Ministry of Interior.

- During the Doha Asian Games in December, the Office also
distributed TIP posters at the Athlete's Village and flyers
were inserted into all local newspapers distributed at the
village.

- In May, the Office coordinated special sermons for Friday
prayers by Imams in the mosques for a period of six weeks to
urge people to treat their servants and employees well and
observe their rights.

- The TIP Office increased government classification of TIP
to include migrant laborers who fall victim to deception and
fraud and who are forced to work in illegal jobs, whether
with or without payment. To combat this, a circular was
distributed to all concerned departments in the Ministry of
Interior and other concerned ministries to abide by this
definition and to apply it when identifying TIP crimes or
investigating TIP victims.

Do these campaigns target potential trafficking victims
and/or the demand for trafficking (e.g. "clients" of
prostitutes or beneficiaries of forced labor)?

- The TIP Office held the first of a series of forums with
labor recruitment agencies in September. It was attended by
representatives of 42 labor agencies in the presence of
representatives from the Labor Department and the Research
and Follow-up Department of the Ministry of Interior. It
focused on delivering TIP awareness to the labor agencies and
making recommendations to authorities concerned with
anti-trafficking.


D. (SBU) Does the government support other programs to
prevent trafficking? (e.g., to promote women's participation
in economic decision-making or efforts to keep children in
school.) Please explain.

- None specifically identified to combat TIP.


DOHA 00000260 005.2 OF 014



E. (SBU) What is the relationship between government
officials, NGOs, other relevant organizations and other
elements of civil society on the trafficking issue?

- The government is cooperating with quasi-independent
organizations such as the National Human Rights Committee and
the Qatar Foundation for Women and Children Protection on
anti-trafficking efforts. There are no independent civil
society or non-governmental organizations (national or
international) active in anti-trafficking efforts.


F. (SBU) Does the government monitor immigration and
emigration patterns for evidence of trafficking?

- It monitors immigration and emigration patterns for
evidence of trafficking. It previously strengthened visa
regulations as a result of shifts in immigration patterns
showing evidence of probable prostitution-related activities.

Do law enforcement agencies screen for potential trafficking
victims along borders?

- The government monitors its land border but is not able to
comprehensively monitor its extensive shoreline. Neither,
however, are believed to be major entry points for trafficked
persons. Prior to and during the Doha Asian Games in
December, immigration officers at the Doha International
Airport were sensitized to the possibility of an increase in
the entry of females for the purpose of prostitution. There
were no reported arrests or incidents.


G. (SBU) Is there a mechanism for coordination and
communication between various agencies, internal,
international, and multilateral on trafficking-related
matters, such as a multi-agency working group or a task
force?

- Human rights offices have been established at the Ministry
of Foreign Affairs and the Ministry of Interior to address
TIP issues. The Supreme Council for Family Affairs is
currently the lead organization for coordination and
communication between various internal agencies.

Does the government have a trafficking in persons working
group or single point of contact?

- The government has a National TIP Coordinator under the
Supreme Council for Family Affairs.

Does the government have a public corruption task force?

- There are no known special bodies in Qatar charged with
fighting corruption, but in 2003 the government launched a
campaign against corruption in high places. Qatar ratified
the United Nations Convention against Corruption on January
30, 2007.


H. (SBU) Does the government have a national plan of action
to address trafficking in persons?

- The government has a national plan of action to address
trafficking in persons. The plan specifies victims of TIP
among: child camel jockeys; women exposed to sexual
exploitation; and incoming workers.

If so, which agencies were involved in developing it?

- Representatives from the Supreme Council for Family
Affairs, Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Supreme Judicial
Council, Ministry of Interior, Ministry of Civil Service and
Housing (Labor Department),General Prosecutor, General
Health Authority, and the Qatar Foundation for Women and
Children Protection were involved in developing the plan of
action.

Were NGOs consulted in the process?


DOHA 00000260 006.2 OF 014


- Representatives from the National Human Rights Committee, a
quasi-independent human rights organization, were involved in
this process as well.

What steps has the government taken to disseminate the action
plan?

- The government has not publicly disseminated the action
plan.


4. (U) Paragraph 29. INVESTIGATION AND PROSECUTION OF
TRAFFICKERS.


A. (SBU) Does the country have a law specifically prohibiting
trafficking in persons--both for sexual and non-sexual
purposes (e.g. forced labor)?

- Qatar does not have a law specifically prohibiting all
forms of trafficking in persons. The Government of Qatar has
drafted, but not passed, amendments to its sponsorship
regulations intended to protect the rights of foreign
workers. The Qatari government has also drafted an
anti-trafficking law that is being circulated to relevant
agencies for comment. It is unclear when the laws will be
enacted. The director of the Supreme Council for Family
Affairs also noted that a new law specifically addressing
domestic workers is also being drafted; however, domestic
workers remain unprotected by general labor laws.

If so, please specifically cite the name of the law and its
date of enactment.

- On July 28, 2005, Law No. 22, banning the transport,
employment, training, and involvement of children under the
age of eighteen in camel races, came into force. According
to Article 4, anyone who violates the law faces three to ten
years' imprisonment and a fine ranging between $13,000 and
$55,000.

Does the law(s) cover both internal and external
(transnational) forms of trafficking?

- Unknown.

If not, under what other laws can traffickers be prosecuted?
For example, are there laws against slavery or the
exploitation of prostitution by means of force, fraud or
coercion?

- Traffickers can be prosecuted under Article 321 (slavery)
or Article 322 (forced labor) of the Criminal Law of 2004,
which bans forced or coerced labor. The penalty for Article
321 is imprisonment of no more than seven years and the
penalty for Article 322 is imprisonment of no more than six
months and/or a fine of no more than QR 3,000 (USD 825). If
the victim is under 16, the penalty is imprisonment of no
more than six years and/or a find of no more than QR 10,000
(USD 2,750).

- Articles 318-319 of the Criminal Law address crimes that
violate human liberty and sanctity (kidnapping).
Specifically, Article 318 prohibits the abduction, seizure or
deprivation of an individual's liberty. The penalty for
crimes that violate human liberty and sanctity is
imprisonment of not more than ten years.

- In 2002, the government also passed a money laundering law
(Article 2) that specifically defines as a money laundering
crime the handling of money related to trafficking of women
and children. Although the new labor law enacted in January
2005 expands some worker rights, the new law does not extend
to domestic workers.

- Article 297 of the Criminal Law outlaws forced
prostitution. The penalty is no more than 15 years
imprisonment.


DOHA 00000260 007.2 OF 014


Are these other laws being used in trafficking cases?

- These laws are not being used to prosecute trafficking
cases.

Are these laws, taken together, adequate to cover the full
scope of trafficking in persons?

- If fully implemented and enforced, current laws would be
adequate to cover the full scope of trafficking-in-persons.

Please provide a full inventory of trafficking laws,
including non-criminal statutes that allow for civil
penalties against alleged trafficking crimes, (e.g., civil
forfeiture laws and laws against illegal debt.)

- There are no specific trafficking laws. The labor law
(which does not apply to domestic workers) allows the alleged
victim to bring his case to the labor court (a civil court)
to attempt to retrieve actual losses (dues owed),but there
are not additional remedies available (i.e., restitution).


B. (SBU) What are the penalties for trafficking people for
sexual exploitation?

- Facilitating prostitution (pimping) is punishable by
imprisonment of not more than ten years.


C. (SBU) Punishment of Labor Trafficking Offenses:

What are the prescribed and imposed penalties for trafficking
for labor exploitation, such as forced or bonded labor and
involuntary servitude?

- Abduction for the purpose of forced labor is punishable by
imprisonment of not more than seven years. Forced labor is
punishable by imprisonment of not more than six months and a
fine not to exceed $825, or both.

Do the government's laws provide for criminal punishment i.e.
jail time for labor recruiters in labor source countries who
engage in recruitment of laborers using knowingly fraudulent
or deceptive offers that result in workers being exploited in
the destination country?

- Qatar is not a labor source country.

For employers or labor agents in labor destination countries
who confiscate workers' passports or travel documents, switch
contracts without the worker's consent as a means to keep the
worker in a state of service, or withhold payment of salaries
as means of keeping the worker in a state of service?

- Withholding payment may be punishable by imprisonment of no
more than six months and/or a fine of no more than QR 3,000
(USD 825). If the victim is under 16 years of age, the
punishment is imprisonment of no more than six years and/or a
fine of QR 10,000 (USD 2,750).

If law(s) prescribe criminal punishments for these offenses,
what are the actual punishments imposed on persons convicted
of these offenses?

- There are no known convictions of these offenses.


D. (SBU) What are the prescribed penalties for rape or
forcible sexual assault?

- The penalty for rape or forcible sexual assault is
imprisonment. The penalty for sexual exploitation is
imprisonment and carries with it a minimum sentence of five
years and a maximum of fifteen years. Cases involving
children carry an automatic fifteen-year sentence.

How do they compare to the prescribed and imposed penalties
for crimes of trafficking for commercial sexual exploitation?


DOHA 00000260 008.2 OF 014


- There are no specific trafficking laws.


E. (SBU) Is prostitution legalized or decriminalized?

- No.

Specifically, are the activities of the prostitute
criminalized?

- Yes, but women suspected of prostitution are often
summarily deported rather than prosecuted under the law.

Are the activities of the brothel owner/operator, clients,
pimps, and enforcers criminalized?

- Rarely.

Are these laws enforced?

- Rarely.

If prostitution is legal and regulated, what is the legal
minimum age for this activity?

- N/A.


F. (SBU) Has the government prosecuted any cases against
traffickers?

- Although there are no laws specifically criminalizing TIP,
existing criminal law has been sparingly used.

If so, provide numbers of investigations, prosecutions,
convictions, and sentences, including details on plea
bargains and fines, if relevant and available.

- There were two convictions and 24 prosecutions for what the
TIP Office described as TIP-related crimes during the year.

- Two Qataris were sentenced to five-year prison terms for
gross physical abuse of their Indonesian maid. The maid had
been systematically subjected to slave-like conditions prior
to being beaten into a comatose state.

- Twenty-four individuals are currently being prosecuted for
prostitution and facilitating prostitution.

Does the government in a labor source country criminally
prosecute labor recruiters who recruit laborers using
knowingly fraudulent or deceptive offers or impose on
recruited laborers inappropriately high or illegal fees or
commissions that create a debt bondage condition for the
laborer?

- Qatar is not a labor source country.

Does the government in a labor destination country criminally
prosecute employers or labor agents who confiscate workers'
passports/travel documents, switch contracts or terms of
employment without the worker's consent, use physical or
sexual abuse or the threat of such abuse to keep workers in a
state of service, or withhold payment of salaries as a means
to keep workers in a state of service?

- Generally no. Employers who confiscate passports/travel
documents, switch contracts or terms of employment without
the worker's consent, or withhold payment of salaries are
sometimes summoned to the labor court and the cases are
treated as civil cases between employers and employees.
Laborers and domestic workers are often detained for months
at the Deportation Detention Center awaiting the outcome of
their cases against their employers. There were two
convictions in 2006 against the employers of a domestic
servant for criminal assault, but not specifically for a
trafficking offense.

Are the traffickers serving the time sentenced? If not, why

DOHA 00000260 009.2 OF 014


not? Please indicate whether the government can provide this
information, and if not, why not?

- Traffickers are not criminally prosecuted.


G. (SBU) Is there any information or reports of who is behind
the trafficking?

- With regard to laborers and domestic workers, individual
employers and recruiting agencies are complicit in the
trafficking in that they knowingly place these workers into
situations of forced labor.

For example, are the traffickers freelance operators, small
crime groups, and/or large international organized crime
syndicates?

- There is no known organized crime involvement.

Are employment, travel, and tourism agencies or marriage
brokers fronting for traffickers or crime groups to traffic
individuals?

- There is no information to indicate that these
organizations are fronts for other trafficking groups.

Are government officials involved?

- There are no government officials implicitly involved,
although some may be owners of private companies that subject
their employees to forced labor conditions.

Are there any reports of where profits from trafficking in
persons are being channeled? (e.g. armed groups, terrorist
organizations, judges, banks, etc.)

- No.


H. (SBU) Does the government actively investigate cases of
trafficking? (Again, the focus should be on trafficking
cases versus migrant smuggling cases.)

- The Qatari Coast Guard conducts preliminary investigations
of illegal immigration for possible human exploitation and
can refer cases to the Criminal Investigation and Evidence
Division for follow-up if needed. Passport and Immigration
investigates cases of visa fraud for signs of organized
trafficking. Plainclothes police officers monitor local
hotels for signs of prostitution. Suspected prostitutes are
investigated for links to local sponsors before arrest and
deportation.

Does the government use active investigative techniques in
trafficking in persons investigations?

- Unknown.

To the extent possible under domestic law, are techniques
such as electronic surveillance, undercover operations, and
mitigated punishment or immunity for cooperating suspects
used by the government?

- Unknown.

Does the criminal procedure code or other laws prohibit the
police from engaging in covert operations?

- Unknown.


I. (SBU) Does the government provide any specialized training
for government officials in how to recognize, investigate,
and prosecute instances of trafficking?

- Yes. The National Office for Combating TIP and the Human
Rights Office of the Ministry of Interior conducted a
workshop from August 20-24, 2006 on the legal, social and
security dimensions of TIP. Participants included a selection

DOHA 00000260 010.2 OF 014


of police officers, Internal Security Force staff and other
personnel related to this subject. The purpose of the
workshop was to "deepen the awareness of the notions related
to the combating of TIP and the activation of the role of
organizations and security bodies for active participation
and confrontation of this crime and its combat and protection
of its victims who are mostly children, women and
housemaids."

- TIP training has been incorporated into basic training at
the police academy. The TIP Office also organized a series of
training courses and workshops for government and private
officials dealing with labor and domestic helpers' affairs to
educate them on the rights of laborers and the obligations of
employers. It included police officers training on various
methods of dealing with TIP victims.


J. (SBU) Does the government cooperate with other governments
in the investigation and prosecution of trafficking cases?

- The government is not known to cooperate with other
governments in the investigation and prosecution of
trafficking cases. However, it coordinated with the Embassy
of Sudan in the repatriation of the young Sudanese boys
employed as camel jockeys. Also, the government shares
information with other countries in the region on patterns
involving prostitution. It works with labor attaches from
South Asian countries to resolve cases of labor contract
disputes, abuse of domestic servants, and workers present in
Qatar without authorization.

If possible, can post provide the number of cooperative
international investigations on trafficking?

- Unknown.


K. (SBU) Does the government extradite persons who are
charged with trafficking in other countries?

- Unknown.

If so, can post provide the number of traffickers extradited?


- Unknown.

Does the government extradite its own nationals charged with
such offenses?

- There are no known cases.

If not, is the government prohibited by law form extraditing
its own nationals?

- There are limits to extradition in accordance with
international law.

If so, is the government doing to modify its laws to permit
the extradition of its own nationals?

- Unknown.


L. (SBU) Is there evidence of government involvement in or
tolerance of trafficking, on a local or institutional level?
If so, please explain in detail.

- Some government tolerance of trafficking is demonstrated in
the enactment of legislation such as the Sponsorship Law,
which is authored by government officials and which creates
and facilitates TIP situations. For example, the Sponsorship
Law engenders situations of bondage and servitude by
prohibiting workers from leaving the country or changing
employment without the permission of their current sponsor.
Finally, the lack of enforcement of existing criminal
statutes and labor laws could be construed as official
toleration of TIP activities.


DOHA 00000260 011.2 OF 014



M. (SBU) If government officials are involved in trafficking,
what steps has the government taken to end such
participation?

- There are no known cases.

Have any government officials been prosecuted for involvement
in trafficking or trafficking-related corruption?

- There are no known cases.


N. (SBU) If the country has an identified child sex tourism
problem (as source or destination),how many foreign
pedophiles has the government prosecuted or
deported/extradited to their country of origin?

- There is no identified child sex tourism problem.

What are the countries of origin for sex tourists?

- N/A.

Do the country's child sexual abuse laws have
extraterritorial coverage (similar to the U.S. PROTECT Act)?

- Article 7 of the Qatari Penal Code includes explicit
provisions endorsing the principles of territoriality and
extraterritorial jurisdiction over offences committed by a
Qatari national or if the deceased is a Qatari.

If so, how many of the country's nationals have been
prosecuted and/or convicted under the extraterritorial
provision(s)?

- Unknown.


O. (SBU) Has the government signed, ratified, and/or taken
steps to implement the following international instruments?
Please provide the date of signature/ratification if
appropriate.

- ILO Convention 182 concerning the Prohibition and Immediate
Action for the Elimination of the Worst Forms of Child Labor:
ratified; 30 May 2000.

- ILO Convention 29 and 105 on Forced or Compulsory Labor.
29: ratified; 12 Mar 1998
105: ratified; 2 Feb 2007

- The Optional Protocol to the Convention on the Rights of
the Child (CRC) on the Sale of Children, Child Prostitution,
and Child Pornography: ratified; 14 Dec 1991; with
reservation: ".....subject to a general reservation regarding
any provisions in the protocol that are in conflict with the
Islamic Shariah." Nine signatories objected to Qatar's
reservation.

- The Protocol to Prevent, Suppress and Punish Trafficking in
Persons, especially Women and Children, supplementing the UN
Convention Against Transnational Organized Crime:
unsigned; unratified.


5. (U) Paragraph 30. PROTECTION AND ASSISTANCE TO VICTIMS.


A. (SBU) Does the government assist victims, for example, by
providing temporary to permanent residency status, relief
from deportation, shelter and access to legal, medical and
psychological services? If so, please explain.

- In 2005, the government opened a shelter for trafficking
victims to serve the needs of abused domestic workers, other
laborers and children. The shelter is in a small housing
compound and comprising fully furnished three-bedroom villas,
with two villas each for men, women and children. Each villa
can accommodate up to seven people. The shelter is under the
management of the National TIP Coordinator. The shelter has
assisted 44 women, men, and children, including eight

DOHA 00000260 012.2 OF 014


laborers (four women and four men). The shelter is
underutilized because of a lack of awareness of its existence
and also because it is primarily seen as a shelter for women
and children. Potential victims in the labor sector have not
had wide-spread access to the shelter. The government has
stated that it hopes to construct a larger shelter to
accommodate potential labor victims.

Does the country have victim care and victim health care
facilities?

- The administrative building of the TIP shelter houses a
health clinic with a medical doctor working on site. Mental
health services are provided to the victims.

Does the country have facilities dedicated to helping victims
of trafficking?

- The TIP shelter provides assistance to workers who have
suffered from abuse in the form of payment of back wages and
repatriation, and it will facilitate a change of employer
rather than deportation in cases where abuse has been proven.
The shelter employed two victims until their sponsorship was
transferred to other employers. One of the domestic helpers
is employed in the shelter as cleaner. The shelter has
provided financial support to some of the victims. The
shelter also pays for the lodgers' calls to their families
back home and provides them with personal necessities. TIP
victims lodged in the shelter are not repatriated unless they
wish. Four victims were repatriated to Vietnam based on their
own wishes in coordination with Labor Department, the
Ministry of Interior, and the Vietnamese Charge' d'Affaires
in Doha. Legal assistance is also available to the victims
while in the shelter. The government has widely publicized
the existence of the shelter and the hotlines in local
newspapers, on TV (local
and regional),and via brochures, posters, and leaflets.

If so, can post provide the number of victims placed in these
care facilities?

- There were at least 20 victims housed in the shelter in

2006.


B. (SBU) Does the government provide funding or other forms
of support to foreign or domestic NGOs for services to
victims? Please explain.

- The government is not known to provide funding or other
forms of support to foreign or domestic NGOs for services to
victims.


C. (SBU) Do the government's law enforcement and social
services personnel have a formal system of identifying
victims of trafficking among high-risk persons with whom they
come in contact (e.g. foreign persons arrested for
prostitution or immigration violations)?

- Health care facilities have instituted a system to refer
suspected abuse cases to the TIP shelter for investigation.
No other system has been noted.

Is there a referral process in place, when appropriate, to
transfer victims detained, arrested or placed in protective
custody by law enforcement authorities to NGO's that provide
short- or long-term care?

- No. Most victims of trafficking are deported. They are
generally placed in the Deportation Detention Center pending
resolution of their cases. The Nepalese expatriate community
has established a private shelter for Nepalese victims.


D. (SBU) Are the rights of victims respected, or are victims
treated as criminals?

- The rights of laborers and domestic workers are generally
not respected.

DOHA 00000260 013.2 OF 014



Are victims detained, jailed, or deported?

- They are often treated as criminals. Laborers are often
kept in the Deportation Detention Center until their civil
cases with their sponsors are resolved. Domestic workers are
also detained and placed in the Deportation Detention Center.
After their cases have been resolved, they are deported, but
sometimes only after long administrative delays.

If detained or jailed, for how long?

- The length of detainment varies greatly. A visit to the
Deportation Detention Center by Embassy officials found 1400
workers detained and awaiting deportation. Some had been
detained for more than four years.

Are victims fined?

- Some victims are also fined if they are found to be in
violation of immigration or other laws.

Are victims prosecuted for violations of other laws, such as
those governing immigration or prostitution?

- Many victims are charged with immigration violations, even
if the violations are the fault of their sponsors.


E. (SBU) Does the government encourage victims to assist in
the investigation and prosecution of trafficking?

- The government encourages some victims to assist in their
own cases of abuse or withholding of pay.

May victims file civil suits or seek legal action against the
traffickers?

- Victims may file civil suits against the traffickers.

Does anyone impede the victims' access to such legal redress?


- Some sponsors and employers have been known to threaten
victims in an attempt to keep them from seeking legal
redress.

If a victim is a material witness in a court case against a
former employer, is the victim permitted to obtain other
employment or to leave the country pending trial proceedings?

- If a victim is a material witness in a court case against
the former employer, the victim may be permitted to obtain
other employment only upon approval of the Ministry of the
Interior. Victims may generally not leave the country if
there is a pending case. In some cases, a power of attorney
may be given to the victim's Embassy to continue pursuing the
case while the victim is repatriated.

Is there a victim restitution program?

- There is no victim restitution program.


F. (SBU) What kind of protection is the government able to
provide for victims and witnesses?

- The government has a shelter for trafficking victims and
assists them with their cases against their sponsors.
However, the shelter has assisted only a few victims.

Does it provide these protections in practice?

- Yes.
What type of shelter or services does the government provide?


- The shelter has a health clinic and a social worker on the
premises to assist victims in rebuilding their lives.

DOHA 00000260 014.2 OF 014



Does it provide shelter or housing benefits to victims or
other resources to aid the victims in rebuilding their lives?

- Yes.

Where are child victims placed (e.g. in shelters,
foster-care, or juvenile justice detention centers)?

- If possible, child victims are housed with their mother.
The shelter is equipped to care for children and foster care
is available.


G. (SBU) Does the government provide any specialized training
for government officials in recognizing trafficking and in
the provision of assistance to trafficked victims, including
the special needs of trafficked children?

- Yes. The National Office for Combating TIP and the Human
Rights Office of the Ministry of Interior conducted a
workshop from August 20-24, 2006, on the legal, social and
security dimensions of TIP. Participants included a selection
of police officers, Internal Security Force staff and other
personnel related to this subject. The purpose of the
workshop was to "deepen the awareness of the notions related
to the combating of TIP and the activation of the role of
organizations and security bodies for active participation
and confrontation of this crime and its combat and protection
of its victims who are mostly children, women and
housemaids." TIP training has been incorporated into basic
training at the police academy.

Does the government provide training on protections and
assistance to its embassies and consulates in foreign
countries that are destination or transit countries?

- Unknown.

Does it urge those embassies and consulates to develop
ongoing relationships with NGOs that serve trafficked victims?

- Unknown.


H. (SBU) Does the government provide assistance, such as
medical aid, shelter, or financial help, to its repatriated
nationals who are victims of trafficking?

- There are no known cases.


I. Which international organizations or NGOs, if any, work
with trafficking victims?

- There are no international organizations or NGOs that work
with trafficked victims in the country.

What type of services do they provide?

- N/A.

What sort of cooperation do they receive from local
authorities?

- N/A.


6. (U) Embassy Point of Contact is Political Officer, Timothy

J. Fingarson. Tel. 974-488-4101 ext. 6453. Fax 974 487-3317.
One FS-04 officer spent 60 hours in the preparation of this
report cable.
UNTERMEYER