Identifier
Created
Classification
Origin
08ABUDHABI382
2008-03-26 11:30:00
UNCLASSIFIED//FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY
Embassy Abu Dhabi
Cable title:  

TIP REPORT FOR UAE MARCH 2008

Tags:  PREL PHUM PREF KCRM KWMN ASEC ELAB SMIG AE 
pdf how-to read a cable
VZCZCXRO4903
PP RUEHDE RUEHDIR
DE RUEHAD #0382/01 0861130
ZNR UUUUU ZZH
P 261130Z MAR 08
FM AMEMBASSY ABU DHABI
TO RUEHC/SECSTATE WASHDC PRIORITY 0628
INFO RUEHZM/GULF COOPERATION COUNCIL COLLECTIVE
RUCNDT/USMISSION USUN NEW YORK 0178
RUEHUNV/USMISSION UNVIE VIENNA 0062
RUEHLM/AMEMBASSY COLOMBO 0164
RUEHNE/AMEMBASSY NEW DELHI 1390
RUEHIL/AMEMBASSY ISLAMABAD 1666
RUEHKA/AMEMBASSY DHAKA 0326
RUEHML/AMEMBASSY MANILA 0688
RUEHJA/AMEMBASSY JAKARTA 0120
RUEHKH/AMEMBASSY KHARTOUM 0050
RUEHNK/AMEMBASSY NOUAKCHOTT 0070
RUEHMO/AMEMBASSY MOSCOW 0449
RUEHKT/AMEMBASSY KATHMANDU 0058
RUEHBJ/AMEMBASSY BEIJING 0247
RHMFIUU/DEPT OF JUSTICE WASHINGTON DC
RHMFIUU/DEPT OF HOMELAND SECURITY WASHINGTON DC
RUEHC/DEPT OF LABOR WASHINGTON DC
RUEATRS/DEPT OF TREASURY WASHINGTON DC
UNCLAS SECTION 01 OF 16 ABU DHABI 000382 

SIPDIS

SENSITIVE
SIPDIS

DEPARTMENT FOR NEA/ARP AND G/TIP/GAYATRI PATEL
ALSO FOR G, INL, DRL, PRM, L/DL, AND NEA/RA

E.O. 12958: N/A
TAGS: PREL PHUM PREF KCRM KWMN ASEC ELAB SMIG AE
SUBJECT: TIP REPORT FOR UAE MARCH 2008

REFS: A) ABU DHABI 377 (GARGASH ON CITY OF HOPE)
B) DUBAI 0092 (DISCORD AMONG DUBAI SHELTERS)
C) ABU DHABI 173 (GARGASH UPDATE)
D) ABU DHABI 135 (OPENING SHELTERS IN ABU DHABI)
E) STATE 9008 (UN.GIFT CONFERENCE FUNDED BY ABU DHABI)
F) STATE 2731 (TIP REPORT GUIDANCE)
G) 07 ABU DHABI 1891 (INTERIM TIP ASSESSMENT)
H) 07 ABU DHABI 1883 (MIN OF JUSTICE TRAINING REQUEST)
I) 07 DUBAI 629 (DUBAI SHELTER'S PATCHY START)
J) 07 ABU DHABI 1820 (UAE TIP REPORT AND TRAINING)
K) 07 DUBAI 581 (G/TIP WITH PHILIPPINE CONSULATE)
L) 07 ABU DHABI 1687 (G/TIP AMB LAGON VISIT)
M) 07 DUBAI 570 (VISIT VISAS)
N) 07 ABU DHABI 1568 (UNICEF ON JOCKEY REPATRIATION)
O) 07 ABU DHABI 1542 (ACTION PLAN WITH MFA)
P) 07 ABU DHABI 1539 (ACTIVIST VOICES)
Q) 07 ABU DHABI 1511 (MOL VIEWS)
R) 07 ABU DHABI 1272 (TIP UPDATE WITH GARGASH)
S) 07 DUBAI 411 (NATIONAL TIP COMMITTEE)
T) 07 ABU DHABI 599 (UAE PRESIDENT ON LABOR FORCE)
U) 07 ABU DHABI 368 (UAE TIP REPORT MARCH 2007)

UNCLAS SECTION 01 OF 16 ABU DHABI 000382

SIPDIS

SENSITIVE
SIPDIS

DEPARTMENT FOR NEA/ARP AND G/TIP/GAYATRI PATEL
ALSO FOR G, INL, DRL, PRM, L/DL, AND NEA/RA

E.O. 12958: N/A
TAGS: PREL PHUM PREF KCRM KWMN ASEC ELAB SMIG AE
SUBJECT: TIP REPORT FOR UAE MARCH 2008

REFS: A) ABU DHABI 377 (GARGASH ON CITY OF HOPE)
B) DUBAI 0092 (DISCORD AMONG DUBAI SHELTERS)
C) ABU DHABI 173 (GARGASH UPDATE)
D) ABU DHABI 135 (OPENING SHELTERS IN ABU DHABI)
E) STATE 9008 (UN.GIFT CONFERENCE FUNDED BY ABU DHABI)
F) STATE 2731 (TIP REPORT GUIDANCE)
G) 07 ABU DHABI 1891 (INTERIM TIP ASSESSMENT)
H) 07 ABU DHABI 1883 (MIN OF JUSTICE TRAINING REQUEST)
I) 07 DUBAI 629 (DUBAI SHELTER'S PATCHY START)
J) 07 ABU DHABI 1820 (UAE TIP REPORT AND TRAINING)
K) 07 DUBAI 581 (G/TIP WITH PHILIPPINE CONSULATE)
L) 07 ABU DHABI 1687 (G/TIP AMB LAGON VISIT)
M) 07 DUBAI 570 (VISIT VISAS)
N) 07 ABU DHABI 1568 (UNICEF ON JOCKEY REPATRIATION)
O) 07 ABU DHABI 1542 (ACTION PLAN WITH MFA)
P) 07 ABU DHABI 1539 (ACTIVIST VOICES)
Q) 07 ABU DHABI 1511 (MOL VIEWS)
R) 07 ABU DHABI 1272 (TIP UPDATE WITH GARGASH)
S) 07 DUBAI 411 (NATIONAL TIP COMMITTEE)
T) 07 ABU DHABI 599 (UAE PRESIDENT ON LABOR FORCE)
U) 07 ABU DHABI 368 (UAE TIP REPORT MARCH 2007)


1. (SBU) Summary: The United Arab Emirates is home to a broad array
of communities, including those vulnerable to exploitive human
traffickers. The population is comprised of over 80 percent
foreigners, many of whom provide unskilled or minimally skilled labor
to a fast-growing economy. In this multi-strata society, the TIP
phenomenon clearly persists. UAEG efforts to come to terms with the
problem are also significant. Implementation of the UAE's anti-TIP
law is ongoing, boosted by the formation of an active National
Committee to Combat Human Trafficking in 2007; while quantitative
measures of progress will take time to assemble, qualitative
improvement in the UAEG approach is indisputable. In addition to
reporting throughout the year (reftels),Post offers the following
observations in response to ref E questions. End summary.


2. (SBU) Responses below are keyed to Ref E "Checklist" in
paragraphs 27 through 30.

Paragraph 27 -- Overview of activities to eliminate trafficking
-------------- --------------

-- 27A. The United Arab Emirates was a country of destination for a
large work force, particularly from South and Southeast Asia,
including both men and women. Precise numbers of trafficked men and
women are impossible to ascertain, yet the magnitude of the transient
labor force suggests widespread potential for exploitation and abuse.
There is no evidence that the UAE is a source country for
trafficking victims, although victims likely transit the UAE. The
UAEG is not able to catalogue all trafficking cases and has not

produced specific estimates of the problem, although the UAEG is
actively pursuing improvements both in terms of data collection and
in focusing resources in immigration, law enforcement and the
judicial system to better identify potential trafficking victims.
Those most at risk of trafficking in the UAE are on the lower end of
the wage scale who have little recourse when an employer or person of
authority withholds wages, presses them into excessive working hours
or unhygienic living conditions, or exerts other coercive influences.

Many potential victims were either unskilled laborers or domestic
workers, including some drawn into the commercial sex industry.
While the total number of foreign construction workers in the UAE
exceeds 500,000 and domestic workers 200,000 (according to various
source country embassies),the actual number of trafficking victims
among them is unknown. Construction workers, particularly from India
and Pakistan, often arrive in a state of debt bondage having
voluntarily paid as much as USD 2,700 (10,000 dirham) to an agent in
the source country to arrange an employment contract. These workers
might receive a salary of between USD 135 to USD 200 (500 to 750
dirham) per month, while interest continues to accrue on their debt.

ABU DHABI 00000382 002 OF 016


Trapped in these conditions for 2 to 3 years (on average),bonded
labor victims could easily number in the tens of thousands according
to a prominent U.S. NGO. Like construction labor, domestic workers
generally came to the UAE voluntarily, but often had their passports
withheld upon entry, or came with the understanding that they would
work in a more-skilled profession instead of the one available to
them upon arrival. There were reports that women -- primarily from
Sri Lanka and the Philippines -- were lured to the UAE to work as
domestic workers but were later sent to work in other countries,
including Oman. Women trafficked to work in the commercial sex
industry came from a myriad of countries spanning from Eastern Europe
to Africa to East Asia. There is no reliable data on the number of
women involved in the sex industry; rough estimates go as high as
10,000. Similarly, there is no reliable information as to how many
of those involved were trafficking victims.

-- 27B. The UAEG has made qualitative strides in its anti-TIP
efforts in 2007, expanding awareness of the problem and working
actively to combat it. Nonetheless, the complex phenomenon persists
in an international environment in which economic incentive continues
to draw vulnerable workers into opportunities abroad.

The UAE economy is heavily dependent on foreign labor. Over 80
percent of the total UAE population, and roughly 98 percent of the
private sector workforce, is expatriate. The majority of unskilled
workers are from poor source countries and came to the UAE for
economic opportunity. Some became trafficking victims after their
arrival in the UAE. Female victims, for example, from South and
Southeast Asia (particularly India, Sri Lanka, Bangladesh, Indonesia,
and the Philippines),may have been brought as domestic laborers and
later trafficked into other work; men from India, Sri Lanka, and
Pakistan who came to the UAE to work as laborers, primarily in the
construction sector (but also in agriculture),may face similar
challenges. Labor conditions in the UAE can be harsh for unskilled
workers in any circumstance, but more particularly when enduring
excessive work hours, nonpayment of wages, verbal, mental, physical,
or sexual abuse, or restriction of movement. One cannot know how
many incidents of such treatment occur, although all are reported
anecdotally from time to time. Trafficking victims most often arrive
in the country voluntarily, having entered into employment contracts
in their home country with an agent who is usually of the same
nationality as the victim. (Regarding freedom of movement, many
employers hold the passports of their workers, in spite of the
practice having been outlawed in 2003. The UAEG organized public
relations campaigns to inform both workers and employers that the
practice is illegal. There were numerous instances, widely reported
by the media, in which UAE courts and embassies or consulates
successfully intervened to compel an employer to return a passport to
an employee. Nonetheless, the practice remains widespread.)

Transient workers are also susceptible to contract switching.
Domestic workers were sometimes made employment offers to work as a
secretary or in another office job and travel to the UAE on a visit

SIPDIS
visa with the promise that the contract would be signed in the UAE,
but upon arrival the worker was informed that he/she would be working
as a domestic worker or in the hotel or restaurant sector. There
were further reports from source country embassies that some domestic
workers who ran away from abusive employers and sought assistance
from the recruitment agencies that brought them to the UAE were
coerced into transferring their contracts and were sent to work in
other countries (e.g. Oman).

Employees who sought assistance from their respective diplomatic
missions were reportedly almost always able to resolve their
complaints to the employees' satisfaction. Source country labor
attaches report good relations with Ministry of Interior (MoI) and
immigration officials, and state that although domestic workers are
not covered under the labor law, MoI officials routinely offer
similar dispute resolution processes and protections as the labor law
provides, but on an informal basis. In March 2007, the UAEG

ABU DHABI 00000382 003 OF 016


announced a standardized work contract for all domestic workers that
took effect on April 1, 2007. The new standard contract stipulates
benefits but not wages, and formalizes a dispute resolution process
through each emirate's Naturalization and Residency Department. It
is unclear whether the UAEG has enough labor inspectors to
sufficiently monitor compliance, although the Ministries of Interior
and Labor have expended considerable effort to prevent and resolve
these problems. MoI took action against hundreds of employers who
abused or failed to pay their domestic employees. According to
current regulations, MoI officials can ban an employer from further
sponsorship of domestic employees after receiving four reports of
abuse.

Police officials, particularly in Dubai, assisted trafficking victims
once they identified themselves as such. However, victims were often
reluctant to approach police due to their illegal status and the risk
of losing their jobs and being arrested and deported. Source country
officials have stated that the Ministries of Labor and Interior, and
the Immigration Departments of both Abu Dhabi and Dubai,
significantly increased their efforts at addressing the labor
complaints of domestic workers. Additionally, the numbers of UAE
officials trained to recognize signs of coercion and potential
trafficking increased.

Construction workers, the largest single work force in the UAE, often
worked under the harshest conditions. The media regularly reported
on strikes by construction workers protesting adverse working
conditions and unpaid salaries. There were several strikes involving
more than 1,000 workers; the striking workers claimed they had not
been paid for periods up to six months. (Unpaid construction workers
in the UAE often continue working without pay, fearing that if they
protest they may have no chance to recover wages owed to them. With
their room and board provided by their employer, the amount of time
that they are willing/able to keep working without pay is much longer
than would be the case in a typical work situation, where the salary
would be needed to cover the expenses of daily life.) The Ministry
of Labor resolved these disputes quickly when they became known.
Legally employed construction workers are covered by the existing UAE
labor law, with a clear mediation procedure. The UAEG also offered
an extensive amnesty program in 2007 for those in irregular status to
legalize their visas or return to their home countries. A reported
341,958 persons took advantage of the amnesty program.

-- 27C. Both federal ministries and local emirate departments are
involved in anti-trafficking efforts. On the federal level, the
Ministries of Interior, Foreign Affairs, Justice, Health, and Labor
are involved actively. On the local level, police and immigration
departments, public prosecutors, and social services departments are
also involved. Police and other government officials have worked
more closely with members of the media to increase public awareness.

The 2006 anti-trafficking legislation created a new anti-trafficking
committee, led by then Minister of State for Federal National Council
Affairs (who was recently made Minister of State for Foreign Affairs
but presumably retains the TIP portfolio). That committee has been
active since its April 2007 formation in drawing together involved
agencies to coordinate UAEG efforts. Article 12 of Federal Law #51
stipulates participation on the committee by the Ministries of
Foreign Affairs, Interior, Justice, Labor, Social Affairs, and
Health, along with State Security and the UAE Red Crescent Society.
Other participants can be added by Cabinet decision.

-- 27D. The UAE has both structural and cultural impediments to
combating trafficking, but corruption does not seem to be a
significant contributing problem. Complex issues such as TIP tax the
human resources of the UAEG, which lacks institutional depth due to
the country's young age and small national population. Training at
all levels of the law enforcement community, for example, is time
consuming when nuanced and complex offences like TIP are involved.
Additionally, a loose federal structure and requirement for consensus

ABU DHABI 00000382 004 OF 016


often prevent quick action on matters with any level of controversy,
such as TIP. For example, the federal Ministry of Interior oversees
the Police General Directorates in each of the seven emirates;
however, each emirate maintains its own police force and supervises
the police stations in that emirate. While all emirate police forces
theoretically are branches of the MoI, in practice they operate with
considerable autonomy, particularly in Dubai. Civil courts are
generally part of the federal system and accountable to the Federal
Supreme Court, with the notable exceptions of Dubai, Abu Dhabi and
Ras Al Khaimah emirates, which have independent judiciaries.
Reaching all government entities uniformly with cohesive and
comprehensive training programs is challenging for the UAEG.

Some cultural characteristics also hamper the Government's ability to
address TIP. For example, as a conservative Muslim country, public
discussion of sex is culturally taboo, which makes it difficult to
address sex trafficking. Similarly, due to a cultural emphasis on
privacy regarding matters of the home, people rarely discuss abuse of
trafficked domestic servants publicly. Financial resources and
technology are not generally limiting factors, although human
resource constraints are apparent. UAE immigration officials
routinely track foreigners who try to enter the country illegally,
for example, using iris recognition biometric technology (the
database contains approximately four million iris scan results).

By its nature, trafficking in persons involves persons and activities
outside (as well as inside) the UAE and aspects of the phenomenon are
not under UAE control. The UAEG therefore frequently stresses the
need to enhance international cooperation.

-- 27E. The National Committee to Combat Human Trafficking and its
constituent government agencies systematically and regularly address
UAEG anti-TIP efforts, coordinating government responses and training
to enhance UAEG capacity and improve data collection. Committee
meetings get prominent local press coverage (in Arabic and English
dailies). The Committee actively pursues international cooperation
and has prepared brochures in English to highlight UAEG efforts to
address the TIP phenomenon. The Committee has stated its desire to
assemble reliable data on the extent of the problem, yet has to date
not issued such quantitative data.

The UAEG devoted significant energy, time and resources to
sensitizing law enforcement, immigration, and judicial officials to
the subject of trafficking in persons, as well as pursuing practical
training to protect victims and prevent future trafficking incidents.
Abu Dhabi and Dubai police and the Ministries of Interior, Health,
and Justice have all held anti-TIP training courses throughout the
year. One such training program in February 2008 involved three U.S.
experts (from the Department of Justice, FBI, and ICE) sharing case
studies with UAE judges and prosecutors. The program, Principles of
Investigating and Prosecuting Human Trafficking Crimes, successfully
deepened the TIP expertise of judicial participants.

The Dubai Naturalization and Residency Department regularly offered
training for arrival and departure inspectors in identifying
fraudulent documents, often used by trafficking victims. The UAEG
also supplied ports of entry and source country embassies and
consulates with brochures in an attempt to warn off potential
trafficking victims, as well as to inform victims where to receive
assistance. The UAEG senior leadership continues to ask the USG for
training information and opportunities that would further their
efforts to combat trafficking in persons, and help law enforcement
officials, prosecutors and judges to better identify, investigate and
prosecute trafficking in persons cases.

Over the reporting period, senior leaders voiced their strong
political will to combat trafficking in persons, notably through a
USD 15 million donation by the Crown Prince of Abu Dhabi that enabled
a UN.GIFT conference on anti-TIP efforts in Vienna in February 2008.
The UAEG's TIP committee actively coordinated multi-agency efforts.

ABU DHABI 00000382 005 OF 016


There was no evidence that corruption of public officials was a
systemic problem. There were no verifiable reports of government
officials being linked to TIP activity during the reporting period.

Paragraph 28 -- Investigation and Prosecution
--------------

-- 28A. On November 9, 2006, the UAEG enacted a comprehensive
anti-trafficking law intended to cover the entire range of
trafficking issues. The first case to be prosecuted under this law
involved an Indian couple transiting from India to Paris, via Dubai,
accompanied by two unrelated Indian boys who held forged passports.
On March 1, 2007, the Dubai Attorney General accepted the case for
prosecution. Prior to this law, Justice Ministry officials advised
that traffickers were prosecuted under specific penal laws such as
kidnapping, rape, sexual abuse and sexual exploitation.

The 2006 law, Federal Law #51 on Combating Human Trafficking Crimes,
defines Human Trafficking as "recruiting, transporting transferring,
harboring, or receiving persons by means of threat or use of force,
or other forms of coercion, abduction, fraud, deception, abuse of
power or of position, taking advantage of the vulnerability of the
person, or, 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. Exploitation includes all forms of
sexual exploitation, engaging others in prostitution, servitude,
forced labor, enslavement, quasi-slavery practices, or detachment of
organs." The law penalizes transnational crimes.

The UAE sees its anti-trafficking legislation as the first of its
kind in the Arab world, defining trafficking as an element of
organized crime and setting forth mechanisms to combat explicit
servitude, sexual exploitation, forced labor and the involuntary
trade in human organs.

Complementing the intent of the new UAE law, Indian authorities began
on September 1, 2007, to restrict Indian women under 30 years old who
have not graduated high school from working in the UAE to protect
them from exploitation. Also, employment contracts were required to
be concluded directly between employer and employee, to the exclusion
of recruiting agents, to decrease chances for exploitation. Contract
review by labor attaches of the worker's embassy or consulate also
proved effective. Furthermore it was announced that pre-paid mobile
phone cards must be provided to every female domestic worker to
facilitate contact with authorities if necessary. On January 24,
2008, the Dubai Police Criminal Investigation Department (CID)
director stated that individuals who facilitate visas for women as
housemaids and then provide those women to traffickers would be
accused of accomplice to trafficking, regardless of intent.

In May 2007, the UAEG ratified the United Nations Convention Against
Transnational Organized Crime, which includes provisions for
international cooperation in anti-human trafficking efforts. On
March 9, 2008, the UAE Cabinet signaled UAE ratification (likely
requiring Federal Supreme Council approval) of the UN Protocol to
Prevent, Suppress, and Punish Trafficking in Persons, especially
women and children.

-- 28B. Trafficking for prostitution carries a five-year minimum
sentence. A life sentence can be imposed if the victim is a female,
a child, mentally impaired, or if the perpetrator is a spouse,
parent, or guardian of the victim. Life sentences can also be
imposed if the perpetrator is a public servant or member of an
organized criminal group; if the act was committed through the use or
threat of force, violence, death, or physical or psychological
torture; or if the crime was committed by an armed person.

Less complex sexual exploitation cases are punishable by a maximum of
one year with a fine or a minimum of two years if the victim is under
the age of 18 or if the victim was coerced into prostitution. If

ABU DHABI 00000382 006 OF 016


force, threat, or fraud was used, or if the victim is a minor, the
maximum sentence is 10 years. Convicted expatriates are frequently
deported once their sentence is complete.

-- 28C. Labor exploitation is a primary concern of the 2006 anti-TIP
law, which stipulates "not less than five years" penalty for human
trafficking crimes (Article 2). Life imprisonment is imposed in
certain circumstances (as noted in 28B above). Persons aware of TIP
crimes who fail to report them are penalized for "not less than one
and not more than five years" and/or face a fine of "not less than
5,000 dirham and not more than 20,000 dirham" (Article 3). Those
prompting others to give false testimony face "not less than five
years" (Article 4). Corporate entities violating the law are to be
"punished by a fine of not less than 100,000 dirham, and not more
than one million dirham," in addition to a possible court order of
"temporary dissolution, or total closure" of the company or one of
its branches (Article 7).

There are no laws that explicitly criminalize labor practices such as
contract switching or seizing a laborer's passport. However,
anti-trafficking legislation is sufficiently broad to cover labor
recruiters in source and destination countries. The UAE Labor Law
criminalizes use of fraudulent documents in labor recruitment. The
maximum penalty is six months and/or a maximum fine of USD 6,800
(25,000 dirham). In October 2007, the Ministry of Labor announced
that laborers' salaries should be paid through an Electronic Wage
Payment System; in an effort to eradicate non-payment of salaries,
cash payments were not permitted after January 2008. The UAEG uses
such mechanisms (enabling them with regulation and technical support)
to lessen the opportunity for exploitation. Compliance is improving
but not uniform. The UAEG cracked down on companies violating rest
break rules (which mandate rests for outside workers during the
hottest parts of the day in summer months),actively inspecting
conditions and pursuing violators.

-- 28D. Rape sentencing ranges from two years to capital punishment,
with possible lashing as another penalty. Death is imposed for rape
that leads to the victim's death. Penalties for sex trafficking
range from a minimum of five years to life.

-- 28E. Prostitution is criminalized by law. The penalty for
prostitution is temporary imprisonment and deportation if a foreign
national. Brothel operators or owners are imprisoned temporarily and
face brothel closure. Pimps and clients can be sentenced to a
maximum of five years. The law has been partially applied. Local
police raided and closed some parlors which were affiliated with
prostitution. For example, in December 2007, Dubai police raided 22
villas and flats and arrested 247 suspects (170 sex workers, 12 pimps
and 65 clients). Business licenses have been permanently cancelled
in some cases.

-- 28F. Dubai Police registered 10 trafficking related cases between
January and August 2007. Five cases pertain to instigating
prostitution, two to threatening children's lives, and three regard
other trafficking issues. At least five individuals were convicted
of trafficking in 2007. More cases have been prosecuted since the
2007 data, as noted below.

While not comprehensive, the following are individual reports of
prosecutions pursued during the reporting period.

In February and March 2007, two separate travel document fraud rings
were uncovered. The perpetrators were referred to trial.

In July 2007, a Dubai court sentenced two individuals to 15 years for
forcing a woman into prostitution. This was the first implementation
of Federal Law # 51 of 2006. Their sentence was reduced to seven
years in September 2007 following an appeal by the Public
Prosecutor's Office for leniency. Their driver was sentenced to
three years for aiding and abetting. As is common in such cases, the

ABU DHABI 00000382 007 OF 016


three will be deported following completion of their sentences.

On September 12, 2007, the Dubai Court of First Instance sentenced
two Indians to 15 years for sexually exploiting an Indonesian woman
by forcing her into prostitution and selling her. On September 23,
2007, two Bangladeshis were charged with attempted trafficking of two
housemaids by forcing them into prostitution. The perpetrators
attempted to sell the housemaids for USD 2,450 to a police informant
posing as a buyer. On October 17, 2007, the Dubai Court of Appeals
sentenced a male suspect to three years for forcing a woman into
prostitution and attempting to sell her for USD 1,170.

On October 23, 2007, the Dubai Attorney General referred a sex
trafficking case to the Dubai Court of First Instance. The Public
Prosecution charged two suspects with trafficking, illegal detention,
operating a brothel, and forcing two females into prostitution. The
perpetrators beat the victims and forced them to have sex with
customers, keeping the money for themselves. Finally, the
perpetrators attempted to sell the victims for USD 2,700 (10,000
dirham).

On November 23, 2007, the Dubai Public Prosecutor accused a
Bangladeshi of bringing a 17-year-old girl to the UAE and forcing her
into prostitution. The girl testified that she entered the UAE on a
visit visa that the perpetrator, whom she knew, sent to her. On
December 1, 2007, a joint State Security and CID operation uncovered
a massive prostitution ring involving 22 brothels in various
residences. A total of 247 individuals comprised of 170 South and
East Asian prostitutes, 12 pimps, and 65 customers were arrested. On
December 13, 2007, the Dubai Court of First Instance sentenced an
Indian woman to three years for forcing her housemaid into
prostitution, beating her for refusing, and working as a prostitute
herself.

On December 17, 2007, the Dubai Court of First Instance sentenced an
Indian man to five years for attempted trafficking. The man
attempted to sell a destitute Indonesian housemaid to a police
informant for USD 1,220 and to force her into prostitution. On
January 14, 2008, the Dubai Court of First Instance sentenced two
Indian men to 10 years for attempting to force two women into
prostitution and sell them to a police informant for USD 2,450. The
women were housemaids who had escaped from their employers. The men
assaulted the victims when they refused to engage in prostitution.
On January 17, 2008, the Dubai Court of First Instance sentenced a
Bangladeshi man to 10 years and a Bangladeshi woman to one year for
forcing an Indian woman into prostitution. As with other similar
cases, the foreign perpetrators will be deported after serving their
sentences.

On February 6, 2008, two Bangladeshi men were referred to court by
the Public Prosecutor for sexually exploiting an Indonesian housemaid
and attempting to sell her to an undercover police agent for USD
2,700 (10,000 dirham).

On February 6, 2008, police arrested four Asian gang members who
attempted to sell a woman into prostitution for USD 2,900. The four
confessed to have trafficked the woman into the UAE on a visit visa
to sell her into prostitution and to running brothels. They were
referred to the Public Prosecutor's Office on trafficking charges;
one was charged with aiding and abetting. On February 18, 2008, the
Dubai Court of First Instance sentenced an Indian driver to three
years and subsequent deportation for attempting to coerce a destitute
housemaid into prostitution.

On February 26, 2008, the Dubai Court of First Instance sentenced an
Iranian businessman to two years for operating a brothel. Seven
Kazakh and Russian prostitutes were sentenced to six months. The
court also sentenced a Kazakh woman to nine months for assisting the
Iranian businessman. The Iranian businessman trafficked the women to
Dubai on visit visas, promising them restaurant jobs but then asking

ABU DHABI 00000382 008 OF 016


them to be prostitutes for three months to cover the cost of visas
and airfare.

On March 9, 2008, Dubai public prosecutors charged a Ukranian woman
with violating Federal Law #51 for trying to sell a penniless
Moldovan woman (who came to Dubai to help treat her daughter's
asthma) to a police informant for USD 7,600 (28,000 dirham).

-- 28G. The UAEG has worked to sensitize law enforcement and
immigration officials to trafficking and has provided practical
training to protect victims and prevent future incidents. Abu Dhabi
and Dubai police and the Ministries of Interior, Health, and Justice
have conducted anti-TIP training. The Dubai Naturalization and
Residency Department trained immigration inspectors to identify
fraudulent documents used by traffickers and victims. The UAEG
supplied ports of entry and source country embassies and consulates
with brochures to warn potential victims about the dangers of
trafficking and to inform them about obtaining assistance.

The Ministry of Justice Institute of Judicial Training and Studies
holds mandatory classes for prosecutors and judges on proper victim
assistance. The Institute also conducts mandatory classes on the
following: human rights; sexual offenses; offenses against life;
immigration offenses; juvenile protection and delinquency; labor
violations and offenses.

Senior UAEG ministers have repeatedly requested USG training,
information, and opportunities that would enhance their efforts to
combat trafficking and help law enforcement officials, prosecutors,
and judges to better identify, investigate, and prosecute trafficking
cases.

On September 2 and 3, 2007, the Ministry of Interior and National
Committee to Combat Human Trafficking organized a trafficking
training seminar at the Abu Dhabi Police Department of Criminal
Evidence to raise trafficking awareness and develop methods to
eradicate it. Participants included the Department of Naturalization
and Residency, CID, police officers, and public prosecutors.

On September 25, 2007, the UAE Police Academy held training entitled
"Islamic Sharia Position Towards Trafficking in Persons." The Head
of Sharia Studies at the Police Academy spoke of the importance of
women in Islam and encouraged the audience to combat trafficking.

On December 10, 2007, the UAE National Committee to Combat Human
Trafficking co-hosted a workshop with the Johns Hopkins University on
GCC legislation on trafficking. The workshop, held in Dubai,
compared legislation in GCC countries and discussed joint methods to
eradicate trafficking.

In January 2008, the Ministry of Interior held a lecture on the
security risks of trafficking and conducted five days of training on
related human rights and law enforcement issues.

On February 24, 2008, the Ministry of Justice began a four-day
anti-TIP judicial workshop in the emirates of Abu Dhabi and Sharjah.
Numerous judges, prosecutors, and legal experts attended the
workshop, entitled "Principles of Investigation and Prosecution of
Human Trafficking Crimes." The USG provided three experts (from FBI,
ICE, and DoJ) to share case studies. At the session, the Minister of
Justice announced that the UAE would ratify the UN Protocol to
Prevent, Suppress and Punish Trafficking in Persons, especially women
and children, supplementing the UN Convention Against Transnational
Organized Crime, which the UAEG had signed earlier.

-- 28H. UAEG officials stated, and several source country embassies
and consulates confirmed, that they cooperate with other governments
on investigations, provide care for and repatriate victims, and
together seek to prevent future incidents. Law enforcement officials
reported that they cooperate with NGOs on trafficking issues. (NGO

ABU DHABI 00000382 009 OF 016


coordination is addressed later in this report.) Ministry of
Interior officials indicated a desire for increased cooperation with
source country governments in the area of information exchange on
organized crime and trafficking. Statistics on international
investigations were not yet available.

In 2006, the UAE issued law #39 pertaining to international
cooperation in judicial matters, which complements anti-TIP efforts
by facilitating extradition and mutual legal assistance. The UAEG
has mutual legal assistance treaties (MLATs) with a number of
countries (not including the U.S.). In some cases, mutual legal
assistance was exchanged with countries with which the UAEG did not
have an MLAT.

-- 28I. The UAEG has extradition treaties with India, Sri Lanka,
Armenia, Canada (for drugs and money laundering charges),Saudi
Arabia, Tunisia, Algeria, Morocco, Syria, Somalia, Jordan, Sudan, and
Egypt. A number of other treaties are in the negotiation or approval
processes. The UAE has at times agreed to extradite individuals to
and from countries with which the UAEG does not have extradition
treaties but has not always ultimately completed the extradition.
UAEG extradition of a UAE citizen to another country is contrary to
UAE law.

A March 2008 report by the National Committee to Combat Human
Trafficking states that the UAE issued four international circulars
naming TIP criminals and extradited three convicted persons during

2007.

-- 28J. Although there were no verified reports that government
officials were involved in trafficking, UAE officials may have at
times turned a blind-eye to the problem. Police act against
prostitution when incontrovertible evidence exists and yet often take
no action if a sexual encounter could be other than commercial in
nature.

NGO officials and human rights observers sometimes questioned the
sincerity of the UAEG's political will to combat trafficking, citing
(among other reasons) the economic importance of foreign labor.

-- 28K. No credible or verifiable cases of government involvement in
trafficking have been reported. Based on prior criminal prosecutions
of government officials, the UAEG would likely prosecute officials
suspected of trafficking.

-- 28L. N/A.

-- 28M. Although some teenage girls are reported to have been
trafficked for prostitution (likely having concealed their true age
in visa documents),there are no reliable reports that the UAE is a
child sex tourism destination or source. There are no reports of
foreign pedophiles being arrested, prosecuted, convicted, sentenced,
deported, or extradited. Child sexual abuse has extraterritorial
coverage only if the victim or perpetrator is a UAE citizen. If so,
a perpetrator could be prosecuted upon return to the UAE.

Paragraph 29 -- Protection and Assistance to Victims
-------------- --------------

-- 29A. The UAEG provides assistance and protection to trafficking
victims, including repatriation assistance. Public hospitals provide
counseling. Nonetheless, the UAE used deportation as a solution in
some cases of labor disputes; we have no evidence that these disputes
involved a TIP dimension, although that is possible.

In 2005, the government established a Social Support Center near Abu
Dhabi for child camel jockeys awaiting repatriation and coordinated
with UNICEF to care for and reintegrate them in their home countries.
This UAE - UNICEF partnership, with funding of USD 9 million,
provides assistance to these children through May 2009. On November

ABU DHABI 00000382 010 OF 016


26, 2007, the UNICEF representative in the Gulf area lauded the UAE's
efforts to deal with the camel jockey issue in a humane way that has
been recognized internationally.

In the Abu Dhabi Emirate, social support centers provide physical and
mental health services to trafficking victims. In the Sharjah
Emirate, the Higher Family Council provides similar health services.
In Dubai, the Dubai Police Human Rights Care Department, Victim
Assistance Unit, provides counseling, medical care, financial aid,
and travel assistance. Each Dubai police station is staffed with a
human rights care officer and a social worker/counselor from the
Dubai Police
Human Rights Care Department. Post does not have statistics
indicating how many victims used any of the above services over the
reporting year.

-- 29B. The UAEG encourages victims to come forward in order to
receive assistance. On December 4, 2007, the Dubai Police Chief
publicly advised any woman who had been duped into prostitution or
anyone with information on traffickers to contact the police. He
stressed that callers would be protected.

The embassies of the Philippines, Sri Lanka, and Indonesia sponsor
shelters for abused and/or trafficked domestic employees, with
cooperation from the UAEG. Notably, one NGO-sponsored women's
shelter operating in Dubai received referrals from the Dubai Police.

On July 8, 2007, Sheikh Mohammad Bin Rashid, Vice President and Prime
Minister of the UAE and Ruler of Dubai, issued a law establishing the
Dubai Women's and Children's Charity Foundation (DWCCF) to care for
female and minor victims of physical and psychological abuse. This
foundation provides shelter, healthcare and psychological counseling
to help victims reintegrate into society. The Dubai Women's Shelter,
operating under this foundation, is funded by the Government of
Dubai. According to data provided by the shelter (through the
National Committee to Combat Human Trafficking),the facility
received 28 suspected victims of trafficking between October 2007 and
March 18, 2008. Among these cases, 24 were adults and four were
minors (under 18 years of age). At least three were reportedly
rehabilitated and repatriated to Uzbekistan by the end of 2007. As
of March 18, 2008, the shelter housed 14 identified trafficking
victims (10 adults and four minors of the following nationalities:
Indonesia, Kazakhstan, Moldova, Uzbekistan, Bangladesh, India,
Nigeria, and "unknown") among a larger shelter population of persons
not identified as having been trafficked.

On December 10, 2007, the National Committee to Combat Human
Trafficking visited Dubai's first official shelter, funded by the
Government of Dubai and run by the DWCCF, to learn about the
shelter's goals and services. This foundation has received official
approval to shelter domestic violence victims. The foundation's
director described the foundation as an "independent civil society
institution in the UAE that deals specifically with women and
children victims of human trafficking, violence, persecution and
neglect." She added that the foundation will "protect the rights of
women and children by offering a safe environment where their rights
will be protected." She mentioned that the foundation helped victims
originating from Asia, Europe and Africa. The Foundation
collaborated with the International Organization for Migration to
assist in victim repatriation.

March 2008 press reports indicated that the a number of former
residents of a private shelter run by an Emirati-American activist
for the past several years have accused that activist of exploiting
women and children in the shelter's care; the chairman of the DWCCF
voiced similar concerns in the press reports. The activist has
denied all charges. This dispute undermined what should have been a
cooperative effort to upgrade the overall quality of sheltering
services in Dubai. U.S. consular officials have worked successfully
in the past with the private shelter to assist at-risk Americans, and

ABU DHABI 00000382 011 OF 016


have seen no evidence of abuse of shelter residents.

On January 13, 2008, the Red Crescent Authority, in collaboration
with the National Committee to Combat Human Trafficking, announced
the future opening of an Abu Dhabi shelter. On February 26, 2008,
UAE Deputy Prime Minister/Chairman of UAE Red Crescent Authority,
Sheikh Hamdan bin Zayed, issued a decision to establish shelters
across the UAE for female and child trafficking victims. The
shelters will be managed by a corporate body with financial and
administrative independence, operating under the auspices of the Red
Crescent Authority.

-- 29C. The Government provides funding for most local social
service organizations (which tend to be loosely government-affiliated
and are not in the strict sense NGOs) and works with foreign NGOs to
assist trafficking victims. Authorities regularly work with source
country NGOs to assist with repatriation efforts.

In February of 2008, the UAE delegation to the Vienna Forum on Human
Trafficking conducted discussions with senior government and UN
officials, NGOs, and international experts on human trafficking.
While there, the delegation initiated partnerships for exchanges and
capacity building. Moreover, the UAEG donated USD 15 million to the
UN Global Initiative to Fight Human Trafficking and provides
financial aid to UN and other voluntary organizations dedicated to
anti-TIP efforts.

-- 29D. Immigration authorities claim to employ methodical screening
criteria to identify victims, primarily sex workers, prior to entry
into the UAE. Questions about how one obtained a UAE entry visa and
what relationship one has with his/her visa sponsor form part of this
screening effort, which looks for inconsistencies in information.
Questionable cases are forwarded to officers specialized in screening
for TIP crimes. Immigration authorities also screen for valid family
relationships regarding women and children. Usually, children are
required to be accompanied by parents or immediate family members.
Single women under 25 years old are often expected to be accompanied
by an adult male family member.

Dubai police report that they screen for victims. Women who claim
they are sex trafficking victims and are willing to cooperate with
police are housed in hotels at police expense until the completion of
the trial(s) of the trafficker(s). These victims are under police
protection while in Dubai. During the reporting period the UAEG
continued to train immigration and law enforcement personnel to
enhance capacity for screening victims.

-- 29E. N/A.

-- 29F. Victims' rights are generally respected, once and if they
are identified as victims. Victims who agree to testify against
their traffickers are afforded housing and employment. However,
police reported that victims often choose immediate repatriation
rather than testifying against their traffickers. Dubai police
reported that prosecutions were common when victims did testify.

Police do not arbitrarily detain, imprison, or deport sexual abuse
victims. Working with foreign governments and NGOs when appropriate,
the UAEG repatriates victims at the UAEG's expense, under the crime
victim assistance program.

Dubai police do not necessarily waive prosecution for women who may
eventually become victims of trafficking after entering the UAE on
their own volition to engage in prostitution. If an individual
entered the UAE to engage in prostitution, in violation of UAE
immigration law, police may question whether prosecution should be
waived only because the individual was later victimized. Dubai
police officials have stated that women may claim to be trafficked to
avoid prosecution.


ABU DHABI 00000382 012 OF 016


-- 29G. Police report that they advise sexual abuse and trafficking
victims of their rights and encourage witness testimony. Victims may
also file civil suits for damages. Foreign diplomats indicate that
victims have been permitted to give sworn testimony and to leave the
country before judgment was rendered. The Dubai Police, in
coordination with CID, attempt to persuade women who they believe are
victims of trafficking to assist in investigations and prosecutions.
As stated earlier, in Dubai, victims are housed in hotels, not
prosecuted, and returned home at government expense if they
participate in the prosecution of the traffickers.

Victims of labor trafficking are referred to the Ministry of Labor to
file a complaint through formal labor resolution channels; this does
not apply to domestic workers who are not covered under the labor
law. Domestic workers may file criminal complaints for abuse, or may
seek Ministry of Interior assistance in changing sponsors. Source
country labor attaches reported that domestic workers seldom filed
civil cases against abusers, and were content to simply change
sponsors or return home. There were no reports of victims having
their access to the courts blocked or discouraged by government
officials.

The UAEG reported that it advised victims of their lawful rights, put
offenders on trial to protect the victims, forwarded all TIP cases to
judicial authorities to seek justice, created social support centers
in police stations to assist victims in liaising with relevant
entities, offered tailored training courses for staff dealing with
TIP victims, sought to learn different languages used by TIP victims,
and analyzed the environments in which TIP victims are exploited.

-- 29H. The government protects individuals identified as
trafficking victims and witnesses. The quality of shelter facilities
is not uniform (and too few currently exist to accommodate the full
demand). The UAE Red Crescent Society has announced plans to build
shelters throughout the country.

UAE Code of Criminal Procedures Articles 14 and 22 provide for legal
assistance for victims. Authorities have worked with international
NGOs and source country embassies and consulates to provide shelter
for trafficking victims. Over the reporting year, hundreds of
victims have been assisted by each of the shelters run by the
Embassies of the Philippines, Sri Lanka, and Indonesia. Police
departments claim to shelter victims in hotels and non-prison
facilities. The UAEG does not operate a safe house system. Post
does not have data on costs incurred by the UAEG to shelter victims.

-- 29I. The UAEG has implemented programs to sensitize law
enforcement and immigration officials on the subject of trafficking
in persons, as well as practical training techniques to protect
victims and prevent future trafficking incidents. Abu Dhabi and
Dubai police and the Ministries of Interior, Health, and Justice have
all held anti-TIP training courses throughout the year. According to
the UAEG, UAE embassies abroad collaborate with international
organizations to combat TIP.

The UAEG senior leadership repeatedly asked the USG for training,
information, and opportunities that would further their efforts to
combat trafficking in persons, and help law enforcement officials,
prosecutors and judges to better identify, investigate and prosecute
trafficking in persons cases. The police asked if the USG could
provide training, and seemed genuinely eager for such training.
Authorities in Dubai and other emirates said they are trying to
pressure Central Asian states to interdict women, trafficked or not,
traveling to the UAE for prostitution. Dubai police asked if the USG
could also pressure those countries.

Other sections of this report address the wide variety of UAEG
training programs designed to sensitize law enforcement and other
officials.


ABU DHABI 00000382 013 OF 016


On December 16, 2007, the Ministry of Interior hosted a workshop for
two days about the compensation and repatriation of the children who
worked as camel jockeys. Representatives from Pakistan, Bangladesh,
Mauritania and Sudan presented reports about the mechanisms used by
their governments to spend the money allocated by the UAE for the
camel jockeys' compensation and rehabilitation.

-- 29J. There were no reports of UAE nationals being trafficked
outside of, or within the UAE. Considering the UAEG's record of
numerous services provided to citizens at little to no cost, it is
expected that the UAEG would provide generous assistance to
repatriated UAE nationals who were victims of trafficking, if such a
situation were to occur.

-- 29K. The Government cooperates and coordinates with NGOs and
international organizations in providing assistance to trafficking
victims, as cases come to its attention. It also proactively
encourages international cooperation on the official and NGO levels,
recent examples of which include the January 2008 labor conference at
which representatives of both sending and receiving countries (those
which supply and those which employ transient laborers) were invited,
along with NGOs. The UAE Ministry of Labor specifically asked the
USG on the margins of that conference to help facilitate creation of
an international NGO that could help address the complex issues
associated with transient labor; the UAEG clearly recognized the need
for and sought cooperation with capable international organizations,
whether NGO or government affiliated.

Another strong example of UAEG encouragement and facilitation of
broader international cooperation against TIP was the February 2008
UN.GIFT conference in Vienna funded by a donation of $15 million from
the Abu Dhabi Crown Prince. The UAE delegation leader, who is also
head of the National Committee to Combat Human Trafficking, asserted
publicly at that conference that: "The donation was made out of the
UAE's firm belief that the creation of a forum for other countries,
multiple UN agencies, intergovernmental entities and the
non-governmental sector all working together under a single banner
would lead to unprecedented cooperation by the international
community. My delegation and I look forward to learning from the
experts gathered here and to sharing our experiences." He cited the
centrality of international partnerships to the UAE's anti-TIP action
plan (one of the plan's four pillars) and emphasized that "no country
or region acting alone can put a stop" to TIP; he encouraged
agreements between the UAE and NGOs in source countries.

Other examples of UAEG support include assistance to UNICEF, the
Pakistan-based Ansar Burney International Welfare Trust, the
Bangladesh National Women's Lawyers Association, the IOM, The
Protection Project, and others (including small source country NGOs).
Some of these linkages were utilized to great affect in the camel
jockey repatriation effort, which the UAEG described as "joint
efforts with national institutions and NGOs to better provide these
victims with medical care, social counseling and education."
Cooperation is also ongoing with a Moldovan NGO to seek ways to
combat TIP.

Paragraph 30 -- Prevention of TIP
--------------

-- 30A. The UAEG acknowledges, forthrightly and publicly, that
trafficking in persons is a scourge it seeks to combat. UAEG senior
leaders have noted repeatedly that this global crime must be
addressed for humanitarian as well as national security reasons.
UAEG officials recognize that a failure to attack any type of
organized crime opens the country to organized crime in other areas,
such as drugs or weapons smuggling. Nonetheless, some officials
still draw a distinction between those trafficked and those entering
the country voluntarily; the nuances of trafficking, and coerced
decisions attendant to otherwise "voluntary" travel to the UAE, are
not always clear. Workers who entered the country voluntarily or

ABU DHABI 00000382 014 OF 016


have a valid labor contract are not uniformly recognized as
vulnerable to trafficking. During the reporting period the UAEG
sought to sensitize more officers to the nuances of trafficking.

-- 30B. Public statements by senior UAE officials highlighting the
TIP phenomenon and condemning its perpetrators are frequently
featured in the English and Arabic UAE press. These government
efforts reach virtually the entire news-reading public. The
government actively encourages businesses to facilitate informational
sessions for new workers to ensure that they are aware of their
rights and know where complaints can be filed. The anti-TIP
committee has published and distributed pamphlets addressing the
phenomenon of TIP and highlighting UAEG laws and actions taken to
combat TIP.

The publicity value of the February "UN.GIFT" conference in Vienna
was also significant in increasing awareness of the TIP problem in
the UAE and the region. Additionally, the UAE hosted a first-ever
gathering of labor ministers from labor sending and receiving nations
in January 2008 to stimulate dialogue between source countries and
employers. Efforts to streamline the contracting process, ensure
timely payment of wages, and generally strike a favorable balance
between supply and demand for labor in the booming economies of the
Gulf, were clear priorities of the UAEG during the reporting period.

In 2005, a new Dubai labor committee announced the establishment of a
website and 24-hour labor complaint hotline within the Dubai Police
Department. Both the website and hotline allowed domestic workers
and laborers to lodge complaints which would then be investigated
expeditiously. In order to make these mechanisms known to the labor
community, the committee launched a $540,000 public awareness
campaign including television and print ads in addition to pamphlets
and brochures delivered to worksites and airports.

-- 30C. The UAEG works with foreign embassies, consulates and
ministries, and source country NGOs, to provide shelter and
assistance to victims and facilitate their repatriation, as well as
to stop the flow of trafficking victims at the source before they
reach the UAE. The UAEG has a good working relationship with the
local branch of the UNDP and seeks improved regional cooperation on
labor-related issues. At a January labor conference the UAE Ministry
of Labor specifically requested U.S. assistance in facilitating NGO
activity in the field of transient labor and related humanitarian
issues.

The Dubai Human Rights Care Department has worked with a number of
source country and U.S.-based NGOs. The Abu Dhabi Police College has
worked with the International Organization for Migration, Amnesty
International, and Interpol to develop its anti-TIP training
programs. In close coordination with UNICEF, the government
established social support centers in the UAE and in source countries
to provide for the care and repatriation of children identified as
trafficking victims in the camel racing industry -- more than 1,077
children were repatriated in 2005 and 2006. In December 2006, the
UAE expanded the assistance programs provided in source countries to
allow all former underage camel jockeys who had worked in the UAE to
receive assistance and continues to follow up that program through
UNICEF, NGOs, and diplomatic missions representing the countries in
question. Facilitation of the UN.GIFT conference in Vienna was
another example of UAEG coordination with key international players.

Between July and December 2006, the UAE signed agreements with five
labor-exporting countries: Nepal, India, Pakistan, Bangladesh, Sri
Lanka, to regulate the workforce flow. Agreements with China,
Thailand, and the Philippines have also been signed. The goal is to
prevent unscrupulous private recruitment agencies from offering
laborers false contracts or inflated salaries that will differ from
the actual conditions of employment. The UAEG seeks increased
cooperation with NGOs to exchange data and expertise in the field of
labor migration.

ABU DHABI 00000382 015 OF 016



The government-funded UAE Red Crescent Authority, an affiliate of the
International Federation of the Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies,
announced in January and February 2008 that it will open shelters for
victims of human trafficking in the Emirate of Abu Dhabi and
elsewhere in the UAE. A shelter run by the Dubai Women and
Children's Charity Foundation was established in 2007.

-- 30D. The various departments of Immigration, Naturalization, and
Residency reportedly keep statistics on immigration and emigration,
and have identified patterns for evidence of trafficking. In
response to this information, the government does not permit single
women under 21 to enter the UAE without legitimate visas, and the
travel documents of women under 30 undergo particular scrutiny.
Children from identified source countries must have their own
passports, even though those countries may allow children to be
endorsed on a parent's passport. This measure ensures that each
child has a visa in individual travel documents.

Both federal and emirate-level immigration authorities are
responsible for controlling the influx of people at the country's
international airports. Immigration authorities regularly conducted
training to detect fraudulent documents, often used by trafficked
persons, for arrival and departure inspectors. The Armed Forces are
responsible for guarding and monitoring the UAE's coast and land
borders. Border guards have the legal authority to stop and inspect
individuals at the border or points of entry, especially if there is
suspicion of illegal activity. The UAE is erecting a fence barrier
that will run for roughly 525 miles along its land borders with Oman
and Saudi Arabia, in an effort to curb land-based smugglers and
illegal immigration. In 2000, the MoI's Department of Naturalization
and Residency created a central operations room including an
integrated federal data center to track the arrival and departure of
individuals in the Federation's seven emirates. In 2003, the UAEG
instituted the use of iris recognition scans to add biometrics
identification information to its databases, to better monitor
migration and combat document fraud by visitors and illegal
immigrants, some of whom are trafficking victims. Using this
technology, UAE immigration authorities have stopped over 30,000
potential illegal immigrants, some of whom were likely trafficking
victims. The database contains approximately four million iris scan
results, including the results of over 300,000 illegal immigrants and
convicts who have been deported.

-- 30E. The government coordinates its trafficking efforts through a
national committee set up specifically to address the problem. The
committee consists of members from various ministries, and is headed
by a national coordinator who is currently Minister of State for
Foreign Affairs. There is no anti-corruption task force, but several
anti-corruption units have been established within the Abu Dhabi
police department.

Meetings of the National Committee to Combat Human Trafficking take
place almost monthly, often at the Presidential Court in Abu Dhabi.
The Committee is authorized by Cabinet decree as the official UAEG
conduit for international requests, inquiries, and delegations on
issues related to TIP. It deliberated the mechanics of fielding such
inquiries at its third meeting in July 2007, with the goals of
consolidating federal and local data, raising TIP awareness through
information campaigns, and conducting training workshops for police
officers and public prosecutors on identification of TIP violations
and treatment of victims.

In a subsequent meeting in September 2007, the committee highlighted
the importance of a hotline and an e-mail mechanism to receive TIP
complaints in the UAE, and scoped out six-month training plans. In
October the committee issued a paper summarizing anti-TIP goals and
programs, and planned field visits to review TIP activities
(including a senior level visit to the official shelter in Dubai).
The November committee meeting addressed training of federal and

ABU DHABI 00000382 016 OF 016


local law enforcement officials as well as training of Ministry of
Justice and Interior officials. Training topics discussed, and
identified in the press, included security risks associated with TIP,
human rights aspects of TIP, investigation methodologies, and
TIP-related data collection.

The committee chair, who holds cabinet rank, led the UAE delegation
to the February 13-15 UN.GIFT conference in Vienna that was largely
funded by the Abu Dhabi Crown Prince. The committee coordinated UAE
participation. The committee also reviewed in February the
four-pronged UAE strategy to combat human trafficking through
legislation, focused law enforcement training, support to victims,
and international cooperation.

-- 30F. The standing National Committee to Combat Human Trafficking
is the focal point for coordinating national action against TIP and
involves at a minimum the Ministries of Foreign Affairs, Interior,
Justice, Labor, Social Affairs, and Health, along with State Security
and the UAE Red Crescent Society. All participant agencies were
involved in formulating the four key goals of the plan, which include
stronger legislation, focused training for law enforcement officials,
provision of support to victims, and promotion of international
cooperation. The plan is articulated in somewhat more detail by the
Committee chair through his regular media interviews.

-- 30G: Stating its strong desire to minimize demand for a
commercial sex trade, which the UAEG views as "enforced labor"
illegal under the UAE constitution, the UAEG conducted raids on
suspect locations. At least two popular clubs in Dubai that were
associated with prostitution were closed in 2007. In a conservative
society which decries non-marital sexual activity (which is subject
to criminal penalty),the UAE strongly discourages prostitution and
applies legal means to pursue offenders. That said, the UAE is
extremely tolerant of foreign populations in its midst and some
officials dismiss prostitution as a crime limited to the non-Emirati
community. One cannot accurately estimate the magnitude of the
problem.

Procedural notes
--------------


3. (SBU) POC for this report in Abu Dhabi is A/DCM Al Magleby, (tel
+971-2-414-2490 and fax +971-2-414-2639). Hours spent on the report
(including time lost in sorting out how to economize the use of
information in last year's report and finding that the questions had
been rearranged without apparent reason),included over 50 hours by a
locally-employed political assistant, 60 hours by FS-03 officers, 30
hours by an FS-01 officer, and 5 hours by FE-OC officers. Hours
spent investigating and reporting on the TIP phenomenon were
significantly higher. A more streamlined and focused list of
questions, in the same order from year to year, would help cut down
on time consumption.

QUINN

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