Identifier
Created
Classification
Origin
09CHISINAU898
2009-11-23 12:12:00
UNCLASSIFIED//FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY
Embassy Chisinau
Cable title:  

MOLDOVA INTERIM TIP ASSESSMENT 2009

Tags:  KCRM KTIP KWMN PGOV PHUM SMIG MD 
pdf how-to read a cable
VZCZCXRO5867
RR RUEHIK
DE RUEHCH #0898/01 3271212
ZNR UUUUU ZZH
R 231212Z NOV 09
FM AMEMBASSY CHISINAU
TO RUEHC/SECSTATE WASHDC 8595
INFO RUEHZL/EUROPEAN POLITICAL COLLECTIVE
UNCLAS SECTION 01 OF 03 CHISINAU 000898 

SENSITIVE
SIPDIS

STATE FOR G/TIP, EUR/UMB, DRL/AE

E.O. 12958: N/A
TAGS: KCRM KTIP KWMN PGOV PHUM SMIG MD
SUBJECT: MOLDOVA INTERIM TIP ASSESSMENT 2009

REFS: A. STATE 109948 B. Chisinau 0877

CHISINAU 00000898 001.2 OF 003


UNCLAS SECTION 01 OF 03 CHISINAU 000898

SENSITIVE
SIPDIS

STATE FOR G/TIP, EUR/UMB, DRL/AE

E.O. 12958: N/A
TAGS: KCRM KTIP KWMN PGOV PHUM SMIG MD
SUBJECT: MOLDOVA INTERIM TIP ASSESSMENT 2009

REFS: A. STATE 109948 B. Chisinau 0877

CHISINAU 00000898 001.2 OF 003



1. (SBU) Summary: Moldova's new government (GOM),
in place only since late September, has moved
quickly to push reforms and address the problem of
trafficking in persons (TIP). Per ref B, Prime
Minister Vlad Filat chaired the GOM's first
meeting of the National Committee for Combating
Trafficking in Persons (NCCTIP) on November 9,
which included cabinet ministers in charge of
social, legal, and judicial matters. The Prime
Minister demanded concrete action in investigating
and opening cases against traffickers, and
appointed Deputy Prime Minister Iurie Leanca to
chair the NCCTIP. The newly appointed NCCTIP
includes heavy-hitters such as the Ministers of
Labor, Social Protection, and Family; Interior,
Justice; Culture, Health; Security and Information
and Communication; and Education, as well as the
Prosecutor General, the Director of the Security
and Information Service, the Director General of
the Frontier Guards, and the Director of the
Center for Combating Trafficking in Persons
(CCTIP). Thus, the GOM's anti-TIP effort promises
to be higher-profile and better coordinated, as it
is a clear priority of the Prime Minister, is
headed by a senior cabinet member, and includes
all relevant ministers. End Summary.


2. (SBU) Post's response to questions in ref A are
given below.

Summarize the progress the Government of Moldova
has made in:

(a) Continuing to investigate and prosecute
officials, complicity in trafficking, and seeking
punishment for such officials.

According to a November 12 response of the CCTIP,
the CCTIP director recently requested the
Prosecutor General to "revisit" the case of Ion
Bejan, former Deputy Director of the CCTIP. This
request reflects Prime Minister Filat's statement
(ref B) at the November 9 NCCTIP meeting: "It is
not enough to identify important persons; they
must be sanctioned as well," and suggests that the
new government will take firmer action on
prosecutions than the previous government. (Note:
Bejan has been investigated before. Investigators
noted then that they were unable to proceed with

the case, mostly because of non-cooperation of
witnesses, or retraction of accusations. End
note.)

At the November 9 meeting of the NCCTIP, the
Minister of Justice reported that 434 TIP-related
cases were opened in the first ten months of 2009
and that courts convicted 57. (Note: These 57
cases convicted were not necessarily from cases
opened this year, and given the length of time
necessary to prosecute a case, were more likely
cases from previous years. The judgments were
final, and not subject to appeal. Some cases can
include more than one individual; the 57 decisions
include acquittals, jail sentences, and fines, but
there are no breakdowns available from the
Ministry. End note.)

(b) Improving data collection on investigations,
prosecutions, convictions, and sentences for
trafficking offenders.

The CCTIP report noted that data coordination
between CCTIP (which has data only on cases
initiated) and the Prosecutor General Office (PGO,
which has information on convictions) will soon be
improved by an Embassy-installed secure IT system
at the CCTIP, which will be accessed by a
prosecutorial unit located at the CCTIP. CCTIP
expected the new system to be completed by
December 2009.

The CCTIP report also noted the long periods of
time required to bring TIP cases from initial
investigation to conviction and penalty. This
means that judicial decisions do not reflect a
real-time percentage of cases opened in the
current year; for example, the case of the Turkish
trafficker sentenced to 23 years in 2008 was

CHISINAU 00000898 002.2 OF 003


opened in 2004.

The problem of separate systems of data collection
remains: the CCTIP keeps statistics on cases
opened and transmitted to prosecutors and courts;
the Prosecutor's office keeps stats on
judgments/decisions delivered by courts (which may
later be subject to appeal); the Ministry of
Justice keeps stats on judgments executed. This
reflects the organization of the national criminal
justice system, but can cause some confusion when
reviewing numbers. We have requested the GOM to
work on a system which would create a seamless
presentation of these as yet disparate statistics.

(c) Increasing anti-trafficking law enforcement
efforts.

The CCTIP report noted an improvement in the
quality of cases: in the first ten months of
2009, 68.8 percent of the TIP cases opened
exclusively by the CCTIP were accepted for further
action by judicial authorities, as opposed to 13.3
percent in the same period in 2008. In Moldova as
a whole, and including all TIP cases referred to
judicial authorities by law enforcement, 51.2
percent of referrals were accepted for further
action. In addition, the collection and analysis
of statistics regarding current cases have
improved, giving the GOM a better picture of the
results of its efforts. The report analyzes the
results of 167 anti-trafficking cases brought to
court against 207 persons (some of whom had cases
dating from earlier years) in the first ten months
of 2009:

--47 (tried)/60 (accused) for trafficking
offenses;
--4/4 for trafficking in children;
--77/93 for pimping;
--29/37 for organization of illegal migration;
--7/10 for taking children out of the country
illegally; and
--3/3 for organizing begging.

Of the 207, 186 were convicted, 15 cases were
suspended, and six were acquitted. Of the 186
convicted, 45 were sentenced to prison (no further
information on length of sentences or numbers
actually imprisoned),33 received suspended
sentences, and 108 were fined.

(d) Continuing to disburse resources for victim
assistance and protection.

The GOM is providing financial assistance to aid
victims. A November 11 report from the
International Organization for Migration (IOM)
noted that the GOM had increased its financing of
the Chisinau Assistance and Protection Center from
512,000 lei (USD 46,500) in 2008 to 680,000 lei
(USD 61,800) in 2009. On November 10, the NGO La
Strada reported that the GOM provided free
issuance of national ID and health insurance and
free access to vocational training programs to TIP
victims and other vulnerable elements of the
population.

(e) Boosting proactive efforts to identify and
protect trafficking victims, including child
victims and victims trafficked within Moldova.

According to the IOM, the National Referral
System, which counters trafficking by providing
job training and health/psychological counseling
to at-risk individuals (children of single
parents, victims of domestic violence and persons
with poor education from rural areas),increased
its presence in Moldova from 12 to 23 raions
(districts) in right-bank Moldova, and established
three centers in the Transnistrian region. Since
the NRS was established in 2006, it has assisted
555 persons Q 204 victims, and 351 at-risk cases.

The CCTIP reported that it ensured the security of
TIP victims returning to the country; provided
psychological and pedagogical counselors for
victims (including children) who were being
interviewed at La Strada; referred victims, "from
the moment of identification," to competent state

CHISINAU 00000898 003.2 OF 003


authorities for assistance; and minimized the
number of hearings in which a victim must
participate. The CCTIP further stated that, as a
result of these measures, the number of victims
accepting help from Moldovan law enforcement
bodies grew from 102 in the first ten months of
2008 to 182 in the same period in 2009.

In its November 10 report, La Strada noted its
concerns that the police still tended to downgrade
an unidentified number of trafficking cases to
pimping or illegal migration. The downgrading to
pimping often occurred when a woman mentioned
consent to provision of sexual services. Cases of
men trafficked for exploitative labor were often
downgraded to illegal migration. La Strada also
noted that Moldovan law enforcement continued to
rely almost exclusively on victims' testimonies
and confrontations with the alleged trafficker.
Under such circumstances, La Strada noted, victims
are subject to subtle or direct threats against
themselves and their families.

La Strada also expressed concerns about children
victims, noting that no special protection
measures have been extended to children; no
special interviewing rooms exist; children were
often interviewed as many as ten times, often
being confronted by the alleged trafficker;
interviews were often carried out by police with
no special training, on ad hoc schedules, often
for several hours, and without the presence of
legal counsel.

La Strada concluded by stating that risk
assessment for minors had to be performed by NGOs
and that NGO recommendations for protection of
victim-witnesses were "randomly and rarely
considered." We will contact La Strada in the
near future to check on GOP response to these
criticisms.

The Center for Temporary Placement of Minors in
Chisinau has 39 employees (security, psychological
and educational),who deal with 1,800 cases a year
of lost, abandoned, repatriated, or arrested
children aged three to 18, and children who run
away from orphanages. It has beds for 24
children. In addition to the Center, 27 smaller
centers, capable of housing up to ten children,
operate in municipalities. On a cases-by-case
basis, the Center reunites children with their
biological families, places them in orphanages, or
returns them to orphanages. It provides full-time
education to those who stay at the Center (a stay
can last from several hours to six months),and
provides a valuable service for vulnerable young
people who would otherwise be on the streets.

(f) Considering prevention activities
specifically targeted at reducing the demand for
human trafficking in Moldova. Please report on any
other significant developments.

La Strada reported that the GOM demand reduction
was focused on prostitution: raiding saunas and
hotels, and checking the identification of purpose
of visit of foreigners, especially those
accompanying women after ten P.M.

Comment:
--------------


3. (SBU) The GOM, despite being nearly non-
functional from the beginning of the parliamentary
election campaign season (beginning in February
2009) through the establishing of the new, interim
government after September, nevertheless continued
efforts to combat TIP. Furthermore, we and others
in the international and NGO communities believe
that the change in GOM leadership has brought new
momentum to address the country's problems with
trafficking. The Prime Minister's recent
statements and the composition of the new NCCTIP
is a strong, top-down testimony to GOM commitment
to tackle the issue.


CHAUDHRY