Identifier
Created
Classification
Origin
10ABUDHABI284
2010-02-25 14:02:00
UNCLASSIFIED
Embassy Abu Dhabi
Cable title:  

UAE'S 2010 TIP REPORT SUBMISSION

Tags:  PHUM KTIP PGOV PREL PREF ELAB KCRM KFRD KWMN SMIG 
pdf how-to read a cable
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FM AMEMBASSY ABU DHABI
TO RUEHC/SECSTATE WASHDC IMMEDIATE 0375
INFO GULF COOPERATION COUNCIL COLLECTIVE
RUEHAE/AMEMBASSY ASMARA 0001
RUEHBJ/AMEMBASSY BEIJING 0010
RUEHBK/AMEMBASSY BANGKOK 0001
RUEHBUL/AMEMBASSY KABUL 0025
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RUEHDM/AMEMBASSY DAMASCUS 0020
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UNCLAS SECTION 01 OF 16 ABU DHABI 000284 

SIPDIS
NEA/ARP, G/TIP, INL, DRL, PRM, NEA/RA-RINA CHATTERJI, G-LAURA PENA

E.O. 12958: N/A
TAGS: PHUM KTIP PGOV PREL PREF ELAB KCRM KFRD KWMN SMIG
ASEC, KMCA, AE
SUBJECT: UAE'S 2010 TIP REPORT SUBMISSION

REF: STATE 2094

UNCLAS SECTION 01 OF 16 ABU DHABI 000284

SIPDIS
NEA/ARP, G/TIP, INL, DRL, PRM, NEA/RA-RINA CHATTERJI, G-LAURA PENA

E.O. 12958: N/A
TAGS: PHUM KTIP PGOV PREL PREF ELAB KCRM KFRD KWMN SMIG
ASEC, KMCA, AE
SUBJECT: UAE'S 2010 TIP REPORT SUBMISSION

REF: STATE 2094


1. (U) Mission UAE's submission for the 2010 trafficking in persons
report follows. Responses are keyed to reftel paragraphs 25 to 30.





THE COUNTRY'S TIP SITUATION

--------------


2. (SBU) Please find below responses to questions in paragraph 25
of reftel:

25A Question: What is (are) the source(s) of available information
on human trafficking? What plans are in place (if any) to undertake
further documentation of human trafficking/ How reliable are these
sources?



25A Answer: The UAE government's central source for information is
the National Committee to Combat Human Trafficking (NCCHT).
Individual government ministries provide human trafficking
information, especially the Ministries of Labor, Interior, Foreign
Affairs, Justice, and Social Affairs. Emirate-level governments
(i.e. equivalent of US state governments) are also sources, as well
as international organizations, NGOs, attorneys, human rights
activists, local media, and diplomats and labor attaches from
labor-sending countries.



The UAE government (UAEG) continues to improve data collection and
victim identification efforts, but it is difficult to determine the
accuracy of official estimates. The NCCHT is a ministerial-level
interagency entity chaired by Dr. Anwar Gargash, Minister of State
for Foreign Affairs, with a mandate to coordinate the
anti-trafficking activities of the entire UAEG. Awareness of and
cooperation with the NCCHT among other government agencies appears
to be absolute.



25B Question: Is the country a country of origin, transit, and/or
destination for men, women, or children subjected to conditions of
commercial sexual exploitation, forced or bonded labor, or other
slave-like conditions? Are citizens or residents of the country

subjected to such trafficking conditions within the country? If so,
does this internal trafficking occur in territory outside of the
government's control (e.g. in a civil war situation)? From where
are people recruited or from where do they migrate prior to being
subjected to these exploitative conditions? To what other countries
are people trafficked and for what purposes? Provide, where
possible, numbers or estimates for each group of trafficking
victims. Have there been any changes in the TIP situation since the
last TIP Report (e.g. changes in destinations)?



25B Answer: The UAE is a destination for men and women,
predominantly from South and Southeast Asia, trafficked for the

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purposes of labor and commercial sexual exploitation. There are
reports of bonded labor, and some migrants are subjected to
conditions indicative of forced labor, including unlawful
withholding of passports, restrictions on movement, non-payment of
wages, threats or abuse. There is no evidence that the UAE is a
source country for trafficking victims.



Migrants comprise more than 90 percent of the UAE's private sector
workforce and are recruited primarily from India, Pakistan,
Bangladesh, Nepal, Sri Lanka, Indonesia, Ethiopia, Eritrea, China,
Thailand, Korea, Afghanistan, Iran and the Philippines. According
to UAEG sources, as of November 2009, there were 1.75 million
Indians, 1.25 million Pakistanis, and 500,000 Bangladeshis in the
UAE.



Many expatriate workers complain of mistreatment, labor law
violations, and low wages, but these complaints do not typically
pertain to human trafficking. The actual number of trafficking
victims among the expatriate population is unknown.



The primary change in the TIP situation since the last report
relates to the UAEG's response. The government is increasingly
aggressive in prosecuting human trafficking cases and penalties for
convictions have been harsh, including several life sentences.



25C Question: To what kind of conditions are the trafficking
victims subjected?



25C Answer: Victims are usually defrauded by recruiters promising
nonexistent jobs or unrealistic salaries and work conditions.
Domestic workers were generally isolated from the outside world and
sponsorship laws gave employers power to control their movements
and left some of them vulnerable to exploitation.



Nonpayment of wages was remedied when the Ministry of Labor (MOL)
instituted a direct deposit system creating an electronic record of
payment for all workers. In the past year, the MOL hired at least
130 additional labor inspectors and the Ministry of Interior (MOI)
and emirate-level governments began carrying out independent
inspections of construction sites and labor camps. MOL claimed to
have inspected 16,524 work sites seeking violations.



25D Question: Vulnerability to TIP: Are certain groups of persons
more at risk of human trafficking (e.g. women and children, boys
versus girls, certain ethnic groups, refugees, IDPs, etc.)? If so,
please specify the type of exploitation for which these groups are
most at risk (e.g., girls are more at risk of domestic servitude
than boys).

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25D Answer: Unskilled, uneducated workers from poor source
countries were most vulnerable to TIP. Widespread economic
migration of both men and women allowed unscrupulous recruiters in
source countries and employers in the UAE to take advantage of some
laborers.



25E Question: Traffickers and Their Methods: Who are the
traffickers/exploiters? Are they independent business people? Small
or family-based crime groups? Large international organized crime
syndicates? What methods are used to gain direct access to victims?
For example, are the traffickers recruiting victims through
lucrative job offers? Are victims sold by their families, or
approached by friends of friends? Are victims "self presenting"
(approaching the exploiter without the involvement of a recruiter
or transporter)? If recruitment or transportation is involved, what
methods are used to recruit or transport victims (e.g., are false
documents being used)? Are employment, travel, and tourism agencies
or marriage brokers involved with or fronting for traffickers or
crime groups to traffic individuals?



25E Answer: Labor recruitment offices in source countries lured
foreign workers with employment contracts that were never honored,
forcing workers into involuntary servitude and debt bondage.
Businesses and individuals within the UAE reportedly promised
migrants employment opportunities that never materialized.



Some women from Eastern Europe, South East Asia, the Far East, East
Africa, Iraq, Iran, and Morocco reportedly are trafficked to the
UAE for commercial sexual exploitation. Some foreign women also
are reportedly recruited for work as secretaries or hotel workers
by third-country recruiters and coerced into prostitution or
domestic servitude after arriving in the UAE.



Some trafficking victims were sold by their families. UAE media
reported at least two cases of Iraqi families who knowingly sold
their teenage daughters to other Iraqis resident in the UAE for the
purpose of prostitution.





SETTING THE SCENE FOR THE GOVERNMENT'S ANTI-TIP EFFORTS

-------------- --------------
--------------




3. (SBU) Please find below responses to questions in paragraph 26
of reftel:



26A Question: Does the government acknowledge that human

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trafficking is a problem in the country? If not, why not?



26A Answer: The UAEG readily acknowledges that human trafficking is
a problem in the country, and continues to improve its prevention,
prosecution, and victim protection efforts. Government Ministers
commonly and candidly discuss human trafficking issues in public,
in the media, and with US government interlocutors.



26B Question: Which government agencies are involved in efforts to
combat sex and labor trafficking - including forced labor - and,
which agency, if any, has the lead in these efforts?



26B Answer: Several federal ministries and emirate-level agencies
are involved in anti-trafficking efforts. At the federal level,
the Ministries of Interior, Labor, Justice, Foreign Affairs, Social
Affairs, and Health are actively involved, as well as the federal
intelligence service. At the emirate level, local police
departments play a large role in combating TIP, especially the
Dubai Police which created a separate anti-trafficking task force
in 2009. The lead agency to combat human trafficking is the NCCHT,
which includes representation from all of the above-named federal
ministries and local entities, in addition to public prosecutors,
social services agencies, shelter staff, immigration officers,
public health officials and mental health specialists.



26C Question: What are the limitations on the government's ability
to address these problems in practice? For example, is funding for
police or other institutions inadequate? Is overall corruption a
problem? Does the government lack the resources to aid victims?



26C Answer: The government's ability to address TIP is limited by
available human resources and its federal structure. The UAE has a
small citizen population and scant experience with complex issues
like TIP. The UAEG passed its anti-trafficking law in 2006 and has
dramatically intensified its efforts since then through additional
training and increased prosecutions. Nevertheless, the UAEG
remains limited by a relative lack of experience with the issue.



The federal government is a loose federation of seven emirates
which exercise considerable autonomy over legal affairs. The NCCHT
appears to be successfully coordinating anti-trafficking efforts
throughout the emirates but the committee is only three years old.
Government corruption is not a problem.



26D Question: To what extent dose the government systematically
monitor its anti-trafficking efforts (on all fronts) and
periodically make available, publicly or privately and directly or
through regional/international organizations, its assessments of
these anti-trafficking efforts?

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26D Answer: The NCCHT systematically monitors the UAE's overall
anti-trafficking efforts and publishes a comprehensive annual
report in addition to periodic informational updates. NCCHT
meetings are publicized by the UAEG and widely covered by both
English and Arabic media.



26E Question: What measures has the government taken to establish
the identity of local populations, including birth registration,
citizenship and nationality?



26E Answer: Widely varying estimates in the tens of thousands of
stateless residents are present in the UAE. The government
attempts to register all residents without citizenship and is
improving naturalization procedures for these stateless persons
(known as bidoon). In 2009, the government granted nationality to
at least 70 previously stateless persons.



26F Question: To what extent is the government capable of gathering
the data required for an in-depth assessment of law enforcement
efforts? Where are the gaps? Are there any ways to work around
these gaps?



26F Answer: The government is capable of gathering the data
required for an in-depth assessment of law enforcement efforts and
the NCCHT attempts to do so every year. The federal structure of
the UAE may create inconsistency in data collection and analysis
due to the autonomy of each emirate government.





INVESTIGATION AND PROSECUTION OF TRAFFICKERS

-------------- --------------




4. (SBU) Please find below responses to questions in paragraph 27
of reftel:



27A Question: Does the country have a law or laws specifically
prohibiting trafficking in persons -- both sexual exploitation and
labor? If so, please specifically cite the name of the law(s) and
its date of enactment and provide the exact language [actual copies
preferable] of the TIP provisions. 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). Does the law(s)
cover both internal and transnational forms of trafficking? If not,
under what other laws can traffickers be prosecuted? For example,
are there laws against slavery or the exploitation of prostitution

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by means of force, fraud, or coercion? Are these other laws being
used in trafficking cases?



27A Answer: The UAE prohibits all forms of trafficking under its
federal law Number 51 of 2006, enacted on November 9, 2006.
Penalties for trafficking offenses range from one year's
imprisonment to life imprisonment. Although this comprehensive law
emphasizes labor trafficking offenses, it has to date only been
used to prosecute sex trafficking offenses. In 2009, the UAE
prosecuted numerous cases applying law Number 51 and at least nine
individuals received life sentences for human trafficking offenses.




27B Question: What are the prescribed and imposed penalties for the
trafficking of persons for commercial sexual exploitation,
including for the forced prostitution of adults and the
prostitution of children?



27B Answer: 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. Persons aware of TIP
crimes who fail to report them can be imprisoned for one to five
years. In 2009, the UAE filed charges under this provision,
reportedly for the first time, and sought one year prison terms in
cases where prosecutors believed witnesses should have reported
potential trafficking victims.



In January 2010, 13 Syrian men were convicted of human trafficking
for the forced sexual exploitation of at least 15 Moroccan women.
Seven of the convicted traffickers received life sentences, while
six received ten year prison terms.



27C Question: What are the prescribed and imposed penalties for
labor trafficking offenses, including all forms of forced labor? If
your country is a source country for labor migrants, do the
government's laws provide for criminal punishment -- i.e. jail time
-- for labor recruiters who engage in recruitment of workers using
knowingly fraudulent or deceptive offers with the purpose of
subjecting workers to compelled service in the destination country?
If your country is a destination for labor migrants (legal/regular
or illegal/irregular),are there laws punishing employers or labor
agents who confiscate workers' passports or travel documents for
the purpose of labor trafficking, switch contracts without the
worker's consent as a means to keep the worker in a state of
compelled service, or withhold payment of salaries as means of
keeping the worker in a state of compelled service?



27C Answer: The minimum penalty for labor trafficking offenses is
five years. Life imprisonment can be ordered under certain
circumstances. The anti-trafficking law is sufficiently broad to
cover labor recruiters in both source and destination countries.

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The UAE Labor Law criminalizes the use of fraudulent documents in
labor recruitment and passport withholding is prohibited.



27D Question: What are the prescribed penalties for rape or
forcible sexual assault? (NOTE: This is necessary to evaluate a
foreign government's compliance with TVPA Minimum Standard 2, which
reads: "For the knowing commission of any act of sex trafficking...
the government of the country should prescribe punishment
commensurate with that for grave crimes, such as forcible sexual
assault (rape)." END NOTE)



27D Answer: Rape is punishable by sentences ranging from two years
imprisonment to death. Penalties for sex trafficking range from a
minimum of five years to life in prison.



27E Question: Did the government take legal action against human
trafficking offenders during the reporting period? If so, provide
numbers of investigations, prosecutions, convictions, and sentences
imposed, including details on plea bargains and fines, if relevant
and available. Please note the number of convicted trafficking
offenders who received suspended sentences and the number who
received only a fine as punishment. Please indicate which laws were
used to investigate, prosecute, convict, and sentence traffickers.
Also, if possible, please disaggregate numbers of cases by type of
TIP (labor vs. commercial sexual exploitation) and victims
(children under 18 years of age vs. adults). What were the actual
punishments imposed on convicted trafficking offenders? Are they
serving the time sentenced? If not, why not?



27E Answer: The government reported 36 human trafficking cases
prosecuted under Law Number 51 in the first nine months of 2009,
compared to 20 in calendar year 2008. Subsequent press reports
describing new cases would indicate the total number of TIP
prosecutions was approximately 45. The NCCHT estimates the number
of accused traffickers during the reporting period was over 100.
All known trafficking convictions resulted in prison terms rather
than fines. Penalties reported for trafficking convictions in 2009
ranged from one year for failure to report knowledge of a
trafficking victim to life imprisonment for commercial sexual
exploitation. All of the reported convictions related to sex
trafficking and the vast majority of the victims were adult
females. There were reports of at least three girls under age 18
trafficked for commercial sexual exploitation.



27F Question: Does the government provide any specialized training
for law enforcement and immigration officials on identifying and
treating victims of trafficking? Or training on investigating and
prosecuting human trafficking crimes? Specify whether NGOs,
international organizations, and/or the USG provide specialized
training for host government officials.



27F Answer: The NCCHT organized several training sessions for

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judicial and law enforcement officials, in coordination with social
services agency staff. Dubai police held workshops with the Dubai
Foundation for Women and Children, which operates the local TIP
shelter. The UAEG also contracted with IOM to provide
anti-trafficking training to law enforcement personnel in Dubai and
Abu Dhabi during 2009.



A primary focus of every training session conducted in 2009 was
victim identification and protection. Shelter staff in Abu Dhabi
and Dubai reported increased sensitivity and awareness among law
enforcement officials compared to previous years.



27G Question: Does the government cooperate with other governments
in the investigation and prosecution of trafficking cases? If
possible, provide the number of cooperative international
investigations on trafficking during the reporting period.



27G Answer: The UAEG completed its ninth bilateral agreement with
labor source countries in 2009. It cooperated with other
governments investigating their own trafficking cases. The UAEG
cooperated with the Government of the Philippines when it shut down
numerous Philippines-based recruiting agencies that had stranded
137 Filipino bus drivers in Dubai who were promised nonexistent
jobs. The UAEG allowed the drivers who so desired to remain in the
country until they found other work. The NCCHT reported that the
UAE government conducted joint TIP investigations with Tunisia,
Armenia, Azerbaijan, Belarus, and several GCC states.



27H Question: Does the government extradite persons who are charged
with trafficking in other countries? If so, please provide the
number of traffickers extradited during the reporting period, and
the number of trafficking extraditions pending. In particular,
please report on any pending or concluded extraditions of
trafficking offenders to the United States.



27H Answer: The UAE has reportedly extradited persons charged with
trafficking in other countries. None of these cases involved the
United States.



27I Question: Is there evidence of government involvement in or
tolerance of trafficking, on a local or institutional level? If so,
please explain in detail.



27I Answer: There is no known government involvement in
trafficking. Although speculation exists that trafficking has been
tolerated by the government due to the importance of foreign labor,
the UAEG's recent efforts to combat trafficking make this
increasingly unlikely. The Minister of Labor has made several
public statements categorizing human trafficking and involuntary
servitude as an impediment to sustained economic growth.

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27J Question: If government officials are involved in human
trafficking, what steps has the government taken to end such
complicity? Please indicate the number of government officials
investigated and prosecuted for involvement in trafficking or
trafficking-related criminal activities during the reporting
period. Have any been convicted? What sentence(s) was imposed?
Please specify if officials received suspended sentences, or were
given a fine, fired, or reassigned to another position within the
government as punishment. Please indicate the number of convicted
officials that received suspended sentences or received only a fine
as punishment.



27J Answer: There is no evidence that government officials are
involved in human trafficking.



27K Question: For countries that contribute troops to international
peacekeeping efforts, please indicate whether the government
vigorously investigated, prosecuted, convicted and sentenced
nationals of the country deployed abroad as part of a peacekeeping
or other similar mission who engaged in or facilitated severe forms
of trafficking or who exploited victims of such trafficking.



27K Answer: There is no evidence UAE troops stationed abroad
engaged in or facilitated trafficking.



27L Question: If the country has an identified problem of child sex
tourists coming to the country, what are the countries of origin
for sex tourists? How many foreign pedophiles did the government
prosecute or deport/extradite to their country of origin? If your
host country's nationals are perpetrators of child sex tourism, do
the country's child sexual abuse laws have extraterritorial
coverage (similar to the U.S. PROTECT Act) to allow the prosecution
of suspected sex tourists for crimes committed abroad? If so, how
many of the country's nationals were prosecuted and/or convicted
during the reporting period under the extraterritorial provision(s)
for traveling to other countries to engage in child sex tourism?



27L Answer: The UAE does not have an identified problem of child
sex tourists coming to the country.





PROTECTION AND ASSISTANCE TO VICTIMS

-------------- --------------




5. (SBU) Please find below responses to questions in paragraph 28

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of reftel:



28A Question: What kind of protection is the government able under
existing law to provide for victims and witnesses? Does it provide
these protections in practice?



28A Answer: The UAEG provides care and protection to trafficking
victims, including repatriation assistance. Public hospitals and
TIP shelters provide health care and counseling.



28B Question: Does the country have victim care facilities
(shelters or drop-in centers) which are accessible to trafficking
victims? Do foreign victims have the same access to care as
domestic trafficking victims? Where are child victims placed (e.g.,
in shelters, foster care, or juvenile justice detention centers)?
Does the country have specialized care for adults in addition to
children? Does the country have specialized care for male victims
as well as female? Does the country have specialized facilities
dedicated to helping victims of trafficking? Are these facilities
operated by the government or by NGOs? What is the funding source
of these facilities? Please estimate the amount the government
spent (in U.S. dollar equivalent) on these specialized facilities
dedicated to helping trafficking victims during the reporting
period.



28B Answer: The government operates shelters in Dubai and Abu Dhabi
largely for female victims of trafficking and abuse. In February
2010, the government announced plans to open additional shelters in
the northern emirates of Sharjah and Ras Al Khaimah by mid-2010.
This network of shelters is funded by the UAEG and operates under
the auspices of the Red Crescent Authority. Foreign and domestic
victims, adults and children, have the same access to these
shelters and their rehabilitative services.



Male victims can receive assistance at their embassies, consulates
or overseas labor offices. Many labor-sending countries offer
shelter in addition to legal and repatriation assistance to their
citizens.



28C Question: Does the government provide trafficking victims with
access to legal, medical and psychological services? If so, please
specify the kind of assistance provided. Does the government
provide funding or other forms of support to foreign or domestic
NGOs and/or international organizations for providing these
services to trafficking victims? Please explain and provide any
funding amounts in U.S. dollar equivalent. If assistance provided
was in-kind, please specify exact assistance. Please specify if
funding for assistance comes from a federal budget or from regional
or local governments.

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28C Answer: The government-operated shelters offer comprehensive
protection and rehabilitation services including health and
nutritional care, psychological assessment, vocational training,
pro bono legal assistance, clothing, and academic instruction
including computer classes and language lessons.



28D Question: Does the government assist foreign trafficking
victims, for example, by providing temporary to permanent residency
status, or other relief from deportation? If so, please explain.



28D Answer: The government waives immigration and other violations
for identified trafficking victims. For example, victims of
commercial sexual exploitation are not charged with prostitution.
The government also provides repatriation assistance. Deportation
may occur in cases where individuals are not identified as victims
of trafficking.



28E Question: Does the government provide longer-term shelter or
housing benefits to victims or other resources to aid the victims
in rebuilding their lives?



28E Answer: In 2009, the government continued funding a
rehabilitation program, in coordination with UNICEF, for former
child camel jockeys who were repatriated in previous years. The
UAEG provided compensation to the victims and their families and
directly financed community development projects in their home
countries.



28F Question: Does the government have a referral process to
transfer victims detained, arrested or placed in protective custody
by law enforcement authorities to institutions that provide short-
or long-term care (either government or NGO-run)?



28F Answer: Yes, law enforcement authorities are trained to
identify trafficking victims. Once identified, victims are
referred to one of the local shelters.



28G Question: What is the total number of trafficking victims
identified during the reporting period? (If available, please
specify the type of exploitation of these victims e.g. "The
government identified X number of trafficking victims during the
reporting period, Y or which were victims of trafficking for sexual
exploitation and Z of which were victims of nonconsensual labor
exploitation.) Of these, how many victims were referred to care
facilities for assistance by law enforcement authorities during the
reporting period? By social services officials? What is the number
of victims assisted by government-funded assistance programs and
those not funded by the government during the reporting period?

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28G Answer: The government identified an estimated 80 trafficking
victims during the reporting period, all of whom were victims of
trafficking for sexual exploitation. All of the identified victims
were referred to care facilities, but some chose to immediately
return to their home countries. The Abu Dhabi and Dubai shelters
assisted approximately 50 women during the reporting period.



28H Question: Do the government's law enforcement, immigration, and
social services personnel have a formal system of proactively
identifying victims of trafficking among high-risk persons with
whom they come in contact (e.g., foreign persons arrested for
prostitution or immigration violations)? For countries with
legalized prostitution, does the government have a mechanism for
screening for trafficking victims among persons involved in the
legal/regulated commercial sex trade?



28H Answer: During the reporting period the UAEG, in coordination
with IOM, trained law enforcement, immigration, and social services
personnel in identifying potential victims of human trafficking.
The training emphasized warning signs to watch for, populations
vulnerable to trafficking, and the most effective methods for
interviewing potential victims.



28I Question: Are the rights of victims respected? Are trafficking
victims detained or jailed? If so, for how long? Are victims fined?
Are victims prosecuted for violations of other laws, such as those
governing immigration or prostitution?



28I Answer: Victims' rights are respected once they are identified
as trafficking victims. Identified trafficking victims are not
jailed, fined or prosecuted for other violations as a result of
their trafficking. Victims who cooperate with law enforcement
officials are provided housing and sometimes employment. Police
reported that victims often choose immediate repatriation, at UAEG
expense, rather than testifying against their traffickers.



28J Question: Does the government encourage victims to assist in
the investigation and prosecution of trafficking? How many victims
assisted in the investigation and prosecution of traffickers during
the reporting period? May victims file civil suits or seek legal
action against traffickers? Does anyone impede victim access to
such 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?
Are there means by which a victim may obtain restitution?



28J Answer: The government actively encourages victims to assist in
the investigation and prosecution of traffickers. Dubai police
reported that victim testimony increased their chances for a
successful prosecution and conviction. Victims can file civil
suits seeking damages from their traffickers with no impediments to

ABU DHABI 00000284 013 OF 016


such legal redress. Victims who agree to testify as witnesses are
housed in hotels at UAEG expense. They are permitted to leave the
country or seek other employment.



28K Question: Does the government provide any specialized training
for government officials in identifying trafficking victims and in
the provision of assistance to trafficked victims, including the
special needs of trafficked children? Does the government provide
training on protections and assistance to its embassies and
consulates in foreign countries that are destination or transit
countries? What is the number of trafficking victims assisted by
the host country's embassies or consulates abroad during the
reporting period? Please explain the type of assistance provided
(travel documents, referrals to assistance, payment for
transportation home).



28K Answer: The UAEG provides specialized training for government
officials in identifying and assisting trafficking victims.
Police, public prosecutors, labor officials, and social services
staff participated in training sessions arranged by IOM, the UAEG
and emirate-level governments.



Two separate delegations, comprising law enforcement officials and
shelter personnel, were part of training programs at the
International Training Centre for Human Trafficking Prevention,
part of the Belarus Academy of the Ministry of Internal Affairs.



Abu Dhabi hosted a symposium on protecting victims of human
trafficking, organized by the Ministry of Interior, and attended by
delegates from various ministries, federal and local departments,
civil society organizations, and representatives of the United
Nations Development Program.



28L Question: Does the government provide assistance, such as
medical aid, shelter, or financial help, to its nationals who are
repatriated as victims of trafficking?



28L Answer: There were no reports of UAE citizens becoming
trafficking victims.



28M Question: Which international organizations or NGOs, if any,
work with trafficking victims? What type of services do they
provide? What sort of cooperation do they receive from local
authorities?



28M Answer: Victim services are primarily provided by the shelters,
which are quasi-governmental entities. The Abu Dhabi shelter is
operated under the auspices of the Red Crescent Authority. New

ABU DHABI 00000284 014 OF 016


shelters opening mid-2010 in Sharjah and Ras Al Khaimah will have
similar governance. The Dubai shelter is operated by the Dubai
Foundation for Women and Children. These entities are not by
definition NGOs, they are funded by the government and receive
strong cooperation from local authorities. Coordination between
local authorities and victim services entities improved greatly in
2009 when shelter and police personnel arranged joint victim
identification and protection training sessions.



IOM assists the UAEG's anti-trafficking efforts but primarily
through practical training rather than direct work with victims.
The UAE invited the UN Special Rapporteur on trafficking in persons
to visit the country during the reporting period.





PREVENTION

--------------




6. (SBU) Please find below responses to questions in paragraph 29
of reftel:



29A Question: Did the government conduct anti-trafficking
information or education campaigns during the reporting period? If
so, briefly describe the campaign(s),including their objectives
and effectiveness. Please provide the number of people reached by
such awareness efforts, if available. Do these campaigns target
potential trafficking victims and/or the demand for trafficking
(e.g. "clients" of prostitutes or beneficiaries of forced labor)?
(Note: This can be an especially noteworthy effort where
prostitution is legal. End Note.)



29A Answer: The government conducted anti-trafficking information
and education campaigns within the UAE and in Embassies and
Consulates in labor-sending countries. The Ministry of Interior
organized seminars in work places and labor camps. The campaigns
are intended to educate workers on their rights in the UAE and
where they can get help for themselves or anyone they suspect may
be a trafficking victim. Toll-free hotlines are widely publicized
and pamphlets on human trafficking are printed in multiple
languages. The Ministry of Interior is distributing to labor
camps, government offices, NGOs, and media outlets, a pocket book
on workers' rights printed in English, Arabic, Tagalog, Persian,
Urdu, and Chinese. A planned airport advertising campaign was
delayed until 2010.



29B Question: Does the government monitor immigration and
emigration patterns for evidence of trafficking?

ABU DHABI 00000284 015 OF 016


29B Answer: Yes, immigration officials are represented on the NCCHT
and received training in identifying travel patterns to and from
source countries.



29C Question: 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?



29C Answer: The National Committee to Combat Human trafficking
(NCCHT) is a federal entity with authority to coordinate
anti-trafficking programs across all levels of government in all
seven emirates. The NCCHT includes representatives from the
Ministries of Labor, Justice, Social Affairs, Health, Foreign
Affairs, and Federal National Council Affairs, as well as State
Security, the Red Crescent Authority and TIP victims' shelters.



29D Question: Does the government have a national plan of action to
address trafficking in persons? If the plan was developed during
the reporting period, which agencies were involved in developing
it? Were NGOs consulted in the process? What steps has the
government taken to implement the action plan?



29D Answer: The national action plan was developed by the NCCHT and
is constantly under review. The NCCHT has met 19 times since its
inception in 2007. During the reporting period, the NCCHT reviewed
anti-trafficking proposals from shelter, police, labor, health,
immigration, and security officials. Proposed amendments to the
UAE trafficking law and action plan included: diversion of funds
seized from traffickers to victim rehabilitation; monitoring of
international trafficking routes; and legal protection for
informers.



29E Question: What measures has the government taken during the
reporting period to reduce the demand for commercial sex acts?



29E Answer: The government enforces strict laws of morality in
accordance with Islamic principles.



29F Question: What measures has the government taken during the
reporting period to reduce the participation in international child
sex tourism by nationals of the country?



29F Answer: There are no reliable reports that the UAE is a child
sex tourism destination or source.

ABU DHABI 00000284 016 OF 016


PARTNERSHIPS

--------------




7. (SBU) Please find below responses to questions in paragraph 30
of reftel:



30A Question: Does the government engage with other governments,
civil society, and/or multilateral organizations to focus attention
and devote resources to addressing human trafficking? If so, please
provide details.



30A Answer: Abu Dhabi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Zayed Al Nahyan
donated $15 million to fund the creation of the UN Global
Initiative to Fight Human Trafficking (UN-GIFT).



30B Question: What sort of international assistance does the
government provide to other countries to address TIP?



30B Answer: There were no reports that the government provided
international assistance to other countries to address TIP.





UAE TIP POC

--------------




8. (SBU) Primary point of contact for trafficking issues is Aaron
Nuutinen, FS-03. Estimated number of hours spent compiling this
report by POC: 40. Estimated number of hours spent by various
Embassy Abu Dhabi and Consulate Dubai officers and LES: 20. POC
telephone: +971 2 414 2621; fax: +971 2 414 2639; email:
nuutinenaa@state.gov.
OLSON