| |
Zimbabwe is a source, transit, and destination
country for men, women, and children trafficked
for the purposes of forced labor and sexual exploitation. Large scale migration of Zimbabweans to
surrounding countries—as they flee a progressively
more desperate situation at home—has increased,
and NGOs, international organizations, and
governments in neighboring countries are reporting
an upsurge in these Zimbabweans facing conditions
of exploitation, including human trafficking.
Rural Zimbabwean men, women, and children are
trafficked internally to farms for agricultural labor
and domestic servitude and to cities for domestic
labor and commercial sexual exploitation. Women
and children are trafficked for domestic labor
and sexual exploitation, including in brothels,
along both sides of the borders with Botswana,
Mozambique, South Africa, and Zambia. Young
men and boys are trafficked to South Africa for farm
work, often laboring for months in South Africa
without pay before “employers” have them arrested
and deported as illegal immigrants. Young women
and girls are lured to South Africa, the People’s
Republic of China, Egypt, the United Kingdom, the
United States, and Canada with false employment
offers that result in involuntary domestic servitude
or commercial sexual exploitation. Men, women,
and children from the Democratic Republic of the
Congo, Malawi, Mozambique, and Zambia are trafficked
through Zimbabwe en route to South Africa.
Small numbers of South African girls are trafficked
to Zimbabwe for domestic servitude.
The Government of Zimbabwe does not fully
comply with the minimum standards for the
elimination of trafficking ; however, it is making
significant efforts to do so. Zimbabwe is placed on
Tier 2 Watch List for its failure to provide evidence
of increasing efforts to combat severe forms of trafficking
over the last year, and because the absolute
number of victims of severe forms of trafficking is
significantly increasing. The government’s efforts to
address trafficking at home somewhat diminished
during the reporting period, particularly in regard
to law enforcement efforts. In addition, the trafficking
situation in the country is worsening as more
of the population is made vulnerable by declining
socio-economic conditions.
Recommendations for Zimbabwe:
- Increase measures
aimed at preventing trafficking; complete investigations
of pending cases and prosecute suspected traffickers;
- advance comprehensive anti-trafficking legislation;
and launch a broad awareness raising campaign
that educates all levels of government officials, as well
as the general public, on the nature of trafficking and
the availability of assistance for victims.
Prosecution
The government’s anti-trafficking law enforcement
efforts diminished during the year, particularly in
regard to prosecutions and convictions of traffickers.
Zimbabwe does not prohibit all forms of trafficking
in persons, though existing statutes outlaw forced
labor and numerous forms of sexual exploitation.
The government reported in 2007 that it was drafting
comprehensive trafficking legislation; however,
the draft has neither been made available for review
nor introduced in Parliament. Unlike the previous
year, the government did not prosecute any human
traffickers during the reporting period; however,
police launched investigations into three new cases of
international trafficking involving four victims. None
of the investigations or cases reported in 2006 came
to completion. While it is not unusual for a detainee
to remain in custody for prolonged periods—in some
cases several years—before the case is heard in court,
a three-month strike by magistrates, prosecutors, and
court staff worsened the backlog of cases awaiting
trial. Zimbabwean police made concerted efforts
to halt commercial sexual exploitation throughout
the country, arresting both individuals in prostitution
and their clients; apprehended minors were
not detained, but instead were interviewed by the
police’s Victim Friendly Unit and referred for counseling.
In 2007, Zimbabwe’s Interpol Office’s Human
Trafficking Desk, staffed by Zimbabwean police detectives,
took part in international trafficking investigations
with Interpol offices in Malawi, Mozambique,
South Africa, the United Kingdom, and Zambia. The
government did not provide specialized anti-trafficking
training; however, government officials attended
10 IOM training workshops that focused on trafficking
and the recognition of victims.
Protection
The growing number of illegal migrants deported
from South Africa and Botswana, combined with
a crippling lack of resources, severely impeded the
government’s ability to effectively identify victims
of trafficking among returnees. The Department of
Immigration required all deportees returning from
South Africa via the Beitbridge border crossing
to attend an IOM-led briefing on safe migration,
which includes a discussion on human trafficking
and IOM’s assistance services. The District
Council of Beitbridge employs a child protection
officer and convenes a child protection committee.
During the reporting period, the government
allocated land to IOM to establish a second
reception center in Plumtree for Zimbabweans
deported from Botswana. Although the government
has an established process for referring victims to
international organizations and NGOs that provide
shelter and other services, in 2007 the government
primarily depended on these organizations to
identify trafficking victims and alert the authorities.
Zimbabwe’s Interpol Office, the Department of
Immigration, and the Department of Social Welfare
coordinated victim assistance with South African
authorities in ongoing cases during the reporting
period. The government encourages victims to assist
in the prosecution of traffickers and offers foreign
victims relief from deportation while they receive
victim services and their cases are investigated.
Prevention
The government sustained its previous level of
anti-trafficking awareness raising efforts. There
is a general lack of understanding about trafficking
across government agencies, especially at the
local level. However, senior government officials
frequently spoke about the dangers of trafficking
and illegal migration, and the state-run media
printed and aired warnings about false employment
scams and exploitative labor conditions. During
the year, all four government-controlled radio
stations aired an IOM public service announcement
eight times each day in five languages during peak
migration periods. In January 2008, the government
signed a memorandum of understanding with
the South African government for a joint project to
regularize the status of illegal Zimbabwean migrant
farm workers in South Africa’s Limpopo Province
and ensure them proper employment conditions.
The inter-ministerial anti-trafficking taskforce took
no concrete action during the year. Information
was unavailable regarding measures adopted by
the government to ensure its nationals deployed to
peacekeeping missions do not facilitate or engage
in human trafficking. Zimbabwe has not ratified the
2000 UN TIP Protocol |