BANGLADESH: Tier 2
Bangladesh is primarily a source, and, to a lesser extent, a transit and destination country for men, women, and
children subjected to forced labor and sex trafficking. Some Bangladeshi men and women who migrate willingly to
work in the Middle East, East Africa, South and Southeast Asia, Europe, and the United States subsequently face
conditions indicative of forced labor. Before their departure, many migrant workers assume debt to pay high
recruitment fees, imposed legally by recruitment agencies belonging to the Bangladesh Association of International
Recruiting Agencies (BAIRA) and illegally by unlicensed sub-agents; this places some migrant workers at risk of
debt bondage. Some recruitment agencies and agents also commit recruitment fraud, including contract switching, in
which they promise one type of job and conditions, but then change the job, employer, conditions, or salary after
arrival. Women who migrate for domestic work are particularly vulnerable to abuse. Some women and children are
subjected to commercial sexual exploitation and forced labor in India and Pakistan. Some NGOs allege instances of
officials on both sides of the India-Bangladesh border allowing human traffickers to operate.
Within the country, some children and adults are subjected to sex trafficking, domestic servitude, and forced and
bonded labor, in which traffickers exploit an initial debt assumed by a worker as part of the terms of employment.
Street children are sometimes coerced into criminality or forced to beg; begging ringmasters sometimes maim
children to increase their earnings. In some instances, children are sold into a form of bondage by their parents,
while others are induced into labor through fraud and physical coercion, including in the domestic fish processing
industry, or exploited in prostitution. According to an international expert on debt bondage, Bangladeshi families
and Indian migrant workers are subjected to bonded labor in some of Bangladesh’s brick kilns, some kiln owners sell
bonded females into prostitution, purportedly to recoup the families’ debts, and some Bangladeshi families are
subjected to debt bondage in shrimp farming. Some ethnic Indian families are forced to work in the tea industry in
the northeastern part of the country. The Burmese Rohingya community in Bangladesh is especially vulnerable to
human trafficking.
The Government of Bangladesh does not fully comply with the minimum standards for the elimination of trafficking;
however, it is making significant efforts to do so.The government continued to prepare, but did not finalize, the
implementing rules for the 2012 Prevention and Suppression of Human Trafficking Act (PSHTA) during the year.The
government lacked a formal mechanism to refer trafficking victims to protective services; authorities rescued 2,621
victims and placed nine in government-operated shelters.The government continued to fund nine multipurpose
shelters, drop-in centers, and safe homes for victims, including victims of trafficking. While the government
reached a labor export agreement with Saudi Arabia requiring employers to pay certain recruitment costs, legal
recruitment fees continued to be extremely high.
RECOMMENDATIONS FOR BANGLADESH:
Finalize, adopt, and disseminate the implementing rules for the PSHTA, and train government officials on its
implementation; take steps to eliminate all recruitment fees charged by licensed labor recruiters, and enforce
violations with criminal sanctions; increase prosecutions and convictions, particularly of labor trafficking, while
strictly respecting due process; establish standard operating procedures for the referral of victims to protection
services; thoroughly investigate credible allegations of government complicity in trafficking and prosecute
offenders who are complicit; enhance the training provided to officials, including law enforcement, labor
inspectors, and immigration officers, on methods to proactively identify trafficking cases and refer victims to
protection services; expand the support services available to victims within Bangladesh and at Bangladesh’s
embassies abroad; use the PSHTA to prosecute fraudulent labor recruiters; improve quality of pre-departure
trainings, including sessions on labor rights, labor laws, and methods to access justice and assistance in
destination countries and in Bangladesh; and accede to the 2000 UN TIP Protocol.
PROSECUTION
The government maintained anti-trafficking law enforcement efforts.The 2012 PSHTA generally prohibits and punishes
all forms of human trafficking, although it prohibits the fraudulent recruitment of labor migrants only if the
recruiter knows the recruited worker will be subjected to forced labor. Prescribed penalties for labor trafficking
offenses are five to 12 years’ imprisonment and a fine of not less than 50,000 Bangladeshi Taka (BDT) ($640), and
prescribed penalties for sex trafficking offenses range from five years’ imprisonment to the death sentence. These
penalties are sufficiently stringent and commensurate with those prescribed for other serious crimes, such as
rape.The government continued to prepare the implementing rules for the PSHTA but did not finalize them, and some
NGOs reported PSHTA provisions had not been circulated widely among district and local officials.The government
provided some anti-trafficking training at the police training academy.The government investigated 146 cases of sex
trafficking and 12 cases of forced labor in 2014, compared with 84 sex and two labor trafficking cases in
2013.Authorities prosecuted 449 trafficking cases in 2014, compared with 215 in 2013. All cases were prosecuted
under the 2012 PSHTA.The government convicted 15 traffickers in 2014, compared with 14 in 2013.The courts sentenced
12 of the convicted traffickers to life, two to 10 years, and one to seven years’ imprisonment.
Alleged official complicity remained a problem. According to one report, politicians, police, and border security
forces on both sides of the India-Bangladesh border allegedly used a token system to allow traffickers to evade
arrest. In 2014, a Bangladeshi national filed a suit in NewYork against his former employers, a Bangladeshi
consular official and his wife, alleging violations of the Trafficking Victims Protection Act, among other forms of
exploitation; the case remains ongoing, and the official has since assumed another diplomatic post.The government
reported it charged one public official in 2014 with visa fraud to facilitate human trafficking; however, no
additional details were provided on any other efforts to address allegations of official complicity.
PROTECTION
The government made limited efforts to protect victims of trafficking.The government reported the rescue of 2,621
victims in 2014, an increase from 1,090 in 2013; of those rescued in 2014,
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