PROSECUTION
During the reporting period, the government maintained its anti- trafficking law enforcement efforts, continuing
its investigation and prosecution of potential child trafficking cases. Existing laws do not prohibit all forms of
trafficking.The 2006 Act Relating to the Transportation of Minors and the Suppression of Child Trafficking (act
2006-04) criminalizes all forms of child trafficking, prescribing penalties of 10 to 20 years’ imprisonment.
However, act 2006-04 focuses on prohibiting and punishing the movement of children rather than their ultimate
exploitation and prescribes much lower penalties—six months’ to two years’ imprisonment or fines—for actual
trafficking crimes involving labor exploitation; these penalties are not sufficiently stringent. The country’s
penal code outlaws procuring or offering someone for prostitution and the facilitation of prostitution and
prescribes punishments of six months’ to two years’ imprisonment. The labor code prohibits forced labor and
prescribes punishments of two months’ to one year’s imprisonment or a fine.These punishments are neither
sufficiently stringent nor commensurate with punishments prescribed for other serious crimes, such as rape.
Comprehensive anti-trafficking legislation that includes prohibitions and penalties for the trafficking of adults
has remained pending review by the Ministry of Justice since the draft was completed in September 2012.
During the year, the Ministry of the Interior’s OCPM—a specialized unit responsible for all criminal cases
involving children—investigated 102 cases of child trafficking, in addition to four cases of exploitative child
labor. The government continued to fail to systematically investigate the trafficking of adults. OCPM referred 19
suspects to the courts for prosecution.The government convicted 10 offenders for child trafficking and the illegal
movement of children under act 2006-04, an increase compared with six convicted in 2013, but a decrease from 20
convicted in 2012. Sentences ranged from six months’ to three years’ imprisonment; however, traffickers were held
in pre-trial detention until sentenced and then released on suspended sentences. Two cases were dismissed for
insufficient evidence; the judge returned three cases to the prosecutor for re-qualification. Prosecutions in 21
cases remained ongoing in courts at the close of the reporting period. The government did not report any
investigations, prosecutions, or convictions of government officials complicit in human trafficking offenses. In
partnership with an international organization and NGOs, the government trained law enforcement officials, judges,
social workers, foster families, and market vendors.The government, with the assistance of an international
organization, extended OCPM child protection services to Benin’s 12 geographical departments; prior to 2015, OCPM
was only present in Cotonou and did not
maintain personnel nationwide.The government put a plan in place to create local offices throughout the country
and to provide gendarmes and police with specialized training for addressing abuses against children.
During the year, allegations of official complicity involving Beninese diplomatic personnel resurfaced. Instead of
assisting in the placement of child trafficking victims among care providers, consular staff colluded with
complicit officials in a destination country to return victims to a trafficking network. Immigration officials in
Cotonou also allegedly supplied falsified travel documents to facilitate the illegal movement of children as
adults.
PROTECTION
The government sustained efforts to protect potential forced child labor victims during the year. OCPM identified
220 potential trafficking victims in 2014, compared with 173 in 2013. Of the 220, 136 were girls and 84 were boys.
OCPM provided the children temporary shelter, as well as legal, medical, and psychological services. OCPM then
transferred victims to long-term NGO shelters; however, the government failed to provide financial or in-kind
support to NGOs providing such care. Officials with the Ministries of Family, Justice, and Interior worked in
partnership with an international organization and NGOs to coordinate placement of child trafficking victims with
host families who provided additional care to children prior to reinsertion into their home communities. Government
social workers provided counseling for such children, while an NGO provided financial support to cover their basic
needs. Through their broad services in support of victims of crime and vulnerable groups, 85 centers for social
promotion (CSP) under the MOF, offered basic social services, food, and temporary shelter to trafficking victims
throughout the country, particularly in rural areas where such services were scarce, and reintegration of victims
into their home communities. Officials and NGO stakeholders in destination countries noted re-trafficking was an
issue once victims returned to Benin, with the child or their siblings often sent back to the trafficker by their
parents to uphold their initial agreement to send children.The government failed to carry out joint investigations
or extraditions of charged defendants in cooperation with Congolese authorities—a key component of their
anti-trafficking cooperation agreement. In August 2013, Beninese officials met with Gabonese authorities to
finalize an agreement for cooperation on child trafficking, although this remained incomplete at the end of the
reporting period.The government did not make systematic efforts to identify adult trafficking victims or employ any
mechanism to screen individuals in prostitution for trafficking victimization, which may have left victims
unidentified in the law enforcement system.
PREVENTION
The government made modest efforts to prevent trafficking in persons.The anti-trafficking coordinating
body—theTrafficking and Exploitation Technical Working Group of the National Monitoring and Coordination Working
Group for Child Protection—met twice during the year and organized awareness campaigns on human trafficking;
however, its six affiliated working groups did not meet during the reporting period.The government engaged local
authorities and traditional leaders in child trafficking prevention. With support from a foreign donor, the MOF
held a one-day session to educate the general population on the root causes of human trafficking, which was
attended by law enforcement, social workers, and other relevant officials. In November and December
2014, the MOL held educational sessions on the legal framework for the prevention of child labor in Benin for 150
stakeholders, including vendors and merchants, in the markets of Cotonou, Parakou, and Port-Novo. Labor inspectors
generally imposed administrative penalties, resulting in fines, even for serious labor violations, some of which
likely included trafficking crimes. The government took no systematic steps to reduce the demand for commercial sex
acts or forced labor both within the country and abroad during the reporting period. It provided Beninese troops
with anti-trafficking training prior to their deployment abroad on international peacekeeping missions, though a
foreign donor conducted the training. The government did not provide anti-trafficking training for its diplomatic
personnel.
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