RECOMMENDATIONS FOR CROATIA:
Increase investigations and prosecutions of suspected traffickers and punish offenders with dissuasive sentences;
strengthen efforts to proactively identify victims, particularly girls induced into prostitution; continue to train
prosecutors on best practices for prosecuting trafficking cases, including methods for collecting evidence against
suspected traffickers, to increase convictions; sensitize judges about secondary trauma in sex trafficking
testimony; continue to inform all identified victims of their right to pursue restitution from their traffickers
and encourage them to do so; devote more resources to the national anti-trafficking secretariat to enable it to
effectively combat trafficking; and continue to raise awareness of situations potentially resulting in trafficking
among vulnerable populations, particularly youth.
PROSECUTION
The government displayed mixed progress on law enforcement efforts. Croatia prohibits all forms of trafficking
through Articles 105 and 106, which prescribe penalties of one to 15 years’ imprisonment. These penalties are
sufficiently stringent and commensurate with those prescribed for rape. During 2014, the government investigated 15
trafficking suspects, a steep decrease from 39 in 2013, and initiated prosecutions of five defendants, one-third
the number prosecuted in 2013. Five traffickers were convicted, of compared with one in 2013; one trafficker was
convicted of labor trafficking and four were convicted of sex trafficking. Prison sentences ranged between one and
six years; however, courts substituted a one-year prison sentence with community service work for one trafficker
and suspended the sentence of another who was a minor. Prosecutors who sought more stringent sentencing appealed
these sentences. Authorities delivered trafficking-specific training to police, border, and traffic officers.
Croatian authorities collaborated with foreign governments, EUROPOL, and INTERPOL on international investigations
that led to the arrest of suspected traffickers. The government did not report any investigations, prosecutions, or
convictions of government officials complicit in human trafficking offenses.
PROTECTION
The government sustained victim protection efforts, though
experts believed victim identification was inadequate in light of the suspected scope of human trafficking in
Croatia.The government provided 388,801 kuna ($63,200) to two NGO-run trafficking shelters in 2014, slightly less
than it provided for shelter care in 2013. One shelter was for adults and one was for minors. Adult victims were
allowed to leave shelters without chaperones after completing a risk assessment. During 2014, police and NGOs
identified 37 victims of sex and labor trafficking and three potential minor victims of labor trafficking, up from
32 identified in 2013. Nearly 90 percent of the identified victims were Croatian and almost 80 percent were
female.Twenty-two of the 37 identified victims were minors. Thirty-one of the identified victims were forced into
prostitution, and six were subjected to forced labor.
Croatian law entitles trafficking victims to safe accommodation and medical, psychological, and legal aid.
Assistance was offered to all 37 victims identified in 2014, of which 11 accepted, including five victims who were
accommodated in shelters. In comparison, 12 out of the 32 victims identified in 2013 accepted government
assistance, of which six were accommodated in shelters. New legislation passed in July 2013 entitles victims to
seek financial compensation from the state in addition to traffickers, but the government had not dispersed any
payments by the end of the reporting period. The government provided repatriation assistance to three minor
victims. The police undertook several operations to identify trafficking victims among child beggars, which led to
the identification of one victim who had been forced to beg. Foreign trafficking victims were offered the same care
as domestic victims, as well as renewable temporary residence permits, employment assistance, skills development
training, and adult classroom education. Alternatively, authorities could assist foreign victims with voluntary
repatriation to their country of origin.
Croatian police followed a standard operating procedure for identifying and referring victims to services, which
included instructions on activating the national referral system when indicators of trafficking were present. When
the system was activated, a mobile team consisting of a police officer specializing in trafficking cases, a social
worker, a victim specialist from the Croatian Red Cross, and usually an NGO representative was sent to coordinate
victim care and placement. Experts reported the procedures functioned well in practice, but police needed to do a
better job identifying victims, particularly in brothels.There was a specially designated social worker in each
county responsible for providing initial care and coordinating further assistance for trafficking victims. Experts
reported that some Croatian judges lacked an appreciation for the impact of psychological trauma on a victim’s
ability to consistently and clearly relate the circumstances of his or her victimization and inappropriately
dismissed as unreliable victim testimony that was delayed, partial, or inconsistent.Written instructions issued by
the state attorney mandated victims not be prosecuted for crimes committed as a result of being subjected to
trafficking.
PREVENTION
The government continued efforts to prevent trafficking.The senior- level national committee to coordinate
anti-trafficking activities met twice during the reporting period and the committee’s working- level operational
team met monthly, including with NGOs, to implement the 2012-2015 national action plan.The government’s Office for
Human Rights and National Minorities, which serves as the national committee’s secretariat, spent 208,000 kuna
($33,800) on awareness-raising projects implemented by NGOs,
professional training, and an emergency hotline, a slight decrease from 2013. The government systematically
monitored its anti- trafficking efforts and posted information on ministries’ websites. The human rights office
launched a campaign sensitizing the public, including potential customers, to the reality that persons engaged in
prostitution may be trafficking victims. The interior ministry implemented a three-month training program in
cooperation with NGOs, local communities, and the private sector to prevent trafficking of women and children; the
program initially trained 120 government officials, who educated 900 local government employees and 3,500 police
officers.The government continued a program to teach youth—particularly girls, asylum seekers, and migrant
youth—how to recognize potentially dangerous situations leading to trafficking, such as attractive job offers and
romantic invitations to travel abroad. Police also held trafficking prevention seminars with high school and
primary school students, including Romani youth, parents, and teachers. In 2014, the labor ministry conducted
public awareness campaigns and business inspections to discourage illegal labor practices, including forced labor
and illegal hiring of foreign workers. The government provided anti- trafficking training for its diplomatic
personnel.
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