CUBA: Tier 2 Watch List
Cuba is a source country for adults and children subjected to sex trafficking and forced labor. Information on the
scope of sex trafficking and forced labor in Cuba is limited. Child sex trafficking and child sex tourism occur
within Cuba. Cuban authorities report people from ages 13 to 20 are most vulnerable to human trafficking in
Cuba.Traffickers also subject Cuban citizens to forced prostitution in South America and the Caribbean. In the
Cuban economy, the government is the dominant employer, including in foreign medical missions, which employ more
than 51,000 workers in over 67 countries and constitute a significant source of Cuban government income. Some
participants in foreign medical missions as well as other sources allege that Cuban officials force or coerce
participation in the program; the Cuban government denies these allegations. Some Cubans participating in these
work missions have stated the postings are voluntary and well paid compared to jobs within Cuba.There have also
been claims that Cuban authorities coerced participants to remain in the program, including by allegedly
withholding their passports, restricting their movement, or threatening to revoke their medical licenses or
retaliate against their family members in Cuba if participants leave the program. There are also claims about
substandard working and living conditions and the existence of “minders” to monitor victims outside of work. Some
medical professionals participating in the missions are in possession of their passports when they apply for and
obtain special United States visa and immigration benefits, indicating passport retention is not a consistent
practice across all work missions. The government arranges for high school students in rural areas to harvest
crops, but claims this work is not coerced.
The Government of Cuba does not fully comply with the minimum standards for the elimination of trafficking;
however, it is making significant efforts to do so. For the second consecutive year, the government reported
efforts to address sex trafficking, including the prosecution and conviction of 13 sex traffickers in 2013 and the
provision of services to victims in those cases.The Cuban government reported at the beginning of 2015 that the
Ministry of Labor and Social Security assumed the lead role in a
committee responsible for combating gender and sexual violence, including sex trafficking.The penal code does not
criminalize all forms of human trafficking, though the government reported continuing efforts to amend its criminal
code, including bringing it into conformity with the requirements of the 2000 UN TIP Protocol, to which it acceded
in July 2013.The government did not recognize forced labor as a problem within Cuba and did not report efforts to
prevent forced labor.The government did not report any trafficking-specific shelters, but offered services to
trafficking victims through centers for women and families harmed by violence. The Federation of Cuban Women, a
government- affiliated non-governmental organization, provided some outreach and education about human trafficking
within the context of violence against women, but did not specifically address it as a crime involving sex
trafficking and forced labor or affecting men and boys.
RECOMMENDATIONS FOR CUBA:
Consistent with the 2000 UN TIP Protocol, draft and pass a comprehensive anti-trafficking law that prohibits all
forms of human trafficking, including an offense of forced labor, a definition that makes minors under the age of
18 sex trafficking victims regardless of the use of force, fraud, or coercion, and the full range of “acts”
(recruiting, transporting, transferring, harboring, or receiving persons) as part of those crimes; vigorously
investigate and prosecute both sex trafficking and forced labor offenses; schedule a visit and engage in robust
discussions with the UN special rapporteur on trafficking in persons on all forms of human trafficking; provide
specialized training for managers in state- owned or controlled enterprises in identifying and protecting victims
of forced labor and implement policies to verify the absence of coercion in such enterprises; train those
responsible for enforcing the labor code to screen for trafficking indicators and educate workers about trafficking
indicators and where to report trafficking-related violations; strengthen efforts, in partnership with
international organizations, to provide specialized victim identification and referral training for first
responders; establish formal policies and procedures to guide officials in the identification of all trafficking
victims and their referral to appropriate services; expand upon the Ministry of Labor and Social Security’s anti-
trafficking responsibilities to include all forms of trafficking and male as well as female victims, and develop an
action plan to address sex trafficking and forced labor for males and females; and adopt policies that provide
trafficking-specific, specialized assistance for male and female trafficking victims, including measures to ensure
identified sex and labor trafficking victims are not punished for unlawful acts committed as a direct result of
being subjected to sex trafficking or forced labor.
PROSECUTION
The government sustained law enforcement efforts by prosecuting and convicting sex traffickers, but took no action
to address forced labor.The penal code does not criminalize all forms of trafficking,
but the government reported it was in the process of amending the code, including making revisions to bring it
into conformity with the requirements of the 2000 UN TIP Protocol. Cuba prohibits some forms of trafficking through
several laws, including:Article 302 (procuring and trafficking in persons); Article 310.1 (corruption of minors for
sexual purposes); Article 312.1 (corruption of minors for begging); and Article 316.1 (sale and trafficking of a
child under 16). Cuban law does not criminalize forced labor as required by the 2000 UNTIP Protocol and the Cuban
government did not report any labor trafficking prosecutions or convictions. The penal code’s definition of sex
trafficking conflates sex trafficking with prostitution and pimping, although Cuban prosecutorial officials
understand the distinction for the purposes of the 2000 UN TIP Protocol definition and for reporting
anti-trafficking law enforcement data.The law criminalizes sex trafficking achieved through force, coercion, or
abuse of power or a position of vulnerability, although the use of such means is considered an aggravating factor
(to a crime of inducing or benefiting from prostitution), not an integral part of the crime. It does not explicitly
include the use of fraud and physical force within the list of aggravating factors that make coercion of
prostitution a crime.The provision addressing corruption of minors encompasses many of the forms of child sex
trafficking, but its definition of a minor as a child under 16 years old is inconsistent with the definition under
the 2000 UN TIP Protocol, which defines a child as any person under the age of 18. Although anyone inducing
children between the ages of 16 and 18 to engage in prostitution would not be identified as a trafficker under
Cuban law, forced prostitution is illegal irrespective of age of the victim, and the government has prosecuted
individuals benefiting from the prostitution of children. Both adult and child sex trafficking provisions do not
explicitly criminalize the acts of recruitment, transport, and receipt of persons for these purposes. Cuba became a
party to the 2000 UN TIP Protocol in 2013, and the government reported it began the process of revising Cuba’s
criminal code in 2012. The government did not provide an update on this process in 2014, but in December 2013
amended Article
346.1 of the criminal code to mandate sentences of five to 12 years’ imprisonment for various crimes, including for
laundering funds obtained from trafficking in persons.
In 2014, the government publicly presented official data on prosecutions and convictions of sex traffickers secured
during calendar year 2013. Authorities reported 13 prosecutions and convictions of sex traffickers, compared with
10 in 2012. At least seven of the convictions involved suspects accused of trafficking seven child victims within
Cuba, including the facilitation of child sex tourism in Cuba. The average sentence was seven years’
imprisonment.Traffickers were punished more severely in some cases when the victim was younger than 16. In
addition, the government was known to have assisted one foreign government’s investigation of a child sex tourism
case.There were no reported forced labor prosecutions or convictions. The government also identified a group of
Cubans living or traveling abroad involved in recruiting and transporting women who used false promises, paid for
travel expenses, and subjected the women to debt bondage while exploiting them in forced prostitution. This case
was still being investigated and had not yet resulted in prosecutions or convictions of suspected traffickers in
Cuba. Students at the Ministry of Interior Academy and police assigned to tourist centers reportedly received
specific anti-trafficking training and victim assistance.The government demonstrated its willingness to cooperate
with other governments on investigations of possible traffickers. The government did not report any
investigations,
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