Victims could apply for compensation through a state fund and through a civil suit against their traffickers;
however, no victim pursued these in 2014.
PREVENTION
The government sustained efforts to prevent trafficking. Authorities developed a 2015 to 2018 national action plan
with input from NGOs; the plan was in the process of being approved at the close of the reporting period. The plan
suggested allocating 7 million krone ($1 million) for improving trust between victims and public officials.
Authorities conducted a public information campaign aimed at increasing awareness of sex and labor trafficking and
operated a hotline for trafficking cases. Authorities continued to train tax inspectors and labor inspectors on
labor trafficking identification.The government did not take measures to reduce the demand for prostitution and
forced labor. The government provided anti-trafficking training or guidance for its diplomatic personnel.
DJIBOUTI: Tier 2 Watch List
Djibouti is a source, transit, and destination country for men, women, and children subjected to forced labor and
sex trafficking. Over 90,000 men, women, and children from Ethiopia, Somalia, and Eritrea are estimated to have
transited through Djibouti as voluntary and undocumented economic migrants en route to Yemen and other locations in
the Middle East; experts reported an increase of children, younger than in previous years, migrating through
Djibouti. An unknown number of these migrants are subjected to forced labor and sex trafficking upon arrival in
these destinations. During their time in Djibouti, which may last for extended periods, this large migrant
population, including foreign street children, is vulnerable to various forms of exploitation, including human
trafficking. Some Djiboutian and migrant women and girls fall victim to domestic servitude or sex trafficking in
Djibouti City, the Ethiopia-Djibouti trucking corridor, or Obock, the preferred departure point forYemen. Some
migrants intending to be smuggled may be moved or detained against their will and endure beatings and abuse within
Djibouti. Smuggling networks, including Djiboutians and Djiboutian residents, may charge exorbitantly high rents or
kidnap and hold migrants, including children, for ransom—increasing their vulnerability to trafficking and debt
bondage; reports indicate some migrant women were subjected to domestic servitude and forced prostitution in
Djibouti to pay these ransoms. In addition, ransoms are, at times, paid by traffickers based in Yemen or Saudi
Arabia, who reportedly intend to exploit migrants or sell women into prostitution or domestic servitude upon their
arrival there. Some of Djibouti’s older street children reportedly act as pimps of younger children. Street
children—including those from Djibouti, Ethiopia, and Somalia—are sometimes forced by their parents or other adult
relatives to beg as a source of family income; children may also be recruited from foreign countries for begging in
Djibouti. Children are vulnerable to forced labor as domestic servants and coerced to commit petty crimes, such as
theft.
The Government of Djibouti does not fully comply with the minimum standards for the elimination of trafficking;
however, it is making significant efforts to do so.The government has not shown evidence of increasing efforts to
address human trafficking compared to the previous year; therefore, Djibouti is placed onTier
2 Watch List for a fourth consecutive year. Djibouti was granted a waiver from an otherwise required downgrade to
Tier 3 because its government has a written plan that, if implemented, would constitute making significant efforts
to bring itself into compliance with the minimum standards for the elimination of trafficking, and it has committed
to devoting sufficient resources to implement that plan. During the year, the government demonstrated continued
interest in combating trafficking—most evident in the government’s completion of an extended national action plan
through 2020.The government continued its partnership with IOM, which included joint trainings of officials and the
publication of awareness-raising materials in 2014. The government identified three trafficking victims in 2014 and
maintained its provision of basic healthcare to undocumented migrants, but remained limited in its ability to
recognize or identify and protect migrants who were victims of human trafficking in Djibouti in part because of
resource constraints.The government punished the one trafficker convicted in 2014 with a suspended sentence—an
inadequate deterrent to trafficking crimes—and failed to investigate or initiate prosecutions for any sex
trafficking crimes during the year.
RECOMMENDATIONS FOR DJIBOUTI:
Implement the national action plan; when implementing anti- trafficking laws, identifying victims, and combating
trafficking generally, use a broad definition of trafficking in persons consistent with the 2000 UN TIP Protocol
that does not rely on evidence of movement, but rather on exploitation of the victim; work with judges,
prosecutors, and police to clarify the difference between cases of human trafficking and alien smuggling; enforce
the anti-trafficking laws through investigation and prosecution of trafficking offenders, especially those
responsible for child prostitution, domestic servitude, or other forced labor offenses, and provide data on
convictions and sentences of trafficking offenders; institute a module on human trafficking as a standard part of
the mandatory training program for new police and border guards; establish policies and procedures for government
officials— including law enforcement, health, and social welfare officers—to identify proactively and interview
potential trafficking victims and transfer them to care; expand mechanisms for providing protective services to
victims, possibly through the forging of partnerships with NGOs or international organizations; form partnerships
with local religious leaders, encouraging them to educate their congregations about trafficking; and launch a
nationwide anti- trafficking awareness campaign.
PROSECUTION
The government made minimal law enforcement efforts to address human trafficking crimes. Djibouti’s Law 210,
Regarding the Fight Against Human Trafficking, enacted in December 2007, prohibits both forced labor and sex
trafficking but does not adequately distinguish between human trafficking and alien smuggling. It provides for the
protection of victims regardless of ethnicity, gender, or nationality, and prescribes penalties of two to five
years’
imprisonment, penalties which are sufficiently stringent, but not commensurate with those prescribed for other
serious crimes, such as rape. Law 111, Regarding the Fight Against Terrorism and Other Serious Crimes of 2011,
increased penalties to 10 years’ imprisonment for human trafficking crimes and adequately defines the crime in line
with international law.
The government reported its conviction of one trafficker in 2014. In this case, the courts convicted a woman of
trafficking in persons and aiding illegal migrants under Law 210 for aiding three non-Djiboutian women across the
border into Djibouti, where she held the women against their will, forced them into jobs, and withheld their
wages.The trafficker received a 24-month suspended sentence and served no time in prison, an ineffective deterrent
to trafficking crimes. A judge ordered the trafficker to repay the wages she withheld from each victim. The
government did not investigate or initiate prosecutions of other forced labor cases or any sex trafficking offenses
during the reporting period. The labor inspectorate did not investigate any child labor infractions or refer any
cases to law enforcement authorities in 2014. The government did not report any investigations, prosecutions, or
convictions of government officials complicit in human trafficking offenses.The government did not provide
anti-trafficking training to law enforcement personnel during the reporting period. In March 2015, the prime
minister hosted a technical meeting to increase international cooperation on trafficking issues; senior Djiboutian
officials and those from Ethiopia, Somalia,Tanzania, Uganda, Kenya, Australia, India, and Sri Lanka participated in
the meeting.
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