but failed to convict any offenders for a second consecutive year; many trafficking cases were settled out of
court, failing to adequately punish offenders or serve as a sufficient deterrent to the commission of trafficking
crimes.
RECOMMENDATIONS FOR EGYPT:
Significantly increase prosecutions and convictions of all forms of trafficking, and adequately punish offenders;
continue to use the national victim referral mechanism to systematically identify and assist trafficking victims
among vulnerable groups, including those arrested for prostitution, street children, and foreign migrants; ensure
identified trafficking victims are not punished for unlawful acts committed as a direct result of being subjected
to human trafficking; expand the scope of protection services, including adequate shelter, and make these services
available to all foreign and domestic trafficking victims; encourage trafficking victims to assist in
investigations and prosecutions against their traffickers; increase training for all government officials on the
anti-trafficking law and victim identification and referral procedures; implement nationwide awareness campaigns;
and provide adequate legal protections for domestic workers.
PROSECUTION
The government made limited progress in anti-trafficking law enforcement efforts. Egypt prohibits all forms of
human trafficking through its 2010 anti-trafficking law, which prescribes penalties from three to 15 years’
imprisonment and fines.These penalties are sufficiently stringent and commensurate with those prescribed for other
serious crimes, such as rape. The Child Law includes provisions prohibiting sex trafficking and forced labor of
children and prescribes sentences of at least five years’ imprisonment, which also are sufficiently stringent and
commensurate with those prescribed for other serious crimes. Articles 80 and 89 of Egypt’s constitution include
provisions prohibiting and criminalizing sex trafficking, compulsory exploitation, and forced labor. For the first
time, in 2014, the government conducted a nationwide data call to district courts to gather information on
trafficking cases from the last five years.The government reported it conducted 27 potential trafficking
investigations, and an international organization reported the government initiated 15 prosecutions under the
anti-trafficking law in 2014; however, the government did not provide the details of these cases. The government
did not convict any trafficking offenders in 2014. Though prosecutions increased from 2013, the lack of convictions
remained a concern. Law enforcement officers lacked understanding of the anti-trafficking law and investigation
techniques, while trafficking cases were oftentimes settled out of court, failing to adequately punish trafficking
offenders for their crimes. In 2014, the government incorporated anti- trafficking training in curricula for newly
appointed prosecutors, and—in coordination with an international organization—it provided anti-trafficking
trainings for over 1,000 judicial and law enforcement officials throughout 2014. The government did not report any
investigations, prosecutions, or convictions of
government employees complicit in human trafficking offenses.
PROTECTION
The government demonstrated decreased efforts to identify and protect trafficking victims, specifically refusing to
provide some services to foreign victims.The government identified and assisted 68 victims in 2014, of which 44
were male and 22 were female, subjected to physical, mental, or sexual abuse. This represents a significant and
ongoing decrease from the previous two reporting periods in which the government identified 173 victims in 2013 and
277 in 2012.Though the government continued to coordinate with NGOs to identify and refer victims to protection
services, it did not adopt written procedures to guide officials in the proactive identification of trafficking
victims among vulnerable populations, including domestic workers—who were not covered under labor laws—street
children, foreign migrants, and women and girls in prostitution.The national victim referral mechanism, which
included counseling and legal assistance to those who called the national anti-trafficking hotline, lacked clear
standard operating procedures, and many officials failed to utilize the mechanism. Furthermore, police were
reportedly reluctant to refer victims to shelter services.The lack of trafficking awareness among police, security,
and judicial officials outside of urban areas contributed to the lack of victim identification and referral to
protection services, as well as punishment of victims for unlawful acts committed as a direct result of being
subjected to human trafficking. As in the previous reporting period, authorities often treated unidentified
trafficking victims as criminals, prosecuting them on charges of prostitution, robbery, or immigration violations.
However, unlike in the previous reporting period, as of early 2015, the government was not holding any African
migrants in Egyptian detention centers in the Sinai. In addition, in September 2014, Egyptian authorities
identified four Nigerian females as trafficking victims after they had been initially arrested and properly
referred them to shelter services.
The government’s provision of protection services to foreign victims, including shelter, declined. International
organizations observed a decrease in the attention authorities paid to appropriately assisting foreign trafficking
victims; in some instances, authorities refused provision of shelter services to foreign victims.The government
jointly operated a shelter with an international organization, which was designated for female and child
trafficking victims and offered medical, psychological, legal, vocational, and repatriation assistance. Despite
this, the international organization reported the shelter’s quality of care for foreign victims was so poor it
temporarily shut down parts of the shelter twice in 2014 and victims were inadequately housed in the remaining
space of the shelter. The shelter reportedly assisted 19 trafficking victims, 16 of whom were foreign and three
children.The Ministry of Health, with international assistance, operated a medical recovery unit for foreign and
domestic, male and female trafficking victims at a Cairo hospital; however, the government did not report its use
of this unit to assist any victims in 2014, a significant decrease from the 68 victims it assisted in 2013.
Though the government relied on international organizations and civil society to fund victim assistance, it did
not—in turn—provide financial assistance or support to these organizations, presenting an obstacle in their ability
to offer continued provision of protective services to trafficking victims. In the absence of adequate protection
services, some victims sought refuge at their respective embassies. The government rarely granted temporary
residency to foreign trafficking victims and expected victims to request this option
on their own without providing them adequate guidance on the procedures to do so.The government assisted in the
repatriation of nine trafficking victims, yet the victims were required to pay exit fees during the repatriation
proceedings; the government failed to provide relief from such penalties. Some foreign trafficking victims were not
offered legal alternatives to removal to countries in which they faced hardship or retribution.
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