RECOMMENDATIONS FOR HONDURAS:
Increase efforts to prosecute trafficking offenses, and to convict and sentence traffickers, especially for forced
labor crimes and sex trafficking of adults; conduct thorough and transparent criminal investigations and
prosecutions of alleged government complicity in trafficking offenses, and convict and sentence complicit
officials; improve victim referral mechanisms and provide specialized services and shelter to all victims through
increased funding to government entities or civil society organizations; develop and implement formal procedures to
identify victims among vulnerable populations, including child workers identified by labor inspections, children
apprehended for illicit gang-related activities, and repatriated child migrants and refer them to service
providers; develop policies and train officials to protect child victims from re-victimization in the criminal
justice system; take measures to increase the number of adult victims identified and assisted, including
repatriated Hondurans; enforce laws punishing brokers for illegal practices which facilitate trafficking, such as
fraudulent offers of employment or excessive fees for migration or job placement; increase training and resources
for the dedicated anti-trafficking police and prosecutorial units, as well as staff on the “immediate response”
team; increase the use of the anti- trafficking law in trafficking prosecutions; and finalize the national action
plan for 2015-2020.
PROSECUTION
The government continued modest law enforcement efforts to combat child sex trafficking, but efforts to investigate
and prosecute other forms of trafficking remained weak. The Honduran anti- trafficking law, enacted in April 2012,
prohibits all forms of trafficking, prescribing penalties ranging from 10 to 15 years’ imprisonment; these
penalties are sufficiently stringent and commensurate with those prescribed for other serious crimes, such as rape.
This law, however, is inconsistent with international law; it conflates human trafficking with other crimes, such
as illegal adoption, and establishes the use of force, deceit, or intimidation as an aggravating factor, rather
than an essential element of most trafficking crimes. Many traffickers were prosecuted under non-trafficking
statutes that prescribe lower penalties, such as those prohibiting pimping. Authorities reported investigating 36
cases of suspected trafficking, most of which involved child sex trafficking. The government prosecuted four
suspects for sex trafficking with no convictions, compared with 17 individuals prosecuted and two convicted for
trafficking crimes in the previous reporting period. All four prosecutions remained ongoing at the close of the
reporting period.
The government increased the number of officials dedicated to investigating trafficking cases and organized a
taskforce among prosecutors to jointly investigate trafficking and smuggling cases with links to organized crime. A
lack of adequate human and material resources, however, limited the effectiveness of investigators and prosecutors,
and insufficient funding forced officials to limit the number of raids on sites where child trafficking occurred.
Authorities cooperated on trafficking investigations with officials from INTERPOL, El Salvador, Guatemala, and the
United States. In October 2014, authorities arrested two high-ranking members of the police and the military for
purchasing commercial sex acts from child trafficking victims.The government did not report any prosecutions or
convictions of government officials complicit in human trafficking offenses. NGOs funded by international donors
continued to deliver most of the anti-trafficking training available to government officials.
PROTECTION
Overall government efforts to identify, refer, and assist trafficking victims remained inadequate and authorities
remained largely dependent on NGOs to fund and provide services. While immigration officials had a manual on victim
identification, Honduran authorities lacked systematic procedures to identify trafficking victims among vulnerable
populations, such as people in prostitution or working children.The government established an “immediate response”
team with three dedicated staff members to identify victims among individuals apprehended by authorities, and in
the last quarter of the reporting period this team assisted four victims. It was also responsible for running a
dedicated helpline launched in June 2014 and for referring identified victims to NGOs to receive services. Between
September 2013 and September 2014, NGOs provided assistance to 116 victims, an unknown number of whom were referred
by the government.
There were limited services available for victims, and services for adult victims were particularly lacking.The
government provided 371,460 lempiras ($17,700) to an NGO that operated the country’s only specialized shelter for
girl victims of sexual abuse and sex trafficking. Honduran consular officers in Mexico assisted four Honduran
victims in obtaining humanitarian visas to remain in Mexico. Authorities made efforts to screen for indicators of
trafficking among the large numbers of Hondurans returned from
abroad, including unaccompanied migrant children, but procedures for referral to follow-up services were
insufficient to ensure all identified victims received such care.The government encouraged victims to assist in
investigations and prosecutions, but the lack of adequate victim and witness protection programs, exacerbated by a
slow trial process and fear of retaliation by traffickers, caused many victims—particularly adults—to decline to
cooperate.There were no reports of identified victims being penalized for unlawful acts committed as a result of
being subjected to human trafficking. However, due to the lack of a formal mechanism to screen vulnerable
populations, some unidentified victims may have been punished for such crimes, and children forced to engage in
criminal activity by criminal groups were sometimes treated as criminals instead of victims. NGOs noted the
criminal justice system often re-victimized child victims due to the lack of sensitivity of some officials and lack
of protective services.The government allowed some child victims to provide testimony via videoconference or
pre-recorded interviews. Honduran law provides eligibility for foreign victims to receive temporary residency
status, including the ability to work, but none received this benefit in 2014.
PREVENTION
The government increased prevention efforts. The interagency, multi-stakeholder commission on child trafficking and
commercial sexual exploitation coordinated efforts; although NGOs funded much of its work, the government, for the
first time, distributed funding (allocated at the close of the previous reporting period) and provided office space
for the commission. The commission established and trained 10 interagency committees to coordinate efforts at the
local level. In May 2014, the president launched a coordinated communication campaign to raise awareness about the
dangers of trafficking, and government officials continued to organize and participate in awareness raising events
funded by NGOs. The commission finalized implementing guidelines for the 2012 law and began drafting, but did not
complete, a new national action plan for the years 2015-2020.The government did not make efforts to punish labor
recruiters or brokers for illegal practices that increase migrants’ vulnerability to exploitation abroad. The
government did not report any investigations, prosecutions, or convictions of child sex tourists. The government
provided anti-trafficking training for its diplomatic personnel. It did not make efforts to reduce the demand for
commercial sex acts or forced labor.
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