under the criminal code; train law enforcement officers, prosecutors, and judicial officials to interpret
“trafficking” as defined in the criminal code—not requiring kidnapping, buying and selling, force, or
confinement—and to not treat victims as visa violators or willing participants in the crime; proactively
investigate and prosecute South Koreans engaging in prostitution with children in Korea and abroad; proactively
identify trafficking victims among vulnerable populations—including individuals arrested for prostitution, disabled
Korean men, and migrant workers in all visa categories—using standard victim identification guidelines; increase
monitoring and establish measures to address trafficking vulnerabilities in Korean government-issued entertainment
visas, including verifying contracts and monitoring sponsoring establishments; proactively investigate allegations
of government complicity in trafficking and prosecute offenders who are complicit; standardize immigration
officers’ application of immigration regulations to potential trafficking victims and implement efforts to monitor
and detect immigration patterns of foreign women who enter South Korea on tourist visas and may be forced into
prostitution; enhance consistency in judges’ sentencing of traffickers, including revising sentencing guidelines on
trafficking-related crimes; increase awareness of prevalence and understanding of trafficking among government
officials, including at the provincial and working-level; continue to investigate and prosecute those who use
forced labor on South Korean-flagged fishing vessels; decrease the rate of suspended sentences and out-of-court
financial settlements in sex and labor trafficking cases; and ratify the 2000 UN TIP Protocol.
PROSECUTION
The government sustained anti-trafficking law enforcement efforts. Chapter 31of the criminal code prohibits all
forms of trafficking, and prescribes up to 15 years’ imprisonment for trafficking crimes; these penalties are
sufficiently stringent and commensurate with those prescribed penalties for other serious crimes, such as rape. The
government continued to use the less stringent 2004 Act on the Punishment of Acts of Arranging Sexual Traffic, the
Labor Standards Act, and the Child and Youth Protect Act to prosecute and punish most trafficking offenses.The
government investigated 457 reported cases linked to human trafficking. Under Chapter 31, the government prosecuted
four sex trafficking cases and obtained three convictions. Under other statutes, the government indicted 163 cases,
including 125 related to labor trafficking, and obtained 11 sex trafficking convictions, compared with 61 in 2013,
and 53 labor trafficking convictions, compared with 11 in 2013. Most of the convicted traffickers received
sentences less than three years’ imprisonment, with fines and community service, but many offenders received
suspended sentences in practice. Prosecutors and police officers complained of inconsistent application of
immigration regulations and actual time served by those convicted. After a March 2014 case involving hundreds of
disabled Korean men exploited on salt farms, the government established a special investigation team to inspect 854
salt farms in the country.The government convicted 40 owners and brokers for various violations; more than half of
those received suspended sentences. A 2012 case of labor abuses on ROK-flagged fishing vessels remained pending at
the end of the reporting period.The Ministry of Justice (MOJ) and National Police Agency (NPA) held a series of
training courses and seminars for prosecutors, judges, and law enforcement officers on anti-trafficking issues,
identification of victims, and victim protection throughout the year.The government did not report any
investigations, prosecutions, or convictions of government officials complicit in human trafficking offenses.
PROTECTION
The government sustained efforts to protect and assist trafficking victims. The government identified and assisted
58 foreign sex trafficking victims, compared with 36 in 2013; statistics for Korean or foreign labor trafficking
victims were unavailable. Although the government established sex trafficking victim identification guidelines in
2013, many law enforcement officers reported not knowing about them, and the government continued to lack labor
trafficking victim identification guidelines. The Ministry of Gender Equality and Family (MOGEF) continued to
support 91 facilities that cater specifically to sex trafficking victims and victims of other crimes.The Ministry
of Employment and Labor (MOEL) operated 38 foreign workers’ support centers and funded NGOs that offered similar
services; thousands of workers, some who were trafficking victims, received counseling, education, job training,
and lodging. NPA continued to work with social workers when screening women involved in prostitution to identify
and assist potential victims of trafficking. Although the law provides that trafficking victims would not be
punished, women in prostitution caught during police raids or arrested migrant workers were fined, required to
attend training, or deported, without being screened for indicators of trafficking.The government maintained an
extensive network of support centers for foreign-born spouses and runaway teenagers, two groups vulnerable to
trafficking.The government offered foreign victims legal alternatives to their removal to countries in which they
may face hardship or retribution. As an incentive to encourage trafficking victims to participate in investigations
and prosecutions, the government issued G-1 visas with permission to work for up to one year.Victims could file a
civil suit in order to receive restitution, but it is unclear how many victims pursued this option.
PREVENTION
The government maintained efforts to prevent trafficking. In partnership with civil society, the government
continued to raise awareness on trafficking through ad campaigns—especially to commemorate the 10th anniversary of
the 2004 enactment of Korea’s first sex trafficking law—and through other outreach and broadcasting programs. The
government conducted two surveys on human rights situations in the agriculture and livestock sectors and abuses
associated with the E6-2 entertainment visas, which could help identify vulnerabilities to trafficking. The E6 visa
survey highlighted the need for reforms in the issuance and monitoring of this visa category, in which some women
are sexually exploited, forced into prostitution, and held under debt bondage. MOGEF continued to operate hotlines
in 13 languages accessible to trafficking victims, and the Ministry of Oceans and Fisheries (MOF) continued to
operate a hotline for foreign crew members. MOF trained 961 marine and ship staff on human rights protections and
labor rights of foreign sailors. The government lacked a trafficking-specific national plan of action, but included
proposed anti-trafficking efforts in its human rights national action plan. MOEL conducted routine inspections for
violations of labor trafficking throughout the year at EPS sites. In an effort to curb the demand for commercial
sex acts, NPA shut down websites and smartphone applications that promote child prostitution in Korea. South Korean
men remained a source of demand for child sex tourism in Southeast Asia and the Pacific Islands, traveling
primarily on travel-agency-organized golf group tours or business trips. The government continued to post warnings
against child sex tourism; however, it did not prosecute or convict any Korean sex tourists.The government
continued to provide anti-trafficking
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