Children sent to work as domestic servants for their wealthier relatives are vulnerable to forced labor or, to a
lesser extent, sexual exploitation. Orphaned children remain susceptible to exploitation, including in street
selling and prostitution. A small number of Liberian men, women, and children are subjected to human trafficking in
other West African countries, including Cote d’Ivoire, Guinea, Sierra Leone, and Nigeria. Victims of transnational
trafficking come to Liberia from neighboring West African countries, including Sierra Leone, Guinea, Cote d’Ivoire,
and Nigeria, and are subjected to the same types of exploitation as internally trafficked victims. Women from
Tunisia and Morocco have been subjected to sex trafficking in Liberia. During the reporting period, Liberian women
were subjected to forced labor in Lebanon. Bribery at border stations, capacity issues, and generalized corruption
within the judiciary continued to hamper trafficking investigations and prosecutions.
The Government of Liberia does not fully comply with the minimum standards for the elimination of trafficking;
however, it is making significant efforts to do so. During the reporting period, an outbreak of Ebola Virus Disease
severely affected the country and overwhelmed the government’s resources and capacity to address effectively a
variety of issues, including trafficking in persons.The government did not prosecute or convict any trafficking
offenders during the reporting period and failed to develop trafficking-specific protective services for victims.
Additionally, despite the country’s significant internal trafficking problem, the government did not identify any
domestic trafficking victims during the reporting period and has yet to ever successfully convict a Liberian
national for trafficking in persons. However, in March 2015, the government sent a high-level delegation to Lebanon
to rescue 10 Liberian women subjected to domestic servitude and conducted an investigation to determine whether
other Liberian women and girls are currently in similar circumstances.The government also continued to conduct
several trainings and workshops for law enforcement and maintained public awareness-raising efforts.
RECOMMENDATIONS FOR LIBERIA:
Continue prosecuting trafficking offenses and convicting and punishing traffickers, with an increased focus on
cases involving Liberian nationals; vigorously investigate, prosecute, and convict government officials complicit
in trafficking offenses; provide additional training to law enforcement officials and magistrates on the
application of the anti-trafficking law and differentiation of trafficking crimes from cases of human smuggling or
kidnapping; implement and educate NGOs, law enforcement personnel, magistrates, and other relevant officials on the
“Direct Assistance and Support toTraffickedVictims Standard Operating Procedures,” so these officials learn
proactively to identify and provide protective services to trafficking victims; establish and adequately fund a
shelter specifically for trafficking victims; and increase efforts to educate the public about the dangers of human
trafficking.
PROSECUTION
The government demonstrated a decrease in anti-trafficking law enforcement efforts. Liberia’s 2005 Act to Ban
Trafficking in Persons prohibits all forms of transnational and internal trafficking. It prescribes a minimum
sentence of one year’s imprisonment for the trafficking of adults and six years’ imprisonment for the trafficking
of children, but does not include a maximum sentence for the trafficking of adults.The prescribed penalties for the
sex and labor trafficking of children are sufficiently stringent, but the prescribed penalties for sex and labor
trafficking of adults are not, nor are they commensurate with those prescribed for other serious offenses, such as
rape.The government reported three investigations, no prosecutions, and no convictions during the reporting period,
which represented a decrease from six investigations, two prosecutions, and two convictions in the previous
reporting period. One of the investigations, which involved 10 Liberian women who were allegedly subjected to labor
trafficking in Lebanon by a Lebanese national, was pending at the close of the reporting period. In March 2015, the
government sent a high-level delegation to Lebanon to rescue the women and continue the investigation in country.To
date, the government has not convicted any Liberian trafficking offenders under Liberia’s anti-trafficking law,
despite the country’s significant internal trafficking problem.
All section heads of the Liberia National Police (LNP) received basic training on how to report suspected
trafficking cases to the Women and Children Protection Section (WACPS), which had the lead in investigating such
crimes; however, LNP staff did not receive specialized training in investigating human trafficking crimes. WACPS
continued to provide a mandatory three-week anti- trafficking training for all of its new officers. During the
reporting period, the anti-trafficking taskforce conducted several trainings for 160 law enforcement and community
leaders focused on the identification of victims and their traffickers; these workshops were jointly funded by the
government and an international organization. Additionally, government officials conducted follow-up monitoring
trips to determine the level of service delivery provided by the previously-trained law enforcement officers. The
government did not report any investigations, prosecutions, or convictions of government employees complicit in
human trafficking offenses.
PROTECTION
The government maintained modest efforts to identify and protect victims of human trafficking. It identified 10
trafficking victims, all of whom were adults subjected to forced labor; this is a decrease compared with the
previous reporting period, during which the government identified 41 trafficking victims. In March 2015, the
government rescued 10 Liberian women who were subjected to domestic servitude in Lebanon; the government
repatriated the women, provided them with medical care and counseling, and placed them in a safe house. Despite the
significant internal trafficking problem within the country, the government neither identified nor provided
services to any internal trafficking victims during the reporting period.There remained no government-run shelters
or safe homes specifically for trafficking victims in Liberia, and the government continued to rely heavily on NGOs
and civil society groups to provide basic assistance and financial support to victims. Nonetheless, the government
allocated the equivalent of approximately $15,000 toward victim protection and assistance in 2014 and additional
funds in 2015 to rescue and rehabilitate victims from Lebanon.The government failed to implement fully its official
standard operating procedures for trafficking victim support during the reporting period. The government
provides
legal alternatives to removal to countries in which victims would face retribution or hardship, such as
temporary residency, on a case-by-case basis.The 2005 anti-trafficking act absolves victims from responsibility for
unlawful acts committed as a result of being subjected to trafficking and there were no reports that victims were
punished during the year.
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