MAURITIUS: Tier 2 Watch List
Mauritius is a source, transit, and destination country for men, women, and children subjected to forced labor and
sex trafficking. Secondary school-aged girls and, in fewer numbers, younger girls from all areas of the country,
including from Rodrigues Island, are induced or sold into prostitution, often by their peers, family members, or by
businessmen offering other forms of employment. Taxi drivers provide transportation and allegedly introduce girls
and clients. Girls and boys whose mothers engage in prostitution reportedly are vulnerable to exploitation in
prostitution at a young age. Some women addicted to drugs are forced into prostitution. Women from Rodrigues Island
are subjected to forced labor in domestic service in Mauritius. In recent years, small numbers of Mauritian adults
have been identified as labor trafficking victims in the UK, Belgium, and Canada. Malagasy women transit Mauritius
en route to employment as domestic workers in the Middle East, where they often are subsequently subjected to
forced labor and sex trafficking. In previous reporting periods, Cambodian fishermen were subjected to forced labor
on foreign fishing boats in Mauritius’ territorial waters. Mauritius’ manufacturing and construction sectors employ
approximately 37,000 foreign migrant workers from India, China, Bangladesh, Sri Lanka, and Madagascar, some of whom
are subjected to forced labor.
The Government of Mauritius 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, the government made modest efforts
to identify and provide protective services to child victims of sex trafficking and continued to conduct extensive
public awareness campaigns to prevent child sex trafficking and reduce the demand for commercial sex acts involving
children. Despite these measures, the government did not demonstrate overall increasing anti-trafficking efforts
compared to the previous reporting period; therefore, Mauritius is placed onTier 2 Watch List. The government did
not prosecute or convict any trafficking offenders during the reporting period.Additionally, there remained a
general lack of understanding among law enforcement of trafficking crimes outside the realm of child sex
trafficking, despite increasing evidence that other forms of trafficking exist in Mauritius, including the forced
labor of adults.The government failed to identify or provide any protective services to adult labor trafficking
victims and did not make any tangible efforts to prevent the trafficking of adults during the reporting period. For
example, despite the presence of approximately 37,000 migrant workers in Mauritius, the government maintained a
severely inadequate number of inspectors in its Special Migrant Worker Unit tasked with monitoring employment
sites, and failed to proactively identify trafficking victims among workers protesting employment abuses. Instead,
the government deported 20 such workers during the reporting period.
there remained a lack of understanding of trafficking among law enforcement and Mauritian officials generally. The
government did not report any investigations, prosecutions, or convictions of government officials complicit in
human trafficking during the reporting period.
RECOMMENDATIONS FOR MAURITIUS:
Use anti-trafficking legislation to investigate and prosecute trafficking offenses and convict and punish
trafficking offenders, including in cases involving labor trafficking or forced prostitution of adults; provide law
enforcement officials, magistrates, prosecutors, social workers, and labor inspectors with specific
anti-trafficking training so officials can effectively identify victims, investigate cases, and refer victims to
appropriate care; increase coordination between law enforcement entities, NGOs, and international organizations on
cases involving foreign trafficking victims; establish procedures to guide officials in proactive victim
identification among at-risk populations, including women in prostitution and migrant workers; create an
inter-ministerial committee to increase coordination among relevant government entities; develop a national action
plan to combat trafficking and allocate sufficient funding to implement the plan; increase the number of labor
inspectors responsible for monitoring the employment of migrant workers; and conduct a national awareness campaign
on all forms of trafficking.
PROSECUTION
The government sustained modest anti-trafficking law enforcement efforts relating to child sex trafficking, but
failed to make any tangible law enforcement efforts to address adult forced labor during the reporting period.The
Combating ofTrafficking in Persons Act of 2009 prohibits all forms of trafficking of adults and children and
prescribes penalties of up to 15 years’ imprisonment for convicted offenders. In addition, the Child Protection Act
of 2005 prohibits all forms of child trafficking and prescribes punishment of up to 15 years’ imprisonment; the
Judicial Provisions Act of 2008 increased the maximum prescribed punishment for child trafficking offenses to 30
years’ imprisonment.These penalties are sufficiently stringent and commensurate with those prescribed for other
serious crimes, such as rape. During the reporting period, the government reported nine trafficking investigations,
but no prosecutions or convictions. This is a decrease from the previous reporting period, when the government
initiated five prosecutions but failed to convict trafficking offenders. Eight of the investigations involved child
sex trafficking offenses and one involved the forced prostitution of an adult; all the investigations remained
pending at the close of the reporting period.
The government has never reported any prosecutions involving adult victims of sex trafficking. It has never taken
any law enforcement action against labor trafficking offenses, including forced labor on foreign fishing boats
illegally operating in Mauritius’ territorial waters and forced labor of migrant workers in the construction and
manufacturing industries.The Minor’s Brigade of the Mauritian Police Force referred 14 cases of child labor to the
Ministry of Labor, Industrial Relations, and Employment (MOL), but no additional law enforcement action was taken;
some of these cases might have involved child labor trafficking. Although the police included training on
trafficking to approximately 330 new police recruits as part of their basic training requirements, with the
exception of cases involving child sexual exploitation,
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