NAMIBIA: Tier 2 Watch List
Namibia is predominantly a country of origin and destination for children and, to a lesser extent, women subjected
to forced labor and sex trafficking. Some victims are initially offered legitimate work for adequate wages, but
eventually experience forced labor in urban centers and on commercial farms. Traffickers exploit Namibian children
within the country through forced labor in agriculture, cattle herding, and domestic service, as well as
prostitution in Windhoek and Walvis Bay. Foreign nationals from southern Africa and Europe are among the clientele
of children in prostitution. Namibians commonly house and care for children of distant relatives to provide
expanded educational opportunities; however, in some instances, these children are exploited in forced labor.Among
Namibia’s ethnic groups, San and Zemba children are particularly vulnerable to forced labor on farms or in homes
and, to a lesser extent, are exploited in prostitution. NGOs reported persons in prostitution being taken aboard
foreign vessels off the Namibian coast, some of whom may be trafficking victims. Children from Angola, Zambia, and
Zimbabwe are subjected to prostitution and forced labor in the fishing sector and in organized street vending in
Windhoek and other cities. Angolan children may be brought to Namibia for forced labor in cattle herding or to sell
drugs.There were reports of exploitative labor—perhaps including forced labor—involving foreign adults and Namibian
adults and children in Chinese-owned retail, construction, and fishing operations.
The Government of Namibia does not fully comply with the minimum standards for the elimination of trafficking;
however, it is making significant efforts to do so. Despite these measures, the government did not demonstrate
overall increasing anti-trafficking efforts compared to the previous reporting period; therefore, Namibia is placed
on Tier 2 Watch List for a fourth consecutive year. Namibia was granted a waiver from an otherwise required
downgrade to Tier 3 because its government has a written plan that, if implemented, would constitute making
significant efforts to bring itself into compliance with the minimum standards for the elimination of trafficking
and it has committed to devoting sufficient resources to implement that plan. The government continued its
prosecution of an alleged sex trafficking offender initiated in 2012, as well as efforts to finalize draft
anti-trafficking legislation. In January 2015, Parliament passed the Child Care and Protection Bill, which was
enacted by presidential signature in April 2015,
criminalizing child trafficking and outlining protections for such victims. Officials discovered and provided
shelter to five potential victims in 2014.The government, however, failed to initiate any new prosecutions during
the year and has never convicted a trafficking offender. Some Namibian officials continued to demonstrate a
reluctance to acknowledge trafficking and incorrectly insisted that transnational movement is a defining element of
trafficking crimes. The government failed to fully institute formal victim identification and referral processes,
which led to the deportation of potential victims in 2014. Lack of effective inter-ministerial coordination in the
development and implementation of anti-trafficking programming remained a key concern.
RECOMMENDATIONS FOR NAMIBIA:
Finalize and enact comprehensive anti-trafficking legislation; increase efforts to investigate and prosecute
trafficking offenses, and convict and punish trafficking offenders under existing law; develop and implement
systematic procedures for the proactive identification of victims and their subsequent referral to care; train
officials on relevant legislation and identification and referral procedures; train judicial officials to promote
consistent use of a broad definition of human trafficking that does not rely on evidence of movement, but focuses
on exploitation, consistent with the 2000 UN TIP Protocol; allocate resources and develop a plan to fully
operationalize renovated safe houses; appoint a formal government lead for anti-trafficking efforts; proactively
investigate and criminally prosecute employers accused of forced labor violations in Chinese retail, construction,
and fishing operations; strengthen coordination among government ministries, at both the minister and the working
level; and institute a unified system for collecting trafficking case data for use by all stakeholders.
PROSECUTION
The government maintained modest anti-trafficking law enforcement efforts during the year. The 2009 Prevention of
Organized Crime Act (POCA) criminalizes all forms of trafficking. Under the POCA, persons who participate in
trafficking offenses or aid and abet trafficking offenders may be imprisoned for up to 50 years and fined,
penalties that are sufficiently stringent and commensurate with punishments prescribed for other serious crimes,
such as rape. In April 2015, the government enacted the Child Care and Protection Bill, which includes a provision
explicitly criminalizing child trafficking. The Ministry of Gender Equality and Child Welfare (MGECW), the
government’s anti-trafficking lead, continued to coordinate the efforts of an inter-ministerial committee
responsible for drafting anti-trafficking legislation, including specific protections for trafficking victims,
prevention measures, and harsher punishments for child trafficking offenses; the draft bill advanced to the Law
Reform Commission and was distributed to the Cabinet Committee on Legislation, yet remained pending passage and
enactment at the end of the reporting period.
The government failed to initiate any new prosecutions during
the year and has never convicted a trafficking offender. The government’s first known sex trafficking
prosecution—initiated in October 2012 under the Swakopmund Magistrate’s Court involving two suspects charged for
their alleged role in procuring three females (aged 13, 14, and 18) for sexual exploitation—remained pending. In
2014, the court released one of the accused on the grounds that the victim could not be located and without that
witness there was insufficient evidence to hold the accused.The Ministry of Labor and Social Welfare did not report
on its efforts to investigate forced labor offenses. Following the president’s public criticism of Chinese
businesses for mistreating Namibians and violating Namibian labor law in the previous reporting period, Chinese
construction and mining companies continued to attract criticism for the conditions under which they employed
Namibian workers; however, the government failed to investigate and prosecute suspected forced labor offenders by
these companies in 2014. In partnership with UNICEF, MGECW finalized its police curriculum on gender-based
violence, including trafficking, during the reporting period; however, the training had not been conducted by the
end of the reporting period.The government did not investigate allegations of children working in the homes of
officials in 2014 or initiate prosecutions or convictions of government officials complicit in human trafficking
crimes.
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