PROSECUTION
The government made modest improvements in its law enforcement efforts. Nepal prohibits most, but not all, forms of
trafficking in persons through the 2007 HTTCA and the 2008 regulation. The HTTCA criminalizes slavery and bonded
labor; however, it does not criminalize the recruitment, transportation, harboring, or receipt of persons by force,
fraud, or coercion for the purpose of forced labor. It criminalizes forced prostitution but, in a departure from
the 2000 UN TIP Protocol definition, does not consider the prostitution of children as a form of trafficking absent
force, fraud, or coercion.The law also criminalizes facilitating prostitution and removal of human organs.
Prescribed penalties range from 10 to 20 years’ imprisonment, which are sufficiently stringent and commensurate
with those prescribed for other serious crimes, such as rape. Bonded labor is prohibited through the 2002 Bonded
Labor (Prohibition) Act. Forced child labor and transnational labor trafficking may be prosecuted under the Child
Labor Act and the Foreign Employment Act (FEA).
The Nepal Police Women’s Cell conducted 185 sex and labor trafficking case investigations under the HTTCA during
the Nepali fiscal year, compared with 144 cases in the previous fiscal year. These investigations involved crimes
in which women and girls were the primary victims; crimes involving male victims are handled by other police
investigative units.The government initiated prosecutions of 454 alleged traffickers in the fiscal year, compared
with 375 in the previous period. Nepali courts convicted 203 traffickers in the fiscal year, an increase from 119
in the previous period.The government did not provide information on sentences or the number of convicted
traffickers who served time in jail. Government officials and civil society groups noted the vast majority of
convictions under the HTTCA were transnational sex trafficking cases and law enforcement authorities often relied
on other legislation to combat internal trafficking. Observers reported victims of transnational labor trafficking
preferred to submit claims for compensation through the FEA, rather than pursue lengthy criminal prosecutions under
the HTTCA, partially because awarded compensation had the potential to be higher.
During the reporting period, the Nepal Police provided officers with special investigative training and the Women’s
Cell introduced a new course on psycho-social victim-centered training. Despite this training, police officers’
lack of awareness of the anti-trafficking law, challenges in evidence collection, and poor investigation techniques
still impeded prosecution efforts. Police officers and political party officials allegedly own dance bars,
establishments that are often locations for sex trafficking, though there is little direct evidence of the
officials’ involvement in trafficking. In 2013, the anti-corruption commission indicted 46 officials from the
Departments of Foreign Employment and Immigration for issuing fraudulent documents; the cases remained pending
trial at the close of the reporting period.
PROTECTION
The government maintained its modest efforts to protect victims. Authorities did not track the number of victims
identified, and observers reported government efforts to identify victims remained inadequate. Immigration
officials reportedly did not notify police of possible trafficking crimes when abused migrant workers returned to
Nepal, and instead urged them to register complaints under the FEA. Although observers reported an overall decrease
in the penalization of victims, during some raids of cabin restaurants, dance bars, and massage parlors, police
reportedly arrested and imprisoned trafficking victims, including girls, before releasing them back to their
traffickers who had bribed the police. Due to pressure from influential suspects, police sometimes interrogated
victims to discourage them from filing cases. The national minimum standards for victim care set forth procedures
for referring identified victims to services; however, referral efforts remained ad hoc and inadequate.The Ministry
of Women, Children, and Social Welfare (MWCSW) continued to partially fund eight rehabilitation homes and emergency
shelters for female victims of gender-based violence, including trafficking. The government did not fund shelter
services for adult male victims in Nepal, although there was one NGO-run shelter for men in Kathmandu.There were
reports some of these shelters limited victims’ ability to move freely. The government continued to run emergency
shelters for vulnerable female workers—some of whom were likely trafficking victims—in Kuwait, Oman, Saudi Arabia,
Qatar, Bahrain and the United Arab Emirates. Nonetheless, shelter capacity was insufficient to adequately respond
to the demand for rescue services and assistance abroad.
The Foreign Employment Promotion Board collected fees from departing registered migrant workers for a welfare fund,
to provide repatriation and one year of financial support to families of injured or deceased workers. During the
fiscal year, the fund was used to repatriate 52 migrant workers and provided financial support to the families of
107 injured and 880 deceased workers.The government did not provide legally mandated benefits to many bonded
laborers who in past years were freed through government decree, leaving them impoverished and vulnerable to
re-trafficking.The HTTCA impeded victim-witness protection by allowing victims who failed to appear in court or who
provided testimony contradicting their previous statements to be fined. Protection mechanisms mandated in the HTTCA
were inconsistently applied. Officials stated victims frequently retracted their statements to law enforcement
under alleged threat by traffickers or those acting on the trafficker’s behalf.
PREVENTION
The government demonstrated increased efforts to prevent human trafficking. The inter-ministerial National
Committee for Controlling Human Trafficking (NCCHT) met regularly and issued its second report on the government’s
anti-trafficking efforts. The government also issued the NPA implementation plan and conducted two coordination
sessions with local officials from at least 27 districts to clarify their roles and responsibilities and set budget
and timeline goals to ensure completion of the tasks. The NCCHT allocated 233,000-380,000 Nepali rupees (NPR),
approximately $2,300-$3,750, to each of the 75 district committees to support awareness campaigns, meetings
expenses, and emergency victim services; this was an increase over the 42,000-57,000 NPR ($414-$562) allocated last
fiscal year. This allocation specifically included 120,000 NPR ($1,180) for each district to establish at least
three new village level committees.
The government maintained its ban on migration of females under age 30 to the Gulf states for domestic work, and in
May 2014, the government suspended all exit permits for domestic work. Officials acknowledged the bans had
increased illegal migration and subsequently heightened migrants’ risks to exploitation; however the government
viewed these policies as temporarily necessary to protect female migrant workers while formulating safe migration
guidelines. The government did not make efforts to reduce the demand for commercial sex acts or forced labor. All
Nepali peacekeeping forces were provided pre-deployment anti-trafficking training.The government provided
anti-trafficking training or guidance for its diplomatic personnel. Nepal is not a party to the 2000 UN TIP
Protocol.
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