NICARAGUA: Tier 2
Nicaragua is principally a source and transit country for men, women, and children subjected to sex trafficking and
forced labor. Nicaraguan women and children are subjected to sex trafficking within the country and in other
Central American states, Mexico, and the United States. Many trafficking victims are recruited in rural areas or
border regions for work in urban centers and tourist locales, where they are subjected to sex or labor trafficking;
victims’ family members are often complicit in their exploitation. Nicaraguan women and girls are subjected to sex
trafficking along the country’s Caribbean Coast, where the lack of strong law enforcement institutions, a higher
crime rate, and presence of drug trafficking increase the vulnerability of the local population. Nicaraguan adults
and children are subjected to forced labor in agriculture, construction, mining, the informal sector, and domestic
service within the country and in Costa Rica, Panama, the United States, and other countries. Children in artisanal
mining and quarrying are vulnerable to forced labor. NGOs report children and persons with disabilities are
subjected to forced begging. Male migrants from Central American countries transit Nicaragua en route to Panama in
search of employment; some are subjected to labor trafficking in Panama. Nicaragua is a destination for child sex
tourists from the United States, Canada, and Western Europe.
The Government of Nicaragua does not fully comply with the minimum standards for the elimination of trafficking;
however, it is making significant efforts to do so. The government drafted and approved its first
trafficking-specific law, but it had yet to take effect at the close of the reporting period. It continued to
conduct anti-trafficking awareness campaigns, prosecute and convict traffickers, and identify and refer some
victims to service providers. However, overall protection efforts were weak; the government did not provide or fund
adequate services for victims, nor did it systematically refer all victims to NGOs to receive such care. The
government did not have formal procedures for identifying victims among vulnerable groups, and front-line officials
were not adequately trained to recognize all forms of trafficking. Authorities prosecuted and convicted fewer
offenders in 2014 than in the previous year, and activities of the anti-trafficking coalition and regional working
groups declined. Prosecution, protection, and prevention efforts in the two Caribbean autonomous regions of
Nicaragua continued to be much weaker than in the rest of the country.
RECOMMENDATIONS FOR NICARAGUA:
Provide adequate funding for specialized services, including psychological, medical, and legal services for victims
in partnership with civil society organizations; implement operating procedures to effectively refer victims to
appropriate services; increase training and funding for government officials—including social workers, labor
inspectors, and law enforcement officials—to facilitate increased victim identification and assistance,
particularly in the autonomous regions; institute clear, formal, and proactive procedures for identifying victims
among vulnerable populations; improve trafficking data collection and coordination across agencies, and increase
transparency in reporting anti-trafficking efforts; strengthen law enforcement and victim protection efforts in the
Caribbean autonomous regions, including through increased staff and funding; increase efforts to investigate and
prosecute cases involving all forms of human trafficking, and convict and punish traffickers and child sex
tourists; partner with civil society organizations to ensure that victims receive long-term care and reintegration
services; and strengthen departmental and regional anti-trafficking coalitions.
PROSECUTION
The government prosecuted and convicted fewer traffickers and provided only limited information about its law
enforcement statistics. Nicaragua criminalizes all forms of human trafficking through Article 182 of its penal
code, prescribing penalties of 10 to 14 years’ imprisonment.A separate statute,Article 315, prohibits the
submission, maintenance, or forced recruitment of another person into slavery, forced labor, servitude, or
participation in an armed conflict; these offenses carry penalties of five to eight years’ imprisonment.These
prescribed punishments are sufficiently stringent and commensurate with penalties prescribed for other serious
crimes, such as rape. In January 2015, the national assembly approved Nicaragua’s first trafficking-specific law;
it did not take effect during the reporting period.
The government provided limited data on law enforcement efforts and, in contrast with previous years, did not
provide further details to clarify these statistics. It is unclear how many investigations for suspected
trafficking were initiated in 2014. Authorities prosecuted 24 suspected offenders in 17 cases (13 involving sex
trafficking and four for forced labor) and convicted 12 traffickers in eight cases (seven involving sex trafficking
and one for forced labor). Prison sentences for nine traffickers ranged from three years and six months’ to 15
years’ imprisonment.Three convicted traffickers did not serve time in prison; it is unclear what penalties they
received. Eight cases involving 10 suspects remained open at the end of 2014. These figures represent a decrease
from 2013, when the government prosecuted 44 suspects and convicted 20 traffickers. Authorities did not report the
number of convictions overturned by appeals courts. Although child domestic servitude is addressed within Article
182 of the criminal code, the government did not consider such cases to be human trafficking crimes and did not
pursue prosecutions in such cases. The government appointed a prosecutor in Waspam, a town in a high-risk region on
the border with Honduras, filling a key position vacant nearly seven years. Nicaraguan authorities collaborated
with counterparts from Belize and Panama to investigate trafficking cases.There were no investigations,
prosecutions, or convictions of government employees complicit in human trafficking offenses. The government
maintained efforts to train officials on trafficking, often in partnership with civil society organizations, but
did not provide clear information on the number of officials trained or the source of funding.
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