PREVENTION
The government demonstrated weakened prevention efforts. Norway did not have an action plan at the close of the
reporting period, as the previous one had expired in 2014 and had not
yet been replaced.There were no cases of authorities punishing labor recruiters involved in the recruitment of
workers through knowingly fraudulent offers of employment. The government continued to direct the bulk of its
attention and resources to combating sexual exploitation and gave inadequate attention and resources to combating
labor trafficking. The government did not fund any broad-based awareness campaigns in Norway. The government did
not report any specific measures to reduce the demand for commercial sex.The government provided anti- trafficking
training or guidance for its diplomatic personnel.
OMAN: Tier 2
Oman is a destination and transit country for men and women, primarily from South Asia and East Africa, subjected
to forced labor and, to a lesser extent, sex trafficking. Most migrants travel willingly and legally to Oman with
the expectation of employment in domestic service or as workers in the country’s construction, agriculture, and
service sectors; some are subsequently subjected to forced labor. Labor source-country officials report domestic
workers seeking assistance experience excessive working hours, passport confiscation, and physical and mental
abuse. Unscrupulous labor recruitment agencies and their sub-agents in South Asia, and labor brokers in the United
Arab Emirates (UAE), Oman, and Iran deceive some workers into accepting work that constitutes forced labor. Many
agencies provide false contracts with fictitious employers or wages and charge workers high recruitment fees at
usurious rates of interest, leaving workers vulnerable to trafficking. Some Omani employers obtain foreign domestic
workers at the porous border crossing between Buraimi, Oman and Al Ain, UAE. Employers typically secure a labor
permit for domestic workers to legally work in Oman; however, some female domestic workers often leave Emirati
families and are not aware they are being taken to Oman for domestic work, rendering them further vulnerable to
exploitation. Women working in Oman as domestic workers from countries without a diplomatic presence in Oman, such
as Ethiopia and Vietnam, are especially vulnerable to forced labor. Government sources previously noted domestic
workers who run away from their employers are also susceptible to forced prostitution. Male Pakistani laborers and
other workers from India, Bangladesh, Sri Lanka, and East Asia transit Oman en route to the UAE; some of these
migrant workers are exploited in situations of forced labor upon reaching their destination. Oman is a destination
and transit country for women from Asia, Eastern Europe, and Africa who are forced into prostitution, typically by
nationals of their own countries.
The Government of Oman does not fully comply with the minimum standards for the elimination of trafficking;
however, it is making significant efforts to do so.The government continued limited investigations and prosecutions
of trafficking offenses. Potential labor trafficking cases continued to be consistently treated as labor
disputes.Victim identification efforts remained weak, as Omani authorities did not employ formal procedures to
proactively identify trafficking victims among vulnerable groups—including domestic workers.The government
identified 10 trafficking victims and continued to assist some victims at a government-run shelter. Authorities
continued to rely on victims to voluntarily identify themselves and report abuses, rather than proactively
investigating trafficking in vulnerable communities.
RECOMMENDATIONS FOR OMAN:
Significantly increase efforts to investigate and prosecute trafficking offenses, and sentence convicted
traffickers to imprisonment; increase and enforce legal protections for domestic workers; institute formal
procedures for identifying trafficking victims among all vulnerable populations, such as migrant workers and people
in prostitution; make greater efforts to investigate and prosecute forced labor offenses, including those
perpetrated by recruitment agents and employers; establish a formal mechanism for cooperation between the Ministry
of Manpower (MOM) and the public prosecutor to investigate and prosecute cases of labor trafficking; refer all
suspected victims of trafficking to the government shelter, regardless of whether there is a corresponding
prosecution of an alleged offender; amend the restrictions on victim referrals to allow broader victim access to
shelter care; offer shelter and specialized services to male victims and labor trafficking victims; do not punish
victims of trafficking for acts committed as a direct result of being subjected to human trafficking, such as
immigration violations or prostitution; enact and enforce strict penalties for employers who withhold their
employees’ passports, including government officials; continue training government officials to recognize and
respond appropriately to human trafficking crimes; and implement prevention programs to reduce the demand for
forced labor and forced prostitution.
PROSECUTION
The government decreased minimal anti-trafficking law enforcement efforts.Through Royal Decree No. 126/2008, also
known as the Law Combating Trafficking in Persons, the government prohibits all forms of trafficking and prescribes
punishments of three to 15 years’ imprisonment, in addition to financial penalties, for trafficking crimes. These
punishments are sufficiently stringent and commensurate with penalties prescribed for other serious crimes, such as
rape. In May 2014, the government enacted the child’s law, for the purpose of providing additional protections for
children, which includes a provision against holding a child in slavery. A MOM circular (No. 2/2006) prohibits
employers from withholding migrant workers’ passports, but does not specify penalties for noncompliance. The
Ministry of Justice oversees a special judicial department at the appeals court in Muscat to handle
trafficking-related cases. The government reported investigating five trafficking cases.The government did not
provide information on the details of the cases.This compares with the investigation of six sex trafficking cases
and one forced labor case in 2013. From the five investigations, the government initiated two prosecutions
involving 11 suspects. The government convicted two of the suspects, acquitted seven due to insufficient evidence,
and two remained awaiting trial at the end of the reporting period.The two convicted offenders received seven-year
sentences and a 10,000 Omani rial ($26,000) fine in accordance with the anti-trafficking law.This represents a
decrease from the five sex trafficking cases prosecuted and convicted in 2013.
Government and source country officials have previously reported cases of labor violations—some of which likely
amounted to forced labor—which were frequently classified as administrative complaints and rarely investigated for
trafficking or referred to criminal court.The government did not report any law enforcement efforts to address the
widespread practice of passport withholding among employers in Oman. Overreliance on administrative avenues of
labor enforcement remained particularly problematic as domestic service—one of the sectors most vulnerable to
abuse—was not within inspectors’ mandate under Omani labor law. During the reporting period, labor source countries
including Indonesia, Bangladesh, Nepal, Sri Lanka, and India either restricted or suspended labor migration of
domestic workers to Oman, pending acceptance of specific procedures by recruiters and employers.The government
tolerated these specific procedures, including set minimum wages by some source countries; however, it did not
develop any standard policies to implement them. The government did not report any investigations, prosecutions, or
convictions of government employees complicit in human trafficking.The Royal Oman Police (ROP) continued to conduct
victim identification trainings for all incoming cadets. In June 2014, MOM organized a workshop on the role of
labor inspectors in anti-trafficking efforts, and in September 2014, the Ministry of Social Development hosted
training for 70 officials from various agencies, which required each agency to present on their efforts to combat
the crime.
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