of skills by investigators or reluctance of witnesses or victims to testify. In 2014, Rwandan officials reported
the government was training additional investigators to increase capacity to investigate reports of forced labor,
sex trafficking, and sexual exploitation of child domestic workers.
The Rwandan National Police (RNP) continued to operate a 15-officer anti-trafficking unit within its INTERPOL
directorate, which reported all major land border crossings were equipped with technology to identify suspected
trafficking offenders attempting to cross the borders. All immigration officers received mandatory training on
passenger profiling, document verification and regulations, and intercepted cross-border trafficking victims. In
this reporting period, the RNP directorate for anti-gender-based violence (GBV) designated three officers in each
of the country’s 78 police stations to serve as a point of contact for domestic trafficking victims; six judicial
police officers specialized in victim identification were also placed in each of Rwanda’s police stations. The
government provided a variety of anti-trafficking trainings to officials, including police, immigration officers,
and labor inspectors, throughout the reporting period, including standard mandatory trainings and a
train-the-trainers program for 15,000 community mediators. In November 2014, the RNP hosted an INTERPOL conference
in Kigali for senior police officers from 39 African countries on international coordination and
information-sharing for anti-trafficking law enforcement operations. During the reporting period, the RNP and NPPA
sought to develop a regional East African Community taskforce comprised of police and prosecutors to counter human
trafficking.
PROTECTION
The government continued to identify trafficking victims. The government continued to provide victim identification
guidelines based on international standards to law enforcement officials and social workers in victim centers,
including provisions on offering counseling, medical treatment, and follow-up investigations. Some authorities
applied identification procedures unevenly and did not proactively identify victims among vulnerable populations,
particularly women and children in prostitution.The government reported identifying 24 Rwandan trafficking victims
from June 2014 to February 2015, including Rwandan victims exploited abroad. Diplomatic personnel repatriated three
Rwandan trafficking victims, including a victim of sex trafficking in Zambia and two victims of domestic servitude
in the UAE; the government provided assistance and counseling to these victims upon their return to Rwanda. The
government continued to encounter difficulty in receiving assistance requested repeatedly from Chinese authorities
to repatriate approximately 100 Rwandan women exploited in various cities in China. In November 2014, the
government launched a social assistance program to support child welfare and counter human trafficking and child
labor; non-governmental volunteers for this program were trained to identify children at risk of human trafficking.
The government did not report if any child trafficking victims were identified and referred for protection services
through this newly-initiated program. The government did not have adequate resources to provide long-term
protection, including shelters, for trafficking victims requiring assistance for more than one month, nor did it
have resources to provide protection services exclusively to trafficking victims distinct from GBV victims. The
government continued to operate a network of 15 “One-Stop” centers that provided short-term assistance, including
free medical exams, counseling, legal assistance, and short-term shelter, to GBV victims and an unknown number
of trafficking victims. The NPPA operated four safe houses for witnesses in criminal cases, which could include
trafficking victims during prosecution of their trafficker, but they did not assist any trafficking victims in
2014. The government continued to operate institutions for vulnerable children—some of whom are vulnerable to
trafficking—including a rehabilitation center for street children that provided psycho-social support, education
and vocational trainings, and reintegration services; however, it did not report identifying or assisting any child
trafficking victims in these facilities in 2014. The government partnered with 34 childcare institutions across the
country that provided shelter, basic needs, and rehabilitation for approximately 3,300 orphans and vulnerable
children; however, these institutions did not provide care specifically for child trafficking victims.
Authorities regularly detained persons in prostitution at detention facilities in Kigali. Authorities screened some
underage detainees for trafficking only after they were arrested and detained and subsequently referred them to
child welfare facilities run by NGOs or the government-runYouth Rehabilitation Center; these facilities, however,
did not provide trafficking specific services.The government did not report if authorities identified and referred
to protection any trafficking victims among those detained in 2014. Although Rwandan law does not provide foreign
trafficking victims with legal alternatives to their removal to a country where they may face hardship or
retribution, in practice—were there any such cases—the government would exercise discretion on a case-by- case
basis to provide such alternatives.The government encouraged victims to participate in the investigation and
prosecution of their perpetrators. It reported that an unspecified number of victims testified against their
traffickers in this reporting period, while other victims chose not to do so. The NPPA reported victims’ choice not
to cooperate during the criminal process led to the acquittal of some trafficking offenders in 2014.
PREVENTION
The government sustained efforts to prevent trafficking. The government’s interagency anti-trafficking working
group met monthly throughout the reporting period. In August 2014, President Kagame publicly urged the government,
civil society organizations, and Rwandan citizens to work together to end human trafficking; officials reported the
president’s declaration resulted in renewed policy attention and resource-allocation to combating the crime.
Likewise, in October 2014, First Lady Jeanette Kagame chaired the first annual inter-ministerial national
consultative forum on human trafficking, drug abuse, and GBV in Parliament; this forum adopted a national action
plan to combat trafficking that was launched that month and is effective until 2016.The government also launched
two national anti-trafficking awareness campaigns in 2014.The RNP continued to operate a national GBV hotline,
which was staffed by social workers trained to identify and refer trafficking cases, yet it did not report how many
victims the hotline identified in 2014.The government required immigration officials to question and verify
necessary documents of all adults crossing the border with children; through these procedures dozens of girls were
not permitted to exit Rwanda after officials determined they would be victimized in commercial sexual exploitation
in Uganda. The government made some efforts to reduce the demand for commercial sex acts. In January 2015, police
arrested a Kenyan and a Rwandan citizen for attempting to hire Rwandan girls to work in the Gulf; the government
initiated the prosecution of these two individuals on trafficking charges under Articles 250 and 256 of the penal
code.The government trained all Rwandan troops and
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