SINGAPORE: Tier 2
Singapore is a destination country for men, women, and girls from other Asian countries subjected to sex
trafficking and forced labor, and a transit country for Cambodian and Filipino men subjected to forced labor on
fishing vessels that stop at ports in Singapore. Many of the more than 1.35 million foreign workers that comprise
more than one-third of Singapore’s total labor force are vulnerable to trafficking; most victims migrate willingly
for work in the construction, domestic service, performing arts, manufacturing, or service industries or in the sex
trade. NGOs report an increase of domestic workers from Cambodia and Burma, many of whom experience language
barriers and lack access to mobile phones, increasing their isolation and vulnerability to trafficking. In
September 2014, the Burmese government imposed a temporary ban on legal emigration to Singapore for domestic work,
citing concerns of abuse and nonpayment of wages. Many foreign workers assume large debts to recruitment agencies
in both Singapore and their home countries, making them vulnerable to forced labor, including debt bondage. Victims
are also compelled into sex or labor exploitation through illegal withholding of their pay, threats of forced
repatriation without pay, restrictions on movement, and physical and sexual abuse. Passport confiscation remains a
widespread and largely accepted practice; research released by the government found six out of 10 foreign work
permit holders were not in possession of their passports and work permits. Foreign workers have credible fears of
losing their work visas and being deported, since employers have the ability to legally repatriate workers at any
time during their contracts with minimal notice. Unscrupulous employers exploit the non- transferability of
low-skilled work visas to control or manipulate workers. Some employers in Singapore rely on repatriation companies
to seize, confine, and escort foreign workers to the airport for departure from Singapore, including through the
use of assaults, threats, and coercion, to prevent them from complaining about abuses to authorities.
Foreign women sometimes enter Singapore with the intention of engaging in prostitution, but upon arrival are
subjected to forced prostitution under the threat of serious harm, including financial harm, or other forms of
coercion. There are cases of child sex trafficking, involving both boys and girls, in Singapore, and cases of
Singaporean men engaging in child sex tourism in other countries. Men are subjected to forced labor on long-haul
fishing vessels that depart from Singapore or dock in Singaporean ports; some agencies in Singapore use deceptive
tactics to recruit Filipino and Cambodian men for this work. There are reports some foreign seamen endure severe
abuse by fishing boat captains, the inability to disembark from their vessels—sometimes for years—the inability to
terminate their contracts, and nonpayment of wages. Some of these men transit Singapore before embarking onto
vessels from ports in other countries.
The Government of Singapore does not fully comply with the minimum standards for the elimination of trafficking;
however, it is making significant efforts to do so.The government passed its first anti-trafficking law, which
prohibits all forms of human trafficking and came into effect in March 2015. Authorities identified 33 victims and
initiated 11 prosecutions in four cases, but did not
convict any traffickers. The government provided some victim assistance through government programs for vulnerable
groups, but did not make progress in ensuring all victims systematically received protection. NGOs provided the
only specialized services for trafficking victims, usually without government funding. The government obtained its
first conviction of a Singaporean national for the facilitation of child sex tourism abroad.
RECOMMENDATIONS FOR SINGAPORE:
Using the 2014 anti-trafficking law, increase investigations and prosecutions of trafficking offenses, including
debt bondage, and convictions and punishments of both sex and labor traffickers; provide specialized training for
officials on using the provisions of the new law to identify victims and investigate cases, with a focus on
identifying non-physical forms of coercion; dedicate a budget for specialized trafficking victim protection and
provide funding to all non-governmental shelters assisting potential victims; develop formal policies to ensure all
potential victims receive robust protections regardless of whether their cases are fully substantiated or lead to
prosecutions; do not punish victims for acts committed as a result of being subjected to trafficking; provide all
victims incentives to participate in investigations and prosecutions, including legal assistance to seek
compensation and temporary employment passes, and adopt a victim-centered approach to law enforcement efforts;
expand cooperation with civil society organizations, particularly in victim protection and support; continue and
increase awareness campaigns to encourage public support of anti-trafficking efforts; and accede to the 2000 UN TIP
Protocol.
PROSECUTION
The government enacted its first trafficking-specific law, but sustained minimal efforts to prosecute and convict
traffickers. In 2014, the government held a series of public consultations on draft anti-trafficking legislation
approved in November 2014 that came into effect in March 2015.The Prevention of HumanTrafficking Act prohibits all
forms of human trafficking and prescribes penalties of up to 10 years’ imprisonment and fines up to 100,000
Singapore dollars ($75,700). These penalties are sufficiently stringent and commensurate with those prescribed for
other serious crimes. In addition, Article 140 of the Women’s Charter prohibits forced prostitution involving
detention or physical force and Article 141 prohibits the movement of women and girls for “trafficking” but does
not define the term. Penalties prescribed for sex trafficking offenses in the Women’s Charter include a maximum of
five years’ imprisonment, which are sufficiently stringent but not commensurate with other serious crimes.
In 2014, authorities investigated 49 potential sex trafficking cases, of which 25 were substantiated as trafficking
cases, 12 were dismissed without further action, and 12 were investigated for other offenses. Among the cases
positively identified as sex trafficking, two cases involving seven defendants were prosecuted,
five cases were dismissed with a warning or no further action, and 18 cases were pending at the close of the
reporting period. Authorities investigated 41 cases of potential labor trafficking and initiated prosecutions of
four suspects.The government did not convict any labor or sex traffickers in 2014, compared with two child sex
traffickers convicted in 2013. Police cooperated with Thai counterparts on a sex trafficking investigation, though
no prosecutions were initiated as a result of that investigation. The government funded an NGO to provide
anti-trafficking training to 4,000 law enforcement officials. However, authorities continued to face challenges in
identifying and building evidence in trafficking cases, particularly labor trafficking. Singapore has never
obtained a labor trafficking conviction.The government did not report any investigations, prosecutions, or
convictions of government officials complicit in human trafficking.
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