This document provides information on a counter-trafficking directory for embassy and consulate staff. The directory contains country fact sheets with key facts, figures, and contacts related to human trafficking in different countries. It is intended to help staff identify and refer victims of trafficking. The fact sheets are organized by continent and provide overviews of trafficking trends, types of exploitation, assistance available, and key stakeholders in each country. Contact information is given for organizations that can help with assisted voluntary return and emergency assistance for victims.
The document is a counter-trafficking directory that provides information on human trafficking in different countries. It contains key facts, figures, and contacts for each country to assist frontline workers in identifying and referring victims of trafficking. The directory includes information organized by continent, with a one-page fact sheet for each country listing the main trends, available assistance organizations, and contacts for assisted voluntary return. The directory is intended to serve as a handy reference tool for practitioners such as border police, embassy staff, airlines employees, and social workers.
The document discusses migration trends, human trafficking, and responses to irregular migration. It notes that Turkey, Pakistan, Lebanon, Iran, and Ethiopia host the most refugees globally. In 2015, over 1.2 million asylum claims were made in the EU, more than double 2014 levels. The document also examines cases of Nigerian women trafficked to Italy for sexual exploitation and Egyptian unaccompanied children migrating irregularly. It proposes that counter-trafficking be integrated into emergency response from the outset and considers life-saving protection for vulnerable populations in crisis situations.
This document discusses human trafficking and modern slavery. It provides definitions and statistics on human trafficking globally and within the EU. An estimated 27 million people are living in slavery today, with more slaves now than at any point in history. Human trafficking involves exploiting people through force, fraud or coercion for forced labor, sex work, slavery or removal of organs. It is a serious global problem and criminal enterprise, especially within parts of Asia and Africa. The EU and its member states aim to address trafficking through prevention, protection and prosecution efforts, but these efforts vary in their effectiveness between countries.
Human trafficking is defined as exploiting people through coercion or deception for forced labor or sexual exploitation. Hundreds of thousands of people, mostly women and children, are trafficked worldwide and in the U.S. each year. While many countries and organizations have made efforts to combat trafficking through laws and services for victims, trafficking remains one of the largest criminal industries and more coordination of advocacy and services is still needed.
The document is the 2012 Global Report on Trafficking in Persons published by the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC). It provides information on trafficking patterns, flows, victims, and traffickers globally and by region based on officially reported data. Key findings include that at least 136 nationalities were trafficked to 118 countries between 2007-2010, and the percentage of detected child victims increased from 20% in 2003-2006 to 27% in 2007-2010. Regional trends and challenges to effective responses are also examined, such as low conviction rates compared to other crimes. The report aims to further understanding of human trafficking to strengthen policies and criminal justice responses.
Global Report on Trafficking in Persons 2012Daniel Dufourt
The document is the 2012 Global Report on Trafficking in Persons published by the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC). It provides information on trafficking patterns, flows, victims, traffickers and forms of exploitation globally and by region based on officially reported data from 2007-2010. Key findings include that at least 136 nationalities were trafficked to 118 countries, and the percentage of detected child victims increased from 20% in 2003-2006 to 27% in 2007-2010. Regional trends and challenges responding to trafficking are also examined, such as low conviction rates globally similar to rare crimes in some countries. The report aims to further understanding of human trafficking to inform criminal justice responses and policies.
The document discusses refugees and forced displacement worldwide. It notes that in 2015 there were 65.3 million forcibly displaced people, including 21.3 million refugees. The top three source countries of refugees were Syria, Afghanistan, and South Sudan. Most refugees are hosted in Turkey, Pakistan, Lebanon, Iran, Ethiopia, and Jordan. The document also provides statistics on stateless people and averages of people forced to flee daily.
Trafficking in Human Beings by Anna Ekstedt (CBSS Task Force against Traffick...Gerd Tarand
Anna Ekstedts presentation at the youth conference in the framework of the European Commission’s Strategy for the Baltic Sea Region, held in the Free and Hanseatic City of Hamburg on the 3.-4. February 2009.
The document is a counter-trafficking directory that provides information on human trafficking in different countries. It contains key facts, figures, and contacts for each country to assist frontline workers in identifying and referring victims of trafficking. The directory includes information organized by continent, with a one-page fact sheet for each country listing the main trends, available assistance organizations, and contacts for assisted voluntary return. The directory is intended to serve as a handy reference tool for practitioners such as border police, embassy staff, airlines employees, and social workers.
The document discusses migration trends, human trafficking, and responses to irregular migration. It notes that Turkey, Pakistan, Lebanon, Iran, and Ethiopia host the most refugees globally. In 2015, over 1.2 million asylum claims were made in the EU, more than double 2014 levels. The document also examines cases of Nigerian women trafficked to Italy for sexual exploitation and Egyptian unaccompanied children migrating irregularly. It proposes that counter-trafficking be integrated into emergency response from the outset and considers life-saving protection for vulnerable populations in crisis situations.
This document discusses human trafficking and modern slavery. It provides definitions and statistics on human trafficking globally and within the EU. An estimated 27 million people are living in slavery today, with more slaves now than at any point in history. Human trafficking involves exploiting people through force, fraud or coercion for forced labor, sex work, slavery or removal of organs. It is a serious global problem and criminal enterprise, especially within parts of Asia and Africa. The EU and its member states aim to address trafficking through prevention, protection and prosecution efforts, but these efforts vary in their effectiveness between countries.
Human trafficking is defined as exploiting people through coercion or deception for forced labor or sexual exploitation. Hundreds of thousands of people, mostly women and children, are trafficked worldwide and in the U.S. each year. While many countries and organizations have made efforts to combat trafficking through laws and services for victims, trafficking remains one of the largest criminal industries and more coordination of advocacy and services is still needed.
The document is the 2012 Global Report on Trafficking in Persons published by the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC). It provides information on trafficking patterns, flows, victims, and traffickers globally and by region based on officially reported data. Key findings include that at least 136 nationalities were trafficked to 118 countries between 2007-2010, and the percentage of detected child victims increased from 20% in 2003-2006 to 27% in 2007-2010. Regional trends and challenges to effective responses are also examined, such as low conviction rates compared to other crimes. The report aims to further understanding of human trafficking to strengthen policies and criminal justice responses.
Global Report on Trafficking in Persons 2012Daniel Dufourt
The document is the 2012 Global Report on Trafficking in Persons published by the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC). It provides information on trafficking patterns, flows, victims, traffickers and forms of exploitation globally and by region based on officially reported data from 2007-2010. Key findings include that at least 136 nationalities were trafficked to 118 countries, and the percentage of detected child victims increased from 20% in 2003-2006 to 27% in 2007-2010. Regional trends and challenges responding to trafficking are also examined, such as low conviction rates globally similar to rare crimes in some countries. The report aims to further understanding of human trafficking to inform criminal justice responses and policies.
The document discusses refugees and forced displacement worldwide. It notes that in 2015 there were 65.3 million forcibly displaced people, including 21.3 million refugees. The top three source countries of refugees were Syria, Afghanistan, and South Sudan. Most refugees are hosted in Turkey, Pakistan, Lebanon, Iran, Ethiopia, and Jordan. The document also provides statistics on stateless people and averages of people forced to flee daily.
Trafficking in Human Beings by Anna Ekstedt (CBSS Task Force against Traffick...Gerd Tarand
Anna Ekstedts presentation at the youth conference in the framework of the European Commission’s Strategy for the Baltic Sea Region, held in the Free and Hanseatic City of Hamburg on the 3.-4. February 2009.
Human Trafficking Today's Slavery Hidden In Plain Sight Scott Mills
Nick Kinsella, independent presentation on how to stop human trafficking to delegates of the 2011 Crime Stoppers International Training Conference in Montego Bay, Jamaica October 26, 2011
WPA/CAREIF Position Statement EUROPE Migrant Crisis.Albert Persaud
Position Statement: Europe Migrant & Refugee Crisis. Migrant, Refugees and Asylum Seekers’ Needs in Europe.
World Psychiatric Association along with Careif and the Centre for Psychiatry -a WPA Collaborating Centre - in Queen Mary, University of London, calls for action.
WPA/CAREIF Position Statement EUROPE Migrant Crisis.MrBiswas
Position Statement: Europe Migrant & Refugee Crisis: Migrant, Refugees and Asylum Seekers’ Needs in Europe: World Psychiatric Association along with Careif and the Centre for Psychiatry -a WPA Collaborating Centre - in Queen Mary, University of London, calls for action.
This document summarizes access to socio-economic rights for refugees across six African countries: Democratic Republic of Congo, Ethiopia, Kenya, Nigeria, South Africa, and Sudan. It provides data on refugee populations and internally displaced persons in each country. It then examines refugees' access to healthcare, education, and employment in the legal framework and realities of each location. Key challenges include lack of documentation, discrimination, limited resources, and restrictions on formal employment for refugees.
The document discusses developing a centralized database to track missing and perished refugees by collecting data from refugees and organizations assisting them. It notes that detailed data on refugee movements does not currently exist. The proposed solution is a WhatsApp bot that refugees could use to share travel details in order to facilitate faster emergency response times and inform search efforts. Challenges include refugees' reluctance to share information and differences in languages/cultures along migration routes.
The document discusses human trafficking, defining it as the recruitment, transportation or harboring of people through force, fraud or coercion for the purpose of exploitation. It outlines how trafficking involves exploiting people through means like forced labor, sex work or organ removal. It discusses common tactics traffickers use to control victims, including taking identification documents, isolating them from friends/family and using threats. It provides resources for reporting trafficking and ways for people to help address the issue.
The document discusses human trafficking, defining it as the recruitment, transportation or harboring of people through force, fraud or coercion for the purpose of exploitation. It outlines how trafficking involves exploiting people through means like forced labor, sex work or organ removal. It discusses common tactics traffickers use to control victims, including taking identification documents, isolating them from friends/family and using threats. It provides resources for reporting trafficking and ways for people to help address the issue.
Human trafficking incidence in rwanda its challenges, prevention and controlJohnGacinya
Rwandans like any other people in the rest of the world, suffer physically and psychologically during and after the transportation of victims of human trafficking to other parts of the world. It is observed that, occupational hazards in industries pose danger to the lives of victims of labour trafficking. It is also noted that sexually-abused victims of human trafficking risk catching HIV/AIDS pandemic. Ignorance, poverty, family conflicts and gender inequality have been found to be some of the key ‘push’ factors that drive individuals to seek economic opportunities elsewhere other than their home areas
Human Trafficking Incidence in Rwanda: Its Challenges, Prevention and ControlJohnGacinya
The main objective of the present study was to analyse the challenges faced by the Government of Rwanda its efforts to prevent and control the incidence of human trafficking in the country.
This document summarizes Team 621's project to improve data on missing or perished refugees. The team, sponsored by the Bureau of Population, Refugees, and Migration, aims to bridge the gap between local authorities and families of deceased refugees by providing families with information. This will strengthen family bonds and instill humanitarian values. The team conducted interviews with refugees, organizations, and local authorities to understand willingness to share and receive data. The goal is to design a system to accurately identify deceased individuals and notify their families to provide closure.
Human trafficking is a complex issue involving the exploitation of millions of people worldwide for financial gain through forced labor and sexual exploitation. It has grown substantially since the 1980s as an illegal business generating billions in profits for criminal organizations. While both men and women can be victims of trafficking, women and children are most commonly exploited through practices like forced prostitution, domestic servitude, and forced child labor. Poverty, lack of opportunities, gender inequality, and demand for cheap labor and sex are key drivers of the trafficking industry. Many countries have enacted laws against trafficking but enforcement remains a challenge due to the transnational and underground nature of the crime.
The International Conference on Migration in Africa (ICMA) hosted by the Scalabrini Institute for Human Mobility in Africa (SIHMA) and the Institute for Social Development at UWC, on 3 December 2014 brought together local, African and international scholars, academics, researchers, practitioners, professionals, policy makers and NGO representatives and funding bodies to discuss issues relating to human mobility in Africa. The topics included south-south migration, the nexus between migration and development, irregular migration and reintegration of returnee migrants.
This document provides a summary of a report on irregular migration, smuggling of migrants, and trafficking in persons in Trinidad and Tobago. It finds that irregular migration and migrant smuggling are more common than human trafficking. Migrants in irregular situations face various forms of exploitation and abuse that violate their human rights. Irregular migration, trafficking, and smuggling undermine the potential economic and welfare contributions of migrants and can reverse development gains if migration is not effectively managed. The report recommends that Trinidad and Tobago expand legal migration channels to reduce irregular migration and the need for smugglers or traffickers. It also suggests mainstreaming migration into development strategies.
Human trafficking is a complex issue in South Africa, driven by both push and pull factors. Poverty, inequality, lack of economic opportunities, and the HIV/AIDS epidemic in the region push vulnerable groups into situations of exploitation. South Africa's relative economic prosperity and demand for cheap labor and commercial sex act as pull factors. As a result, South Africa is a destination, transit, and source country for human trafficking. Women and children make up the majority of trafficking victims. An integrated, multi-sectoral approach is needed that addresses the root causes of trafficking and provides protection for victims.
Sex tourism, although it has becalmed important to the world’s economy, has many serious consequences. Due to many countries dependence on the tourism industry it would be impossible to completely abolish the trade. It is important for the world, to be informed about the true consequences of sex tourism. This would dissipate many of the myths, stereo types, and behavior of tourist seeking a pleasure-seeking experience. The people must be informed of the drastic cost associated with sex tourism. Sex Tourism’s place in the future is still very uncertain. It will be interesting to see how the nature of the industry changes in the future.
Trafficking in Persons Trends and Patterns by Kristiina Kangaspunta, UNODC - ...OECD Governance
Presentation made by Kristiina Kangaspunta, UNODC at the 3rd meeting of the OECD Task Force on Charting Illicit Trade - OECD, Paris, 30-31 March 2015
For more information see http://www.oecd.org/gov/risk/charting-illicit-trade-third-task-force-meeting.htm
This team is developing a solution to improve data collection on missing or deceased refugees. Their solution would collect identifying information from refugees that could be used to contact family members if they perish. This would help provide closure to families and allow organizations like the ICRC to fulfill their mission of reconnecting people. They have interviewed stakeholders and refined their hypotheses. Their key partners would include humanitarian organizations collecting data and local authorities who could use the information to identify bodies. The goal is to reconnect refugee families and help identify bodies in a respectful, ethical manner.
This document discusses modern slavery and human trafficking around the world. It states that millions of people are living in bondage, forced to work in brutal conditions under threat of violence. They may be forced into labor, begging, or prostitution. Human trafficking is a crime that exploits victims for financial gain. It is a problem that affects every country. The document then provides statistics on trafficking victims and profits as well as information on government anti-trafficking efforts in India.
This document provides an overview of IOM's projects related to safe migration in Vietnam. It summarizes 7 current projects focused on counter-trafficking, including facilitating the return and reintegration of trafficked victims from countries in the Greater Mekong Sub-region, supporting bilateral agreements between Vietnam and Cambodia to combat trafficking, developing victim identification guidelines, and establishing networks of support for trafficked persons. It also outlines 2 proposals submitted to donors on building counter-trafficking capacity and addressing human trafficking.
Human Trafficking Today's Slavery Hidden In Plain Sight Scott Mills
Nick Kinsella, independent presentation on how to stop human trafficking to delegates of the 2011 Crime Stoppers International Training Conference in Montego Bay, Jamaica October 26, 2011
WPA/CAREIF Position Statement EUROPE Migrant Crisis.Albert Persaud
Position Statement: Europe Migrant & Refugee Crisis. Migrant, Refugees and Asylum Seekers’ Needs in Europe.
World Psychiatric Association along with Careif and the Centre for Psychiatry -a WPA Collaborating Centre - in Queen Mary, University of London, calls for action.
WPA/CAREIF Position Statement EUROPE Migrant Crisis.MrBiswas
Position Statement: Europe Migrant & Refugee Crisis: Migrant, Refugees and Asylum Seekers’ Needs in Europe: World Psychiatric Association along with Careif and the Centre for Psychiatry -a WPA Collaborating Centre - in Queen Mary, University of London, calls for action.
This document summarizes access to socio-economic rights for refugees across six African countries: Democratic Republic of Congo, Ethiopia, Kenya, Nigeria, South Africa, and Sudan. It provides data on refugee populations and internally displaced persons in each country. It then examines refugees' access to healthcare, education, and employment in the legal framework and realities of each location. Key challenges include lack of documentation, discrimination, limited resources, and restrictions on formal employment for refugees.
The document discusses developing a centralized database to track missing and perished refugees by collecting data from refugees and organizations assisting them. It notes that detailed data on refugee movements does not currently exist. The proposed solution is a WhatsApp bot that refugees could use to share travel details in order to facilitate faster emergency response times and inform search efforts. Challenges include refugees' reluctance to share information and differences in languages/cultures along migration routes.
The document discusses human trafficking, defining it as the recruitment, transportation or harboring of people through force, fraud or coercion for the purpose of exploitation. It outlines how trafficking involves exploiting people through means like forced labor, sex work or organ removal. It discusses common tactics traffickers use to control victims, including taking identification documents, isolating them from friends/family and using threats. It provides resources for reporting trafficking and ways for people to help address the issue.
The document discusses human trafficking, defining it as the recruitment, transportation or harboring of people through force, fraud or coercion for the purpose of exploitation. It outlines how trafficking involves exploiting people through means like forced labor, sex work or organ removal. It discusses common tactics traffickers use to control victims, including taking identification documents, isolating them from friends/family and using threats. It provides resources for reporting trafficking and ways for people to help address the issue.
Human trafficking incidence in rwanda its challenges, prevention and controlJohnGacinya
Rwandans like any other people in the rest of the world, suffer physically and psychologically during and after the transportation of victims of human trafficking to other parts of the world. It is observed that, occupational hazards in industries pose danger to the lives of victims of labour trafficking. It is also noted that sexually-abused victims of human trafficking risk catching HIV/AIDS pandemic. Ignorance, poverty, family conflicts and gender inequality have been found to be some of the key ‘push’ factors that drive individuals to seek economic opportunities elsewhere other than their home areas
Human Trafficking Incidence in Rwanda: Its Challenges, Prevention and ControlJohnGacinya
The main objective of the present study was to analyse the challenges faced by the Government of Rwanda its efforts to prevent and control the incidence of human trafficking in the country.
This document summarizes Team 621's project to improve data on missing or perished refugees. The team, sponsored by the Bureau of Population, Refugees, and Migration, aims to bridge the gap between local authorities and families of deceased refugees by providing families with information. This will strengthen family bonds and instill humanitarian values. The team conducted interviews with refugees, organizations, and local authorities to understand willingness to share and receive data. The goal is to design a system to accurately identify deceased individuals and notify their families to provide closure.
Human trafficking is a complex issue involving the exploitation of millions of people worldwide for financial gain through forced labor and sexual exploitation. It has grown substantially since the 1980s as an illegal business generating billions in profits for criminal organizations. While both men and women can be victims of trafficking, women and children are most commonly exploited through practices like forced prostitution, domestic servitude, and forced child labor. Poverty, lack of opportunities, gender inequality, and demand for cheap labor and sex are key drivers of the trafficking industry. Many countries have enacted laws against trafficking but enforcement remains a challenge due to the transnational and underground nature of the crime.
The International Conference on Migration in Africa (ICMA) hosted by the Scalabrini Institute for Human Mobility in Africa (SIHMA) and the Institute for Social Development at UWC, on 3 December 2014 brought together local, African and international scholars, academics, researchers, practitioners, professionals, policy makers and NGO representatives and funding bodies to discuss issues relating to human mobility in Africa. The topics included south-south migration, the nexus between migration and development, irregular migration and reintegration of returnee migrants.
This document provides a summary of a report on irregular migration, smuggling of migrants, and trafficking in persons in Trinidad and Tobago. It finds that irregular migration and migrant smuggling are more common than human trafficking. Migrants in irregular situations face various forms of exploitation and abuse that violate their human rights. Irregular migration, trafficking, and smuggling undermine the potential economic and welfare contributions of migrants and can reverse development gains if migration is not effectively managed. The report recommends that Trinidad and Tobago expand legal migration channels to reduce irregular migration and the need for smugglers or traffickers. It also suggests mainstreaming migration into development strategies.
Human trafficking is a complex issue in South Africa, driven by both push and pull factors. Poverty, inequality, lack of economic opportunities, and the HIV/AIDS epidemic in the region push vulnerable groups into situations of exploitation. South Africa's relative economic prosperity and demand for cheap labor and commercial sex act as pull factors. As a result, South Africa is a destination, transit, and source country for human trafficking. Women and children make up the majority of trafficking victims. An integrated, multi-sectoral approach is needed that addresses the root causes of trafficking and provides protection for victims.
Sex tourism, although it has becalmed important to the world’s economy, has many serious consequences. Due to many countries dependence on the tourism industry it would be impossible to completely abolish the trade. It is important for the world, to be informed about the true consequences of sex tourism. This would dissipate many of the myths, stereo types, and behavior of tourist seeking a pleasure-seeking experience. The people must be informed of the drastic cost associated with sex tourism. Sex Tourism’s place in the future is still very uncertain. It will be interesting to see how the nature of the industry changes in the future.
Trafficking in Persons Trends and Patterns by Kristiina Kangaspunta, UNODC - ...OECD Governance
Presentation made by Kristiina Kangaspunta, UNODC at the 3rd meeting of the OECD Task Force on Charting Illicit Trade - OECD, Paris, 30-31 March 2015
For more information see http://www.oecd.org/gov/risk/charting-illicit-trade-third-task-force-meeting.htm
This team is developing a solution to improve data collection on missing or deceased refugees. Their solution would collect identifying information from refugees that could be used to contact family members if they perish. This would help provide closure to families and allow organizations like the ICRC to fulfill their mission of reconnecting people. They have interviewed stakeholders and refined their hypotheses. Their key partners would include humanitarian organizations collecting data and local authorities who could use the information to identify bodies. The goal is to reconnect refugee families and help identify bodies in a respectful, ethical manner.
This document discusses modern slavery and human trafficking around the world. It states that millions of people are living in bondage, forced to work in brutal conditions under threat of violence. They may be forced into labor, begging, or prostitution. Human trafficking is a crime that exploits victims for financial gain. It is a problem that affects every country. The document then provides statistics on trafficking victims and profits as well as information on government anti-trafficking efforts in India.
This document provides an overview of IOM's projects related to safe migration in Vietnam. It summarizes 7 current projects focused on counter-trafficking, including facilitating the return and reintegration of trafficked victims from countries in the Greater Mekong Sub-region, supporting bilateral agreements between Vietnam and Cambodia to combat trafficking, developing victim identification guidelines, and establishing networks of support for trafficked persons. It also outlines 2 proposals submitted to donors on building counter-trafficking capacity and addressing human trafficking.
The document is a baseline study from Vietnam that examines violence, exploitation, abuse and discrimination affecting women and children in migration. It provides an overview of Vietnam, including demographic statistics and key facts. It then analyzes the situation in Vietnam across four areas: violence, exploitation, abuse and discrimination in migration. For each area, it describes the problem, reviews the legal framework and government policies, examines implementation challenges, and discusses the role of non-state actors before concluding with recommendations. The study finds that while Vietnam has strong laws and policies to protect rights, implementation and enforcement remain weak, resulting in ongoing challenges like violence and exploitation that disproportionately impact women and children.
This document summarizes a study that estimates the return to a 4-year university education in Vietnam using different econometric models. The study uses data from Vietnam's household living standards survey. It finds that the return to university education is approximately 17% based on an instrumental variables model and 17.8% based on ordinary least squares and treatment effect models. The return to higher education in Vietnam has significantly increased since economic reforms in the late 1980s. The document reviews different methods for estimating returns to education and their limitations, such as ability bias and weak instruments.
The document provides information about applying for a Canadian work permit from Vietnam. It outlines the required documents, which include application forms, passport, photos, and proof of employment in Canada. It also lists the non-refundable processing fee of $150 CAD or $140 USD. Supporting documents that must be submitted include proof of identity, qualifications for the job, language ability, and financial support for accompanying family members. The processing times are listed as 60 working days from October to February and 120 working days from March to September. The document emphasizes that applications must follow the instructions and include sufficient documentation or they may be refused.
The document summarizes a scoping review of 27 studies that validated or used 10 measures of depression in Vietnamese populations. The studies showed variation in validation methods, with an emphasis on criterion validity and reliability. Content and construct validity need more evaluation to ensure validity across diverse cultural contexts like Vietnam. For primary care use, measures must be further evaluated for brevity and ease of use. To identify appropriate measures, assessment must balance standard validity testing with enhanced testing of cultural appropriateness, language, gender, and acceptability for primary care.
This document summarizes a working paper that estimates the labour market returns to higher education in Vietnam using data from the Vietnam Household Living Standards Survey. The paper employs ordinary least squares, instrumental variables, and treatment effect models to estimate the return to a four-year university education in Vietnam in 2008. The estimates reveal that the return to university education is approximately 17% annually based on the IV model and 17.8% based on the OLS and treatment effect models. This indicates that the bias from using OLS is small in the context of Vietnam. The estimated return has increased significantly since economic reforms began in Vietnam in the late 1980s.
This document summarizes a study on migrants' vulnerability to malaria and the epidemiology of artemisinin-resistant malaria in Binh Phuoc Province, Vietnam. The study included a knowledge, attitudes and practices survey of over 2,000 migrants and local residents in 6 communes, as well as an in-depth study of 240 migrant workers in Dak O Commune. The results showed high levels of mobility among respondents, with many working in forested border areas where malaria transmission occurs. Access to healthcare and malaria prevention services was often limited for migrant groups. Knowledge of malaria was variable, with room for improvement in prevention practices. The findings point to migrants being more vulnerable to malaria due to mobility patterns, limited access to services
The International Organization for Migration (IOM) is seeking a consultant to develop a Safe Migration Index (SMI) to measure vulnerability and resilience to human trafficking in Vietnam. The SMI will assess risk and protective factors at the individual, household, and community levels in four target provinces. The consultant will conduct a literature review, validate risk/protective factors with stakeholders, develop and pilot a questionnaire and scoring methodology, conduct a baseline study, and produce reports analyzing patterns and recommending interventions. The six-month consultancy will commence in September 2022, involving desk research, tool development, a pilot study, baseline data collection, and final reporting by January 2023. Candidates should have research and writing skills along with experience in
This document discusses international violence against women and U.S. response and policy issues. It provides context on how the international community has increasingly recognized violence against women as a human rights issue in recent decades. It then summarizes U.S. efforts to address violence against women, which have generally focused on specific types of violence through programs rather than adopting a comprehensive approach or coordinating across agencies. The document also outlines policy considerations for Congress related to improving and coordinating U.S. efforts to combat violence against women globally.
The study assesses a planned relocation project in Hoa Binh Province, Vietnam that aims to relocate 1,200 households from two communes facing high natural disaster risks. It explored household decision-making processes and relocation outcomes through surveys with 406 households. Key findings include:
1) Disaster experience is high but relocation decisions consider livelihood impacts and social factors, not just risk reduction.
2) Uncertainty around support, timing, and conditions affects whether households choose to relocate.
3) Infrastructure improvements and social networks at relocation sites encourage movement, while participation in planning was limited.
This document summarizes a thesis that examines the success factors of the Toronto Region Immigrant Employment Council (TRIEC). The thesis finds that TRIEC achieved success through six key factors: highly professional operational practices, an action-oriented approach, strong leadership from business, community and municipal leaders, a focus on employers, effective communication strategies, and operating in a unique contextual environment of the Toronto region. When compared to other Immigrant Employment Councils across Canada, TRIEC stood out for having the most vocal leadership on immigrant integration issues, openly sharing its results and finances, and bringing together three levels of government to discuss immigration. The study aims to identify lessons that could help other councils improve immigrant employment outcomes.
This document provides an overview of IOM's approach and institutional engagement on migration, environment and climate change. It acknowledges that human mobility is impacted by environmental and climatic factors and that migration also impacts the environment. IOM aims to facilitate migration as an adaptation strategy, ensure assistance for forced migration, and minimize unmanaged migration. The organization advocates for integrating human mobility considerations into policies on climate, development, disaster risk reduction and more.
IOM provided a summary of its response to the Libyan crisis after one month. Over 380,000 migrants fled Libya, including over 210,000 third country nationals. IOM has assisted the return of over 78,000 people through charter flights and other means. While many Egyptians and Tunisians returned early in the crisis, IOM is now focusing on evacuating sub-Saharan Africans and others still stranded, as the situation in Libya remains volatile and unpredictable. IOM continues operations across North Africa and beyond to safely return migrants and stands ready to support reintegration in home countries.
UN Women commissioned a report to assess the extent to which social protection policies in South-East Asia integrate a gender lens. The report reviewed policies in 9 countries and found that while some programs target women, national systems generally do not take a gender-responsive approach. Specific groups of women, such as migrant women and female-headed households, face particular vulnerabilities that are often ignored. The report identifies ways for UN Women to promote gender-responsive social protection, including learning from innovative regional programs and good practices from other developing areas.
Este documento presenta un manual sobre políticas públicas de migración laboral. El manual contiene siete módulos que cubren temas como el marco político, legal e institucional para la migración laboral, la recolección de datos y análisis, el reclutamiento de trabajadores migrantes, el desarrollo de recursos humanos y el mercado laboral externo, y los servicios de apoyo para migrantes. El objetivo del manual es servir como una guía práctica para los responsables de políticas públicas en América Latina a fin
How to Fix the Import Error in the Odoo 17Celine George
An import error occurs when a program fails to import a module or library, disrupting its execution. In languages like Python, this issue arises when the specified module cannot be found or accessed, hindering the program's functionality. Resolving import errors is crucial for maintaining smooth software operation and uninterrupted development processes.
A review of the growth of the Israel Genealogy Research Association Database Collection for the last 12 months. Our collection is now passed the 3 million mark and still growing. See which archives have contributed the most. See the different types of records we have, and which years have had records added. You can also see what we have for the future.
ISO/IEC 27001, ISO/IEC 42001, and GDPR: Best Practices for Implementation and...PECB
Denis is a dynamic and results-driven Chief Information Officer (CIO) with a distinguished career spanning information systems analysis and technical project management. With a proven track record of spearheading the design and delivery of cutting-edge Information Management solutions, he has consistently elevated business operations, streamlined reporting functions, and maximized process efficiency.
Certified as an ISO/IEC 27001: Information Security Management Systems (ISMS) Lead Implementer, Data Protection Officer, and Cyber Risks Analyst, Denis brings a heightened focus on data security, privacy, and cyber resilience to every endeavor.
His expertise extends across a diverse spectrum of reporting, database, and web development applications, underpinned by an exceptional grasp of data storage and virtualization technologies. His proficiency in application testing, database administration, and data cleansing ensures seamless execution of complex projects.
What sets Denis apart is his comprehensive understanding of Business and Systems Analysis technologies, honed through involvement in all phases of the Software Development Lifecycle (SDLC). From meticulous requirements gathering to precise analysis, innovative design, rigorous development, thorough testing, and successful implementation, he has consistently delivered exceptional results.
Throughout his career, he has taken on multifaceted roles, from leading technical project management teams to owning solutions that drive operational excellence. His conscientious and proactive approach is unwavering, whether he is working independently or collaboratively within a team. His ability to connect with colleagues on a personal level underscores his commitment to fostering a harmonious and productive workplace environment.
Date: May 29, 2024
Tags: Information Security, ISO/IEC 27001, ISO/IEC 42001, Artificial Intelligence, GDPR
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How to Add Chatter in the odoo 17 ERP ModuleCeline George
In Odoo, the chatter is like a chat tool that helps you work together on records. You can leave notes and track things, making it easier to talk with your team and partners. Inside chatter, all communication history, activity, and changes will be displayed.
The simplified electron and muon model, Oscillating Spacetime: The Foundation...RitikBhardwaj56
Discover the Simplified Electron and Muon Model: A New Wave-Based Approach to Understanding Particles delves into a groundbreaking theory that presents electrons and muons as rotating soliton waves within oscillating spacetime. Geared towards students, researchers, and science buffs, this book breaks down complex ideas into simple explanations. It covers topics such as electron waves, temporal dynamics, and the implications of this model on particle physics. With clear illustrations and easy-to-follow explanations, readers will gain a new outlook on the universe's fundamental nature.
How to Build a Module in Odoo 17 Using the Scaffold MethodCeline George
Odoo provides an option for creating a module by using a single line command. By using this command the user can make a whole structure of a module. It is very easy for a beginner to make a module. There is no need to make each file manually. This slide will show how to create a module using the scaffold method.
Exploiting Artificial Intelligence for Empowering Researchers and Faculty, In...Dr. Vinod Kumar Kanvaria
Exploiting Artificial Intelligence for Empowering Researchers and Faculty,
International FDP on Fundamentals of Research in Social Sciences
at Integral University, Lucknow, 06.06.2024
By Dr. Vinod Kumar Kanvaria
How to Make a Field Mandatory in Odoo 17Celine George
In Odoo, making a field required can be done through both Python code and XML views. When you set the required attribute to True in Python code, it makes the field required across all views where it's used. Conversely, when you set the required attribute in XML views, it makes the field required only in the context of that particular view.
বাংলাদেশের অর্থনৈতিক সমীক্ষা ২০২৪ [Bangladesh Economic Review 2024 Bangla.pdf] কম্পিউটার , ট্যাব ও স্মার্ট ফোন ভার্সন সহ সম্পূর্ণ বাংলা ই-বুক বা pdf বই " সুচিপত্র ...বুকমার্ক মেনু 🔖 ও হাইপার লিংক মেনু 📝👆 যুক্ত ..
আমাদের সবার জন্য খুব খুব গুরুত্বপূর্ণ একটি বই ..বিসিএস, ব্যাংক, ইউনিভার্সিটি ভর্তি ও যে কোন প্রতিযোগিতা মূলক পরীক্ষার জন্য এর খুব ইম্পরট্যান্ট একটি বিষয় ...তাছাড়া বাংলাদেশের সাম্প্রতিক যে কোন ডাটা বা তথ্য এই বইতে পাবেন ...
তাই একজন নাগরিক হিসাবে এই তথ্য গুলো আপনার জানা প্রয়োজন ...।
বিসিএস ও ব্যাংক এর লিখিত পরীক্ষা ...+এছাড়া মাধ্যমিক ও উচ্চমাধ্যমিকের স্টুডেন্টদের জন্য অনেক কাজে আসবে ...
LAND USE LAND COVER AND NDVI OF MIRZAPUR DISTRICT, UPRAHUL
This Dissertation explores the particular circumstances of Mirzapur, a region located in the
core of India. Mirzapur, with its varied terrains and abundant biodiversity, offers an optimal
environment for investigating the changes in vegetation cover dynamics. Our study utilizes
advanced technologies such as GIS (Geographic Information Systems) and Remote sensing to
analyze the transformations that have taken place over the course of a decade.
The complex relationship between human activities and the environment has been the focus
of extensive research and worry. As the global community grapples with swift urbanization,
population expansion, and economic progress, the effects on natural ecosystems are becoming
more evident. A crucial element of this impact is the alteration of vegetation cover, which plays a
significant role in maintaining the ecological equilibrium of our planet.Land serves as the foundation for all human activities and provides the necessary materials for
these activities. As the most crucial natural resource, its utilization by humans results in different
'Land uses,' which are determined by both human activities and the physical characteristics of the
land.
The utilization of land is impacted by human needs and environmental factors. In countries
like India, rapid population growth and the emphasis on extensive resource exploitation can lead
to significant land degradation, adversely affecting the region's land cover.
Therefore, human intervention has significantly influenced land use patterns over many
centuries, evolving its structure over time and space. In the present era, these changes have
accelerated due to factors such as agriculture and urbanization. Information regarding land use and
cover is essential for various planning and management tasks related to the Earth's surface,
providing crucial environmental data for scientific, resource management, policy purposes, and
diverse human activities.
Accurate understanding of land use and cover is imperative for the development planning
of any area. Consequently, a wide range of professionals, including earth system scientists, land
and water managers, and urban planners, are interested in obtaining data on land use and cover
changes, conversion trends, and other related patterns. The spatial dimensions of land use and
cover support policymakers and scientists in making well-informed decisions, as alterations in
these patterns indicate shifts in economic and social conditions. Monitoring such changes with the
help of Advanced technologies like Remote Sensing and Geographic Information Systems is
crucial for coordinated efforts across different administrative levels. Advanced technologies like
Remote Sensing and Geographic Information Systems
9
Changes in vegetation cover refer to variations in the distribution, composition, and overall
structure of plant communities across different temporal and spatial scales. These changes can
occur natural.
2. What is included in the counter-trafficking directory ?
This directory gathers key facts and figures about human trafficking in different countries, which you can
check before taking up your duties in the country you have newly been appointed to. It also contains useful
contacts to refer the victim or potential victim you might identify according to his/her profile: s/he can be
in need of immediate protection, need further counselling, wish to stay in the country of destination, or
ask to return back to his/her home country. According to the option s/he chooses, s/he might be entitled
to different assistance schemes.
Who should use the counter-trafficking directory ?
This tool has been designed to help embassies and consulates staff in referring victims and potential vic‑
tims of trafficking, and can be provided as a handy tool after the staff has been trained on how to identify
a victim of trafficking. However, it can also be used by a large range of practitioners working with victims
of trafficking, as it aims to facilitate transnational referrals.
How to use the counter-trafficking directory ?
The factsheets have been classified by continent. Each factsheet is one-page sized in order to provide se‑
lected information. You should contact national stakeholders in charge of counter-trafficking if you need
more specific/updated information. You can click on the country you want to learn about on the “index”
page to access the country’s page directly.
3. AFRICA
Algeria ‑ 5
Benin ‑ 6
Egypt ‑ 7
Morocco ‑ 8
Nigeria ‑ 9
Tunisia ‑ 10
Zimbabwe ‑ 11
AMERICA
Argentina ‑ 13
Brazil ‑ 14
Colombia ‑ 15
Costa Rica ‑ 16
Ecuador ‑ 17
Peru ‑ 18
United States of America ‑ 19
ASIA-OCEANIA
China ‑ 21
Indonesia ‑ 22
Japan ‑ 23
Kuwait ‑ 24
Pakistan ‑ 25
Republic of Korea ‑ 26
Republic of Palau ‑ 27
Republic of the Marshall Islands
(RMI) ‑ 28
Thailand ‑ 29
The Federated States of Micronesia
(FSM) ‑ 30
The Philippines ‑ 31
Turkmenistan ‑ 32
Uzbekistan ‑ 33
Vietnam ‑ 34
EUROPE
Albania ‑ 36
Austria ‑ 37
Belarus ‑ 38
Belgium ‑ 39
Bulgaria ‑ 40
Croatia ‑ 41
Denmark ‑ 42
Finland ‑ 43
France ‑ 44
Germany ‑ 45
Greece ‑ 46
Italy ‑ 47
Latvia ‑ 48
Macedonia ‑ 49
Moldova ‑ 50
Poland ‑ 51
Portugal ‑ 52
Romania ‑ 53
Russia ‑ 54
Slovak Republic ‑ 55
Spain ‑ 56
Switzerland ‑ 57
The Netherlands ‑ 58
Ukraine ‑ 59
United Kingdom ‑ 60
INDEX
5. 5
1 victim officially identified in 2015
Transit country for Sub-Saharan African people en route to
neighboring countries or Europe
Main types of exploitation: forced labour (men and women),
sexual exploitation (men)
No governmental protective services
Assistance mainly provided by NGOs and International
organizations
Main trends and figures
Contact for Assisted
Voluntary Return
National Emergency
Hotline
Assistance available and Main stakeholders involved
Algeria
IOM Algeria :
Email : scraggs@iom.int
NADA Algeria :
Phone : +213 (0) 23 7985
S.O.S. Femmes En Detresse :
Website : http:/
/sosfemmesendetresse.org
Email : sosfemmes@hotmail.com
3033
(0) 21926076
6. 6
Estimated total number of VoTs identified : 131 potentials victims
identified in 2015
Main types of exploitation : sexual exploitation and domestic
servitude
Source country for : Kuwait, Dubaï, Nigeria, Gabon, Equatorial
Guinea
Destination country for : Filipino, Moroccan and Togolese
Plan International Bénin provides psychological support
Phone : +229 21 30 39 51 / +229 21 30 64 97
Address : Carre 647, Rue 395 Aupiais -
Area : CadjehounBoite Postale : 08 BP 699 -
Email : benin.co@plan-international.org
UNICEF
Address : Avenue CENSAD - Face à Bénin Marina Hotel
Phone : 21.30.02.66/21.30.09.42
01 B.P. 2289 Recette Principale Cotonou
Email : cotonou@unicef.org
Main trends and figures Contact for Assisted
Voluntary Return
Assistance available and Main stakeholders involved
Benin
IOM Benin :
Address : Lot 1 Patte d’Oie
(enceinte UNHCR)
Phone : +229 6602 1443
Email : nafagnon@iom.int
Terre des Hommes : care and protection activities
Phone : (+229) 21 30 72 92
Esam : protection and children reintegration
Etoile Rouge :
Phone : +229 00229 95 01 01 95 / 21 30 52 37
Email : info@esamsolidarity.org
Office Central de Protection des Mineurs et de la Répres‑
sion de la Traite des Etres Humains
National Emergency
Hotline Not available
7. 7
More than 500 potential victims identified in 2015
Main types of exploitation :
sexual exploitation, forced labour, begging
A source country for : Sri-Lanka and neighboring countries
A destination country for : Syrian refugees, people from South
and Southeast Asia and East Africa
Shelter for female and child trafficking victims
Medical recovery unit for trafficking victims at a Cairo hospital
(operated by the Ministry of Health with international assistance)
Department for Crime Prevention and Prevention of Criminality
at the Ministry of the Interior
Main trends and figures
Contact for Assisted
Voluntary Return
National Emergency
Hotline
Assistance available and Main stakeholders involved
Egypt
IOM Egypt :
Email : avrregypt@iom.int
National Counter for Trafficking Hotline
(National Council for Childhood
& Motherhood) :
16021
8. 8
Main types of exploitation: sexual exploitation, forced labour,
domestic servitude
Main countries of origin: Ivory Coast, Democratic Republic
of the Congo, Senegal, Nigeria, and Cameroon, Indonesia
and the Philippines
Source country for Europe and the Middle-East
Assistance provided by IOM, with referral to specialized centers :
the ‘Ain Ghazal’center in the far East region of Oriental,
or the Fez-based center “Initiative pour la Protection des Femmes”.
Main trends and figures
Contact for Assisted
Voluntary Return
Assistance available and Main stakeholders involved
Morocco
IOM Morocco :
Address : 11, rue Aït Ourir, « Pinède »,
Souissi, Rabat - Maroc
Phone : +212 (0)5 37 65 28 81
Email : iomrabat@iom.int
National Emergency
Hotline
Not available
9. 9
943 victims identified in 2015
Main types of exploitation: forced labour and sexual exploitation
A source country for Central and West African countries, Middle
East and Central Asia, Czech Republic, Italy and other European
countries
Assistance provided by the National Agency for the Prohibition
of Trafficking in Persons and Other Related Matters (NAPTIP)
Longer-term assistance provided at two shelters
(operated by the Ministry of Women’s Affairs and NGOs)
Additional medical treatment provided in hospitals through
agreement with NAPTIP
Main trends and figures
Contact for Assisted
Voluntary Return
National Emergency
Hotline
Assistance available and Main stakeholders involved
Nigeria
IOM Nigeria :
Lagos office :
Ms. Winnie Aideyan
Phone : + 234-8022-249-773
Abuja office :
Ms. Sunday Omoyeni
Phone : + 234-8140-671-127
Not available
10. 10
6 victims identified in 2015
Types of exploitation in Tunisia : domestic servitude, forced labour
Types of exploitation abroad : sexual exploitation, forced labour
Main countries of origin : Côte d’Ivoire, Mali, Senegal
Assistance for foreign victims in Tunisia :
Caritas Tunisia, Terre d’Asile Tunisia
Assistance for victims/ single mothers :
Association AMAL and association Beity
Ministry of Social Affairs (and for Tunisian victims abroad :
Office des Tunisiens à l’Etranger - OTE)
Main trends and figures
Contact for Assisted
Voluntary Return
National Emergency
Hotline
Assistance available and Main stakeholders involved
Tunisia
IOM Tunisia :
Mrs. Hélène Le Goff (CT Project Manager)
Ms. Imen Naija (CT Project Assistant)
Address : 6 passage du Lac le Bourget,
Berges du Lac, 1053 – Tunis
Phone : (+216) 71. 860. 312 /
(+216) 71. 961. 313
Email : CTTunis@iom.int
Planned for 2017 through the National
Commission against Trafficking
11. 11
A source, transit and destination country
A source country for South Africa, Botswana,
Europe and the Middle East
Main types of exploitation: forced labour,
domestic servitude and sexual exploitation
Repatriation assistance, medical treatment, psycho-social support
and reintegration support provided to Zimbabwean victims
exploited abroad
Anti-Trafficking Inter-Ministerial Committee
Coalition of Parliamentarians Against Trafficking
UN agencies – UNFPA, UN Women, ILO, UNICEF, UNCG, IOM
Civil Society Organizations – Musasa Project, Development Practi‑
tioners Network, YWCA, etc.
Main trends and figures
Contact for Assisted
Voluntary Return
Assistance available and Main stakeholders involved
Zimbabwe
IOM Zimbabwe:
Address :
4 Duthie Road, Alexandra Park,
Harare
Phone : +263 702485
Website : www.zimbabwe.iom.int.
National Emergency
Hotline
Not available
13. 13
Estimated total number of VoTs identified :
2110* : 849 victims of forced labour (40%), 1261 victims of sexual
exploitation (60%)
Breakdown adult/children VoTs :
1997 adults (95%), 113 minors (5%)
Main countries of origin :
Bolivia, Paraguay, Dominican Republic, Peru
*source - National Program for Rescue. This number may include the total
number of individuals encountered during anti-trafficking law enforcement raids,
some of whom were likely in exploitative labour without force, fraud, or coercion.
Psychological, medical, social and legal assistance, emergency
shelters and security, provided by the National Program for
Rescue and Support to VoTs, until the victim’s statement.
Upon that moment, the Ministry of Social Development con‑
tinues with the assistance. Each province has also a designated
government entity responsible for coordinating victim protec‑
tion at the local level.
Main trends and figures
Contact for Assisted
Voluntary Return
National Emergency
Hotline
Assistance available and Main stakeholders involved
Argentina
IOM Argentina :
Address : Callao 1046, Buenos Aires
Phone : +5411-48151035
Website : http:/
/www.argentina.iom.int/co/
145
14. 14
In 2015, anti-trafficking offices reported 987 sex trafficking
and 876 labour trafficking victims identified. Ministry of Labour
mobile inspection units identified 1,010 labourers in situations of
forced labour.
Brazil is a source, transit, and destination country for sexual ex‑
ploitation and forced labour. Brazilian women and children, and
girls from other countries in the region, are exploited in domestic
servitude with approximately 213,000 children employed as
domestic workers in Brazil.
Women and children from other parts of South America, and
Brazilian women, children and transgender are exploited within
the country in sex trafficking. Brazilians are also exploited in sex
trafficking abroad, especially in Western Europe and China.
Ministry of Justice at federal level; Local counter-trafficking
committees at state level (nucleos); civil society networks
Main trends and figures
Contact for Assisted
Voluntary Return
National Emergency
Hotline
Assistance available and Main stakeholders involved
Brazil
IOM Brazil :
Email : avrrbrasil@iom.int
Toll free hotline (human rights abuses) :
Toll free hotline (assistance for women) :
100
180
15. 15
67 victims of trafficking have been officially identified in 2015
Main type of exploitation : sexual exploitation
Direct and indirect assistance coordinated by the Anti-trafficking
Operating Center (COAT) managed by the Ministry of Interior :
http:/
/tratadepersonas.mininterior.gov.co/
Direct assistance includes :
return assistance, safe and decent accommodation, medical assis‑
tance, access to psychological and legal counselling and assistance.
Indirect assistance includes :
projects and programmes allowing victims to access education,
vocational training, funding for income-generating projects,
long-term medical, psychological, and legal assistance.
Main trends and figures
Contact for Assisted
Voluntary Return
National Emergency
Hotline
Assistance available and Main stakeholders involved
Colombia
- Ministry of Foreign affairs,
through consulates in countries of destination
- Ministry of Interior,
through the Anti-trafficking Operating Center
(COAT)
Email : coordinacioncoat@mininterior.gov.co
- IOM Colombia
Email : calopez@iom.int
018000522020
16. 16
3 victims officially identified by the government in 2015
Origin, transit and destination country
Main countries of origin :
- Women from Nicaragua, Dominican Republic,
and other Latin American countries
- Men from Central America and Asian countries
Main types of exploitation : sexual exploitation and forced labour
Comprehensive assistance services : medical and psychological
assistance, safe housing and immigration protection
Main trends and figures
Contact for Assisted
Voluntary Return
National Emergency
Hotline
Assistance available and Main stakeholders involved
Costa Rica
IOM Costa Rica :
Address : San José, La California,
150 meters west of the Embassy
of Nicaragua
Phone : (506) 2212-5328
Website : www.costarica.iom.int
Email : mmatarrita@iom.int
911
- Gestión de Tráfico Ilícito de Migrantes y Trata de Personas :
(506) 2299-8037 / (506) 2299-8043
- Dirección Policía Profesional de Migración : (506) 2299-8023
- Fiscalía Adjunta contra la Trata de Personas y Tráfico Ilícito de Migrantes :
(506) 2295-3901 / (506) 2295-3764
- Instituto Nacional de las Mujeres : (506) 8833-5969
- Patronato Nacional de la Infancia : (506) 2523-0891 / (506) 2222-8905
- Fundación Rahab : (506) 2248-2095
17. 17
72 victims identified in 2015
Main types of exploitation : forced begging, sexual exploitation,
domestic servitude, forced labour.
Main countries of origin : Colombia, Peru, Dominican Republic,
Venezuela, Haiti and Cuba
Assistance available through NGO’s, and in particular through :
Alas de Colibrí
Phone : (593) 2 2 536 849
Email : info@fundacionalasdecolibri.org
Address : Ramón Valarezo N57- 53 y Pedro Freile, Quito
Website : http:/
/www.fundacionalasdecolibri.org/
National Police Crime Unit Against Trafficking in Persons and
Smuggling of Migrants
System of Protection and Assistance to Victims, Witnesses
and other Participants (SPAVT, in Spanish)
Main trends and figures
Contact for Assisted
Voluntary Return
National Emergency
Hotline
Assistance available and Main stakeholders involved
Ecuador
- IOM Ecuador :
Address : Av. Mariana de Jesús OE7-02
y Nuño Valderrama.
Phone : +593 2 3934400
Website : http:/
/www.oim.org.ec/
1800 DELITO (335426)
911
To provide Information :
Emergency:
18. 18
699 potential trafficking victims identified by the Police in 2015
Main types of exploitation : forced labour and sexual exploitation
Trafficking trends in Peru available on :
http:/
/portal.mpfn.gob.pe/boletininformativo/infotratadepersonas
Assistance available through:
- Centro de Atención Legal y Psicosocial (CALP)
Capital Humano y Social Alternativo
Phone : (51-1) 446-5834 / 242-3625
Address : Calle Piura 750, Miraflores. Lima – Perú
- Unidad Central Protección a Víctimas y Testigos : +51 208-5555
-Ministerio de Justicia y derechos Humanos : +51 204-8020
- Ministerio del Interior : +51 518-0000
- Ministerio de la Mujer y Poblaciones Vulnerables : 6261600
- Ministerio Público – Fiscalía Especializada en Trata : +51 429-2877
Main trends and figures
Contact for Assisted
Voluntary Return
National Emergency
Hotline
Assistance available and Main stakeholders involved
Peru
IOM Peru :
Address : Calle Miguel
Seminario 320
piso 14 San Isidro
Phone : (511) 6330000
- Line :
option 1
1818
19. 19
1,726 victims identified in 2015
Main types of exploitation : sexual exploitation and forced labour
A source, transit and destination country
(mainly for the citizens of Mexico and the Philippines)
Anti-Trafficking Coordination Team (ACTeam) : NGOs, Department
of Health and Human Services (HHS)
Department of Justice (DOJ), Department of Homeland Security
(DHS), and Department of Labor (DOL)
Nationwide network of 153 NGOs receiving financial support
from HHS
Main trends and figures
Contact for Assisted
Voluntary Return
National Emergency
Hotline
Assistance available and Main stakeholders involved
United States of America
IOM USA :
Email : amahoney@iom.int
Email : edarlington@iom.int
“National Human Trafficking Resource
Center” National Hotline :
( http:/
/traffickingresourcecenter.org/ )
1-888-3737-888
21. 21
65 victims identified in 2015
Main types of exploitation : forced labour, sexual exploitation,
forced begging
Source country for : Angola
Destination country for : Cambodia, Myanmar, Vietnam, Laos,
Mongolia, and the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea
Alleged assistance provided to victims through governmental
shelters and access to vocational trainings and employment
services
Financial compensation and prosecution of traffickers allegedly
possible through civil and criminal lawsuits
Main trends and figures
Contact for Assisted
Voluntary Return
National Emergency
Hotline
Assistance available and Main stakeholders involved
China
IOM China :
Email : rfairbrother@iom.int
Phone : +86 10 5979 9695
The police rapid reaction number : 120
22. 22
In 2015 IOM Indonesia has identified 1,322 VoTs, majority male
fishermen originating from Myanmar, Cambodia and Laos but
also cases of forced labour, mainly domestic workers who
worked internally in Indonesia and/or overseas and victims of
sexual exploitation (including 2 children).
Labour exploitation, domestic servitude and sexual exploitation
According to IOM Indonesia CT database, from January to De‑
cember 2015, 9 children and 1,313 adults have been identified.
Main countries of origin :
Myanmar, Cambodia, Thailand and Laos (male fishermen)
Cambodia (domestic worker), Kazakhstan (sexual exploitation)
Shelters (Ministry of Social Affairs, Ministry of Women Empower‑
ment and Child Protection, faith based organizations and NGOs)
Medical and psycho social rehabilitation (IOM, Ministry of Health,
Ministry of Social Affairs)
Return and reintegration (IOM, BNP2TKI, Ministry of Foreign Affairs,
Ministry of Social Affairs, local governments)
Main trends and figures
Assistance available and Main stakeholders involved
Indonesia
National
Emergency Hotline
Ministry of Women Empowerment and
Child Protection :
www.kemenpppa.go.id
(click Form Pengaduan Masyarakat)
Hotline : +62 8123119001
+62 82125751234 (24 hours)
National Board for Placement and Protection
of Indonesian Overseas Workers (BNP2TKI)
Hotline : 0800 1000 (toll free, 24 hours)
Email : halotki@bnp2tki.go.id / SMS : 7266
Ministry of Foreign Affairs
http:/
/perlindungan.kemlu.go.id/portal/
home/pengaduan_kasus
Hotline : +62 21 3813186 (working hours)
Ministry of Social Affairs
Hotline : +62 82111300911 (24 hours)
Contact for
Assisted
Voluntary Return
IOM Indonesia :
Address:SampoernaStrategicSquare,
NorthTower12AFloor,Jl.Jend.SudirmanKav
45-46Jakarta
Email:CounterTraffickinginIndonesia@iom.int
23. 23
Rescue operations led by the Police and the Immigration Bureau
Emergency Temporary Shelter and Basic Services provided by
Japan Women’s Consulting Centers (public shelters)
Assistance available through NGOs and Private Shelters :
HELP and Saalaa House of Women
Legal assistance provided by volunteer lawyers groups
Japan Network Against Trafficking in Persons
(JNATIP) https:/
/www.facebook.com/jnatip
Contact for Assisted
Voluntary Return
National Emergency
Hotline
Assistance available and Main stakeholders involved
Japan
IOM Japan :
Send message via :
http:/
/www.iomjapan.org/infolib
/infomation_form.html
Phone :+81 (0)3 (3595) 2487
- Police :
- NGO Helplines :
- Tokyo Regional Immigration Bureau:
110
03-3368-8855
03-5796-7112
045-914-7008
Main trends and figures
54 victims identified in 2015 (49 adult/5 children)
Main types of exploitation : sexual exploitation and forced labour
Main countries of origin : South-East Asia (the Philippines, Thailand)
24. 24
Main types of exploitation : forced labour, domestic servitude
and sexual exploitation
Destination country for : South and Southeast Asian countries,
Egypt, the Middle East, Ethiopia, Uganda, and Madagascar
Medical and psychological care as well as assistance with
repatriation provided at governmental shelter for runaway
domestic workers
Financial compensation of the victims and prosecution of
traffickers allegedly possible through civil and criminal lawsuits
Main trends and figures
Contact for Assisted
Voluntary Return
Assistance available and Main stakeholders involved
Kuwait
IOM Kuwait :
Email : etarkhan@iom.int
National Emergency
Hotline
Not available
25. 25
15,153 victims identified in 2015
Main types of exploitation : forced labour and sexual exploitation
A source country for : Iran and Afghanistan
Destination country for : Afghanistan, Bangladesh, Sri Lanka,
China, Russia, Nepal, Iran, Uzbekistan, Azerbaijan and Myanmar
Internal trafficking of Pakistanis victims is significant
Assistance to victims provided mainly by NGOs
Main trends and figures
Contact for Assisted
Voluntary Return
Assistance available and Main stakeholders involved
Pakistan
IOM Pakistan :
Address : House # 09, Street 06,
F-6/3 Islamabad.
Phone : + 92 51 230 7841 - 57 (Ext 205)
Fax : + 92 51 230 7859
National Emergency
Hotline
Not available
26. 26
Main types of exploitation : forced labour and sexual exploitation
Main countries of origin : China, Democratic People’s Republic of
Korea, the Philippines, Vietnam, Indonesia, and other countries in
Asia, the Middle East, and South America
Assistance through public interest lawyer’s group and shelters/
counselling center for migrant women
Main trends and figures
Contact for Assisted
Voluntary Return
National Emergency
Hotline
Assistance available and Main stakeholders involved
Republic of Korea
IOM Korea :
Ms. Seonyoung LEE ( Operation Assistant )
Phone : +82-70-4820-2751
Center for women’s hotline :
+82-1366 (24/365)
27. 27
Main coutries of origin : The Philippines, Bangladesh,
Nepal, China, Korea
Main types of exploitation: forced labour, domestic servitude
and debt bondage, sexual exploitation
Assistance available through :
- IOM Palau
- Palau Red Cross
Main trends and figures
Contact for Assisted
Voluntary Return
Assistance available and Main stakeholders involved
Republic of Palau
IOM Palau :
Address : Suite 210 PDC Bldg Palau
Koror, Palau 96940
Phone : 680 778 9186
IOM RMI :
Pohnpei Head Office
Address : Suite 2G PohnUmpomp Building,
PohnUmpomp Place, Nett Municipality
Pohnpei, 96941
Federated States of Micronesia
Email : micronesiaenquiries@iom.int
Phone : (691) 320-8735.
National Emergency
Hotline
Not available
28. 28
Main types of exploitation : sexual exploitation and forced labour
Main countries of origin : RMI, China
Shelter, legal and humanitarian assistance provided through
the Micronesian Legal Services Corporation and NGOs
such as Women United Together, Youth to Youth in Health,
Marshal Islands Red Cross Society, Humanity First,
or the Salvation Army
Ministry of Justice :
Transnational Crime Unit : 692 625 3233
Division of Immigration : 692 625 8633
Attorney General’s Office Criminal Division : 692 625 3244
Main trends and figures
Contact for Assisted
Voluntary Return
Assistance available and Main stakeholders involved
Republic of the Marshall Islands (RMI)
IOM RMI :
Pohnpei Head Office,
Address : Suite 2G PohnUmpomp Building,
PohnUmpomp Place, Nett Municipality,
Pohnpei, 96941 -
Federated States of Micronesia
Phone : (691) 320-8735
Majuro Sub Office,
Address : 2nd Floor Kabkondikdik
/ AC Apartments
Delap, Majuro
MH, 96960 -
Republic of the Marshall Islands
Email : micronesiaenquiries@iom.int
Phone : (692) 625-4705
National Emergency
Hotline Not available
29. 29
720 victims identified in 2015
Main types of exploitation: sexual exploitation and forced labour
A source country for: North America, Europe, Africa, Asia and the
Middle East
A destination country for: Myanmar, Laos, and Cambodia
Assistance provided at regional trafficking shelters
(managed by the Ministry of Social Development and
Human Security)
Main trends and figures
Contact for Assisted
Voluntary Return
National Emergency
Hotline
Assistance available and Main stakeholders involved
Thailand
IOM Thailand :
Poonchailai Siriwattana,
Project Assistant, Counter Trafficking Unit
Email : psiriwattana@iom.int
National Hotline :
1300
30. 30
The Federated States of Micronesia (FSM)
Main types of exploitation : sexual exploitation,
domestic servitude, and forced labour
(mainly in the hospitality and construction industries)
Main countries of origin : the Philippines, FSM, South-East Asia
Assistance available through :
- IOM
- Department of Education
- Department of Health and Social Affairs
- Every Home for Christ fellowship (faith based organization)
- Women’s Council
- Attorney General Offices (FSM individual States)
Main trends and figures
Contact for Assisted
Voluntary Return
National Emergency
Hotline
Assistance available and Main stakeholders involved
IOM FSM :
Address : Suite 2G PohnUmpomp Building,
PohnUmpomp Place, Nett Municipality
Pohnpei, 96941
Email : micronesiaenquiries@iom.int
Phone : (691) 320-8735.
National Police HT Hotline :
(691) 923 - 2000
31. 31
In 2016, there were 38 reported trafficking cases of Filipinos in 26
territories commonly for forced labour and sexual exploitation.
From 2013 to 2016, 543 trafficked persons were assisted through
the recovery and reintegration program of the department of Social
Welfare and Development (DSWD).
Source country for : Vietnam, Malaysia, Palau, Timor Leste, Republic
of Korea, Japan, Papua New Guinea, Solomon Islands, United States
of America, Saint Lucia, Morocco, Netherlands, Norway, Malta, Cyprus,
Egypt, Israel, Jordan, Iraq, Kuwait, Afghanistan, Brunei, China (Taiwan,
Hong Kong) and Czech Republic
Recovery and Reintegration Program for Trafficked Persons
(RRPTP) is a program under the DSWD which provides assis‑
tance to TIP survivors in form of livelihood, legal, psychological
assistance, subsidies, etc.
Temporary Shelter at Batis Center for Women: a partner NGO
of IOM that accommodates Women TIP Survivors that needs
temporary shelter upon return to the Philippines.
Inter-Agency Council Against Trafficking (IACAT) is composed
of government agencies and non-government representatives
for the women, children and migrant sectors with mandates to
protect and prosecute violations against trafficking in persons.
Main trends and figures
Contact for Assisted
Voluntary Return
National Emergency
Hotline
Assistance available and Main stakeholders involved
The Philippines
IOM The Philippines :
Address : 28th floor Citibank Tower,
8741 Paseo de Roxas, 1226 Makati City
Phone : + 63.2.230.1999
Email : mnlops@iom.int
Actionline Against Human Trafficking :
Call :
Call :
ABS-CBN Lingkod Kapamilya Foundation Inc.
(Bantay Bata 163)
(02) 1343
163
Email : 1343actionline@cfo.gov.ph
Facebook : fb.com/1343Actionline
Web : 1343actionline.ph
Web : www.bantaybata163.com
Email : bb163report@abs-cbn.com
(toll-free)
32. 32
12 victims identified by State, 40 identified by international
organizations in 2015
Main types of exploitation : forced labour and sexual exploitation
A source country for : Russia and Turkey
A transit and destination country
Assistance through NGOs and IOs
Prosecutor General’s Office and State Migration Service (SMS)
Main trends and figures
Contact for Assisted
Voluntary Return
National Emergency
Hotline
Assistance available and Main stakeholders involved
Turkmenistan
IOM Turkmenistan :
Phone : +99312 420817
Fax : +99312 420816
Email : ldinmedova@iom.int
“Ynam” Hotline in Ashgabat :
+99312463514
33. 33
924 victims identified in 2015
Main types of exploitation : forced labour and sexual exploitation
A source country for : Kazakhstan, Russia, and Ukraine
Assistance provided through NGOs and at a government-funded
trafficking rehabilitation center
Main trends and figures
Contact for Assisted Voluntary Return
National Emergency
Hotline
Assistance available and Main stakeholders involved
Uzbekistan
IOM Uzbekistan :
Phone : +998 71 120 56 97 (Tashkent, UZ)
Phone : +7 7172 696 553 (Astana, KZ)
Email : iomastana@iom.int
Email : stoshbaev@iom.int
Ministry of Internal Affairs of Uzbekistan
Hotline :
+998 71 233 39 39
+998 71 233 22 33
34. 34
Estimated total number of VoTs identified : 1,000 potential
victims of trafficking identified in 2015
Main types of exploitation : forced labour, sexual exploitation,
false marriage
Breakdown adult/children VoTs (if available) :
over 85% of victims are women and children
Main countries of origin : Vietnam
Initial Assistance provided by the Border Guard upon victim’s return
Reintegration assistance provided by Department of Social Vice
Prevention at Central and Provincial Levels
Other stakeholders involving : Women’s Union, Legal Aid Department,
Government and Non-government Shelters for victims of trafficking
Main trends and figures
National Emergency
Hotline
Assistance available and Main stakeholders involved
Vietnam
Hotline for free counselling by
the Department of Child Protection :
Hotline of the Ministry of Public Security
on Counter-Trafficking :
OR
Hotline of the Peace House for shelter
and assistance for victims of trafficking
and victims of domestic violence:
18001567
06944193
0946833380
0437280936
Contact for Assisted Voluntary Return
IOM Vietnam :
Address : Level 12A, CMC Tower, Duy Tan, Cau Giay, Hanoi, Vietnam
Phone : 04-3736-6258 (ext. 114) / Fax : 04-3736-6259
Email : linhhoang@iom.int / Website : www.iom.int.vn
36. 36
109 victims and potential victims identified in 2015
(61 adults /48 children)
Source and destination country
Main types of exploitation : sexual exploitation, forced labour,
child begging
Main country of origin : Albania
Shelter, medical, psychological assistance, legal counselling
available through NGOs and Social Care centers.
State Police Structures, Regional Offices of the SSS,
Regional Directorates of Education and of Health,
CPUs (Child Protection Units) in the municipalities.
Main trends and figures
Contact for Assisted
Voluntary Return
National Emergency Hotline
Assistance available and Main stakeholders involved
Albania
Ministry of Internal Affairs,
Office of the National Anti-Trafficking
Coordinator
Ministria e Punëve të Brendshme -
Address : Sheshi Skërnderbej, nr.3 – Tiranë
Phone : + 355 4 2233540
Website : www.punetebrendshme.gov
.al/al/k-k-a-t
Responsible Authority in Albania :
Autoriteti.pergjegjes@punetebrendshme.gov.al
IOM Albania :
Address : Rruga “Ibrahim Rugova”,
Nd. 42, H. 4 – Tirana
Phone : +355 42 25 78 36
Email : infotirana@iom.int
0800 77 99
- free hotline :
- The Android smartphone app called “Raporto! Shpeto” (Report! Save!) can be downloaded for free from the Google Play
store and includes : Hotline direct dial, Map to services, Services database, Report trafficking and Knowledge center.
37. 37
301 victims identified in 2015
Main types of exploitation : sexual exploitation, domestic
servitude, forced labour, forced begging
Main countries of origin : European Union countries
(mainly Romania, Bulgaria, Hungary and Slovakia),
but also Bosnia and Herzegovina, Serbia, Nigeria,
the Philippines, China, Indonesia
Accommodation, psychosocial, social, legal and health counselling
Assistance through the LEFÖ Intervention Center for Trafficked
Women (for women and girls age 15 and up) : http:/
/www.lefoe.at/
MEN VIA (specialized center for trafficked men) : www.men-center.at
Drehscheibe center of the Child and Youth Welfare of the City of
Vienna (for unaccompanied foreign minors and trafficked children)
Herzwerk (streetworking organization) : herzwerk-wien.com
Solwodi (shelter for women wishing to leave prostitution) :
http:/
/www.solwodi.at/
Main trends and figures
Contact for Assisted
Voluntary Return
National Emergency
Hotline
Assistance available and Main stakeholders involved
Austria
IOM Austria :
Email : iomvienna@iom.int
Phone : +49 911 4300 0
Return counselling organizations :
LEFÖ Intervention Center for
Trafficked Women :
Email : ibf@lefoe.at
Caritas Return Counselling :
Verein Menschenrechte Österreich
Federal Province of Carinthia
Federal Criminal Intelligence Service :
+43-677-61343434
38. 38
263 victims identified by NGOs in 2015
Main types of exploitation : sexual exploitation and forced labour
Transit country
A source country for : Germany, Poland, Russia and Turkey
Formal national referral mechanism adopted in 2015
Temporary shelter and free medical services
Assistance through NGOs and private shelters
Main trends and figures
Contact for Assisted
Voluntary Return
National Emergency
Hotline
Assistance available and Main stakeholders involved
Belarus
IOM Belarus :
E-mail : IOMMinskCTUnit@iom.int
National number :
For mobile telephone users of Velcom
and MTS :
For international calls :
113
8 801201 5555
+375 162 21 8888
39. 39
152 victims identified in 2015
Main types of exploitation : Sexual exploitation, forced labour and
forced begging
Main countries of origin : Romania, Morocco, Bulgaria, Albania,
Benin, Algeria, Belgium, Brazil, Pakistan, Serbia
Assistance includes : accommodation, psychosocial and medical
assistance, legal counselling
Assistance available in the 3 specialized reception centres :
- Pag-Asa (Brussels)
- Sürya (Liège, Wallonia)
- Payoke (Antwerp, Flanders)
Specific reception centres for unaccompanied minors :
- Minor Ndako (Brussels)
- Juna (Flanders)
- Esperanto (Wallonia)
Main trends and figures
Contact for Assisted
Voluntary Return
National Emergency
Hotline
Assistance available and Main stakeholders involved
Belgium
IOM Belgium :
Ms. Elisabeth Palmero
Phone : +32(0)22877422
Email : epalmero@iom.int
Pag-Asa :
Sürya :
Payoke :
04 232 40 30
02 511 64 64
03 201 16 90
40. 40
24 victims identified by IOM in 2016, 35 victims in 2015
Main types of exploitation : sexual exploitation, forced labour,
forced begging
Source country for : Spain, Sweden, Poland, Czech Republic,
Bulgaria, Belgium, Italy and Ireland
Assistance through NGOs :
Animus Foundation , Puls Pernik, SOS Varna
National Commission for combating trafficking in human beings
Main trends and figures
Contact for Assisted
Voluntary Return
National Emergency
Hotline
Assistance available and Main stakeholders involved
Bulgaria
IOM Bulgaria :
Ms. Tsvetelina Naydenova
Phone : 00359 2 93 94 774
Mobile : 00359 884 60 29 87
IOM Hotline against trafficking :
+359 2 93 94 777
41. 41
38 victims identified in 2015 (34 adults, 4 children)
Main type of exploitation : sexual exploitation
Main countries of origin :
Croatia (35), Bosnia and Herzegovina (2) Hungary (1)
Shelter, medical and psychological assistance as well as
legal aid provided by Social services, the Croatian Red Cross,
and the national NGO Network PETRA
Main trends and figures
Contact for Assisted
Voluntary Return
National Emergency
Hotline
Assistance available and Main stakeholders involved
Croatia
IOM Croatia :
Address : Radnička cesta 41 7th floor
HR-10000 Zagreb
Phone : +385 1 4816 881
Fax : +385 1 4816 879
Email : iomzagreb@iom.int
PETRA NGO :
Website : http:/
/www.petra-nvo.net/
0800 77 99
SOS :
42. 42
93 victims identified in 2015
25 children identified as victims since 2009
Main types of exploitation: sexual exploitation, forced labour,
forced criminality
Main countries of origin: Nigeria, Romania, Thailand, Uganda,
Brazil, Ghana and Vietnam.
Assisted return and re-integration available
Possibility to apply for asylum if persecution is feared
in the country of origin
Housing provision or protected stay, health services, social,
psychological and legal counselling
Eligibility for a reintegration benefit upon return to country
of origin/residence
Assistance through NGOs and ministerial authorities,
as well as the Danish Centre against Human Trafficking
Main trends and figures
Contact for Assisted
Voluntary Return
National Emergency
Hotline
Assistance available and Main stakeholders involved
Denmark
IOM Denmark :
Address : UN City, Marmorvej 51,
2100 Copenhagen, Denmark.
Phone : +45 45 33 53 92
The Danish Centre against
Human Trafficking :
+45 70 20 25 50
43. 43
89 victims assisted by the National Assistance System
for victims of trafficking
Main types of exploitation : labour exploitation
(mainly in the restaurant and agriculture buisnesses),
sexual exploitation
Main country of origin : Nigeria
Assistance available through NGOs or municipalities :
counselling and guidance, social assistance, health care services,
income support, accommodation, interpreting services and legal
counselling
National Assistance System for Victims of trafficking -
located in the Joutseno Reception Centre in Lappeenranta
Main trends and figures
Contact for Assisted
Voluntary Return
National Emergency
Hotline
Assistance available and Main stakeholders involved
Finland
National Assistance System
for victims of trafficking :
Phone : +358 2954 63177
Website : www.ihmiskauppa.fi
IOM Helsinki :
Address : Unioninkatu 13, 00130 Helsinki
Phone : +358 96841150
National Assistance System
for victims of trafficking :
+358 2954 63177
44. 44
92 victims identified in 2015
Main types of exploitation : sexual exploitation, forced labour,
forced begging, domestic servitude
Main countries of origin of victims : Albania, Brazil, Bulgaria,
China, Morocco, Nigeria and Romania
Eligibility to residence permit
Assistance (accommodation, medical care, legal assistance, etc.)
through NGOs : National Network for the Assistance and
Protection of Human Trafficking Victims
(Ac.Sé network, gathering 70 partners)
Website : http:/
/www.acse-alc.org
Main trends and figures
Contact for Assisted
Voluntary Return
National Emergency
Hotline
Assistance available and Main stakeholders involved
France
French Office for Immigration
and Integration (OFII) :
Address : 48 rue de la Roquette, 75011 Paris
Phone : +33 (0) 1 55 28 19 40
Website : www.ofii.fr
IOM France : Ms. Fanny Ruinart
Email : fruinart@iom.int
Phone : +33 (0) 1 4044 0684/91
National Network for the Assistance and
Protection of Human Trafficking Victims
Hotline :
0 825 009 907
+ 33 (0) 4 92 15 10 51
(from France)
(from abroad)
45. 45
583 victims identified
Types of exploitation : forced labour and sexual exploitation
(men, women and children)
Main countries of origin of sexual exploitation victims :
Bulgaria, Romania, Germany, Nigeria
Eligibility to temporary residence permit and, pending on case,
possibility for asylum
Assistance through the German NGO Network against Trafficking
in Human Beings (KOK – 70 NGOs)
Website : www.kok-gegen-menschenhandel.de
Main trends and figures
Contact for Assisted
Voluntary Return
National Emergency
Hotline
Assistance available and Main stakeholders involved
Germany
IOM Germany :
Phone : +49 911 4300 0
National violence against women
hotline support :
+49 800 116016
46. 46
57 potential victims identified in 2015
Main types of exploitation : sexual exploitation, forced labour,
forced begging
Main countries of origin for victims of sexual exploitation :
Eastern Europe (Bulgaria, Romania, Russia), Albania, Greece,
Nigeria and China
Eligibility to residence permit
Assistance through NGOs (A21, ACT UP, HOPE SPOT, ASIS)
Anti-Trafficking Unit of the Hellenic Police
Main trends and figures
Contact for Assisted
Voluntary Return
National Emergency
Hotline
Assistance available and Main stakeholders involved
Greece
IOM Greece :
Phone : +30 210 99 19 040
Human Trafficking Resource Line :
1109
47. 47
Approximately 800 victims identified in 2015
Types of exploitation: sexual exploitation, forced labour,
forced begging and forced criminality
Main countries of origin for sexual exploitation and
forced labour victims : Nigeria, Romania, Morocco, China
Main countries of origin for forced begging and petty theft :
children from Romania, Nigeria, Brazil, Morocco and Italy
Eligibility to temporary residence permit
Assistance through NGOs and IOs : On the Road, IOM
Main trends and figures
Contact for Assisted
Voluntary Return
National Emergency
Hotline
Assistance available and Main stakeholders involved
Italy
RIRVA Network -
Return Help Desk :
Email : info@reterirva.it
Phone : 800722071
National hotline against trafficking :
800 290 290
48. 48
8 victims identified in 2015
Main types of exploitation: forced labour and sexual exploitation
Latvia is a country of origin for forced labour, sexual exploitation
and brokered mariages
Assistance available through NGOs and IO: Shelter ”Safe house”,
RCW Marta, IOM - http:/
/marta.lv
Riga City Council Welfare Department, 3rd Division for Action
against Trafficking in Human Beings
Living on the Avails of Prostitution of the Organised Crime
Enforcement Department of the Central Criminal Police
Department of the State Police
Main trends and figures
Contact for Assisted
Voluntary Return
National Emergency
Hotline
Assistance available and Main stakeholders involved
Latvia
IOM Latvia :
Phone : +371 67503627
Hotline operated by Marta Center :
800 020 12
49. 49
National Emergency Hotline
4 victims officially identified by the government in 2015,
94 potential victims identified by NGOs
Main type of exploitation : sexual exploitation
Main countries of origin : Macedonia, Afghanistan, Nigeria
Ministry of Interior , Ministry of Labour and Social Policy :
- Coordinated assistance and protection to victims through
the Office of the National Referral Mechanism
- Center for Victims of Human Trafficking (CVHT)
Assistance available through NGOs :
- Association for action against violence and human trafficking
“Open Gate La Strada”
- For A Happy Childhood
Main trends and figures
Assistance available and Main stakeholders involved
Macedonia
Contact for Assisted
Voluntary Return
Office of the National Referral Mechanism,
Ministry of Labour and Social Policy Svetlana
Cvetkovska, Office Coordinator
Phone : + 389 76 456 795
Email : nmuofficemk@yahoo.com
IOM Macedonia :
Address : St. Banja Lucka no.4, Skopje
Phone : + 389 2 3095 477
Email : iomskopje@iom.int
++389 2 2777-070 0880011111
- “Red Button” App – to report victims electronically
- from Macedonia : (operated by NGO Open Gate – La Strada)
- SOS line :
50. 50
310 victims identified in 2015
Main types of exploitation : sexual exploitation and forced labour
Assistance available for repatriated victims at
Chisinau Assistance and Protection Center
Shelter and medical, legal, and psychological assistance
provided by the government, regardless of the victims’
cooperation with law enforcement
Main trends and figures
National Emergency
Hotline
Assistance available and Main stakeholders involved
Moldova
National hotline against trafficking :
Hotline in the Transnistria region :
0800 77 777
23.33.09 022
0800 88888
( from Moldova )
( from abroad )
Contact for Assisted Voluntary Return
Ministry of Labour, Social Protection and Family -
National Coordination Unit of the NRS
Phone : (+373 22) 727274
Email : coordonator.snr@mmpsf.gov.md
IOM Moldova : Ms. Irina Arap, 36/1, Ciuflea str. MD 2001 Chisinau
Phone : (+373 22)232940 ext.119 / Mobile :. +373 692 79690
51. 51
229 victims identified in 2015
Main types of exploitation: forced sexual labour, forced labour,
forced begging
Main countries of origin for forced sexual labour and forced
labour: Bulgaria, Romania, Ukraine and other European countries
Eligibility to temporary residence permit and, pending on case,
possibility for permanent residential permit
Assistance through NGOs and IO :
La Strada, Nobody’s Children Foundation, IOM
Main trends and figures
Contact for Assisted
Voluntary Return
National Emergency
Hotline
Assistance available and Main stakeholders involved
Poland
IOM Poland :
Phone : (+48 22) 5389103
National Intervention and Consultation
Centre for Victims of Trafficking (KCIK) :
+48 22 628 01 20
52. 52
193 victims identified in 2015
(135 victims in Portugal, 58 nationals abroad)
Breakdown adult/children victims : in 2015 116 adults,
18 children and 2 unknown.
Main types of exploitation : forced labour and sexual exploitation
Main countries of origin : Romania, Brazil, Angola and Nigeria
Assistance through :
- The Commission for Citizenship and Gender Equality (CIG)
- APF (Family Planning association) shelter
- Saúde em Português shelter
- APAV shelter, counselling support unit
The Portuguese Observatory is involved in THB data analysis
and capacity building activities.
Main trends and figures
Contact for Assisted
Voluntary Return
National Emergency
Hotline
Assistance available and Main stakeholders involved
Portugal
IOM Portugal :
Address : Rua Jose Estevão, 137 – 8.º
1150-201 Lisbon, Portugal
Phone : +351 21 324 29 40
Email : iomlisbon@iom.int
808 257 257
+315 218 106 191
53. 53
Mainly a source country for other European countries
880 Romanian victims identified in 2015 (trafficked internally
and internationally)
Breakdown adult/children : 66% women, nearly 36% minor girls
Main types of exploitation : sexual exploitation and forced labour
Assistance through international and non- governmental
organizations (counselling and assisted return as well as social,
psychological, legal, and vocational assistance) :
- IOM, ADPARE Bucharest (Asociaţia pentru Dezvoltarea
Practicilor Alternative de Reintegrare si Educatie),
- Asociatia Pro Refugiu Bucharest,
- Generatie Tanara Timisoara,
- People to People Oradea,
- Asociatia Betania Bacau,
- Asociatia Global Help Craiova.
Main trends and figures
Contact for Assisted
Voluntary Return
National Emergency
Hotline
Assistance available and Main stakeholders involved
Romania
IOM Romania :
Address : 11 Viitorului Str.,
Bucharest 2, Romania,
Phone : +40 21 211 45 65
Email : iombucarest@iom.int
Website : www.oim.ro
0 800 800 678
54. 54
5,000 estimated victims identified by experts in 2015
Main types of exploitation : forced labour and sexual exploitation
A source country for : Northeast Asia, Europe, Central Asia,
Africa, United States and Middle East
Assistance provided by international organizations
Shelter operated by the Russian Red Cross in St Petersburg
Shelter for medium to long-term assistance and counselling
in Moscow
Main trends and figures
Contact for Assisted
Voluntary Return
National Emergency
Hotline
Assistance available and Main stakeholders involved
Russia
IOM Russia :
Email : iommoscow@iom.int
National hotline for migrants,
refugees and VoT :
8-800-333-00-16
55. 55
Mainly country of origin
25 victims identified and included into the national program in 2015
Main types of exploitation : forced labour, sexual exploitation,
forced begging, forced marriages
Main destination countries : The UK, Germany, Ireland, Netherlands,
Switzerland, Poland, Belgium, Austria
Estimated to be also transit or destination country for victims of
forced labour from Romania, Ukraine, Vietnam, Thailand, China,
The Philippines
National programme of support and protection for victims of human trafficking (provides assisted voluntary return and
complex reintegration services incl. safe housing)
IOM Slovakia, SKC Dotyk, Caritas Slovakia
Ministry of Interior of the Slovak Republic
Main trends and figures
Contact for Assisted
Voluntary Return
National Emergency
Hotline
Assistance available and Main stakeholders involved
Slovak Republic
IOM Slovakia :
Phone : +421 02 5249 0511
Email : bratislavatrafficking@iom.int
National Hotline for Victims
of Human Trafficking
+421 800 800 818
Vulnerable groups :
- Slovak women of Romani descent subjected to forced marriages combined with forced
labour or sex trafficking
- disabled people subjected to forced begging
- homeless people exploited for forced labour
- Slovak children of Romani descent subjected to sexual exploitation internally and
forced criminal behavior in The UK
(operated 24/7)
56. 56
169 victims identified in 2015
Main types of exploitation: forced labour and sexual exploitation
(men, women and children)
Main countries of origin for sexual labour : Women from Eastern
Europe (particularly Romania, Bulgaria, Ukraine, Russia, Hungary
and Croatia), South America (particularly Paraguay, Brazil,
Colombia, and Ecuador), China and Nigeria
Main countries of origin for forced labour : Men and women from
China, India, men from Romania (low criminal activities), men
from Hungary (agriculture) and Pakistan (domestic service, textile,
agricultural, construction, industrial and service industries)
Eligibility to temporary residence permit and asylum
Assistance through NGOs and IOs: APRAMP, Proyecto Esperanza
and SICAR (run by the Sisters Adoratrices), Villa Teresita, ACCEM,
MdM, Caritas, Fundacion Cruz Blanca, Red Cross Spain,
APIP-ACAM, IOM
National Rapporteur on Trafficking in Persons
Main trends and figures
Contact for Assisted
Voluntary Return
National Emergency
Hotline
Assistance available and Main stakeholders involved
Spain
IOM Spain :
Phone : +34 915943670
Instituto de la Mujer :
APRAMP 24H Hotline :
Proyecto Esperanza 24H Hotline :
Villa Teresita Madrid 24H Hotline :
900 191 010
+34 609589479
+34 607542515
+34 616097238
900 152 152
57. 57
208 victims assisted in 2015
(Swiss Federal Statistics’ estimations)
Main types of exploitation : sexual exploitation, forced labour,
domestic servitude and child begging
Main countries of origi n: Hungary, Romania, Bulgaria, Nigeria,
Cameroun, Thailand, Brazil and the Dominican Republic
Advocacy and Support for Migrant Women and Victims of
Trafficking (FIZ) : specialized NGO based in Zurich (with shelters),
www.fiz-info.ch, +41 44 436 90 00
Au Coeur des Grottes : NGO based in Geneva (with shelter),
www.coeur.ch, +41 22 338 24 80
Astrée : NGO based in Lausanne (with shelter),
www.astree.ch, +41 21 544 27 97
Swiss Co-ordination Unit against Trafficking in Persons and
Smuggling of Migrants (SCOTT) : National Coordination Agency,
http:/
/www.ksmm.admin.ch/ksmm/en/home.html
Main trends and figures
Contact for Assisted
Voluntary Return
National Emergency
Hotline
Assistance available and Main stakeholders involved
Switzerland
IOM Switzerland :
Address : Thunstrasse 11, 3000 Bern 6
Phone : +41 31 350 82 13
Website : www.ch.iom.int
840 212 212
0800 20 80 20
National Hotline operated
by the NGO Act212 :
Hotline in Geneva :
(10am-6pm, Monday-Friday)
(2-6pm, Monday-Friday)
58. 58
In 2015, registration of 1,321 possible trafficking victims according
to the National Rapporteur
Types of exploitation: sexual exploitation, labour exploitation and
forced illicit activities
In 2015, an increase of the number of minor victims to 25%
Main countries of origin: Netherlands, Bulgaria, Romania, Poland
and Hungary
Eligibility to a temporary residence permit
Shelter, social assistance, medical care & legal aid
Main care coordinator : Comensha
Website : http:/
/mensenhandel.nl/
Main trends and figures
Contact for Assisted
Voluntary Return
National Emergency
Hotline
Assistance available and Main stakeholders involved
The Netherlands
IOM The Netherlands :
Phone : + 31 (0) 88 – 746 44 66
Website : www.iom-nederland.nl
033 – 448 11 86
Comensha Helpdesk :
www.hoenuverder.info
59. 59
102 victims identified by the state, 740 identified by IOM in 2015
Main types of exploitation: sexual exploitation and forced labour
Main countries of origin : Moldova, Vietnam, Central Asian countries
A source country for : Russian Federation, Poland, Turkey
Assistance through governmental stakeholders, NGOs and IOs :
shelter, social, psychological and medical support,
legal counselling, professional training and access
to employment
Main trends and figures
National Emergency
Hotline
Assistance available and Main stakeholders involved
Ukraine
National Toll-Free Counter-Trafficking
and Migrant Advice Hotline :
(free from landline phones on the territo‑
ry of Ukraine)
(free for clients of Kyivstar, MTS, Lifecell
on the territory of Ukraine)
(from abroad)
0 800 505 501
+38 (0352) 523952
527
Contact for Assisted Voluntary Return
IOM Ukraine :
Tatiana Netch - Email : tnetch@iom.int,
Yulia Yatsenko - Email : yyatsenko@iom.int,
Phone : +380 (044) 568-50-15 (Ext. 114, 118)
Iryna Titarenko - Email : ititarenko@iom.int
e-mail : cmavn.ternopil@@gmail.com
60. 60
3,266 potential victims identified in 2015 - 40% increase on 2014
Main types of exploitation : forced labour and criminal exploitation
Main countries of origin : Albania, Vietnam and Nigeria
Support and assistance to adult victims of human trafficking
for a minimum of 45 days : accommodation, counselling,
medical and psychological support
Assistance is provided by the Salvation Army and 11 partner
organisations (among which : the Medaille Trust, City Hearts,
Migrant Help, Unseen UK) through a network of safe houses
in 19 geographical locations across England and Wales.
Main trends and figures
Contact for Assisted
Voluntary Return
National Emergency
Hotline
Assistance available and Main stakeholders involved
United Kingdom
IOM UK :
Website : unitedkingdom.iom.int
National Hotline :
https:/
/modernslavery.co.uk/need-help.html
New helpline and ressource center
to be launched in 2016 by Unseen UK
0800 0121 700