TRAFFICKING IN PERSONS REPORT 2009
SPAIN
Spain is a transit and destination country for men, women, and children
trafficked for the purposes of commercial sexual exploitation and forced labor.
Victims are primarily trafficked from Romania, Russia, Ukraine, Brazil,
Colombia, Dominican Republic, Ecuador, Paraguay, Venezuela, and Nigeria, though
victims are also trafficked from other areas of Latin America, Eastern Europe,
and Africa. While most identified victims are women between the ages of 18 and
25 who are trafficked for sexual exploitation, minor females are also trafficked
to Spain for the same purpose, and men and women are trafficked for forced
labor, most often in the agriculture and construction sectors. There has been an
increase in the number of minors trafficked into Spain for forced begging. In
smaller numbers, Chinese victims are trafficked to Spain, primarily for forced
labor. A coalition of 20 NGOs in Spain estimates that there are at least 50,000
people in Spain who are victims of human trafficking. Particularly vulnerable to
trafficking are migrants from Romania and Bulgaria and possibly unaccompanied
migrant minors, though there is limited data available on the latter group.
The Government of Spain fully complies with the minimum standards for the
elimination of trafficking. The government recognized weaknesses in the area of
victim protection and took formal steps during the reporting period to
strengthen policies to ensure that victims are granted full protection under the
law.
Recommendations
Continue to vigorously investigate and prosecute human trafficking crimes and
convict and punish trafficking offenders; track data on trafficking
prosecutions, convictions and sentences served by trafficking offenders;
continue to develop formal procedures to guide government officials in
proactively identifying victims among vulnerable groups, such as irregular
migrants and women in prostitution; implement the new national referral
mechanism; ensure victim protection and assistance programs are adequately
funded; ensure male and child victims’ access to appropriate assistance and
protection; consider a campaign at the national level to raise awareness of
labor and sex trafficking.
Prosecution
The government demonstrated solid efforts to prosecute and punish trafficking
offenders during the reporting period. Spain prohibits all forms of trafficking
in persons though Articles 313 and 318 of its criminal code and the Organic Law
11/2003, which prescribe penalties for sex trafficking of five to 15 years’
imprisonment and penalties for labor trafficking of four to eight years’
imprisonment. These penalties are sufficiently stringent, and the penalties
prescribed for sex trafficking are commensurate with the prescribed penalties
for other grave crimes. During the reporting period, Spanish police arrested 403
people for sex trafficking and 68 people for forced labor. In 2008, the
government prosecuted 135 trafficking cases -- up from 102 in 2007 -- and
convicted 107 trafficking offenders (14 of which were involved in forced labor)
-- down from 142 in 2007, with an average sentence of slightly more than four
years. Approximately 95 percent of those convicted received sentences of one
year or more imprisonment, and five percent of those convicted received a fine
and/or suspended sentence. There were no reports of trafficking related official
complicity in Spain in 2008.
Protection
The government demonstrated efforts to address victim protection deficiencies
that came to light in 2008. During the course of dismantling a large-scale sex
trafficking network from 2007 to 2008, authorities arrested over 500 possible
victims and deported many of them back to their country of origin; it is unclear
if any of them received trafficking victim protection assistance subsequent to
their arrests. In December 2008, in an effort to improve victim protection
measures, Spain established a formal mechanism for referring victims to service
providers. While Spain still is in the process of developing formal procedures
for officials to use in identifying potential victims among vulnerable groups,
such as people involved in the decriminalized commercial sex trade or migrant
workers, the government funded NGOs to provide victim identification training
for officials throughout Spain and reportedly identified 771 sex trafficking and
133 forced labor victims during the reporting period. Five of the leading
anti-trafficking NGOs in Spain assisted 1,002 victims in 2008. While Spain did
not release official figures on the amount it spent on victim protection, the
government increased funding to a leading anti-trafficking NGO during the
reporting period . Victims were entitled to medical and psychological
assistance, including emergency care, through the national health care system as
well as access to temporary shelter and legal protection. It is not clear
whether the government offered specialized anti-trafficking services for labor
trafficking or child victims. The government encouraged foreign victims to
assist in trafficking investigations and prosecutions by providing trafficking
victims with a 30-day reflection period. The government did not report on the
number of victims that received the reflection period. Trafficking victims may
qualify for the establishment of new identities in some instances. Spanish law
permits trafficking victims to remain in Spain if they agree to testify.
According to government policy, after legal proceedings conclude, victims had
the option to remain in Spain permanently.
Prevention
Spain sustained efforts to prevent trafficking through awareness raising about
human trafficking over the past year. The government approved a national
anti-trafficking action plan in December 2008 that pledged approximately $57
million over the next four years toward combating trafficking through law
enforcement, victim assistance, and trafficking prevention programs. The
national government did not implement a broad anti-trafficking public awareness
campaign during the reporting period, but the cities of Madrid, Barcelona and
Seville funded local public awareness campaigns. The Madrid city government
produced awareness posters targeted at potential clients of the sex trade with
the slogan “Because you pay, prostitution exists…Do not contribute to the
perpetuation of 21st century slavery.” A government-funded NGO provided a
24-hour number for trafficking victims, but the number was not toll free
throughout the country. Under the motto “There Are No Excuses,” the Spanish
government in 2008 partnered with UNICEF on a website to warn Spanish travelers
against committing child sex tourism offenses abroad. According to the Spanish
military, Spanish troops receive trafficking awareness training before their
deployment abroad for international peacekeeping missions.
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