http://www.state.gov/g/tip/rls/tiprpt/2010/142761.htm
 
Romania is a source, transit, and destination country for men, women, and
children subjected to trafficking in persons, specifically conditions of
forced labor and women and children in forced prostitution. Romanian men,
women, and children are subjected to conditions of forced labor, including
forced begging, in Spain, Italy, the Czech Republic, Greece, Finland,
Germany, the United Kingdom, Cyprus, Australia, France, and the United
States. Women and children from Romania are victims of forced prostitution
in Italy, Spain, the Netherlands, the United Kingdom, Greece, Germany,
Cyprus, Austria, and France. Romanian men, women, and children are
trafficked within the country for commercial sexual exploitation and forced
labor, including forced begging and petty theft. In 2009, the majority of
trafficking victims identified within the country were victims of forced
labor. Romania is a destination country for a small number of women from
Moldova, Colombia, and France who are forced into prostitution. The majority
of identified Romanian victims are victims of forced labor, including forced
begging.

The Government of Romania does not fully comply with the minimum standards
for the elimination of trafficking; however, it is making significant
efforts to do so. Although more than half of the victims identified in 2009
were victims of forced labor, the government was again unable to report
significant efforts to address labor trafficking; specifically, the
government did not disaggregate labor trafficking law enforcement statistics
from sex trafficking statistics and thus was unable to report the number of
labor trafficking investigations, prosecutions, and convictions, or the
number of labor victims assisted by the government during the reporting
period. In March 2009, the government reorganized its lead anti-trafficking
agency - the National Agency Against Trafficking in Persons (NAATIP). It was
changed from an independent, national agency with the authority to
administer federal funding for anti-trafficking initiatives, to a
subordinate agency of the National Police under the Ministry of Interior.
Experts reported that the reorganization of NAATIP had a significant,
negative impact on victim assistance during the year. Specifically, the
government was much less cooperative with anti-trafficking NGOs and it
allocated no federal funding for NGOs to provide victim services and conduct
anti-trafficking prevention programs. As a result, nearly 30
anti-trafficking NGOs either closed or changed their focus to issues other
than human trafficking in order to retain federal funding; some of these
NGOs provided critical victim assistance including shelter, counseling,
vocational training, and other rehabilitative care for victims. The number
of victims who received government-funded assistance significantly decreased
for another consecutive year, and the government identified significantly
fewer victims compared with the previous reporting period. NGOs and
international organizations reported that the reorganization of NAATIP has
left Romania without a true national agency to provide direction to other
ministries with anti-trafficking responsibilities.

Recommendations for Romania: Increase funding for trafficking victim
assistance programs, including some funding for NGOs providing victim
services; improve efforts to collect law enforcement data for trafficking
crimes prosecuted under Law No. 678/2001 and other relevant laws by
disaggregating sex trafficking offenses from labor trafficking offenses;
demonstrate efforts to investigate and punish acts of labor trafficking and
efforts to assist victims of labor trafficking; improve efforts to identify
potential victims among vulnerable populations, such as undocumented
migrants; continue to provide victim sensitivity training for judges;
increase victim referrals to NGO-service providers by government officials;
improve inter-ministerial communication and coordination on trafficking;
improve the capacity of local governments to assist victims by: providing
training to local officials, increasing communication and guidance from
NAATIP, and allocating federal funding to ensure local officials are able to
fulfill their mandated anti-trafficking responsibilities; and continue
efforts to forge and sustain partnerships with regional governments to raise
awareness and reduce the demand for trafficking.

Prosecution
Romania demonstrated law enforcement efforts over the reporting period;
however, it did not report the number of investigations, prosecutions, and
convictions obtained against labor trafficking offenders. Romania prohibits
all forms of trafficking in persons through Law No. 678/2001, which
prescribes penalties of three to 15 years' imprisonment. These penalties are
sufficiently stringent and commensurate with penalties prescribed for other
serious crimes, such as rape. In 2009, authorities investigated 759 cases -
including some investigations started in 2008, compared with 494 new cases
in 2008. The government prosecuted 303 individuals for trafficking in 2009,
compared with 329 individuals prosecuted in 2008. During the reporting
period, Romania convicted 183 trafficking offenders, up from 125 individuals
convicted in 2008. During the reporting period, only 39 percent - 72 of the
183 - of convicted trafficking offenders served some time in prison; one
offender was sentenced to up to six months' imprisonment, 54 offenders were
sentenced to five to 10 years' imprisonment, six offenders were sentenced to
10 to 15 years' imprisonment, and one child offender was sentenced to an
undisclosed amount of time in prison. The remaining 111 convicted
trafficking offenders did not receive imposed prison sentences. In 2009,
Romanian law enforcement officials forged partnerships with foreign
counterparts from five countries, leading to the arrest of at least 16
trafficking offenders and the identification of at least 107 victims. There
were no reports that government officials were involved in trafficking
during the reporting period.

Protection
The Government of Romania significantly decreased its efforts to protect and
assist victims of trafficking during the reporting period. In 2009, the
government provided no funding for anti-trafficking and victim-service NGOs,
compared with $270,000 provided to four NGOs in 2008. This lack of
government funding caused a significant decrease in the number of victims
assisted by both government agencies and NGOs. In 2009, the government
identified 780 victims - including at least 416 identified victims of forced
labor and at least 320 identified victims of forced prostitution, a
significant decrease from 1,240 victims identified in 2008. Of those victims
identified in 2009, 176 were children, trafficked for both forced labor and
prostitution. The government did not undertake proactive measures to
identify potential victims among populations vulnerable to trafficking,
including illegal migrant detention centers. No foreign victims were
identified by the government or NGOs in 2009. Although the government
continued to operate nine shelters for victims of trafficking, their quality
varied and many victims preferred to go to NGO-operated shelters. Local
governments were tasked with providing victims access to various types of
assistance; however, the national government provided local governments with
no funding, training, or guidance, and the capacity of local governments to
address human trafficking was virtually nonexistent during the reporting
period. The government reported that approximately 365 victims were provided
with some type of government-funded assistance, compared with 306 victims
assisted by the government in 2008. An additional 32 victims were assisted
by non-government funded programs, compared with 234 victims assisted by
NGOs in 2008.

Government authorities referred all 780 identified victims for assistance,
compared with 540 victims referred for assistance in 2008. Victims were
encouraged to participate in trafficking investigations and prosecutions;
158 victims served as witnesses in 2009, a significant decrease from 1,053
victims who assisted law enforcement in 2008. The law provides that foreign
victims were eligible to benefit from a 90-day reflection period to remain
in the country and decide whether they would like to cooperate in a criminal
proceeding; however in practice, no foreign victims used this reflection
period. The law permits foreign victims to request a temporary residence
permit and remain in the country until completion of the trafficking
investigation and prosecution; in 2009, no foreign victims applied for and
received temporary residence permits. While the rights of victims were
generally respected and identified victims were not punished for unlawful
acts committed as a direct result of being trafficked, some judges continued
to be disrespectful toward female victims of sex trafficking which
discouraged victims from participating in trafficking cases.

Prevention
Romania maintained its efforts to raise awareness during the reporting
period. The government conducted a public campaign to raise awareness about
sex trafficking entitled "The Two-Faced Man." This campaign reached an
estimated audience of 620,000 and ran for three months, consisting of
advertisements for television and radio and posters displayed on public
transportation. The government also conducted an awareness campaign targeted
at approximately 30,000 school children and 530 teachers. The government
concluded its demand reduction campaign targeted at clients of potential
victims of forced prostitution and forced labor in June 2009.
 
(C) US Department of State
 
----------------------------
 
Vali
"Noble blood is an accident of fortune; noble actions are the chief mark of
greatness."
"When the power of love overcomes the love of power, the world will know
peace."
Aboneaza-te la  <mailto:[email protected]> ngo_list: o
alternativa moderata (un pic) la [ngolist]
Please consider the environment - do you really need to print this email?

Raspunde prin e-mail lui