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LEBANON: Gov't urged to combat
trafficking in human beings
September 22, 2005 - (IRIN) Lebanon needs to review
its domestic laws and policies to conform to international norms
in order to combat widespread trafficking in human beings, especially
women and children, a United Nations expert said.
"Lebanon’s victims of trafficking are often invisible
because they suffer in places that remain hidden to the public eye
such as private homes or hotel rooms," Sigmu Huda, the UN Special
Rapporteur on human trafficking told reporters following a fact-finding
mission that lasted from 8-15 September.
"Much remains to be done for the government to implement Lebanon’s
international obligations related to human trafficking. A number
of domestic laws procedures and policies have to be brought in conformity
with international norms and standards," Huda, who is a human
rights activist and lawyer from Bangladesh, said on Friday.
She noted, however, that the Ministry of Labour had indicated they
intended to present legislation on domestic migrant workers one
month from September.
Another project started in July by the Ministries of Justice and
Interior with technical cooperation from the UN Office on Drugs
and Crime and the UN Children's Fund, is in the process of assessing
the trafficking situation.
While no official statistics on the crime exist, experts say thousands
of people have been smuggled into Lebanon. Women and children, who
often end up as domestic labourers and prostitutes, are particularly
prone to abuse.
"One survey brought to my attention found that at least one
out of every three Lebanese employers beats his or her domestic
worker," Huda told reporters in the capital, Beirut, on Friday.
"Some victims personally related incidents of traumatic sexual
abuse to me."
Some of the abused workers had arrived in Lebanon from Asia or Africa
to find they were bound by a contract with a local employment agency
written in Arabic, a language they did not understand, and completely
different than the one they signed in their home country.
"It is this second contract that is considered valid and binding
by the Lebanese authorities," said Huda, who met government
officials, diplomats, NGO leaders and visited correction facilities
and safe houses for abused workers.
The rights of domestic workers, she added, were practically nonexistent
in the Lebanon since they remain excluded from labour protection
laws such as the 1946 Labour Code. They also do not have access
to labour courts.
Apart from physical, sexual and psychological abuse, most of the
labourers had to endure 16 hour work days, seven days a week. Sometimes,
their wages were withheld.
According to UN estimates, between 150,000 and 200,000 domestic
workers in Lebanon, mostly from Asia and Africa, have suffered because
their employers refused to renew their work permits.
Also falling victim to trafficking are Eastern European women who
signed contracts to work as dancers in adult clubs or "artistes",
only to find themselves coerced into work as prostitutes.
"Their vulnerability is exacerbated by the
fact that the Lebanese Penal Code criminalises prostitution. A woman
engaging in acts of prostitution may be subject to prosecution,
detention and deportation," Huda said.
"At the same time, the people who operate the nightclubs, to
which the women are brought to find their clients, are operating
legally according to administrative rules set by [the authorities],"
she added.
INSUFFICIENT LAWS
The Lebanese Parliament ratified in August the UN Protocol to Prevent,
Suppress, and Punish Trafficking but it has yet to introduce new
laws or amendments that would clamp down on the crime.
According to the US State Department's 2004 report on human trafficking,
Lebanese law does not specifically prohibit trafficking in persons.
"The Lebanese Penal Code stipulates that, ‘any person
who deprives another of freedom either by abduction or any other
means shall be sentenced to temporary hard labour’; however,
during the year the government did not apply this code to trafficking
cases," the report noted.
Some of the women who were trafficked, the report added, came to
Lebanon voluntarily with legitimate work permits, and an unknown
number also entered the country illegally. However, many of those
with work permits ended up working illegally in the sex industry.
According to the UN Office on Drugs and Crime, trafficking in human
beings has reached epidemic proportions across the world in the
past decade. It is fuelled by economic disparity, high unemployment
and the disruption of traditional livelihoods; and traffickers face
few risks and can earn huge profits.
From: http://www.irinnews.org/report.asp?ReportID=49187&SelectRegion=Middle_East&SelectCountry=LEBANON
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