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Articles 1 (paragraph 1), 2 (paragraph 1), and 25 of the Convention. Trafficking in persons. Further to its previous comments on the trafficking of persons both in and outside the country for the purpose of forced prostitution, the Committee notes with interest the promulgation of the Act of November 2007 to prevent and punish the trafficking of persons, and its Regulations of February 2009.
The Committee notes that the Act has established an Inter-Ministerial Committee for the purpose of coordinating and following up the National Programme to prevent and punish the trafficking of persons and the standing programmes drawn up to combat such trafficking. The Inter-Ministerial Committee is a standing body and its members are the Ministers of the Interior, Communications and Transport, External Relations, Public Security, Labour and Social Security, Health and Social Development, Public Education, Tourism and Public Prosecution. Other institutions also participate, such as the National Institute for Women and the Committee for the Development of Indigenous Peoples.
The Committee hopes that the application of the Act will enable human trafficking to be combated effectively, since it constitutes a grave violation of the Convention. It hopes that the Government will provide information on the application of the Act and on any other measures taken with a view to the eradication of human trafficking. It requests the Government to provide a copy of the National Programme and the standing programmes created by the Inter-Ministerial Committee.
Adequate and strictly enforced penalties
In view of the fact that Article 25 of the Convention provides that the illegal exaction of forced or compulsory labour shall be punishable as a criminal offence by penalties that are adequate and strictly enforced, the Committee sought information on the penalties imposed on persons condemned for human trafficking.
The Committee takes note of section 6 of the Act to prevent and punish human trafficking which lays down prison sentences ranging from 9 to 18 years for persons committing the offence of human trafficking. It also notes that pursuant to section 12(IX) of the Act, the Inter-Ministerial Committee shall compile statistical data on human-trafficking offences with a view to publishing them periodically. Statistics must include disaggregated information on the number of arrests, judicial proceedings, number of convictions of human traffickers and persons guilty of offences relating to human trafficking in its various forms; the number victims, their sex, age, nationality, the type of victimization, their migratory status.
The Committee hopes that the Government will provide a copy of the report containing these statistics, together with a copy of relevant court decisions indicating the sentences imposed.
Participation of public employees in human trafficking
The Committee previously asked the Government for information on the measures taken or envisaged to ensure exhaustive investigation of complaints of complicity or direct participation by public employees in the trafficking of persons and on the penalties imposed.
The Committee notes that section 6 of the Act to prevent and punish the trafficking of persons establishes that the penalty of 9 to 18 years’ imprisonment for trafficking in persons shall be increased by half where the offender is a public employee.
The Committee notes that in 2006, in its Concluding Observations, the United Nations Committee on the Protection of the Rights of all Migrant Workers and Their Families expressed concern at the cases of trafficking that involved public employees. The Committee observes that the key role played by the forces of order in enforcing the law and the Convention is distorted in the event of corruption among their members, and hopes that the provisions of the new Act will allow the effective punishment of the intimidation of victims, complicity and direct participation of members of the forces of order in human trafficking. The Committee hopes that the Government will take the necessary steps to investigate properly the cases in which law enforcement personnel have been involved and that it will provide relevant statistical data.
Protection of victims
The Committee takes note of sections 17 and 18 of the Act to prevent and punish human trafficking which concern protection and assistance for victims. Under these provisions, victims must be provided with facilities to remain in the country for the duration of the judicial proceedings. Advance programmes for immediate assistance must also be drawn up during and after the proceedings and they are to include training, guidance and, in the case of nationals, assistance in seeking employment.
The Committee notes section 9 of the Act which provides that when someone condemned for committing the offence of human trafficking is held penally responsible, the court’s sentence shall include payment of compensation for damage to the victim to cover inter alia, medical treatment, transport including return to the place of origin, loss of income, and material and moral damages. Section 32 of the Regulations to the Act provides that the public prosecutor shall seek and compile sufficient evidence to justify and quantify the compensation referred to in section 9 of the Act. The Committee observes that this provision is important for the protection of victims since it establishes that the courts shall also decide on the compensation for which the offender is liable.
The Committee requests the Government to provide information on the application of these provisions indicating the number of victims who have benefited from the protection and compensation measures provided for therein.
1. Human trafficking. In earlier observations, the Committee noted the comments made by the International Confederation of Free Trade Unions (ICFTU) concerning the trafficking of women and girls both in and outside the country for the purpose of forced prostitution. With regard to the trafficking of young persons in particular, bearing in mind that Article 3(a) of the Worst Forms of Child Labour Convention, 1999 (No. 182) provides that the term “worst forms of child labour” comprises “all forms of slavery or practices similar to slavery, such as the sale and trafficking of children, debt bondage and serfdom and forced or compulsory labour”, the Committee is of the view that the problem of the sale and trafficking of children for the purpose of sexual exploitation, particularly prostitution, can be examined more specifically in the context of Convention No. 182.
2. With regard to the examination of trafficking for the purpose of sexual and labour exploitation in the light of the obligations laid down in the Convention, the Committee observed previously that this practice falls within the scope of the Convention and constitutes a serious breach of it.
3. In its report, the Government expresses concern that the Committee continues to deal with a matter which, in the Government’s view, falls outside the scope of the Convention. The Government observes that the Convention contains no provisions on trafficking, which is dealt with in other international instruments and particularly the United Nations Convention against Transnational Organized Crime and its Protocol. The Committee would point out that any situation where someone is sexually exploited or forced to work without his or her valid consent, regardless of whether trafficking is involved, falls within the scope of the Convention by virtue of its definition of forced labour. Furthermore, the fact that there is an international instrument devoted specifically to trafficking does not exempt a State from the obligations it undertakes on ratifying the Convention. The fact that trafficking is defined in the Palermo Protocol contributes to more effective application of both instruments. An essential component of the Protocol’s definition is the purpose of the trafficking, namely exploitation, the definition of which expressly refers to forced labour or services, slavery or practices similar to slavery, servitude and the various forms of sexual exploitation. The forced labour component of this definition provides the link between the Palermo Protocol and Convention No. 29, indicating clearly that human trafficking for the purpose of exploitation falls within the definition of forced or compulsory labour in Article 2, paragraph 1, of the Convention.
4. In its previous observation, the Committee noted the Government’s information on the provisions of the national legislation to prevent, suppress and punish human trafficking: sections 206-208 (trafficking and procuring of persons) and 366ter (trafficking of young persons) of the Penal Code and section 2(V) of the Federal Act against Organized Crime.
5. The Committee also noted the measures to encourage victims to report their cases to the authorities, including authorization to remain in the country at least for the duration of the legal proceedings, and possibly to reside permanently, and protection against reprisals. The Committee requested the Government to indicate and provide copies of the relevant provisions.
6. The Committee noted the Government’s information that “the penal legislation imposes heavier penalties in cases where persons reporting crimes, witnesses or family members are intimidated (Federal Penal Code, section 219)”. The Committee noted that this provision establishes the crime of intimidation committed by public servants and asked the Government to indicate the provisions applying to persons who resort to intimidation and who are not members of the public service. The Committee also expresses the hope that the Government will provide information on the number of sentences imposed upon public servants for the crime of intimidation, with copies of the rulings made under the above provision.
7. In response to the Government’s statement that in practice it varies the measures it takes to suit the type and circumstances of the risk incurred by the person to whom protection is provided, the Committee requested the Government to provide copies of the provisions envisaging such protection and to indicate the measures concerned. The Committee hopes that this information will be provided with the Government’s next report.
8. The Committee again asks the Government for information on any penalties imposed for human trafficking in accordance with the requirement in Article 25 of the Convention that the illegal exaction of forced or compulsory labour shall be punishable as a penal offence and that the penalties imposed must be really adequate and strictly enforced.
9. The Committee notes that the Senate has approved the Act against Trafficking in Persons, which will enable such trafficking to be prevented and punished more effectively. The Committee hopes that the Government will provide information on the promulgation of the Act and on any other measures taken or envisaged to ensure observance of the Convention.
In its previous observation, the Committee noted the comments made by the International Confederation of Free Trade Unions (ICFTU) concerning the trafficking in women and girls within the country and abroad for purposes of forced prostitution. The Committee requested the Government to provide detailed information on this issue.
The Committee notes that the Government’s indication in its report that "there is no other information supporting the generalizations made by the ICFTU, and that it is not therefore possible to ascertain their truth".
The Committee notes that a study, carried out in six cities with the support of UNICEF, estimated at 16,000 the number of boys and girls who were victims of commercial sexual exploitation. The objective of the study was to identify the role, relevance and operational methods of networks of organized crime in the procuring, trafficking and exploitation of boys and girls. The Committee also notes the report submitted by the Special Rapporteur to the United Nations Commission on Human Rights (E/CN.4/2003/85/Add. 2, of 30 October 2002), in which the Special Rapporteur expresses concern at the "corruption closely linked to transnational organized crime, and in particular gangs engaged in the trafficking and smuggling of persons", and also refers to the General Population Act under which sentences of imprisonment of up to ten years may be imposed and can even be applied to victims of trafficking and smuggling.
Furthermore, the United Nations Committee on the Rights of the Child, while being "aware of the measures taken by the State Party on the situation of ‘repatriated children’ (menores fronterizos), remains particularly concerned that a great number of these children are victims of trafficking networks, [which] use them for sexual or economic exploitation"... and "about the increasing number of cases of trafficking and sale of children from neighbouring countries who are brought [to Mexico] to work in prostitution" (CRC/C/15/Add. 112, paragraph 32).
The Committee notes the convergence of the information concerning the existence of cases of the trafficking in persons for the purposes of economic and sexual exploitation. Such situations fall within the scope of the Convention and constitute grave violations of it. In practice, the work or service is imposed on the person concerned without her or his consent. Violence, coercion or deception are used to achieve the transfer of the persons concerned with the purpose of subjecting the victims to economic or sexual exploitation, from which they cannot free themselves.
The Committee notes the information provided by the Government concerning the provisions of the national legislation to prevent, repress and punish the trafficking in persons, namely sections 206 to 208 (trafficking and procuring of persons) and 366ter (trafficking of young persons) of the Penal Code and section 2(V) of the Federal Act against organized crime.
The Committee notes that section 366ter affords protection against the removal of young persons outside the national territory by providing that "the crime of the trafficking in young persons is committed by any person who removes a young person under 16 years of age and delivers that person to a third party in an illicit manner, outside the national territory, with the purpose of obtaining an undue economic benefit through the removal or delivery of the young person". The Committee requests the Government to provide information on the provisions affording protection to young persons who are removed from other countries to Mexico for the purposes of exploitation.
The Committee also notes the Government’s reference to the measures intended to encourage victims to report their cases to the authorities, including the authorization to remain in the country at least for the duration of the legal proceedings and possibly to reside permanently, and protection against reprisals. The Committee requests the Government to indicate and provide copies of the particular provisions which have this effect.
The Government adds that "the penal legislation imposes heavier penalties in cases in which persons reporting crimes, witnesses or family members are intimidated (Federal Penal Code, section 219)". The Committee notes that the above section establishes the crime of intimidation committed by public servants and requests the Government to indicate the provisions applicable to persons who resort to intimidation and who are not members of the public service. The Committee also hopes that the Government will provide information on the number of sentences imposed upon public servants for the crime of intimidation, with copies of the rulings made under the above provision.
In its report, the Government reiterates that in practice it adopts different measures which vary according to the type and circumstances of the risk incurred by the person to whom protection is to be provided. The Committee hopes that the Government will provide copies of the provisions envisaging such protection and will indicate the measures concerned.
The Committee also hopes that the Government will provide information on the penalties that have been applied to persons convicted of the trafficking in persons, in accordance with the provisions Article 25 of the Convention, under which the illegal exaction of forced or compulsory labour shall be punishable by penalties that are really adequate and are strictly enforced.
The Committee notes the comments made by the International Confederation of Free Trade Unions (ICFTU), dated 13 March 2002, on the application of the Convention. The above comments were forwarded to the Government on 18 July 2002 so that it could make the observations that it considers appropriate.
In its comments, the ICFTU refers to the trafficking of women and girls within the country and abroad for the purposes of forced prostitution and the trafficking of illegal migrant workers from Central America to Mexico and the United States.
The Committee notes that the Government has replied to the comments of the ICFTU in a communication dated 28 November 2002 merely referring to its report on this Convention.
The Committee notes the information provided by the Government in its report in reply to the Committee’s general observation on the measures taken or contemplated to prevent, suppress and punish the trafficking of persons for the purpose of exploitation. The Committee notes the Government’s statements relating to the Mexican legislation with regard to the protection that is accorded against forced labour in general, debt slavery, the exploitation of prostitution and the penalties that can be imposed on those responsible. The Committee notes that no citations were made in the report of the legal texts or provisions to which reference was made. The Committee requests the Government to indicate the relevant texts and provisions.
With regard to the protection of victims who are prepared to give evidence against reprisals by exploiters, the Government indicates in its report that "the federal Government adopts various measures which vary according to the type and circumstances of the risk incurred by the person to whom protection is to be provided". The Committee requests the Government to indicate the measures concerned.
The Committee notes that the situations to which the ICFTU refers in its comments could involve serious violations of the Convention and it hopes that the Government will provide information on the measures which have been taken in relation to the matters raised.
[The Government is asked to reply in detail to the present comments in 2003.]