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Viewing cable 10KAMPALA426, UGANDA: 2010 TRAFFICKING IN PERSONS REPORT

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Reference ID Created Released Classification Origin
10KAMPALA426 2010-02-25 13:25 2011-08-30 01:44 UNCLASSIFIED Embassy Kampala
VZCZCXRO3123
OO RUEHGI RUEHRN RUEHROV
DE RUEHKM #0426/01 0561327
ZNR UUUUU ZZH
O R 251325Z FEB 10
FM AMEMBASSY KAMPALA
TO RUEHC/SECSTATE WASHDC IMMEDIATE 0279
INFO IGAD COLLECTIVE
RWANDA COLLECTIVE
UNCLAS SECTION 01 OF 10 KAMPALA 000426 
 
SIPDIS 
DEPT FOR G/TIP 
 
E.O. 12958: N/A 
TAGS: PHUM KTIP KCRM KFRD KWMN PGOV PREF ELAB SMIG UG
SUBJECT: UGANDA: 2010 TRAFFICKING IN PERSONS REPORT 
 
REF: 10 STATE 2094; 09 KAMPALA 163 
 
Embassy POC for Trafficking in Persons (TIP) issues is Political 
Officer Trevor Olson, Tel: 256-41-306-214, Mobile: 256-772-220-135, 
Fax: 256-41-345-144. Pol/Econ Chief (FS-02), Political Officer 
(FS-03), FSN Political Assistant (FSN-11), and Department of 
Justice Legal Advisor spent 100 hours combined to prepare this 
report.  Information provided below is keyed to reftel questions. 
 
 
 
25A. Sources of available information include the government of 
Uganda's 15-member inter-ministerial Anti-Sacrifice and Trafficking 
in Persons task force (ASTP), the Ministry of Gender Labor and 
Social Development (MGLSD), the Ugandan Police Force (UPF), the 
Ugandan People's Defense Force (UPDF), the judiciary's Directorate 
of Public Prosecution (DPP) and Uganda's semi-autonomous Human 
Rights Commission (UHRC). Post has found information from these 
government offices to be reliable.  A number of local, regional and 
international NGOs have trafficking prevention, protection, and 
legal aid programs (See 28M).  Information published or provided by 
international NGOs is usually accurate and reliable, while 
information from local organizations is often assembled with good 
intention but with limited resources and cannot be considered 
completely reliable.  All organizations are willing to share 
information with post and also occasionally publish formal reports 
on trafficking. The published reports typically describe 
trafficking trends, methods, and victim and trafficker profiles; 
some also include broad estimates of the numbers of victims, and 
recommended actions for the GOU and other stakeholders.  During the 
past year organizations which have published reports in the past 
refocused their resources to lobby for the passing of the 
comprehensive TIP law.  As a result, fewer studies were completed. 
 
 
 
 
25B. Uganda is a country of origin, transit, and destination for 
children and adults trafficked for commercial sex, forced labor, 
and human sacrifice.  Citizens of Uganda are both victims and 
perpetrators of trafficking in Uganda.  Victims were trafficked 
within Uganda, within the region, to and from the Middle East, 
Asia, and elsewhere.  While the Lord's Resistance Army (LRA) 
continued to abduct children and adults to serve as sex slaves, 
porters, and combatants in southern Sudan, the Democratic Republic 
of Congo (DRC), and the Central African Republic, there have been 
no LRA abductions or attacks in Uganda since 2006.  No particular 
region or ethnic group within Uganda appeared more susceptible to 
trafficking, although local NGOs and Ugandan authorities provided 
services to hundreds of child trafficking victims from the Karamoja 
region of eastern Uganda during the year.  Thirteen women 
trafficked to Iraq as domestic laborers were repatriated to Uganda 
in 2009.  Their case prompted the Ugandan government to cancel the 
license of one recruiting agency and suspended the practice of 
sending domestic workers to Middle Eastern countries. Authorities 
also reported an increase in the number of child sacrifice cases, 
and investigated hundreds of incidents of child and human sacrifice 
and confirmed 29 occurrences in 2009.  The 2009 passage of a TIP 
law by Parliament substantially improved the TIP situation in 
Uganda by raising public and governmental awareness and giving 
authorities new tools to investigate and prosecute trafficking 
crimes. Many LRA fighters captured by the Ugandan military in DRC, 
CAR, and southern Sudan were abducted as children by the LRA and 
are transported back to Uganda by Ugandan authorities, issued 
amnesty when requested, and reintegrated into society.  The 
military's Child Protection Unit in Gulu is typically the first 
stop former abductees.  In 2009, this unit processed 66 victims 
before turning them over to NGO-run reintegration centers. The 
Government and donors also provide financial, medical, 
psychological, and rehabilitation services to ex-abductees, 
including child soldiers, for resettlement into Ugandan society. 
 
 
 
25C. Trafficking victims were subjected to hazardous working 
conditions, long working hours, imprisonment, and physical abuse. 
Commercial sex victims were also subjected to the risk of 
contracting sexually transmitted diseases. Ugandans trafficked to 
Iraq as domestic workers reported that they were forced to work 
long hours, physically and sexually abused, improperly fed, and 
locked in their employer's residences.  Victims of trafficking for 
the purpose of human sacrifice were murdered and subject to removal 
or mutilation of body parts and internal organs. 
 
KAMPALA 00000426  002 OF 010 
 
 
25D. Girls and boys between the ages of 8 and 18 are the most 
vulnerable to trafficking for labor or CSEC, with studies showing 
that girls are particularly vulnerable. Women between the ages of 
18 and 30 are vulnerable to being trafficked abroad under the cover 
of domestic worker contracts.  Infants and young children are 
vulnerable to trafficking and  human sacrifice.  Pakistani, Indian, 
and Chinese workers are trafficked into Uganda by importers and 
construction firms.  Police confirm the existence of trafficking 
rings in which Indian minors are forced into prostitution or 
pornography by Indian traffickers.  Vulnerability increases due to 
external shocks such as drought and food availability in rural 
areas or the disruption of normal migration patterns by the ongoing 
disarmament program in the Karamoja region. 
 
 
 
25E. The ILO, MGLSD, the Ugandan Police Force (UPF) and local and 
international NGOs have identified traffickers as pimps, bar and 
brothel owners, employment bureaus, recruitment agencies, formerly 
trafficked victims who recruit others, peers and friends of 
trafficking victims, intermediaries in villages,  businesses 
operators, and others. For children under 12 years of age, 
traffickers frequently obtained the consent of the parents based on 
promises of education or employment.  In most situations, parents 
placed their children with an intermediary known to the community 
such as relatives, peers or well-established individuals. Ugandan 
and foreign traffickers may use Ugandan employment agencies to 
recruit Ugandan employees for domestic, security or other work 
abroad.  Local recruiting agencies may or may not know that the 
workers will be trafficked upon arrival in the foreign country, and 
often are incapable or unwilling to adequately track and monitor 
the workers they have recruited once they leave Uganda. 
 
 
 
26A: The Ugandan government regards TIP as a serious problem and 
has repeatedly exhibited the political will needed to combat 
trafficking.  For example, Parliament passed comprehensive TIP 
legislation in April 2009 that was signed by the President in 
October and will enter into force after publication in the 
government gazette.  The government also created, in February 2009, 
a 15-member inter-ministerial Anti-Sacrifice and Trafficking in 
Persons task force (ASTP) to manage trafficking cases, implement 
public information campaigns, and draft policy.  Numerous senior 
government officials, including President Museveni and First Lady 
Janet Museveni, spoke out against trafficking and human sacrifice 
during the year.  In addition, the police and other relevant law 
enforcement agencies now require mandatory TIP training for 
officers. 
 
 
 
26B. The Ministry of Internal Affairs, which oversees the Ugandan 
Police Force, Immigration, and the Criminal Investigation Division, 
has the lead in combating trafficking in persons.  The MGLSD 
manages policy development and assists with victim care.  The 
Ministry of Justice and the Directorate for Public Prosecutions 
(DPP) prosecutes trafficking cases.  The ASTP task force also 
includes a member from Interpol, the Ministry of Information, the 
Ministry of Education, and Uganda's Internal Security Organization. 
 
 
 
26C. Severe resource constraints hamper the Government's 
prevention, prosecution and protection efforts.  The ASTP task 
force, for instance, operates without a dedicated vehicle or 
sufficient communications equipment. Inadequate resources and 
significant court backlogs also constrain efforts of prosecutors 
and the judiciary to pursue convictions against traffickers.  While 
corruption is a serious problem in Uganda, there are no indications 
of corruption impeding efforts to combat or investigate 
trafficking. The government does not have the resources required to 
assist trafficking victims, and therefore turns rescued victims 
over to partner NGOs for care. 
 
 
 
26D. The newly formed ASTP task force is now responsible for 
documenting and reporting on cases and trends of human sacrifice 
and trafficking.  In January 2010, the ASTP reported a preliminary 
figure of 29 human sacrifice cases in 2009, and announced that the 
release of a comprehensive report on human trafficking and human 
sacrifice is scheduled for March 1.  The ASTP's ability to monitor 
anti-trafficking efforts and compile data is limited by resource 
constraints and variations in the ways individual government 
agencies documented trafficking data.  For instance, police 
officers mark multiple offenses on arrest or investigation forms, 
 
KAMPALA 00000426  003 OF 010 
 
 
making it difficult for the ASTP to disaggregate statistics on 
trafficking, kidnapping, abduction, pimping, and other offenses. 
The passage of the TIP law, and changes to police documentation 
procedures should provide a unified system for monitoring 
anti-trafficking efforts and trafficking incidents.  Prior to the 
TIP law, trafficking cases were charged under other statutes. The 
UPF's CFPU at the national police headquarters monitors sex crimes 
involving children and local police efforts to rescue children from 
exploitative forms of labor.  The DPP maintains statistics on the 
number of prosecutions and convictions on the crime of sex with a 
minor, which includes trafficking victims. 
 
 
 
26E.  Birth registration is optional and most children and many 
non-voting adults are not centrally registered.  The GOU is 
currently evaluating the feasibility and resources available to 
implement a national identification program.  In 2000, Uganda 
required that all children have their own passports for 
international travel as a means to prevent child smuggling and 
trafficking. Uganda immigration officials have a watch list and 
computerized systems for checking identity documents of individuals 
entering and departing the country.  However, many of Uganda's 
border crossings are inadequately manned, and much of Uganda's land 
and water borders are unfenced and/or unpatrolled. Within 
Immigration, there is a task force that monitors the issuance of 
passports to children and has blacklisted several NGOs and 
orphanages on suspicion of trafficking offenses. 
 
 
 
26F. The Ugandan government is not currently capable gathering the 
data required for an in-depth assessment of law enforcement 
efforts?  The UPF's and ASTP's ability to monitor anti-trafficking 
efforts and compile data is limited by resource constraints and 
variations in the ways individual government agencies documented 
trafficking data.  For instance, police officers mark multiple 
offenses on arrest or investigation forms, making it difficult for 
the ASTP to disaggregate statistics on trafficking, kidnapping, 
abduction, pimping, and other offenses. The ASTP, through manual 
review of cases was able to surmount these issues to assemble a 
limited data set of human sacrifice cases.  The passage of the TIP 
law, and changes to police documentation procedures should provide 
a unified system for monitoring anti-trafficking efforts and 
trafficking incidents. 
 
 
 
27A.  In April 2009, the Ugandan Parliament passed comprehensive 
TIP legislation. This legislation was signed by President Museveni 
in October and will enter into force once published in the 
government "gazette".  Public and government awareness of 
trafficking issues increased over the past year due to new law and 
programs carried out by the government in cooperation with donors, 
and local and international NGOs.  The law is comprehensive; it 
provides detailed definitions of trafficking and related offenses 
and contains provisions for the protection, support and 
repatriation of victims, and for restitution, compensation to them. 
The law also contains extra-territorial jurisdiction, extradition, 
and forfeiture of assets provisions.  The law also mandates the 
establishment of a prevention of trafficking in persons office. 
Penalties under the law for trafficking range from fifteen years 
for basic labor trafficking to the death penalty for "aggravated" 
offenses such as the trafficking of a child that results in their 
death.  Because the law is not yet in effect, trafficking cases 
have continued to be prosecuted under other laws, such as 
procurement of a woman to become a prostitute, detention with 
sexual intent, sex with a minor girl (defilement), dealing in 
slaves, compelling unlawful labor, abduction, kidnapping, obtaining 
money under false pretenses. Taken together these laws cover most 
cases of trafficking.  However, lack of investigative resources and 
technical capacity in the criminal justice system limited effective 
enforcement of the different laws.  The TIP law will close some 
gaps and will establish clear penalties for trafficking crimes. 
 
 
 
27B.  The TIP law specifies penalties of between 15 years and life 
imprisonment for the trafficking of adults for sexual exploitation 
and penalties of between life imprisonment and death for 
trafficking children for commercial sexual exploitation.  These 
penalties are stricter than the current seven years imprisonment 
established in the penal code for similar offences.  Currently, 
Penal Code Section 131 prohibits the procurement of any woman or 
girl to become a prostitute or to work in a brothel, either in 
Uganda or elsewhere; Section 134 prohibits the unlawful detention 
of another person for the purpose of sexual intercourse, including 
 
KAMPALA 00000426  004 OF 010 
 
 
in a brothel; Section 136 prohibits any person from living on the 
earnings of a prostitute, which includes aiding, abetting, or 
compelling prostitution; and Section 137 prohibits any person from 
operating a brothel.  For offenses under all of these sections the 
penalty is seven years imprisonment. 
 
 
 
27C.  Currently Ugandan Penal Code Section 249 prohibits the 
import, export, purchase, sale, receipt, or detention of persons as 
slaves, with a penalty of imprisonment for up to 10 years.  The 
punishment for adult labor trafficking will not change under the 
new law, as it specifies 10 years of imprisonment for engaging the 
labor services of a victim of trafficking in persons, however under 
the new law the labor trafficking of children is punishable with 
life imprisonment.  Uganda is a source country for labor, under the 
new TIP law, labor recruiters who engage in recruitment of workers 
by knowingly providing false or deceptive information will be 
liable to trafficking charges. Uganda is a destination for a 
limited number of labor migrants and under the new TIP law 
employers who confiscate workers' passports for the purpose of 
local trafficking, switch contracts, or compel service by 
withholding salaries will be subject to trafficking charges. 
 
 
 
27D.  Rape carries a maximum penalty of death.  While judges 
continue to impose death sentences, the Ugandan government has 
executed a convicted criminal in years.  Defilement (sex with a 
minor girl even if consensual) also carries a maximum penalty of 
death.  These penalties are more severe than the current law for 
procuring a woman to be a prostitute (up to seven years in prison) 
or for dealing in slaves (up to 10 years in prison).  The new TIP 
law has stricter punishments for trafficking that involves sexual 
exploitation which are commensurate to the current punishment for 
rape.  For example, syndicated or large scale trafficking, 
trafficking committed by persons of authority, or trafficking that 
causes the death, serious illness or HIV/AIDS infection of the 
victim punishable by death. 
 
 
 
27E:  Despite limited government ability to collect and compile 
data (See 26F), the ASTP reported 29 cases of homicide or attempted 
homicide for the purpose of human sacrifice in 2009.  Fifteen of 
these cases involved children less than 18 years of age.  Of the 15 
children, 2 were rescued, 2 are missing with one presumed dead and 
11 were beheaded or had other body parts removed. All of the 
confirmed adult victims were beheaded or had other body parts 
removed.  For these offences, 50 suspects were charged and their 
cases are currently pending in court.  In one case, a female 
Rwandan national who was arrested on January 26, 2009 attempting to 
sell her six-month old baby for the purpose of sacrifice was 
charged in court and deported to Rwanda. The baby was repatriated 
to Rwanda and placed in the custody of the father with the 
assistance of a local NGO. 
 
 
 
Authorities also reported two cases of child abduction for the 
purpose of forced labor involving seven juvenile victims.  In March 
2009, four children between the 6-12 years of age were abducted 
from Mbale and taken to Kenya.  Authorities rescued the children 
and returned them to Uganda where they were reunited with their 
parents.  Two female suspects were charged with kidnapping, and 
face a penalty of up to life imprisonment.  The second case 
involved three victims allegedly kidnapped to serve as domestic 
laborers in Southern Sudan, the trafficker was arrested and charged 
with kidnapping.  The case is pending trial. 
 
 
 
In 2009, authorities reported one case involving the abduction of 
three juvenile victims for the purpose of defilement (sexual 
exploitation).  The victims were returned to their parents and the 
suspect was charged and is awaiting trial. Police also investigated 
the alleged trafficking of Pakistanis to Uganda for financial 
exploitation.  Police said available evidence cannot yet sustain 
criminal charges, but that investigations are ongoing. 
 
 
 
During the year, IOM repatriated 13 Ugandan women from Iraq who 
were recruited by a local Ugandan firm to work as domestic 
laborers. The women reported sexual harassment and abuse at the 
Iraqi homes where they worked.  In July, authorities questioned the 
management of Uganda Veterans Development Ltd, the local employment 
 
KAMPALA 00000426  005 OF 010 
 
 
agency that recruited the women, and later cancelled the company's 
operating license. On August 5, the External Labor Unit (ELU) at 
the Ministry of Gender, Labor and Social Affairs suspended the 
export of domestic workers to the Middle East for all external 
employment agencies.  The ASTP also assisted with the repatriation 
of a separate case of three Ugandan girls stranded in Iraq. An 
investigation was still ongoing in the case at year's end. 
 
 
 
The UPF and DPP reported that the cases reported last year remain 
pending. 
 
 
 
27F: The GOU provided specialized training for government and law 
enforcement officials on recognizing, investigating, and 
prosecuting trafficking cases and on victim handling and care. 
Between October 2008 and September 2009, the U.S. Mission supported 
16 TIP training programs, including a two-week training for TIP 
instructor development, a two-week training for TIP Criminal 
Investigations, and a series of 14 one-day TIP first responder 
courses.  The UPF also developed a 25-page anti-trafficking first 
responder pocket manual which has been distributed to over 2,000 
law enforcement personnel during the training programs. The manual 
contains the United Nations Protocol and current Ugandan laws, the 
duties of a first responder and victim/suspect interview questions. 
Thirteen of the instructors from the train-the-trainer course 
provided a series of one-day "Combating Human Trafficking: First 
Responder Course" sessions in four locations throughout Uganda. 
The new trainers from the four core law enforcement agencies, with 
strong support from the Minister of Internal Affairs, Inspector 
General of Police, Immigration Director, DPP, and MGLSD, trained 
2,010 additional trainees in Kampala, Masindi, Mbarara, and Mbale, 
. 
 
 
 
In February 2009, as U.S. supported two-week TIP criminal 
investigations course trained 28 participants from the UPF and 
Immigration.   This course emphasized the human trafficking 
process, interviewing and interrogation techniques, undercover 
operations, crime scene management and preservation of evidence, 
surveillance and gathering and analyzing intelligence, while 
stressing the importance of respect for human rights.  The 
Inspector General of Police has mandated that all Ugandan police 
officers receive specialized TIP training. To meet this mandate the 
UPF has incorporated the one-day TIP first responder course into 
basic training at the police academy.  As of September 2009, 
approximately 150 officers received this training from the UPF's 
Child and Family Protection Unit.  Additionally, the Criminal 
Investigations Directorate, which is currently providing training 
to new officers, has included TIP training in its program. 
Further, the newly appointed head of Immigration's training bureau 
has committed to providing TIP training to all new and seasoned 
personnel once a training schedule is developed.  The SLEA also 
worked in cooperation with the UPF Community Policing Unit and 
anti-trafficking/human sacrifice unit to develop a detailed 
investigative manual on human trafficking and missing/abducted 
children. 
 
 
 
The Government provides training to members of the military 
through Child Protection Units located in each military command. 
Ugandan troops deploying outside Uganda receive additional 
training, including on trafficking in persons.  On a regular basis, 
Ugandan soldiers are given specific training on the rights of 
children and carry a code of conduct detailing the rights of women 
and children. Police officers are actively participating in a 
specialized training program on the worst forms of child labor. 
 
 
 
27G: Uganda cooperated with the governments of Rwanda, Burundi, 
DRC, Kenya, Tanzania, Yemen, Botswana, and Poland on trafficking 
cases. The GOU, DRC, and southern Sudanese governments are working 
together in a joint military operation to pursue the LRA and rescue 
abductees.  The police also participate in the East African Police 
Chiefs Organization (EAPCO), which includes nine countries in the 
region.  The organization provides mutual legal assistance, 
training, and a forum to discuss trans-national crime.  The 
INTERPOL unit of the national police also participates in 
multilateral investigations of cross-border crimes including drug 
and firearms trafficking, although none have so far included human 
trafficking crimes.  The head of Tanzania's anti-trafficking unit 
participated in the February 2009 training in Uganda and assisted 
 
KAMPALA 00000426  006 OF 010 
 
 
the UPF in setting up its TIP unit.  During the year, the GOU/UPF 
also worked in direct cooperation with Kenyan authorities to return 
four juvenile victims to Uganda who were taken to Kenya for forced 
labor. It is not known if the Kenyan suspects were arrested or 
prosecuted however the female Ugandan suspect has been charged with 
abduction and obtaining money under false pretenses. In August 
2009, the GOU worked with the U.S., Iraqi, and IOM to repatriate 13 
victims of trafficking from Iraq. 
 
 
 
27H: Uganda belongs to INTERPOL and has honored extradition 
warrants for other crimes.  The EAPCO is currently developing an 
extradition treaty for the nine member countries that should 
facilitate the extradition of criminals.  In practice, for most 
cases, the GOU does not have the financial resources to extradite 
although the newly signed TIP legislation does provide for 
extraditing suspects from other countries. 
 
 
 
27I: There were no indications of government collusion with 
traffickers or tolerance of trafficking. 
 
 
 
27J: During the year no government officials were investigated for 
trafficking.  The TIP legislation establishes harsher punishments 
for persons of authority, including police officers and other 
government officials that are involved in trafficking in persons. 
For instance, while an ordinary citizen could receive 15 years 
under a basic labor trafficking conviction, a police officer or 
other government official could receive life imprisonment. 
 
 
 
27K:  Uganda has 3,200 peacekeepers and 124 police officer in 
Somalia and 130 police officers in Darfur, Sudan.  The Ugandan 
Peoples Defense Forces (UPDF) reported no cases of trafficking 
involving peacekeepers.  There were no reports of Ugandan 
peacekeepers involved in trafficking crimes. 
 
 
 
27L: Uganda does not have an identified problem of sex tourism or 
of its citizens travelling abroad for sex tourism. The TIP law has 
an extraterritorial provision to allow prosecution of Ugandans for 
trafficking-related offenses in another country. 
 
 
 
28A: The GOU lacks resources to provide long-term assistance to 
victims and instead refers victims to NGOs.  While this handover is 
often through informal arrangements at lower levels, the UPF does 
have a memorandum of understanding with one NGO to place its social 
workers in Central Police Station and in stations in two other 
districts to assist children and other trafficking victims.  The 
NGO reports that the system is working well. The Government 
assisted IOM to repatriate 13 female trafficking victims from Iraq. 
The victims needed government travel documents to return to Uganda. 
Officials at the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, the President's 
Office and Immigration were instrumental in ensuring that the 
travel documents were received.  The Minister of Internal Affairs 
has granted permission for foreign victims of trafficking to remain 
in Uganda when needed for an investigation.  Uganda does not 
currently have a formal witness protection program; however, in 
some cases they are able to relocate a victim within the country. 
The IGP has advised that he plans to develop a witness protection 
program as part of the implementation of the TIP law. 
 
 
 
28B: The GOU provides assistance to former LRA abductees, including 
children. The Ugandan military has a Child Protection Unit, which 
facilitates the reception and debriefing of former child soldiers, 
as well as their subsequent transfer to NGO-run reintegration 
centers.  Child soldiers who surrender or are captured are provided 
with shelter and food during the short period (one or two days) 
before they are transferred to NGO custody.  NGOs are notified by 
the military as soon as the military has a child under its care. 
The amnesty program has been an important method to encourage LRA 
rebels to surrender and has led to a significant reduction in LRA 
strength. The MGLSD operates two transit shelters in Karamoja for 
internally displaced Karamojong, including children who were 
trafficked and used for begging or other urban street work.  The 
MGLSD also operates the Mpigi facility in Kampala for the initial 
intake of street children (who are primarily from Karamoja).  In 
 
KAMPALA 00000426  007 OF 010 
 
 
February 2010, there were 40 Karamojong children at the Mpigi 
facility awaiting transfer to one of the two facilities in 
Karamoja.  The government could not provide budget figures for the 
facilities, but post estimates the expenditure to be between 
$50,000 and $100,000.  There were no government facilities for male 
or female adult victims of trafficking. 
 
 
 
The local NGO Uganda Youth Development Link (UYDEL) operates two 
shelters in Kampala for trafficked children and takes in children 
referred to them by police, local leaders, partner NGOs, peer 
educators and parent support groups.  UYDEL reported that between 
September 2009 and February 2010 they received 66 trafficked 
children between age 10 and 18 for protection.  Of the 66, 32 were 
referred by educators or school administrators, 16 by local leaders 
and 12 by the UPF, the remaining six victims were trafficked 
Congolese children referred by the Refugee Law Project.  50 were 
girls and 16 boys. UYDEL reports that it provides social support 
services at only one of its two facilities, which includes routine 
counseling, play and art therapies, and vocational and life skills 
training for 3-6 months. The social workers visit/make contacts 
with parents/guardians to prepare them to receive the child and 
support them rebuild their lives after the rehabilitation process. 
 
 
 
In 2009, IOM repatriated approximately a number of Congolese women 
together with their dependents to DRC. These women are part of a 
larger group that came to Uganda with Ugandan soldiers returning 
from the war in Congo (1998-2003), many of whom were later 
abandoned and have resorted to commercial sex work. 
 
 
 
Foreign trafficking victims, such as the six Congolese children 
identified above had the same access to care and a facilities as 
internal trafficking victims. 
 
 
 
28C: The Police's CFPU provides limited counseling services once a 
victim has been identified; and then refers victims to available 
NGO's for additional services.  The GOU does not have the resources 
to fund foreign or domestic NGOs for services to trafficking 
victims.  However, the government works closely with NGOs that 
assist trafficked victims in Kampala and other urban centers, and 
that assist former LRA abductees at reception centers in northern 
Uganda. 
 
 
 
28D: Currently, Ugandan law does not provide assistance to foreign 
trafficking victims and immigration officials are required to 
deport individuals in violation of the immigration code.  However, 
on a case-by-case basis the Minister of Internal Affairs can allow 
foreign victims to remain in Uganda to assist in an investigation, 
though the GOU cannot officially allow work privileges or offer 
livelihood or other assistance.  The Legal Affairs Department at 
Immigration and others involved in the drafting on the new TIP law 
recognized this issue, and the new TIP law will remedy many of the 
current legal limitations on handling foreign victims.  It also 
establishes government health, social, medical, counseling, and 
psychosocial assistance and calls on the government to provide 
accommodation and material assistance where possible. 
 
 
 
28E: The GOU lacks the resources to provide longer-term shelter or 
housing benefits to trafficking victims.  The Government, in 
conjunction with NGOs, provides short term assistance. In the case 
of former LRA abductees, some vocational training and reintegration 
assistance is provided.  The new TIP law does call on the 
Government to provide accommodation when possible. 
 
 
 
28F: The Ugandan military's Child Protection Unit screens children 
who were trafficked by the LRA and refers them to NGO-run 
assistance programs.  The UPF refers trafficking victims to NGOs. 
The UPF's CFPU works closely with UYDEL, which has placed social 
workers in the Central Police Station in Kampala and in two other 
locations to provide legal, medical, and psychological assistance 
to victims.  During the past year, the UPF has referred six victims 
to UYDEL's shelter in Kampala. 
 
KAMPALA 00000426  008 OF 010 
 
 
28G: As noted in 27E, the UPF does not have firm statistics on 
trafficking cases, both because cases are charged under other laws, 
and because the UPFs ability to compile crime statistics is 
limited.   For 2009, the UPF provided information on the 13 women 
trafficked to or in Iraq, on 7 children trafficked for forced labor 
to neighboring countries, and 3 children trafficked for sexual 
exploitation.  The GOU assisted in the care and handling of all of 
these victims, often referring them to NGOs for care and 
counseling. The 13 victims repatriated from Iraq were placed with 
IOM for medical and psychological counseling immediately upon their 
return to Uganda, and subsequently returned to their families. 
UYDEL provided care for 36 trafficking victims. 
 
 
 
28H:  The GOU does not have a formal system of identifying victims 
from high risk groups.  However, Immigration and the UPF are 
proactively trying to identify victims at entry/exit points into 
Uganda and Kampala. Over the past year, a U.S. funded police 
training program resulted in  a Government initiative to have all 
police, immigration officers, and labor inspectors trained to 
identify and investigate trafficking.  Trainers were trained and 
the GOU is now using them along with trained officers of the UPF's 
Child and Family Protection Unit (CFPU) to conduct additional 
training.  The police reported the continuation of proactive law 
enforcement measures to counter trafficking.  Measures include 
placing investigators with uniformed officers at checkpoints on 
roads leading into Kampala to identify potential victims and human 
traffickers.  The IGP plans to train the Community Policing Unit to 
develop public awareness strategies and to gather and share of 
information between the police and the public on trafficking 
issues. 
 
 
 
28I:  The rights of victims are generally respected in Uganda. 
Child victims of criminal activity are referred to the CFPU and 
social workers within police stations.  Sometimes victims are 
detained, particularly when police conduct sweeps to remove street 
children or prostitutes from bars.  Potential victims are sometimes 
prosecuted for immigration or prostitution violations.  LRA 
abductees are usually granted amnesty through a government program. 
After a period of residence at NGO reception centers, generally 
about six weeks, they are released so that they can be reunited 
with their families and reintegrated into society.  NGOs and others 
provide limited additional assistance, including psychosocial 
counseling.  Child sex workers rounded up with adult prostitutes 
during police sweeps are generally released without charge, often 
into the care of NGOs. 
 
 
 
28J: The GOU encourages victims to assist in the investigation and 
prosecution of trafficking through referrals to NGOs, which can 
provide shelter and counseling while investigations proceed.  The 
new law mandates the establishment of a victim's fund. In northern 
Uganda, the government has offered amnesty to LRA rebels who 
renounce rebellion and provide information to the government.  The 
government encourages victims in sex trafficking cases to testify. 
During the past year, the SLEA persuaded the UPF to pay for 
physical examinations of victims of sexual assault.  In the past, a 
police physician was rarely available and victims usually had to 
pay as much as $20 for the examination.  This cost was prohibitive 
for most victims and discouraged victims from coming forward.  In 
early March 2009, the UPF announced that victims would no longer be 
required to pay for this examination.  While the free medical 
examination is a step forward, there is also social stigma against 
victims of sexual crimes in some communities.  Other factors 
believed to inhibit reporting and prosecution of sexual crimes 
include fear of retribution, lack of support services, and use of 
alternative restitution procedures. 
 
 
 
28K:  The GOU does not offer training in trafficking of persons for 
its foreign service officers, but 
 
Immigration officers posted in Ugandan embassies are being trained 
as part of current training programs.  Ugandan embassies are called 
upon to assist in the tracking of cases when needed and provide 
necessary travel documents to repatriate victims 
 
 
 
28L: The GOU provides assistance, including medical aid, to former 
abductees returning from LRA captivity and also provided some 
 
KAMPALA 00000426  009 OF 010 
 
 
assistance to the women who were repatriated from Iraq. 
 
 
 
28M: UNICEF, Save the Children, World Vision, IOM, ILO, Concerned 
Women's Associations in Kitgum, Gulu, and Lira; Gulu Support the 
Children Organization, Lira-Facilitation for Peace and Development 
(FEPAD), Give Me a Chance, the International Rescue Committee, 
African Network for the Prevention and Protection Against Child 
Abuse and Neglect (ANPCANN) and its affiliate UYDEL, Busia 
Compassionate Friends, Kids in Need, Restore International, 
International Justice Mission, and a number of other NGOs work with 
formerly abducted children in northern Uganda, children in 
situations of commercial sex exploitation, and other at risk 
individuals.  These organizations provide food, shelter, 
psychosocial counseling, and vocational training.  The Government 
supports the activities of these organizations. 
 
 
 
29A: The government in collaboration with NGOs conducted 
anti-trafficking dialogues and education campaigns in 2009.  For 
example: on November 5 a national workshop was held in Kampala to 
sensitize the public on the problem of child sacrifice; on 
November 23 the ASTP and the Coalition Against Human Sacrifice 
launched the Anti-human Sacrifice Campaign; on November 24 the ASTP 
and the Coalition Against Human Sacrifice organized a public 
dialogue on child sacrifice in Kampala; on November 26 government 
officials participated in a solidarity march to protest increased 
incidents of child sacrifice; and on November 28 government 
officials participated in a launch to combat human sacrifice that 
was held in Kamuli District in Eastern Uganda. 
 
 
 
These activities focused on the causes, magnitude, effects, policy 
and service gaps in addressing the problem. They were attended by 
participants including academicians, politicians, media workers, 
NGOs and government officials.  As a result of the activities there 
is increased awareness of the problem of trafficking and child 
sacrifice among the public and the police has increased their 
vigilance in responding to reports of suspected incidents. Public 
awareness campaigns have largely focused on addressing the supply 
side of trafficking because the GOU identified cultural acceptance 
and "ignorance" as the primary driver.  During the reporting 
period, there was also significant public debate on the TIP 
legislation.  The Parliamentary Committee on Defense and Internal 
Affairs conducted extensive and well-publicized hearings and worked 
with women Parliamentarians and local organizations to increase 
awareness of trafficking and the need for the TIP law. 
 
 
 
29B: In 2000, Uganda required that all children have their own 
passports as a means to prevent child smuggling and trafficking. 
This has helped identify potential external trafficking victims. 
The Government monitors its borders and has cooperated in a 
US-financed program to increase border security.  Traffickers have 
been apprehended at Uganda's border with Kenya and Rwanda. 
Uganda's INTERPOL unit disseminates international alerts on 
suspects to Uganda's border officials for screening immigrants. 
Immigration officials are monitoring flights to Dubai, which have 
been used to traffic children.  The Uganda police also cooperate 
closely with their counterparts in the region to investigate and 
arrest suspects involved in cross-border crime. 
 
 
 
29C: The primary coordinating mechanism is the 15-member, 
inter-ministerial Anti-Sacrifice and Trafficking in Persons task 
force (ASTP). 
 
 
 
29D: The Government of Uganda has had a national anti-trafficking 
working group since 2005. The ASTP is the current formation of the 
working group and plays a role in developing laws and policy such 
as the TIP law, and also in enforcement, education and prosecution 
efforts.  The Chief of the ASTP has reported that, with the passing 
of the TIP law, the ASTP will work toward a comprehensive national 
action plan on to address human sacrifice and trafficking.  Several 
ministries have national action plans that address trafficking 
problems in Uganda. The Ministry of Labor is working with police, 
local governments, the Ministries of Justice and Immigration, and 
non-governmental and international organizations to develop a plan 
for the dissemination of TIP resources throughout the country.  The 
MGLSD also has a five-year plan that includes assisting children so 
 
KAMPALA 00000426  010 OF 010 
 
 
that they do not become vulnerable to traffickers. 
 
 
 
29E: In October 2007 the GOU started to draft a law to address 
sexual exploitation. The Ugandan Penal Code prohibits procuring of 
a female and causing her to become a prostitute, to leave the 
country to frequent a brothel elsewhere, or become an inmate of a 
brothel.  Punishment for those offenses is imprisonment for up to 7 
years.  The same punishment applies in cases in which a female 
below age 21 is procured for the purpose of sex with any other 
person in Uganda or elsewhere.  The code also prohibits procuring 
any person by using threats, intimidation, false pretense or false 
representation or by administering drugs.  Owning or occupying 
premises where a girl younger than 18 years is induced to have 
unlawful sex with any man is punishable by imprisonment for 5 
years.  Under the code, no person can be convicted of procurement 
based on evidence provided by only one collaborating witness. 
Ministry of Gender, Labor and Social Affairs officials said the law 
is difficult to implement.  Most people who were previously 
arrested in the act of prostitution were charged with being idle 
and disorderly.  The government continues community 
awareness-raising efforts to target poor rural areas where girls 
and women are most likely to be recruited. 
 
 
 
29F:  The Government continues to draft the Anti-Pornography Bill 
2009, and has announced that it will soon be tabled in Parliament. 
According to the Bill, individuals found guilty of the act risk 
being sentenced to prison for 10 years or to pay a fine of $5,000. 
 
 
 
29G:  The Ugandan Peoples Defense Forces (UPDF) provides 
anti-trafficking instruction as part of its human rights and child 
protection training for Ugandan troops deploying internationally. 
Uganda currently has 3,200 troops serving in the African Union 
Mission in Somalia which received human rights training and 
instruction on trafficking in persons from the UPDF's Human Rights 
Desk and Child Protection Unit personnel prior to deployment.  In 
addition, the State-Department's ACOTA training package, which 
trained the second Ugandan battalion and subsequent battalions, 
provided "Command and Staff Operations Skills" training to prepare 
the battalion commander and thirty members of his staff for the 
Somalia mission.  The senior leadership of the Ugandan battalions 
was taught the specific duties and principle responsibilities of 
senior officers to protect human rights, understand gender-based 
violence, eliminate of sexual exploitation, provide protection for 
children, and prevent of trafficking in persons.  This training was 
mandated by the U.S. Congress for all USG-funded peace support 
operations. 
 
 
 
Ugandan forces deployed to the DRC, Southern Sudan and the Central 
African Republic to pursue the LRA received refresher briefings on 
the treatment of children and others abducted by the LRA.  Each 
Ugandan unit that deployed contained between two and five Child 
Protection Unit officers.  The UPDF, UNICEF, Save the Children, and 
IOM developed a protocol to protect victims that it has rescued 
from the LRA.  In 2009, the UPDF's Child Protection Unit assisted 
in the return and reintegration of 66 victims abducted by the 
Lord's Resistance Army rebels.  The unit processed the victims and 
transferred them to NGO-run centers for longer term care and 
support. 
 
 
 
30A: The GOU partners with local, regional and international NGOs 
and with neighboring countries to handle TIP cases and develop 
policy and programs. 
 
 
 
30B: The GOU is not in a position to provide funding or substantial 
training to other countries, but coordinates with officials from 
other countries on specific TIP cases and to develop coordination 
mechanisms. 
HOOVER