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Viewing cable 06ATHENS573, GREECE PART 4: TIP REPORT SUBMISSION 2006

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Reference ID Created Released Classification Origin
06ATHENS573 2006-03-01 05:02 2011-08-30 01:44 UNCLASSIFIED//FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY Embassy Athens
This record is a partial extract of the original cable. The full text of the original cable is not available.
UNCLAS SECTION 01 OF 06 ATHENS 000573 
 
SIPDIS 
 
SENSITIVE 
 
FOR EUR/SE, EUR/PGI, G/TIP, INL/HSTC, G, DRL, PRM, IWI 
 
E.O. 12958: N/A 
TAGS: KCRM PHUM KWMN SMIG KFRD PREL ELAB GR TIP
SUBJECT: GREECE PART 4: TIP REPORT SUBMISSION 2006 
 
REF: A. STATE 3836 
 
     B. THESSALONIKI 25 
     C. ATHENS 538 
     D. ATHENS 512 
     E. ATHENS 431 
     F. ATHENS 414 
     G. THESSALONIKI 14 
     H. ATHENS 369 
     I. ATHENS 346 
     J. ATHENS 328 
     K. 05 ATHENS 3157 
     L. 05 ATHENS 3144 
     M. 05 ATHENS 3110 
     N. 05 ATHENS 2959 
     O. 05 ATHENS 2927 
     P. 05 THESSALONIKI 86 
     Q. 05 ATHENS 2802 
     R. 05 THESSALONIKI 81 
     S. 05 ATHENS 2779 
     T. 05 ATHENS 2742 
     U. 05 ATHENS 2113 
     V. 05 ATHENS 1626 
     W. 05 TIRANA 968 
     X. 05 ATHENS 1268 
 
1.  The following is Sensitive but Unclassified.  Please 
Protect Accordingly. 
 
2. (SBU)  Below are Embassy Athens' responses to the 2006 TIP 
report questionnaire.  Text is keyed to Ref A request for 
"Protection and Assistance to Victims" Section.  This is the 
fourth of four cables. 
 
3.  PROTECTION AND ASSISTANCE TO VICTIMS: 
----------------------------------------- 
-- A. Does the government assist victims, for example, by 
providing temporary to permanent residency status, relief 
from deportation, shelter and access to legal, medical and 
psychological services?  If so, please explain.  Does the 
country have victim care and victim health care facilities? 
If so, can post provide the number of victims placed in these 
care facilities? 
 
Greece's 2002 anti-trafficking law and 2003 Presidential 
Decree call for comprehensive health services for victims, 
shelter, protection, and temporary relief from deportation at 
the prosecutor's request.  The 2005 Immigration Law provides 
for centrally issued residence permits with no fee and a 
one-month reflection period for victims.  The GoG reported 
that of the 137 victims identified in 2005, 57 accepted 
support and protection by the state, 20 were granted 
suspensions of deportation (100 percent of those who were 
subject to deportation), 19 were provided shelter and other 
victim care from state and/or NGO shelters, and 32 were 
assisted by their embassies after referral from the GoG. 
Other victims contacted their embassies independent of GoG 
assistance and so are not included in these statistics.  A 
number of victims identified in 2004 continued to be 
sheltered at NGO shelters.  29 special residence permits for 
TIP victims were granted or renewed in 2005.  (NGOs reported 
that, as occurs with residence permits granted to "normal" 
immigrants, there were sometimes months-long bureaucratic 
delays in the issuance of the residence/work permits which 
left the victims unable to seek work or travel.) 
 
Through the MFA, information from all NGO-run shelters was 
provided for all victims hosted in 2005, including details of 
nationality, and dates of protection and services provided to 
victims over the past two years. 
 
According to information from the MPO, the majority of the 
identified 137 victims had legal documentation to reside in 
Greece, and did not request protection from the state.  The 
police report that the majority of victims departed for their 
native countries without government repatriation assistance 
and a small number remain in Greece.  During 2005, IOM 
repatriated 5 Romanian victims and the infant of one victim, 
2 Moldovan victims, 3 Ukrainian victims, 2 Russian victims, 3 
Bulgarian victims, and 2 Lithuanian victims. 
 
-- B. Does the government provide funding or other forms of 
support to foreign or domestic NGOs for services to victims? 
Please explain. 
 
(SBU)  In 2005 the GoG authorized approximately two million 
euros to a variety of NGO programs and projects, including 
shelters, legal assistance, conferences, trainings, and 
prevention in source countries.  (See Prevention - D.) (Note: 
Please protect - Do not publish amount of GoG funding as it 
is not publicly released.  End Note.) 
 
-- C.  Is there a screening and referral process in place, 
when appropriate, to transfer victims detained, arrested or 
placed in protective custody by law enforcement authorities 
to NGO's that provide short- or long-term care? 
 
There is a screening process in place which has effectively 
transferred identified by law enforcement authorities into 
protective state and/or NGO custody.  The Memorandum of 
Cooperation now formally allows police to cooperate with 
NGOs, which has resulted in 19 victims being transferred from 
the police to NGO shelters.  For example, three Nigerian 
victims were identified as TIP victims in December 2005 at an 
Athens police station, after which they were transferred to a 
secret location Athens shelter.  With the entry into force on 
 
SIPDIS 
January 1 of the Immigration Law, which provides for the 
reflection period, police now have more flexibility to send 
victims to protective custody.  Police report using the 
government hotline to coordinate with NGOs on victim care. 
In practice, the referral process operates most effectively 
when law enforcement officials are the first contact point 
for the victim.  When NGOs are the first contact point, NGOs 
report that victims are not always entered into the 
protection system, possibly because there are not necessarily 
criminal charges associated with the case or because the NGO 
cannot convince the victim to seek protected status from the 
prosecutor. 
 
-- D. Are the rights of victims respected, or are victims 
also treated as criminals?  Are victims detained, jailed, or 
deported?   If detained or jailed, for how long?  Are victims 
fined?  Are victims prosecuted for violations of other laws, 
such as those governing immigration or prostitution? 
 
In the past, victims who were arrested for immigration 
violations or prostitution were sometimes tried alongside 
their traffickers.  Greek law does not yet exclude TIP 
victims from prosecution, but the prosecutor can and does 
grant this reprieve on a case-by-case basis, and the GoG 
reports that prosecutors did so with any and all crimes the 
137 TIP victims identified in 2005 had "committed."  The GoG 
reports that the Council of Europe Convention Against 
Trafficking in Human Beings which it signed on November 17, 
2005 stipulates that victims not be tried for crimes 
committed during the course of their victimization, so once 
the Convention is ratified this "loophole," which is avoided 
in practice, will be closed.  NGOs complain that while 
victims are no longer routinely prosecuted, there have been 
cases where victims' identities have not been protected. 
(Ref 05 Thess 81.) 
 
In 2005, the penalty for a suspected victim's conviction were 
reversed with the help of the Human Rights Ombudsman. 
Victims have been convicted in the past for criminal acts 
committed during their victimization.  In one such case, a 
non-recognized, suspected victim of trafficking who was 
sheltered as a TIP victim was convicted of prostitution 
violations.  The NGO that sheltered her, Doctors of the 
World, had grounds to believe she was a TIP victim, although 
she did not cooperate with the prosecutor and did not seek 
victim status.  She learned she had been included on the 
persona non grata (PNG) list (until 2015) because of her 
conviction after attempting to renew her residence permit. 
She appealed to the Human Rights Ombudsman in 2004 and the 
Ombudsman contacted the MPO Aliens and Administrative 
Division, which decided in December 2005 to remove her from 
the PNG list "for humanitarian reasons" based on the 
suspicion she had been a TIP victim. 
 
-- E. Does the government encourage victims to assist in the 
investigation and prosecution of trafficking?  May victims 
file civil suits or seek legal action against the 
traffickers?  Does anyone impede the victims' access to such 
legal redress? If a victim is a material witness in a court 
case against the former employer, is the victim permitted to 
obtain other employment or to leave the country? Is there a 
victim restitution program? 
 
The government's record on encouraging TIP victims to testify 
is mixed.  As in the U.S., the process of granting victim 
status and receiving a victim's work/residency permit is put 
into motion when victims agree to cooperate with authorities 
in the prosecution of their traffickers.  Now that victims 
are being granted residency/work permits (MOI reports 29 
issued or renewed in 2005) and with other victims already 
legally resident in Greece, more victims may remain in the 
country to testify when their traffickers come to trial. 
There is strong NGO support for some victims during court 
cases, and all NGO representatives who have been present at 
trials state that without such support, many victims would be 
emotionally unable to testify.  Prosecutors have told us 
informally that it would be illegal under Greek law to 
provide the proceeds of criminal enterprises to TIP victims. 
NGOs still claim that victims are not always properly 
notified of court summons to testify against traffickers, 
with subpoenas sent to victims' prior addresses, i.e., the 
places they were exploited.  Traffickers have been released 
pending trial in order for the courts to "track down" 
witnesses in their home countries. 
 
-- F. What kind of protection is the government able to 
provide for victims and witnesses?  Does it provide these 
protections in practice?  What type of shelter or services 
does the government provide? Does it provide shelter or any 
other benefits to victims for housing or other resources in 
order to aid the victims in rebuilding their lives? Where are 
child victims placed (e.g. in shelters, foster-care type 
systems or juvenile justice detention centers)? 
 
The law on Organized Crime (2928/2001) provides for witness 
protection.  If the victim is a witness to a crime that is 
not organized crime, the MPO reports that the police will 
protect the victim with an order of the prosecutor.  In 
practice, NGOs report that some identified and sheltered 
victims receive threats from their traffickers and need 
better protection.  NGOs who run shelters complain of 
inadequate security or police protection provided to the 
shelter.  One NGO refused to shelter a potential victim due 
to fear it could not adequately protect her in its shelter 
from her trafficker.  NGOs, especially those who do victim 
support and attend trials, report that they are also 
threatened by traffickers and their highly-paid lawyers. 
Child victims are officially turned over to the prosecutor 
for children, but there are not specialized shelters for 
child TIP victims so they are typically sheltered in 
orphanages or other state institutions.  The bilateral 
agreement with Albania signed in February details 
comprehensive child protections. 
 
-- G. Does the government provide any specialized training 
for government officials in recognizing trafficking and in 
the provision of assistance to trafficked victims, including 
the special needs of trafficked children?  Does the 
government provide training on protections and assistance to 
its embassies and consulates in foreign countries that are 
destination or transit countries?  Does it urge those 
embassies and consulates to develop ongoing relationships 
with NGOs that serve trafficked victims? 
 
The GOG provides anti-TIP training for police at all levels, 
including retraining and lifelong training of police 
personnel.  There were 10 seminars for police and law 
enforcement personnel in 2005 estimated to have trained more 
than 1,300 officers on TIP.  Child anti-trafficking NGOs have 
presented information to police on the special needs of child 
trafficking victims independently and at the seminars noted 
above.  The MPO issued a directive to all police in December 
2004 reinforcing how to recognize, question, and assist 
victims of TIP.  The MFA charges its embassies and consulates 
with some monitoring of source country NGOs that are partners 
with Hellenic Aid funded NGOs and therefore funding from the 
GoG. 
 
-- H. Does the government provide assistance, such as medical 
aid, shelter, or financial help, to its repatriated nationals 
who are victims of trafficking? 
 
Not applicable - Greece is not a source country for TIP 
victims. 
 
-- I. Which international organizations or NGOs, if any, work 
with trafficking victims?  What type of services do they 
provide?  What sort of cooperation do they receive from local 
authorities? 
 
--International Organization for Migration (IOM): 
coordination with the GoG on repatriations of victims, 
seminars and trainings for authorities, NGOs, social workers, 
police prosecutors, and the diplomatic corps, public 
awareness, coordination of diplomatic/NGO/GoG "Working 
Group."  IOM has excellent cooperation with local authorities 
and receives GoG funding.  It signed the MOC with the 
Interministerial Council. 
 
--Stability Pact Thessaloniki Office (SPOT): Regional TIP 
initiatives, holding a regional organized crime conference, 
which included a TIP workshop.  (Ref Thess 14) 
 
--European Network of Women (ENOW): multilingual victims 
hotline, operation of a shelter including provision of food 
and clothing, psychosocial victim support, legal support and 
advocacy, family contact public awareness, lobbying.  ENOW 
has good cooperation with local authorities and receives GoG 
funding.  It signed the MOC with the Interministerial Council. 
 
--Greek Council for Refugees (GCR): legal support and 
advocacy, family contact, seminars and trainings.  GCR has 
good cooperation with local authorities, receives GoG 
funding, and signed the MOC with the Interministerial Council. 
 
--International Society for the Support of Families (DESO): 
operation of three shelters including provision of food and 
clothing, medical and psychological and psychiatric support, 
lobbying.  DESO has some cooperation with local authorities, 
received GoG funding and in-kind donation of the shelter 
buildings.  DESO signed the MOC with the Interministerial 
Council. 
 
--Center for the Rehabilitation of Victims of Torture (CRTV): 
shelter, psychosocial and psychiatric support, legal support, 
lobbying.  CRTV has good, ad hoc cooperation especially with 
local police authorities, receives victim referrals directly 
from police, and is authorized GoG funding but is having 
problems seeing it delivered.  CRTV signed the MOC with the 
Interministerial Council. 
 
--Nea Zoi/Association for the Support and Restoration of 
Individuals in Prostitution: street work, victim 
identification through street work and visits to detention 
centers, victim support, lobbying.  Nea Zoi has limited 
cooperation with authorities as an independent, international 
NGO, but attends "Working Group" meetings. 
 
--Greek Helsinki Monitor (GHM): legal support and advocacy, 
publications of the Galatsi Group, lobbying.  Poor 
cooperation with GoG, outspoken critic of GoG efforts on TIP 
and other human rights issues. 
 
--Association for the Social Support of Youth (ARSIS): victim 
identification, coordination with TdH in Albania on child 
victims, public awareness, lobbying.  ARSIS has good 
cooperation with authorities and has done outreach to 
provincial police.  ARSIS receives GoG funding and will 
implement part of the $600,000 TACT project in Albania. ARSIS 
signed the MOC with the Interministerial Council. 
 
--Smile of the Child: shelters for primarily Greek children, 
public awareness, lobbying.  Excellent cooperation with 
authorities, signed the MOC with the Interministerial 
Council. 
 
--Center for Research and Support for Victims of Maltreatment 
and Social Exclusion (CVME or "EKYTHKA" in Greek): shelter, 
psychosocial and legal support to victims, lobbying.  Good 
cooperation with authorities, receives GoG funding, signed 
the MOC with the Interministerial Council. 
 
--Klimaka-Agency for the Development of Human and Social 
Capital: shelters, psychiatric and social support to victims, 
vocational training and activities in shelters, public 
awareness, lobbying. Excellent cooperation with authorities, 
receives victim referrals directly from police, receives GoG 
funding, signed the MOC with the Interministerial Council. 
 
--Solidarity (NGO of the Greek Orthodox Church): shelter, 
excellent cooperation with authorities, receives GoG funding, 
signed the MOC with the Interministerial Council. 
 
--ACT UP: STD and HIV screening, street work, victim 
identification, support, and referral, lobbying.  Good 
cooperation with GoG despite criticism of GoG, receives GoG 
funding. 
 
--Mediterranean Women's Studies Center (KEGME): seminars and 
training for police personnel in Albania.  Receives GoG 
funding, cooperation with GoG. 
 
--European Public Law Center: codification of regional TIP 
laws through the three-year "Project Hera" with 
Serbia-Montenegro, Kosovo, Albania, Macedonia, BiH, Croatia, 
Moldova, Belarus, and the Ukraine, undertaking a project on 
enactment of TIP laws in Moldova.  Receives GoG funding. 
 
--Human Rights Defense Center (KEPAD): coordination of 
Ariadne Regional Network, Greece/TIP working group at the UN. 
Excellent cooperation with GoG, receives GoG funding, signed 
MOC with Interministerial Council. 
 
--The International Police Association (IPA): training 
seminars for police on TIP. Excellent cooperation with 
authorities, (IPA members are Hellenic National Police), 
receives GoG funding, signed MOC with Interministerial 
Council. 
 
--Agapi: Thessaloniki-based social organization sponsored a 
TIP awareness-raising event for 200 members of the general 
public in February 2006.  GoG officials responsible for TIP, 
police, NGO reps, and others presented information on the TIP 
phenomenon to students and citizens.  (Ref Thess 25) 
 
--Doctors of the World/Medecins du Monde (MdM): program to 
benefit street children and orphans of Moldova. (Previously 
MdM had a TIP shelter in Athens, but it was closed when the 
new board shifted MdM's focus from TIP victims in Greece.) 
Good cooperation with GoG, receives GoG funding.  In May 2005 
Doctors of the World-Greece organized an international 
conference on "Raising Public Awareness about Women 
Trafficking in Turkey: Anti-Trafficking Fora and Creation of 
a Civil Society Network" with the Int'l Blue Crescent which 
included speakers from Greek NGOs, the GoG, and Greek 
Universities among the international panel. 
 
--The Galatsi Group: Group of approximately 11 NGOs that 
formerly met on a regular basis to discuss actions to combat 
TIP.  TIP related documents and submissions to international 
organizations are published under the name of the group, 
although they no longer regularly meet. 
 
--Center for Research and Action on Peace (KEDE): establish, 
equip, and operate a vocational training center in Armenia. 
Limited cooperation with GoG, receives GoG funding. 
 
--STOP NOW: Formerly focused on public awareness-raising. 
While members still attend TIP-related meetings, such as the 
"Working Group," the NGO has no funding or current projects. 
Limited cooperation with GoG, signed MOC with 
Interministerial Council. 
 
--Caritas Greece (NGO of the Catholic Church): Primarily 
works with refugees, feeding program, legal support, held 
seminar in 2005 entitled "Trafficking in Persons, 
Sensitization for Prevention" in May 2005 with presentations 
given by police, NGOs, and prominent Greeks. Caritas also 
conducted TIP public awareness poster campaign with the 
poster message with a picture of a young girl turned away and 
the message: "Trafficking: Don't turn your back on Modern-day 
Slavery... it is of immediate concern!!  Every year it is 
estimated that 700,000-4,000,000 people in the world are 
BOUGHT, SOLD, MOVED, AND IMPRISONED against their will!" and 
Caritas contact info. 
 
--Transparency International-Greece: Galatsi Group Member. 
 
--Social Aid of Hellas: Galatsi Group Member. 
 
--Social and Educational Action Center for the Support of 
Children and the Family: after school care, showers, 
clothing, tutoring, and meal program for disadvantaged 
children, especially Roma.  Galatsi Group Member. 
 
Other NGOs work on various TIP issues. 
 
TIP CONTACT 
----------- 
(U)  The Embassy's point of contact on TIP is political 
officer Karen Grissette.  Email: Grissetteke@state.gov, Tel: 
30-210-720-2551, Fax: 30-210-729-4307. 
Ries