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Viewing cable 06MEXICO1113, SIXTH ANNUAL ANTI-TRAFFICKING IN PERSONS (TIP)

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Reference ID Created Released Classification Origin
06MEXICO1113 2006-03-02 13:24 2011-08-30 01:44 UNCLASSIFIED//FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY Embassy Mexico
VZCZCXRO5300
RR RUEHCD RUEHGD RUEHHO RUEHMC RUEHNG RUEHNL RUEHRD RUEHRS RUEHTM
DE RUEHME #1113/01 0611324
ZNR UUUUU ZZH
R 021324Z MAR 06
FM AMEMBASSY MEXICO
TO RUEHC/SECSTATE WASHDC 9309
INFO RUEHXC/ALL US CONSULATES IN MEXICO COLLECTIVE
UNCLAS SECTION 01 OF 18 MEXICO 001113 
 
SIPDIS 
 
SENSITIVE 
SIPDIS 
 
STATE FOR WHA/PPC AND G/TIP 
 
E.O. 12958: N/A 
TAGS: KCRM PHUM KWMN ELAB SMIG ASEC KFRD PREF
SUBJECT: SIXTH ANNUAL ANTI-TRAFFICKING IN PERSONS (TIP) 
REPORT - MEXICO 
 
REF: A. 06 STATE 3836 
     B. 05 STATE 168419 
     C. 05 MEXICO 5224 
     D. 05 TIJUANA 1561 
     E. 05 MEXICO 7191 
     F. 05 TIJUANA 1527 
 
1. (SBU) The mission's point of contact on the 
Anti-Trafficking in Persons Report is Poloff Scott C. 
Higgins.  He may be reached by telephone at (52)(55) 
5080-2000, ext. 4806, or by fax at (52)(55) 5080-2247.  Post 
requests that the names of the non-governmental organizations 
(NGOs) working with the Government of Mexico (GOM) providing 
victim protection and assistance are not/not for public 
disclosure in this context. Post also requests that the names 
and details of ongoing investigations are not/not for public 
disclosure. 
 
Mexico is a country of origin, transit, and destination for 
persons trafficked for sexual and labor exploitation.  While 
there are no reliable figures as to the extent of the 
trafficking problem, Mexico's geographic location along 
primary transportation routes for illegal migration into the 
U.S. as well as the country's high level of organized 
criminal gang activity leaves little doubt that the 
transnational and domestic trafficking numbers are 
substantial. 
 
The GOM has shown commendable progress in combating 
trafficking in persons (TIP) in the past year; however, more 
focused efforts are needed to provide a clear and reliable 
framework for the protection of victims and the prosecution 
of traffickers.  The GOM has decided to take a two-tier 
approach to combat trafficking.  To start, the GOM's 
Interinstitutional Working Group on Trafficking is developing 
an initial short-term strategy that includes addressing 
specific elements of the Tier 2 Watchlist Action Plan to be 
implemented in select locations based on existing 
intelligence on trafficking networks (Ref B).  As the GOM 
gains knowledge and experience in combating the trafficking 
phenomena, it plans to expand its efforts to a nationwide, 
long-term strategy. 
 
Notable achievements during the year include: 
 
- In January and February representatives from the Mexican 
Interinstitutional Working Group on Trafficking traveled with 
the Department of Homeland Security Immigration and Customs 
Enforcement (DHS-ICE) TIP Coordinator to Chihuahua, Chiapas 
and Cancun to assess the law enforcement capabilities and 
shelter resources in anticipation of starting major case 
investigations in the areas; 
- On December 15, 2005 the Mexican Senate approved a 
comprehensive TIP law that includes harsh sanctions for 
offenders as well as meaningful protection and prevention 
provisions for victims.  The bill is now with the Chamber of 
Deputies pending its consideration; 
- On August 18, 2005 the GOM signed an Amendment to an 
existing Letter of Agreement (LOA) with the U.S. Government 
(USG) that provides USD $3.02 million to establish dedicated 
investigative units and a technical subgroup to combat 
trafficking; 
- The Mexican National Migration Institute (INM) named a 
primary point of contact on trafficking and the institute 
sought assistance from several NGOs to provide shelter and 
assistance to trafficking victims during the year; 
- The INM continued formalizing special repatriation 
procedures for unaccompanied minors from Central America; 
- A Trafficking in Persons goal was added to the trilateral 
Security and Prosperity Partnership (SPP) Senior Law 
Enforcement Plenary (SLEP) Working Group Matrix. 
 
 
OVERVIEW OF A COUNTRY'S ACTIVITIES TO ELIMINATE TRAFFICKING 
IN PERSONS 
--------------------------------------------- ----------------- 
 
2. (SBU) Question 1. Is the country a country of origin, 
transit, or destination for international trafficked men, 
women, or children?  Specify numbers for each group; how they 
were trafficked, to where, and for what purpose.  Does the 
trafficking occur within the country's borders?  Does it 
occur in territory outside of the government's control (e.g. 
in a civil war situation)?  Are any estimates or reliable 
numbers available as to the extent or magnitude of the 
problem?  Please include any numbers of victims. What is 
(are) the source(s) of available information on trafficking 
in persons or what plans are in place (if any) to undertake 
documentation of trafficking? How reliable are the numbers 
 
MEXICO 00001113  002 OF 018 
 
 
and these sources?  Are certain groups of persons more at 
risk of being trafficked (e.g. women and children, boys 
versus girls, certain ethnic groups, refugees, etc.)? 
 
Post Response:  Mexico is a country of origin, transit, and 
destination for trafficked men, women, and children for 
purposes of sexual and labor exploitation.  In terms of 
transit and destination, the vast majority of trafficking 
victims come from Central America, with a lesser number of 
victims originating from South America, the Caribbean, 
Eastern Europe, and Asia.  Mexico also has a significant 
problem with internal trafficking. 
 
There are no reliable statistics on the extent of the 
trafficking problem.  The Mexican Interinstitutional Working 
Group on Trafficking has expressed an interest in 
commissioning a comprehensive study to serve as the basis for 
formulating a long-term national plan to combat trafficking, 
but a lack of resources remains the biggest obstacle. 
Several separate regionally-focused studies conducted by 
civil society organizations in conjunction with government 
agencies are due to be released soon.  The limited statistics 
and information on trafficking patterns that are available 
usually come from NGOs; however, these reports tend to 
contain more anecdotal evidence than concrete statistics. 
 
3. (SBU) Question 2. Please provide a general overview of the 
trafficking situation in the country and any changes since 
the last TIP Report (e.g. changes in direction).  Also 
briefly explain the political will to address trafficking in 
persons. Other items to address may include:  What kind of 
conditions are the victims trafficked into?  Which 
populations are targeted by the traffickers?  Who are the 
traffickers?  What methods are used to approach victims? (Are 
they offered lucrative jobs, sold by their families, 
approached by friends of friends, etc.?)  What methods are 
used to move the victims (e.g., are false documents being 
used?). 
 
Post Response: The profile of the trafficking problem in 
Mexico has definitely been increased over the past year by 
the media, civil society organizations, and the government. 
Post strongly believes that the continual pressure applied, 
especially by the media and civil society, has finally 
brought the issue to the tipping point, and the GOM is now 
prepared to fully engage on the issue.  There is a strong 
political will at the federal level to address trafficking; 
however, many local and state level officials still do not 
fully understand the nature of the trafficking problem or 
admit that they have a problem. 
 
A December 2005 Congressional Research Service (CRS) Report 
on Trafficking in Persons in Latin America found that 
"internal trafficking generally flows from rural to urban or 
tourist centers within a given country, while trafficking 
across international borders generally flows from developing 
to developed nations."  Anecdotal evidence tells us that this 
trend holds true for Mexico.  Women and children from 
Mexico's poorest regions move to the urban, tourist, and the 
northern border areas seeking economic opportunity, but they 
often end up working in the commercial sex industry due to 
trickery, threats, or physical violence by traffickers. 
 
The increasing trend of illegal migration from Mexico and 
Central America into the U.S. also puts a larger number of 
vulnerable persons at risk for coming into contact with 
traffickers.  Migrants from Mexico and Central America 
(especially women and children) are frequently smuggled into 
the U.S. with promises of a lucrative job only to find 
themselves forced into prostitution or debt-bondage working 
conditions.  Other common methods used to approach/ target 
victims include placing ads in newspapers that invite girls 
to participate in international exchanges or to start 
lucrative modeling careers.  Once the girl is isolated from 
family and friends, she is forced into prostitution.  An NGO 
working in the southern border area (Casa del Migrante) has 
reported that many indigenous persons and migrants from 
Central America work in extremely poor conditions on coffee 
farms under elements of debt-bondage, and some 90 percent of 
their children work as domestic employees. 
 
The many pitfalls along the migration routes (including 
exploitation by criminal gangs such as the Mara Salvatrucha 
and corrupt law enforcement officials) drive more illegal 
migrants to hire "polleros" (alien smugglers) to help them 
transit Mexico and cross the U.S. border - thus increasing 
theirs chances of falling prey to trafficking networks.  It 
is commonly accepted that traffickers often employ alien 
smugglers to target or move victims.  Alien smugglers use a 
 
MEXICO 00001113  003 OF 018 
 
 
wide variety of techniques to get people across the border, 
including false documents, hidden compartments, and dangerous 
desert crossings. 
 
Many organized criminal organizations from Mexico and other 
countries use Mexico as a staging and training area for women 
and young girls destined for brothels and table dance bars in 
the U.S.  According to the Bilateral Safety Corridor 
Coalition (BSCC), criminal gangs from Mexico, Central 
America, Russia, Japan, Ukraine and several other countries 
are involved with trafficking victims across the U.S. - 
Mexico border. 
 
4. (SBU) Question 3.  What are the limitations on the 
government's ability to address this problem in practice? 
For example, is funding for police or other institutions 
inadequate?  Is overall corruption a problem?  Does the 
government lack the resources to aid victims? 
 
Post Response:  To date, the most significant limitations 
that have impeded the government's ability to address the 
trafficking problem were a lack of resources, internal 
institutional disorganization, lack of comprehensive 
legislation, and corruption.  Funding for police and other 
institutions has been inadequate for anti-trafficking efforts 
because the GOM was dedicating large amounts of human and 
monetary resources to fight an escalating problem with 
narcotics trafficking and violence resulting from competing 
drug cartels - especially along the northern border area.  Up 
until recently, the GOM's Interinstitutional Working Group on 
Trafficking has not been effective in formulating a plan or 
coordinating efforts because the group did not meet 
frequently enough and the participants kept changing. 
Pervasive corruption, especially at the state and local 
level, continues to exacerbate the problem as traffickers are 
free to operate without fear of prosecution by simply paying 
off authorities. 
 
Fortunately, some of these limitations have been offset to a 
certain degree during the last year.  The signing of the 
Amendment to the LOA has made USD $3.02 million available to 
assist the GOM in establishing dedicated investigative units 
and a technical subgroup to combat trafficking (Ref C). 
USAID will also award a USD $3 million contract in March that 
will provide resources to enhance shelter capacity and 
assistance for trafficking victims.  The GOM has used 
discussions related to these two initiatives to better 
organize their own internal communication and 
anti-trafficking efforts via the Interinstitutional Working 
Group on Trafficking.  The group now meets on a regular basis 
and all the participants appear up to speed on the issue and 
are empowered to act.  The GOM is also focusing more 
resources on the trafficking problem as the PFP announced it 
would dedicate 140 agents throughout the country to work 
trafficking cases, and the INM announced it would add more 
than 100 new agents to the southern border to enhance 
security. 
 
The GOM has a long way to go to solve its problem with 
corruption; however, anti-corruption measures continued to be 
an important issue for the Fox administration.  Additionally, 
a scandal that has been in the headlines since January has 
brought an enormous amount of international and domestic 
media attention to the trafficking phenomena in Mexico.  The 
story centers on secretly recorded telephone conversations 
between a powerful businessman (Kamel Nacif Borge) and a 
number of state government officials (including the governor 
of the state of Puebla) during which the participants 
discussed plans to jail Lydia Cacho, an independent 
journalist, on charges of defamation and libel and have her 
raped while she was in custody.  The charges stem from 
allegations Cacho made in her 2005 book in which she alleged 
links between government officials, businessmen, drug 
dealers, and a child prostitution network.  While Cacho never 
directly accuses Kamel Nacif of wrongdoing, she did link him 
to Jean Succar Kuri - a person b 
 
elieved to be at the center of a child prostitution network 
in Cancun.  Succar Kuri is currently being held in Arizona 
awaiting a decision on extradition back to Mexico to face 
charges.  The media and numerous senior members of government 
have called the incident an outrage and are demanding not 
only an investigation into the irregular arrest of Cacho, but 
into the underlying charges of trafficking in persons as 
well. 
 
5. (SBU) Question 4. To what extent does the government 
systematically monitor its anti-trafficking efforts (on all 
fronts -- prosecution, prevention and victim protection) and 
 
MEXICO 00001113  004 OF 018 
 
 
periodically make available, publicly or privately and 
directly or through regional/international organizations, its 
assessments of these anti-trafficking efforts? 
 
Post Response:  The GOM lacks the ability at this time to 
systematically monitor and periodically make available an 
assessment of its anti-trafficking efforts.  The PFP is 
currently considering adapting an existing internal database 
system to track and report on trafficking cases.  Also, the 
Narcotics Affairs Section (NAS) at post has offered to 
explore options to provide the PFP with case tracking 
software that NAS has provided to other Mexican federal law 
enforcement agencies. 
 
The Center for Research on National Security (CISEN) has 
provided post with several extensive presentations containing 
intelligence on trafficking cases and networks, but such 
products were the result of time consuming surveys of state 
and local law enforcement offices.  The CISEN, and later the 
PFP, were unable to readily provide additional details or 
updates about cases included in the presentations.  Many 
government officials, however, have admitted that they see 
the comprehensive federal anti-trafficking law and a system 
to track prosecutions as essential for combating trafficking 
in Mexico. 
 
 
PREVENTION 
----------- 
 
6. (SBU) Question 5. Does the government acknowledge that 
trafficking is a problem in that country?  If no, why not? 
 
Post Response:  The GOM acknowledges that trafficking is both 
a transnational and domestic problem.  Senior GOM officials 
continued to speak out against trafficking throughout the 
year, including President Fox, the Secretary for Foreign 
Relations, the Secretary of Government, the Director of INM, 
as well as several state governors and attorneys general. 
During the last year, the GOM sponsored numerous seminars and 
conferences that included panels on trafficking and the need 
for a federal anti-trafficking law.  The trafficking problem 
as it relates to internal and border security is seen by many 
senior government officials as a national security issue of 
the utmost importance. 
 
On December 15, 2005 the Mexican Senate unanimously passed 
(95 to 0) a comprehensive TIP law that includes harsh 
sanctions for offenders as well as meaningful protection and 
prevention provisions for victims.  The bill is now with the 
Chamber of Deputies for its consideration.  Several senior 
government officials have predicted that the law will pass 
the lower house during the current legislative session that 
ends in April.  The Senate held an international seminar on 
trafficking in October 2005.  The seminar included numerous 
international and domestic anti-trafficking experts from both 
governmental and civil society, including Juan Artola, IOM; 
Fabienne Venet, Sin Fronteras; Laura Langberg, Organization 
of American States (OAS); Mohamed Mattar, Johns Hopkins 
University; and Miguel Ontiveros, National Institute of Penal 
Sciences.  Several of these groups also provided comments to 
improve the bill that were included in the final version. 
 
On November 3, 2005 the Baja State Congress General Assembly 
approved an anti-TIP law, making it the first state to pass a 
law that addresses all "three P's" - prosecution, prevention, 
and protection (Ref D).  However, the law was recently 
challenged and revoked.  The President of the General 
Assembly Representative Elvira Luna Pineda stated that she 
will make a few revisions to the law and resubmit it for 
consideration in March.  Several other states (including 
Chiapas) have also toughened laws against child prostitution 
and commercial sexual exploitation of minors during the year. 
 
During the year, the INM hosted a series of three conferences 
addressing security on the southern border that included 
panels dedicated to the issue of trafficking.  The third and 
final conference took place on November 11, 2005 in Mexico 
City during which the INM presented a proposal for an 
integrated migration policy for the southern border.  The 
proposal includes numerous actions aimed at combating 
trafficking that include improving cooperation with the PGR 
in prosecuting trafficking crimes, soliciting the assistance 
of the International Organization for Migration (IOM) to 
enhance victim services, developing a public awareness 
campaign about trafficking, establishing a special 
trafficking victim/ witness visa, strengthening enforcement 
at companies that abuse migrant workers, and fighting 
internal corruption. 
 
MEXICO 00001113  005 OF 018 
 
 
 
The INM has already taken the initial steps of naming a 
primary point of contact on trafficking to help schedule 
training for migration agents, to serve as the liaison for 
facilitating the regularization of status for victims/ 
witnesses so that they can participate in prosecutions, and 
to work with NGOs to provide shelter and assistance to 
trafficking victims. 
 
7. (SBU) Question 6. Which government agencies are involved 
in anti- trafficking efforts and which agency, if any, has 
the lead? 
 
Post Response:  The GOM established its Interinstitutional 
Working Group on Trafficking in 2004, which includes 
representatives from the PFP, the PGR, the CISEN, the INM, 
the Public Security Police (SSP), the Foreign Ministry (SRE), 
the National Family Protection Agency (DIF), the National 
Institute for Women's Issues (INMUJERES), the Secretariat of 
Health (SSA), the Secretariat of Tourism (SECTUR), and the 
Secretariat of Labor (STPS). 
 
SIPDIS 
 
The PFP was recently named the lead agency on combating 
trafficking, taking over the responsibility from CISEN.  This 
is seen as a positive development because the PFP has the law 
enforcement capabilities necessary to run investigations and 
arrest traffickers, whereas CISEN is a strategic intelligence 
gathering agency.  Additionally, the three officials that 
were in charge of the trafficking portfolio at the CISEN were 
transferred to the PFP, and they now lead the government's 
law enforcement anti-trafficking efforts.  The federal and 
state attorneys general offices are still responsible for 
prosecuting cases.  The PFP, the PGR, and the INM 
participants on the Interinstitutional Working Group on 
Trafficking are working closely with the DHS-ICE TIP 
Coordinator to establish the dedicated investigative teams 
that will soon open several major trafficking cases. 
 
8. (SBU) Question 7. Are there, or have there been, 
government-run anti- trafficking information or education 
campaigns?  If so, briefly describe the campaign(s), 
including their objectives and effectiveness.  Do these 
campaigns target potential trafficking victims and/or the 
demand for trafficking (e.g. "clients" of prostitutes or 
beneficiaries of forced labor)? 
 
Post Response:  Yes.  To date, the primary focus of the GOM's 
anti-trafficking information and education campaigns have 
focused on a National Program to Eradicate the Commercial 
Sexual Exploitation of Minors.  The program is administered 
by the DIF and is supported by numerous executive and 
legislative branch entities (e.g., the STPS, the SECTUR, and 
the PGR), as well as civil society groups (the ILO in 
particular). 
 
The program includes workshops on detecting, protecting, and 
providing attention to victims that are provided to social 
services, trade unions, private sector, law enforcement, and 
education audiences.  The program continues to build upon the 
widely publicized campaign called "Abre los ojos, pero no 
cierres la boca" (Open your eyes, but do not close your 
mouth).  Other features of the program include a toll-free 
number and a wide range of public awareness and outreach 
materials targeting various audiences - including potential 
victims and sexual tourists. 
 
The DIF recently reported that in 2005 the agency rescued 270 
children from commercial sexual exploitation and since the 
program's launch in 2003 the government and civil society 
organizations have given attention to 398 girls and 37 boys 
at risk; developed and implemented 13 local campaigns, 249 
training workshops, and 23 forums; and undertook 64 
operations that rescued 127 girls and 19 boys from sexual 
exploitation. 
 
9. (SBU) Question 8. Does the government support other 
programs to prevent trafficking? (e.g., to promote women's 
participation in economic decision-making or efforts to keep 
children in school.)  Please explain. 
 
Post Response:  Yes.  INMUJERES runs programs designed to 
prevent discrimination against women and help them understand 
their rights.  An example is "Por una vida sin violencia" 
(For a Life Without Violence).  The DIF has programs aimed at 
both women and children such as "De la calle a la vida" (From 
the Street to Life) that is aimed at street children.  On 
both borders the DIF runs an extensive network of shelters 
that protect unaccompanied minors detained while trying to 
enter the U.S./ depart Mexico (see question 32).  The DIF 
 
MEXICO 00001113  006 OF 018 
 
 
also has a program to Prevent and Combat Child Labor and 
Protect the Rights of Minors. 
 
In 2005, the GOM awarded 5.6 million scholarships to 
elementary and high school students from families with 
limited economic resources in an effort to keep the children 
from dropping out of school.  President Fox recently 
announced that the federal government would increase the 
number of scholarships to 6 million in 2006. 
 
10. (SBU) Question 9. What is the relationship between 
government officials, NGOs, other relevant organizations and 
other elements of civil society on the trafficking issue? 
 
Post Response:  The relationship between government 
officials, NGOs, other relevant organizations and other 
elements of civil society on the trafficking issue varies - 
generally depending on the particular government agency and 
whether the relationship is at the federal or state level. 
For more information, see questions 20 and 35. 
 
Representatives from both the BSCC and Fundacion Infancia 
told post that they have an excellent working relationship 
with the national and state DIF offices when collaborating on 
anti-trafficking programs and training, but that much more 
could be done.  In February the BSCC signed an agreement with 
the state of Baja California to combat the sexual 
exploitation of children and women along the U.S.-Mexico 
border (see question 20). 
 
Since June 2005, the End Child Prostitution, Child 
Pornography and Trafficking of Children for Sexual Purposes 
(ECPAT) organization, the BSCC, Fundacion Infancia, the IOM, 
and the ILO have all sponsored training for governmental 
organizations and NGOs in Mexico to build capacity in victim 
services and to develop greater awareness of trafficking and 
the harms of sexual tourism. 
 
The IOM reported that they are receiving excellent 
cooperation from INMUJERES, the government of Mexico City, 
and the state governments in Chiapas, Hidalgo, Quintana Roo, 
and Veracruz.  The IOM, however, stated that it met some 
resistance in establishing a Coordinating Committee with key 
government entities at the federal level.  Recently, the INM 
did assist the IOM in the identification of two trafficking 
victims that were being held in an INM detention center as 
irregular migrants.  The INM released the two migrants into 
the care of an IOM-related NGO and facilitated the submission 
of a formal criminal complaint with the PGR (see question 
17).  An investigation is ongoing.  The IOM is also currently 
working on an assessment of trafficking in Mexico City with 
support of the Mexico City government, and the organization 
recently completed a manual on TIP in cooperation with 
INMUJERES, the INM, and the Inter-American Commission on 
Women (CIM-OAS).  Note. The names of NGOs working with INM 
with victim protection and assistance are not/not for public 
disclosure. End Note. 
 
Sin Fronteras reported that they continued to have access to 
the migration detention center in Mexico City to hold 
workshops but lamented that they do not have full access to 
the entire facility to interview for victims.  The 
organization recently reported that it is currently working 
with the INM to secure a temporary visa for a Chinese migrant 
who escaped a forced labor situation in Guanajuato (see 
question 17).  The victim reported that he and a number of 
other Chinese nationals were working in Mexico legally, but 
that the company forced them to work 16 hours a day, live in 
the factory, and the management withheld their travel 
documents.  Sin Fronteras stated that the situation at the 
factory had improved since a visit by Mexican authorities, 
but that no arrests have been made.  The PGR reports that the 
case is still under investigation.  Note. The names of NGOs 
working with INM with victim protection and assistance are 
not/not for public disclosure. End Note. 
 
On May 19, 2005, ECPAT-USA launched its Protect Children in 
Tourism (PCT) Project in Cancun, Mexico, which included 
encouraging tourism industry officials to sign the ECPAT Code 
of Conduct for the Protection of Children from Commercial 
Sexual Exploitation in Travel and Tourism.  The project will 
train people in the travel industry in Cancun about sex 
tourism - its causes and effects, relevant US and Mexican 
laws, and what they can do to help prevent and respond to a 
situation before it gets worse.  A few initial meetings with 
the tourism industry and local government officials have been 
held in the area, but the project rollout has been delayed 
due to a change in the NGO's personnel and a large hurricane 
that struck the region in late 2005. 
 
MEXICO 00001113  007 OF 018 
 
 
 
The Embassy Committee on Trafficking is working closely with 
the Mexican Interinstitutional Working Group on Trafficking 
to better integrate the NGOs in all aspects of the 
government's efforts to combat trafficking.  For instance, 
the GOM plans to hold a conference in mid-March with the NGOs 
and international organizations working on the trafficking 
issue in Mexico in order to gain a better understanding of 
their ongoing efforts and look for opportunities to cooperate 
(e.g., provide training to law enforcement, identify victims, 
collaborating on public awareness and outreach campaigns). 
Participants on the government working group have told post 
they fully understanding that NGOs play a key role in 
identifying and rescuing victims. 
 
11. (SBU) Question 10. Does it monitor immigration and 
emigration patterns for evidence of trafficking?  Do law 
enforcement agencies screen for potential trafficking victims 
along borders? 
 
Post Response:  Yes.  Mexican authorities are aware of the 
influx of trafficked persons and other illegal migrants 
entering through the southern border with the intention of 
transiting Mexico en route to the U.S.  Mexican migration 
authorities deported or detained for deportation 240,269 
aliens in 2005 - 226,264 of which were from Central America. 
The 2005 totals mark a ten percent increase over 2004.  The 
INM is also reporting an up tick in the number of women and 
children migrating alone, which makes them prime targets for 
trafficking networks.  In 2005, the INM received 22,055 
unaccompanied Mexican minors returned from the U.S. - a 63.6% 
increase from 2004. 
 
The INM acknowledges the difficulties it faces due to a lack 
of budgetary resources.  However, the GOM is making a 
good-faith effort to secure its borders as evidenced by a 
number of ongoing efforts.  The INM held a series of forums 
in 2005 to discuss security on the southern border that 
included representatives from Central American consulates 
(see question 5).  The GOM has signed accords with Guatemala, 
Belize, and El Salvador that include provisions to enhance 
border security and provide for the safe and orderly 
repatriation of migrants (see questions 32 and 34).  Law 
enforcement and migration officials from the three countries 
recently met under the auspices of the High-Level Border 
Security Group (Grupo de Alto Nivel de Seguridad Fronteriza, 
GANSEF) to sign an accord to establish mechanisms to 
strengthen security on their shared borders by cooperating to 
combat organized crime, trafficking in persons, the Mara 
Salvatrucha, and terrorism. 
 
The GOM is building of a USD $10 million migrant processing 
facility in Tapachula, Chiapas, where many Central American 
migrants pass (see question 27).  Unfortunately, progress in 
completing the facility was severely impacted by a hurricane 
that directly hit the area in late 2005.  Many experts 
predict that the social and economic costs of the storm's 
damage will also lead to an increase in migration and 
criminal activity (including trafficking and prostitution) in 
the region (Ref E). 
 
The INM is making an attempt to link with NGOs to provide 
victim assistance and has asked for the USG and civil society 
groups for assistance in training its agents to identify 
trafficking victims.  During the year, the IOM and Sin 
Fronteras reported that it had been contacted by INM on 
several occasions to assist with providing assistance and 
protection to a trafficking victim, and post knows of at 
least four victims that were provided temporary permission to 
remain in the country (see question 9 and 17).  Note. The 
names of NGOs working with the INM with victim protection and 
assistance are not/not for public disclosure. End Note. 
 
12. (SBU) Question 11. Is there a mechanism for coordination 
and communication between various agencies, internal, 
international, and multilateral on trafficking-related 
matters, such as a multi- agency working group or a task 
force?  Does the government have a trafficking in persons 
working group or single point of contact?  Does the 
government have a public corruption task force? 
 
Post Response:  The government uses its Interinstitutional 
Working Group on Trafficking to coordinate internal, 
international, and multilateral efforts to combat 
trafficking.  When the PFP was named the new lead agency on 
trafficking, Ardelio Vargas Fosado became the primary point 
of contact for the GOM. 
 
The Secretariat for Public Administration (SFP) and the PGR 
 
MEXICO 00001113  008 OF 018 
 
 
share the responsibility to investigate public corruption. 
Many government agencies also have internal anti-corruption 
programs. 
 
13. (SBU) Question 12. Does the government have a national 
plan of action to address trafficking in persons?  If so, 
which agencies were involved in developing it?  Were NGOs 
consulted in the process?  What steps has the government 
taken to disseminate the action plan? 
 
Post Response:  The GOM does not have a national plan of 
action to address trafficking at this time.  The 
Interinstitutional Working Group on Trafficking has expressed 
an interest in drafting a national plan, but first it would 
like to commission a comprehensive nationwide study of the 
trafficking phenomenon to have a better understanding of the 
scope of problem. 
 
In the meantime, key participants from the Interinstitutional 
Working Group on Trafficking (SRE, PFP, PGR, INM, and DIF) 
are developing a near-term tactical plan (with support from 
the Embassy Mexico Committee on Trafficking) that will 
identify specific geographic areas of focus, viable cases for 
prosecution, and shelter resources to provide the necessary 
victim's assistance services.  The group has already 
identified Cancun, Guadalajara, Monterrey, Tijuana, Sonora, 
and Tapachula as initial target areas based on existing 
intelligence developed by the CISEN and the PFP.  The group 
feels that it has sufficient intelligence on at least four 
trafficking networks to open cases immediately, but it is 
waiting until the dedicated investigative units are 
established and the shelter/ victim's assistance component of 
the operations have been identified before moving forward. 
 
In January and February participants of the 
Interinstitutional Working Group on Trafficking traveled with 
the DHS-ICE TIP Coordinator to Ciudad Juarez, Chiapas and 
Cancun to assess the law enforcement and shelter resources in 
anticipation of starting major case investigations in the 
areas.  The key participants from the Interinstitutional 
Group on Trafficking plan to meet with members of the Embassy 
Committee on Trafficking on March 6 to discuss law 
enforcement training, victim's assistance and protection, and 
working with NGOs. 
 
 
INVESTIGATION AND PROSECUTION OF TRAFFICKERS 
--------------------------------------------- 
 
For questions A-D, posts should highlight in particular 
whether or not the country has enacted any new legislation 
since the last TIP report. 
 
14. (SBU) Question 13. Does the country have a law 
specifically prohibiting trafficking in persons--both 
trafficking for sexual exploitation and trafficking for non- 
sexual purposes (e.g. forced labor)? If so, what is the law? 
Does the law(s) cover both internal and external 
(transnational) forms of trafficking? If not, under what 
other laws can traffickers be prosecuted?  For example, are 
there laws against slavery or the exploitation of 
prostitution by means of coercion or fraud?  Are these other 
laws being used in trafficking cases?  Are these laws, taken 
together, adequate to cover the full scope of trafficking in 
persons?  Please provide a full inventory of trafficking 
laws, including civil penalties, (e.g., civil forfeiture laws 
and laws against illegal debt). 
 
Post Response:  At this time Mexico still lacks a federal 
anti-trafficking law and must rely on existing federal and 
state criminal statutes to prosecute trafficking cases; 
however, the government does have the legal instruments 
necessary to combat both internal and external trafficking. 
 
Mexico's General Population Law, Article 138, makes it a 
federal crime to traffic in undocumented aliens.  The law 
provides a term of imprisonment shall be imposed on a person 
who for himself or another, for the purpose of trafficking, 
attempts to transport or transports or represents that he 
will transport, Mexicans or foreigners to a foreign country 
without proper documentation, or introduces foreigners into 
Mexico without proper documentation. 
 
Article 365 of the Mexican Penal Code, makes it a federal 
crime to use physical violence, moral suasion, trick or 
intimidation or any other means, for oneself or another, to 
get services or work without payment.  It also punishes any 
arrangement which deprives a person of liberty, or puts him 
or her in conditions of servitude. 
 
MEXICO 00001113  009 OF 018 
 
 
 
Article 366 makes it a crime to transport a minor (under 16 
years of age) outside the country for financial benefit and 
imposes a penalty of three to ten years. 
 
Article 2 of the Federal Law Against Organized Crime 
prohibits three or more people from committing repeated 
violations of Article 366 of the Penal Code and 138 of the 
General Population Law.  This provision allows use of 
techniques for organized crime investigations and 
prosecutions, such as wiretapping; seizure and forfeiture of 
proceeds; and preventive detention.  The time period under 
the statute of limitations is doubled. 
 
Article 201 of the Mexican Penal Code punishes those who 
commit the crime of corruption of minors (less than 18 years 
old).  The crime includes those who oblige minors to commit 
acts of sexual exhibitionism, sexual acts or prostitution. It 
also criminalizes the procurement of minors to induce them to 
commit the acts described above, for the purpose of making 
films and videos for hard copy or for electronic distribution. 
 
The Constitution of the United Mexican States bans slavery 
and prohibits forced labor, which includes forced or bonded 
labor by children.  The minimum legal age to work is 14 years 
of age. 
 
15. (SBU) Question 14. What are the penalties for traffickers 
of people for sexual exploitation?  For traffickers of people 
for labor exploitation? 
 
Post Response:  Article 138 (trafficking undocumented aliens) 
provides a term of 6 to 12 years imprisonment.  Penalties 
increase by half if the crime is committed with minors or 
under conditions which will put their health or life in 
danger. 
 
The penalty for violation of Article 365 (labor exploitation) 
is three days to one year, but increases to one to five 
years, if the plan is to carry out a sexual act. The penalty 
increases to 20 to 40 years, if Article 365 is violated with 
a child less than 16 years old, or a victim more than 60 
years old, or if the person is mentally or physically 
handicapped.  The penalty increase to 25 to 50 years if the 
minor is deprived of liberty with the intent to send him or 
her out of the country, with the intent of obtaining payment 
for the sale or delivery of the minor. There are additional 
penalties if the violation also involves a permanent or 
presumptively incurable disease or loss of sexual function. 
 
Corruption of minors is punished with sentences of five to 
ten years under Article 201; if the conduct is repeated, the 
sentence is seven to 12 years. Under Article 201 anyone who 
procures minors for films, video or other pornographic 
materials may be sentenced from five to ten years. Those who 
film, photograph, print or distribute pornographic materials 
involving minors are subject to sentences of ten to 12 years. 
 One who directs or manages a child pornography enterprise 
can receive a sentence of eight to 12 years imprisonment. 
 
16. (SBU) Question 15. What are the penalties for rape or 
forcible sexual assault?  How do they compare to the penalty 
for sex trafficking? 
 
Post Response:  Each of Mexico's 31 states, plus Mexico City, 
has their own penal codes and the penalties vary.  In Mexico 
City, the penalty for rape of a child less than twelve years 
old is punishable by two to five years imprisonment; another 
50 percent of the sentence is added if violence was used. 
Rape of a woman 12 to 18 years old is punishable by three 
months to four years in prison.  The penalty for rape of an 
adult woman is six months to four years; if violence is used 
in the process, an additional 50 percent of the sentence may 
be added to it.  Use of force in a rape against a member of 
either sex is punishable by eight to 14 years in prison. 
 
According to federal law, child prostitution and any practice 
that affects a child's psychosocial development is a felony 
under Mexican law.  The Federal Penal Code and the Penal 
Proceedings Code cover crimes involving children or 
adolescents in pornography or prostitution.  The laws cover 
child pornography, prostitution of minors, and corruption of 
minors or mentally disabled persons.  They specify penalties 
for perpetrators according to the seriousness of the crime. 
 
17. (SBU) Question 16. Is prostitution legalized or 
decriminalized? Specifically, are the activities of the 
prostitute criminalized?  Are the activities of the brothel 
owner/operator, clients, pimps, and enforcers criminalized? 
 
MEXICO 00001113  010 OF 018 
 
 
Are these laws enforced? If prostitution is legal and 
regulated, what is the legal minimum age for this activity? 
Note that in many countries with federalist systems, 
prostitution laws may be covered by state, local, and 
provincial authorities. 
 
Post Response:  Prostitution is legal in Mexico, but only for 
adults (those 18 years of age and older) that are not being 
pimped.  The existing laws that do pertain to prostitution 
focus on threats to public health, moral corruption and 
pimping.  The Mexican criminal code contains penalties for 
corruption of minors; for induced or forced prostitution and 
maintaining brothels; for employment of minors in bars and 
other centers of vice; and for the procurement, inducement or 
concealment of prostitution.  Flagrant prostitution is 
subject to a penalty of six months to five years in prison. 
Both pimping and prostitution are practiced widely and 
generally without arrest or prosecution. 
 
18. (SBU) Question 17. Has the Government prosecuted any 
cases against traffickers?  If so, provide numbers of 
investigations, prosecutions, convictions, and sentences, 
including details on plea bargains and fines, if relevant and 
available.  Are the traffickers serving the time sentenced: 
If no, why not?  Please indicate whether the government can 
provide this information, and if not, why not? (Note: 
complete answers to this section are essential. End Note) 
 
Post Response:  Note. The names and details of ongoing 
investigations are not/not for public disclosure. End Note. 
There is no doubt that the GOM is pursuing numerous 
trafficking cases (see case details below) - the difficulty 
is in determining the case status or disposition.  The GOM 
acknowledges that it is not currently able to readily provide 
statistics or information on cases against traffickers due to 
the lack of a federal law and because most trafficking cases 
are prosecuted at the state level using a variety of other 
criminal statutes.  Additionally, under the Mexican judicial 
system, cases are prosecuted via lengthy written submissions 
to a judge, a process that is usually drawn out - sometimes 
years.  As such, it is very difficult for the government to 
systematically follow up or report on cases.  The PFP and PGR 
have expressed an interest in implementing a trafficking case 
tracking system (see question 4). 
 
That said, before the PFP took the lead on trafficking, the 
CISEN reported that from January to August 2005 law 
enforcement authorities began criminal proceedings for 
trafficking-related offenses in 1,336 cases (57 federal and 
1279 state) and imposed sentences in 531 cases (20 federal 
and 511 state).  These figures clearly include many cases 
that would not be considered trafficking. 
 
Post did review the cases with the PGR and the PFP to isolate 
specific ongoing cases that are trafficking-related, and the 
GOM was able to provide one case example of a prosecution and 
sentencing on a verifiable trafficking case.  Details as 
provided by the government are as follows. 
 
- On November 23, 2005, a Mexican court convicted and 
sentenced Ricardo Gonzalez Gonzalez and Paula Martinez 
Rodriguez on the charge of Lenocinio (Pimping).  They were 
sentenced to six years in prison and fined approximately USD 
$11,000 each.  The original sentence would have been between 
2-10 years, but because of the violence involved, the 
sentence was extended to 3-15 years.  Case Summary:  Ricardo 
Gonzalez forced a Honduran female into prostitution around 
May 2005.  The victim was forced to live with Gonzalez and 
she was taken to work everyday by Gonzalez or Martinez, and 
she was always watched by at least one of the two.  The 
victim advised Gonzalez on June 2, 2005 that she did not want 
to continue to be a prostitute.  Gonzalez and Martinez took 
the Honduran female to Veracruz and beat her up and 
threatened to do harm to her family in Honduras if she did 
not continue to prostitute herself.  Because she was afraid 
for her life, the victim continued to work as a prostitute 
and all of her money was confisca 
ted by Gonzalez.  Again on July 12, 2005, the victim told 
Gonzalez that she did not want to work as a prostitute and 
later that day she escaped by jumping in a cab and the cab 
driver took her to the police station, where she gave her 
statement.  On July 14, 2005, Ricardo Gonzalez and Paula 
Martinez were arrested and kept in custody until the judge 
declared them guilty and sentenced them to prison.  Post has 
a copy of the conviction documents. 
 
The government also provided the following details on other 
ongoing trafficking cases. 
 
 
MEXICO 00001113  011 OF 018 
 
 
- On September 13, 2005, police in Mexico City arrested 
Mercedes Lujan and Javier Cruces on charges on Sexual 
Exploitation (Case 069/2005).  The arrest resulted from a 
complaint filed by an Argentine female migrant when she was 
detained by the INM.  The victim claimed that she was 
promised a job as a receptionist by Lujan, but that after she 
arrived, Lujan and Cruces forced her into prostitution.  The 
INM contacted the Argentine Consulate upon her detention and 
called the PGR.  According to PGR, the victim was able to 
offer valuable information about criminal gangs dedicated to 
trafficking in Mexico, Central and South America.  The victim 
was given a 30 day temporary permission to remain in the 
country and pursue a more permanent migration status.  The 
INM gave custody of the victim to Sister Maria Arlina Barral 
Arellano, Director of the Pastor Commission of Migrants. 
Post has a copy of the complaint from INM.  The investigation 
is ongoing. 
 
- On July 17, 2005, the INM detained a Chinese migrant in 
Ciudad de Valle de Santiago, Guanajuato.  The Chinese migrant 
claimed that he had escaped a near by factory, and he filed a 
complaint against KBL De MQxico, S.A. de C.V. for abusive 
treatment and forced labor exploitation.  The PFP has opened 
an investigation (Case 111/2005 and the PGR is looking at the 
case for possible organized crime charges).  Government 
officials visited the factory after receiving the complaint 
and reported improved conditions.  Post has a copy of the 
compliant from INM.  The investigation is ongoing. 
 
- On July 8 in Tlaxcala, a coordinated operation involving 
the CISEN, the PGR, the Federal Investigative Agency (AFI), 
and the INM led to the arrest of two German nationals for 
pimping, child pornography, and child prostitution.  Police 
believe the two men are a part of a large child pornography 
and prostitution ring.  In addition to a considerable amount 
of child pornography seized, five minors were rescued from a 
house owned by the two men.  The traffickers are currently 
detained while authorities continue the investigation. 
 
- In July in Mexico City, INM officials detained five Chinese 
migrants transiting Mexico to New York.  The group had 
traveled from China to Cuba to Guatemala, and then walked for 
13 days into Mexico.  Authorities also arrested Roberto 
Franco Camacho, a Mexican citizen who was smuggling the 
group.  The Chinese migrants admitted to INM agents that they 
were to work for 10 years in a factory in exchange for 
eventually being smuggled to New York.  After an 
investigation, the INM and the PGR determined there was 
insufficient evidence to pursue charges. 
 
- In July, Thai authorities extradited Thomas Frank White to 
stand trial in Mexico.  The PGR had issued arrest warrants 
for White in relation to his use of drugs, alcohol, money, 
and the threat of violence to coerce minors to have sex with 
him and others.  The trial is pending. 
 
- In August, INM and AFI agents raided a company called 
Brazilian Brides - a mail order bride service suspected of 
smuggling and trafficking Brazilian women.  Police arrested 
10 women who worked for the company.  On August 16 and 17, a 
judge remanded the women to jail during the investigation. 
The investigation is ongoing. 
 
- In August in Oaxaca, local police raided a bar and arrested 
its owner, Asis Morales Lazarillo, for the corruption of 
minors and pimping.  During the arrest, police rescued a 
minor girl who was working in the bar as a prostitute. 
Police turned the minor over to a local DIF shelter.  The 
trafficker paid a bond and was released.  The investigation 
is ongoing. 
 
- Mexican authorities are still awaiting the extradition of 
Jean Succar Kuri from the U.S.  Succar Kuri is currently 
being held in Phoenix, Arizona on an international warrant 
issued by Mexico in connect to charges of child pornography 
and child prostitution (see question 3). 
 
19. (SBU) Question 18. Is there any information or reports of 
who is behind the trafficking?  For example, are the 
traffickers freelance operators, small crime groups, and/or 
large international organized crime syndicates?  Are 
employment, travel, and tourism agencies or marriage brokers 
fronting for traffickers or crime groups to traffic 
individuals? Are government officials involved?  Are there 
any reports of where profits from trafficking in persons are 
being channeled?  (e.g. armed groups, terrorist 
organizations, judges, banks, etc.) 
 
Post Response:  Anecdotal evidence suggests that trafficking 
 
MEXICO 00001113  012 OF 018 
 
 
in Mexico involves all types of individuals and groups - 
including freelance operators, small crime groups, and large 
international organized crime syndicates (see question 2). 
 
The IOM believes that there are 135 criminal trafficking 
networks in Mexico.  The CISEN says there are 126 gangs 
involved in trafficking on the southern border.  The internet 
and mail order bride agencies are reportedly common methods 
used by traffickers to attract victims as well as clients 
(see Brazilian Bride case in question 17).  Alien smugglers 
are also frequently involved in identifying and transporting 
trafficking victims.  The CISEN recently reported to post 
that the smuggling of trafficking victims is becoming an 
increasing important income source for alien smugglers. 
 
There have been reports that some law enforcement and 
migration officials - especially at the local level - have 
been involved in trafficking to the extent they have been 
known to accept bribes to facilitate or ignore alien 
smuggling or to allow brothels and child prostitution to 
exist unmolested. 
 
20. (SBU) Question 19. Does the government actively 
investigate cases of trafficking?  (Again, the focus should 
be on trafficking cases versus migrant smuggling cases.) Does 
the government use active investigative techniques in 
trafficking in persons investigations? To the extent possible 
under domestic law, are techniques such as electronic 
surveillance, undercover operations, and mitigated punishment 
or immunity for cooperating suspects used by the government? 
Does the criminal procedure code or other laws prohibit the 
police from engaging in covert operations? 
 
Post Response:  The government does actively investigate 
cases related to trafficking mainly at the state level (e.g., 
pimping, child prostitution, child pornography offenses, etc) 
using active investigative techniques, including electronic 
surveillance, undercover operations, and mitigated punishment 
or immunity for cooperating suspects used by the government. 
Domestic law does not prevent the police from engaging in 
covert operations. 
 
21. (SBU) Question 20. Does the government provide any 
specialized training for government officials in how to 
recognize, investigate, and prosecute instances of 
trafficking? 
 
Post Response:  The government, in conjunction with some NGOs 
and the USG, does give specialized training to its officials 
in how to recognize, investigate, and prosecute instances of 
trafficking. 
 
The DIF/ ILO program to Eradicate the Commercial Sexual 
Exploitation of Minors has trained hundreds of government 
officials.  The DHS Citizenship and Immigration Services 
(DHS-CIS) has offered training to Mexican migration agents 
that includes elements about how to identify trafficking 
victims.  The NAS and DOJ Federal Bureau of Investigations 
(DOJ-FBI) sections at post have provided training to Mexican 
law enforcement officials on active investigation and 
interviewing techniques. 
 
In February the DHS-ICE TIP Coordinator brought the DHS C3 
team to Mexico to provide training to 40 PFP agents in the 
cyber crimes unit.  Also in February, the attorney general 
for state of Baja California's signed an agreement to work 
with the BSCC to combat the sexual exploitation of children 
and women along the U.S.-Mexico border.  Under the accord, 
the BSCC will hold a series of workshops with the agency's 
police and other personnel on the special needs of sex crime 
victims. 
 
The DOJ plans to send to Mexico in March an expert on 
prosecuting trafficking cases.  The expert will stay for a 
TDY assignment of six months to a year to serve as an advisor 
to the PGR and the PFP. 
 
22. (SBU) Question 21. Does the government cooperate with 
other governments in the investigation and prosecution of 
trafficking cases? If possible, can post provide the number 
of cooperative international investigations on trafficking? 
 
Post Response:  The GOM cooperates with other governments in 
the investigation and prosecution of trafficking cases. 
During the year, the GOM extradited numerous traffickers to 
the U.S. and received the extradition of several traffickers 
wanted to stand trial in Mexico (see question 22). 
 
Mexican law enforcement officials continue to work closely 
 
MEXICO 00001113  013 OF 018 
 
 
with DHS-ICE on numerous investigations of cross-border 
trafficking cases - especially in the northern border area. 
On the prosecution side, the Tijuana Consulate recently 
provided investigative support for local police in ten 
trafficking and child sex tourism cases.  DHS-ICE agents in 
Tijuana, New York, Miami, and Virginia are investigating a 
case for Protect Act violations (Ref F). 
 
On February 17 DHS-ICE Mexico City received information 
indicating that a subject of active federal and state 
warrants was in Mexico.  The warrants for arrest were for 
child pornography and violation of probation for a capital 
sex battery.  DHS-ICE Mexico City immediately contacted the 
Mexican federal authorities in the region and coordinated 
efforts with several agencies including the PFP, INM, and PGR 
to apprehend and remove the subject.  On February 19 DHS-ICE 
Mexico City coordinated the deportation by Mexican 
Immigration Authorities and delivery of the subject to U.S. 
authorities at the Miami International Airport. 
 
23. (SBU) Question 22. Does the government extradite persons 
who are charged with trafficking in other countries?  If so, 
can post provide the number of traffickers extradited?  Does 
the government extradite its own nationals charged with such 
offenses?   If not, is the government prohibited by law form 
extraditing its own nationals?  If so, what is the government 
doing to modify its laws to permit the extradition of its own 
nationals? 
 
Post Response:  Yes.  See specific case details below. 
 
- On May 24, 2005, Mexico extradited Mexican citizens Jose 
Paoletti Moreda and Renato Paoletti Lemus to the U.S to stand 
trial in the Eastern District of New York on federal 
extortion charges.  The charges relate to the their 
involvement in an international alien smuggling operation 
that, during the 1990s, transported deaf-mute Mexican 
nationals to the United States, held them captive, and forced 
them to work as peddlers in New York, Chicago, and Los 
Angeles. 
 
- On September 28, 2005, Mexican citizen Juan Luis Cadena 
Sosa was arrested in Mexico for the purpose of extradition to 
the U.S.  Cadena Sosa is wanted to stand trial in the 
Southern District of Florida on federal charges of importing 
aliens for purposes of prostitution, interstate transport of 
persons for purposes of illegal sexual conduct, and related 
offenses.  From 1996 to 1998, the Cadena family allegedly 
smuggled numerous Mexican women, including minors, from 
Mexico with the promise of legitimate jobs in the U.S. 
Instead, evidence shows that the women were forced to work as 
prostitutes in brothels in South Florida in order to pay off 
their smuggling fees. Currently, another family member, Abel 
Cadena Sosa, is being prosecuted in Mexico for the same 
offenses. 
 
- On October 21, 2005, Mexican citizen Consuelo Tomasa 
Carreto was arrested in Mexico for the purpose of extradition 
to the U.S.  She is wanted to stand trial in the Eastern 
District of New York on federal charges of sex trafficking, 
forced labor, alien smuggling, and related offenses.  Carreto 
allegedly was part of a family-run organization that, between 
1991 and 2004, smuggled women from Mexico to New York, where 
they were forced to work as prostitutes through deception, 
fraud, coercion, rape, forced abortion, threats, and physical 
violence.  Evidence shows that Carreto's role in the 
organization included recruiting young, uneducated women from 
impoverished areas in Mexico.  On September 22, 2005, Mexico 
also issued a warrant for the arrest of another member of the 
organization, Maria de los Angeles Velasquez-Reyes, whose 
capture is pending. 
 
24. (SBU) Question 23. Is there evidence of government 
involvement in or tolerance of trafficking, on a local or 
institutional level?  If so, please explain in detail. 
 
Post Response:  Yes.  See post's response to question 18. 
 
25. (SBU) Question 24. If government officials are involved 
in trafficking, what steps has the government taken to end 
such participation?  Have any government officials been 
prosecuted for involvement in trafficking or trafficking- 
related corruption? Have any been convicted?  What actual 
sentence was imposed?  Please provide specific numbers, if 
available. 
 
Post Response:  In general the Fox Administration continues 
to promote a culture of zero tolerance for corruption and has 
shown considerable transparency in addressing allegations of 
 
MEXICO 00001113  014 OF 018 
 
 
corruption, rather than sweeping reports of such abuse "under 
the carpet," as often occurred during previous 
administrations.  From January through October 2005, 
officials at the SFP conducted more than 4,512 inquiries and 
investigations into possible malfeasance or misconduct by 
some 3,350 federal officers and employees throughout the GOM. 
 These inquiries and investigations resulted in the issuance 
of 68 warnings, 1,296 reprimands, suspensions of 918 
employees, dismissals of 1,342 federal employees, and fines 
resulting in approximately USD $300 million dollars.  Post 
was not able to determine how many of these cases involved 
trafficking; however, increases in the number of complaints 
filed during the Fox administration almost certainly indicate 
increased public confidence that government institutions will 
act upon such reports seriously, rather than ignoring them. 
Numerous NGOs working along both borders report that 
undocumented migrants are often too afraid to report any type 
of abuse to authorities out of fear of being deported. 
Currently, most allegations originate from average Mexican 
citizens. 
 
The INM continues to fight corruption with mixed results.  In 
September, the PGR issued arrest warrants for six INM agents 
accused of accepting bribes from alien smugglers.  A judge, 
however, dismissed charges against 20 migration officials, 
incarcerated since 2004 and accused of alien smuggling - 
seven of the 20 remain charged with money laundering.  Also 
in September, the GOM announced it was expanding its 
"Operation Safe Mexico" to the southern border. 
 
26. (SBU) Question 25. If the country has an identified child 
sex tourism problem (as source or destination), how many 
foreign pedophiles has the government prosecuted or 
deported/extradited to their country of origin? Does the 
country's child sexual abuse laws have extraterritorial 
coverage (like the U.S. PROTECT Act)? 
 
Post Response:  The GOM has both arrested and extradited 
foreign pedophiles (see questions 17 and 22).  The government 
has no extraterritorial laws expressly addressing child 
sexual abuse.  However, Article 4 of the Mexican Penal Code 
provides jurisdiction to Mexican federal district courts for 
the prosecution of any defendants in a case in which the 
defendant or victim is Mexican or Mexican interests are 
official. 
 
27. (SBU) Question 26. Has the government signed, ratified, 
and/or taken steps to implement the following international 
instruments? Please provide the date of 
signature/ratification if appropriate. 
 
- ILO Convention 182 concerning the prohibition and immediate 
action for the elimination of the worst forms of child labor. 
 
Post Response:  Yes.  Mexico ratified it in March 2000. 
 
- ILO Convention 29 and 105 on forced or compulsory labor. 
 
Post Response:  Yes on both counts.  Mexico ratified ILO 
Convention 29 on May 12, 1934, and Convention 105 on June 1, 
1959. 
 
- The Optional Protocol to the Convention on the Rights of 
the Child (CRC) on the sale of children, child prostitution, 
and child pornography. 
 
Post Response:  Yes.  Mexico ratified it on January 16, 2002. 
 
- The Protocol to Prevent, Suppress and Punish Trafficking in 
Persons, especially Women and Children, supplementing the UN 
Convention Against Transnational Organized Crime. 
 
Post Response:  Yes.  Mexico ratified it on May 4, 2003. 
 
 
PROTECTION AND ASSISTANCE TO VICTIMS 
------------------------------------ 
 
28. (SBU) Question 27. 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? 
 
Post Response:  The rights of crime victims are guaranteed in 
the Mexican Constitution, regardless of the victim's 
nationality.  Both the Mexican federal government and some 
 
MEXICO 00001113  015 OF 018 
 
 
states have crime victim's assistance programs.  The programs 
cover legal assistance and medical services and psychological 
counseling.  The DIF, for example, provides temporary shelter 
and medical services to unaccompanied minor victims of 
trafficking or smuggling.  The DIF also tries to locate 
parents or family members in order to repatriate the 
children.  The quality of the programs varies widely.  While 
some heath screening takes place, undocumented aliens are not 
routinely screened for HIV/AIDS.  Even when tested, positive 
results may not show up for months. 
 
The INM has a policy to grant temporary resident status for 
trafficking victims.  In the past year, INM has granted 
temporary status to at least four trafficking victims, and in 
a few cases it has granted the ability to work while the 
judicial process is underway (see question 9 and 17).  The 
INM is also constructing a large new facility in Tapachula, 
Chiapas to process migrants.  This facility envisions 
separate accommodations for men, women, children and 
families.  It will also have offices of the National Human 
Rights Commission (CNDH) and consuls from the Central 
American countries whose citizens pass through the region. 
It is hoped that better surroundings for illegal migrants 
could increase the probabilities of victim identification and 
their use as witnesses.  The INM has consulted with the IOM 
on the construction of the facility.  Unfortunately, 
construction on the facility was impacted when a hurricane 
caused extensive damage in the region in late 2005; the 
migration area of the facility is not expected to open until 
spring 2006. 
 
In August 2005, the DIF in the state of Chiapas opened a 
shelter near the state capital Tuxtla Gutierrez that provides 
medical and psychological attention, job training, and other 
reintegration services to domestic violence victims. 
Government officials told poloff during a tour of the 
facility that they were willing to accept other types of 
victims (e.g., trafficking).  USAID plans to visit the 
shelter in the coming weeks to determine if it would be 
appropriate to house trafficking victims in the facility. 
 
29. (SBU) Question 28. Does the government provide funding or 
other forms of support to foreign or domestic NGOs for 
services to victims?  Please explain. 
 
Post Response:  The federal and state governments do provide 
funding and other forms of support to domestic NGOs for 
services to victims; however, the level of funding and 
support is very limited.  The director for the SRE's office 
for civil society organizations is attending meetings of the 
Mexican Interinstitutional Working Group on Trafficking in an 
effort to better coordinate the GOM's relation with NGOs 
working on the issue. 
 
30. (SBU) Question 29.  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? 
 
Post Response:  The DIF operates shelters for unaccompanied 
migrant children who are intercepted at the border.  Shelters 
operate in border towns for those adults who self-refer. 
Third Country Nationals (TCNs) intercepted at the border are 
generally placed in a migration detention station until they 
can be repatriated.  NGO's such as Casa Alianza offer shelter 
to street children, mainly adolescents, who are often victims 
of sexual exploitation.  The INM has also referred several 
trafficking victims to NGOs for assistance (see questions 9 
and 17). 
 
31. (SBU) Question 30. 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? 
 
Post Response:  Violators of Mexican immigration law usually 
are deported within a few weeks, especially if they are from 
Central America.  Since June 2005, SSP and INM agents have 
raided numerous table dance bars and brothels throughout the 
country.  In each case, the authorities detained between 15 
and 25 women; the vast majority of the women detained came 
from Central and South America, but some were from Asia and 
Eastern Europe as well.  Given the lack of a federal 
trafficking law and the reluctance of victims to participate 
in prosecutions, the authorities deported the women for 
violating immigration law.  Post knows of no cases in which 
 
MEXICO 00001113  016 OF 018 
 
 
the undocumented migrants were prosecuted for other offenses. 
 
32. (SBU) Question 31. 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? 
 
Post Response:  Yes, the PFP, the PGR, and the INM do 
encourage victims to cooperate with investigations; however, 
the victims rarely self-identify and the law enforcement 
agents often lack the training necessary to identify 
trafficking victims.  The INM has managed to identify a few 
victims and grant temporary legal status to victims willing 
to participate in investigations (see question 17).  The INM 
has no specific numbers on the persons granted such permits 
and takes them on a case-by-case basis; however, post knows 
of at least four victims that have received a temporary 
status to remain in the country.  The federal law passed by 
the Senate and now pending in the lower house of Congress 
contains provisions for a victim restitution program. 
 
33. (SBU) Question 32. 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)? 
 
Post Response:  The DIF manages 20 children's shelters (19 on 
the northern border with the U.S. and one on the southern 
border with Guatemala).  The 19 shelters on the northern 
border are for unaccompanied Mexican minors caught in the 
U.S. or in Mexico trying to cross the border.  Trained 
shelter staff conduct interviews with the children for a 
variety of victim issues, and then tries to reunite the 
children with family when appropriate.  Minors that are 
"other than Mexican" are sent to the shelter in Tapachula, 
Chiapas and then repatriated to their home countries.  The 
GOM worked closely with UNICEF to improve the shelter system 
on the northern border, and now the GOM is collaborating with 
the IOM to build similar capacity on the southern border.  In 
other cases, the GOM has referred victims to NGOs; however, 
there are not many shelters capable of handling trafficking 
victims. 
 
In the February meeting of the USG-GOM SLEP Working Group on 
Organized Migrant Smuggling and Trafficking in Persons, law 
enforcement officials from the PFP and PGR acknowledged the 
importance of providing victim protection and they were open 
to the idea of including a victim/ witness advocate on the 
dedicated investigation units.  The Interinstitutional 
Working Group on Trafficking also plans to work with USAID to 
identify shelter resources and short falls in order to better 
focus and coordinate funding. 
 
34. (SBU) Question 33. 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? 
 
Post Response:  Since 1998, the PGR has trained its officers 
to deal with child victims of sexual abuse.  The Mexican 
consulates along the U.S. southern border are trained at 
handling these types of cases as well.  The 
Interinstitutional Working Group on Trafficking has proposed 
creating a network among the Mexican Consulates throughout 
the U.S. to help raise awareness and identify victims. 
 
The INM is very interested in getting training for its 
migration agents.  In addition, some NGOs have provided 
training to police as well (see questions 9 and 35). 
 
35. (SBU) Question 34. Does the government provide 
assistance, such as medical aid, shelter, or financial help, 
to its repatriated nationals who are victims of trafficking? 
 
Post Response:  Through the DIF the government administers 
 
MEXICO 00001113  017 OF 018 
 
 
assistance programs for children repatriated to Mexico 
principally from the United States.  The DIF's 
inter-institutional Project for the Attention to Minors on 
the border incorporates actions of various government and 
societal institutions.  The program's objectives are to 
develop a campaign for the permanent protection of children 
on both sides of the of Mexico's northern border; consolidate 
a network of shelters and health centers aimed at trafficked 
children; and a system of reintegration for repatriated 
children (see question 32). 
 
Mexico has also begun to make advances under the respective 
memorandums of understanding signed with Guatemala, El 
Salvador, and Belize by arranging for the secure and 
organized repatriation of Central Americans - with special 
attention given to women and children.  Under new procedures 
instituted in 2005, the INM must notify the appropriate 
consulate of children held in detention and scheduled for 
repatriation.  The repatriation of children must take place 
at agreed upon times and locations and they are transported 
separately from adults.  In the case of Guatemalans, children 
are placed under the responsibility of Bienestar Social, the 
Guatemalan child welfare institution.  In some special cases, 
children are also placed with Casa Alianza in Guatemala City. 
 Post has heard from some NGO contacts working on the 
southern border that the new procedures are still not 
formulized or consistent, but authorities on both sides of 
the border are aware of the continuing issue (see question 
10). 
 
36. (SBU) Question 35. 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? 
 
Post response:  Numerous NGOs and international organizations 
work with trafficking victims. 
 
Sin Fronteras has a good relationship with the GOM, 
particularly with the INM and the SRE's Secretariat for 
Global Affairs.  Sin Fronteras holds regular workshop in the 
Ixtapalapa Migrant Detention Center in Mexico City, and the 
NGO has been called upon in the past to assist the INM with 
providing assistance to trafficking victims (see question 
17).  Sin Fronteras plans to include a trafficking module in 
it workshops to help identify trafficking victims.  Note. The 
names of NGOs working with the INM with victim protection and 
assistance are not/not for public disclosure. End Note. 
 
The IOM also works extensively with the GOM, again mostly 
with the INM to provide training to INM officials on both the 
northern and southern borders.  The IOM is conducting an 
assessment of TIP in the state of Baja California Norte and 
the city of Tapachula, Chiapas and it has held a TIP seminar 
in Cancun.  The IOM recently signed an agreement with Casa 
del Migrante in Tapachula, Chiapas to pay the costs of 
sheltering and providing assistance to trafficking victims. 
They are also close to signing a similar agreement with the 
domestic violence shelter Centro Integral de Atencion a Las 
Mujeres (CIAM) in Cancun.  The INM has also contacted the IOM 
for assistance with trafficking victims.   Note. The names of 
NGOs working with the INM with victim protection and 
assistance are not/not for public disclosure. End Note. 
 
The BSCC and World Vision recently launched a public 
awareness campaign composed of stickers and posters in highly 
trafficked areas in the Tijuana border area with a 24/7 call 
center to field anonymous tips.  A new billboard two blocks 
from the Tijuana Consulate sternly warns onlookers "Abuse a 
child in this country, go to jail in yours - Stop sexual 
exploitation."  Taxis display new bumper stickers 
highlighting a "Pedo-File Rex" dinosaur denouncing child sex 
tourism next to old political slogans and commercial ads. 
 
The DIF/ ILO program to eradicate commercial sexual 
exploitation of minors is operating in the 27 cities 
considered the most vulnerable to the phenomena (Tijuana, 
Tapachula, Ciudad Juarez, Acuna, Frontera, Monclova, Piedras 
Negras, Valle de Bravo, Acapulco, Guadalajara, Puerto 
Vallarta, Zapopan, Tonala, Tlaquepaque, Degollado, Oaxaca, 
Cancun, Playa del Carmen, Cozumel, Chetumal, Tlaxcala, 
Jalapa, Veracruz, Nautla y Cosoleacaque) and in 11 states 
(Baja California, Chiapas, Chihuahua; Coahuila, Mexico, 
Guerrero, Jalisco, Oaxaca, Quintana Roo, Tlaxcala y 
Veracruz). 
 
The Coalition Against Trafficking in Women (CATW) actively 
works to raise awareness about TIP.  It is currently working 
on programs, such as TV ads, designed to prevent the sexual 
 
MEXICO 00001113  018 OF 018 
 
 
exploitation of minors.  CATW reports having received funding 
from the INMUJERES and the Mexico City Government. 
 
Fundacion Infantia works with the tourism industry on 
prevention of child sexual exploitation.  Fundacion Infantia 
works with the BSCC and the ILO in providing training to 
government entities and schools. 
 
The Casa del Migrante runs shelters in Tapachula, Ciudad 
Juarez, and Tijuana where they primarily attend to migrants 
but also encounter TIP victims.  The organization recently 
added a separate shelter area dedicated for trafficking 
victims that includes space for up to 12 victims.  There is 
currently one trafficking victim staying at the shelter. 
 
Casa Alianza Mexico (CAM) runs a network of shelters 
dedicated to street children.  In the course of their work, 
they encounter TIP victims.  They receive the cooperation of 
the INM when they encounter an undocumented migrant and need 
assistance to repatriate the victim to their native country. 
 
The OAS provided funds for and participated in workshops, 
conferences, and public awareness campaigns in Mexico in 
2005.  The OAS funds also supported large initiatives 
administered by the ILO and others aimed at reducing child 
labor and the commercial sexual exploitation of children. 
 
The Fray Julian Garces Human Rights Center, based in the 
state of Tlaxcala, works with trafficking victims in that 
area. 
 
"Las Mercedes" runs a shelter for women who have been victims 
of prostitution or are at risk of becoming victims.  They go 
to the bus terminals in Mexico City where young, unsuspecting 
minors and women arrive from the rural areas and talk to them 
before the prostitution networks victimize them. 
 
INMUJERES is also involved in anti-TIP efforts, mostly 
through funding programs for CATW and its program to counter 
violence against women ("For a Life Without Violence") to 
educate women on their rights. 
 
The UN Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC) works with the GOM 
on anti-TIP efforts. 
 
37. (SBU) NOTE:  If post reports that a government is 
incapable of assisting and protecting TIP victims, then post 
should explain thoroughly.  Funding, personnel, and training 
constraints should be noted, if applicable. Conversely, a 
lack of political will to address the problem should be noted 
as well. 
 
Post Response:  At this point, the GOM is not fully capable 
of assisting trafficking victims beyond the network of DIF 
shelters for Mexican children, but there have been several 
cases during the year in which a trafficking victim was 
identified by government officials and turned over to NGOs 
for victim's assistance and protection. 
 
The major constraint facing the government in providing 
assistance and protection is a lack of resources, training, 
and personnel.  However, during recent discussions at the 
USG-GOM SLEP Working Group on Organized Migrant Smuggling and 
Trafficking in Persons, GOM officials acknowledged the need 
to dedicate additional government resources to the protection 
victims/ witnesses as well as forge a closer working 
relationship with NGOs. 
 
Furthermore, the Mexican Interinstitutional Working Group on 
Trafficking and the Embassy Mexico Committee on Trafficking 
are doing an "inventory" of available governmental and NGO 
shelter and victim assistance resources in the initial target 
areas in order to determine where we can best focus/ leverage 
the limited resources available from the GOM, the USG, and 
civil society groups. 
 
 
Visit Mexico City's Classified Web Site at 
http://www.state.sgov.gov/p/wha/mexicocity 
 
KELLY