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Viewing cable 07BERN200, TIP - SWITZERLAND: ANNUAL ANTI-TRAFFICKING IN

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Reference ID Created Released Classification Origin
07BERN200 2007-03-01 15:40 2011-08-30 01:44 UNCLASSIFIED Embassy Bern
VZCZCXRO1929
PP RUEHAG RUEHAST RUEHDA RUEHDBU RUEHDF RUEHFL RUEHIK RUEHKW RUEHLA
RUEHLN RUEHLZ RUEHROV RUEHSR RUEHVK RUEHYG
DE RUEHSW #0200/01 0601540
ZNR UUUUU ZZH
P 011540Z MAR 07
FM AMEMBASSY BERN
TO RUEHC/SECSTATE WASHDC PRIORITY 3744
INFO RUEHZL/EUROPEAN POLITICAL COLLECTIVE
RHMFIUU/DEPT OF JUSTICE WASHINGTON DC
RUEHC/DEPT OF LABOR WASHINGTON DC
RUEATRS/DEPT OF TREASURY WASHINGTON DC
UNCLAS SECTION 01 OF 25 BERN 000200 
 
SIPDIS 
 
SIPDIS 
 
DEPT FOR G/TIP, INL, DRL, PRM, IWI, EUR/PGI, EUR/AGS 
DEPT PLEASE PASS USAID 
 
E.O. 12958: N/A 
TAGS: PHUM KCRM KWMN SMIG KFRD PREF ELAB SZ
SUBJECT: TIP - SWITZERLAND: ANNUAL ANTI-TRAFFICKING IN 
PERSONS REPORT 
 
------------------ 
TABLE OF CONTENTS: 
------------------ 
 
I.    SUMMARY OF NEW DEVELOPMENTS 
II.   OVERVIEW 
III.  PREVENTION 
IV.   INVESTIGATION AND PROSECUTION OF TRAFFICKERS 
V.    PROTECTION AND ASSISTANCE TO VICTIMS 
 
------------------------------ 
I. SUMMARY OF NEW DEVELOPMENTS 
------------------------------ 
 
Switzerland continued to make progress in its anti- 
trafficking-in-persons practices, investigating and 
prosecuting TIP cases vigorously.  In 2006, federal and 
cantonal police led at least 38 investigations on 
trafficking or trafficking-related offenses.  With 
regard to prosecutions, provisional data for the first 
half of 2006 show that Swiss courts made at least 11 
convictions for trafficking or trafficking-related 
offenses.  To improve the statistics of investigations 
and prosecutions and to gather national data, the 
National Conference of the Cantonal Justice Ministers 
decided in April 2006 to harmonize cantonal recording 
practices and gather national policing statistics by 
2009. 
 
On the legal front, Parliament in March 2006 
unanimously adopted a more comprehensive definition of 
human trafficking, which entered into force on December 
1, 2006.  The new article penalizes trafficking in 
persons for the purposes of sexual exploitation, labor 
exploitation, or to remove a body organ.  This 
amendment to the Penal Code was an integral part of the 
ratification of the Optional Protocol to the UN 
Convention on the Rights of the Child on the Sale of 
Children, Child Prostitution and Child Pornography. 
Switzerland ratified the Optional Protocol in October 
and it entered into force on November 2006.  In June 
2006, Parliament adopted the ratification bill of the 
two Protocols to the UN Convention against 
Transnational Organized Crime to Parliament for 
ratification, which Switzerland ratified in October 
2006. 
 
During 2006, the KSMM held two interdisciplinary 
workshops on the assisted return and reintegration of 
TIP victims and on human trafficking for the purpose of 
removing body organs, punishable under the new 
trafficking article in the Penal Code.  The KSMM also 
designed a training program for police and prosecuting 
officers in the investigation of TIP cases, finishing 
preparations for the first training class in combating 
human trafficking.  The five-day course will be held at 
the Swiss Police Academy in Neuchatel in April 2007. 
In January 2007 the KSMM conducted a written survey to 
assess the need for specialized training among NGOs and 
VictimsQ Assistance Centers.  At the operational level, 
the National Conference of the Chiefs of the Cantonal 
Police Forces in decided in July 2006 to inaugurate an 
inter-cantonal Working Group on Trafficking in Persons 
and Migrant Smuggling, in order to disseminate expert 
knowledge and to make recommendations on investigations 
and administrative processes. 
 
Protection: The government enacted new protective 
measures for TIP victims.  The number of TIP victims 
receiving counseling services from professional 
assistance centers for victims of crime rose from 84 in 
2004 to 126 in 2005, an increase that at least one NGO 
credited to improved protective measures.  In 2006, 
cantonal immigration authorities offered 39 trafficking 
victims the 30-day stays of deportation proceedings 
designed to offer them a period of contemplation and 
recovery.  Three trafficking victims were offered 
short-term residency permits for the duration of 
legal/court proceedings against their traffickers, and 
three victims were granted long-term residency permits 
on grounds of personal hardship after the end of court 
proceedings.  The Zurich-based anti-TIP NGO FIZ also 
counseled more TIP victims in 2006 than the year before 
and, for the first time, received public money for its 
TIP-victim assistance services. 
 
 
BERN 00000200  002 OF 025 
 
 
Efforts to improve the legal protections of TIP victims 
continued.  In a national referendum on September 24, 
2006, the Swiss electorate approved a new Federal Law 
on Foreigners that brings improvements in the legal 
protection of TIP victims.  The new law formalizes the 
process of granting TIP victims a stay of deportation 
proceedings to recover from their trauma and weigh 
participation in judicial proceedings.  The law is 
scheduled to come into force at the beginning of 2008. 
As part of the implementation of the new Federal Law on 
Foreigners, the Federal Office for Migration (FOM) and 
Cantonal Migration Offices will also make the necessary 
adjustments for the central recording of all stays-of- 
deportation orders and temporary residency permits 
granted to TIP victims and witnesses.  In June 2006 the 
lower house of Parliament began debate on the revision 
of the Victims Assistance Law (OHG) that would enhance 
crime victims' right to emergency protections and allow 
cantons to pool resources to establish regional victim 
assistance centers specializing in certain types of 
crime (e.g. TIP).  In December 2006, the upper house of 
Parliament began plenary debate of the draft bill for a 
new federal code of criminal trial proceedings that 
will replace the 26 existing cantonal codes and 
strengthen witness protection measures in court trial 
proceedings. 
 
Existing cantonal cooperation projects ("roundtables") 
to formalize referral procedures in TIP cases between 
immigration, police, and justice authorities and victim 
assistance bodies continued:  In Zurich, the canton 
which pioneered these efforts, participants of the 
anti-TIP roundtable met in November 2006 for the second 
annual evaluation conference.  Three more cantons have 
formalized the referral process in written memoranda of 
understanding during the reporting period, and efforts 
to establish a formal referral process continued in 
another three.  As a direct result of the regulation to 
stay deportation proceedings and the better cooperation 
between NGOs and law enforcement officials, the number 
of TIP victims willing to testify against their 
traffickers has risen considerably; FIZ reports that 
during 2006 almost 50 percent of victims being 
counseled testified against their traffickers, compared 
to fewer than ten percent a few years ago. 
 
Prevention: The government also expanded its prevention 
efforts.  Swiss embassies and consulates increased 
their scrutiny of visa applications for nightclub 
performers, with a view toward ensuring that applicants 
received valid contracts, are completely aware of their 
future conditions, and are informed how to seek help 
once in Switzerland.  The FOM also issued new 
regulations on official monitoring of the working 
conditions of cabaret dancers and the contractual 
obligations of the nightclub owners.  Swiss agencies 
continued several prevention and protection programs 
abroad, valued annually at over US$ 1 million. 
 
The three official churches of the Canton of Basel- 
Landschaft, in cooperation with FIZ, developed an 
exhibition to raise awareness among the general public 
of the problem of trafficking in women.  The exhibit 
opened in Basel-Landschaft in September 2006 and will 
be shown in a total of ten cantons.  With a view toward 
the upcoming European Soccer Cup, to be hosted by 
Switzerland and Austria in 2008, the federal government 
has appropriated $80,000 to kick-start public awareness 
campaigns against trafficking and forced prostitution 
spearheaded by the "soccer community" and NGOs.  FIZ 
has already begun preparations for an awareness-raising 
campaign during the Euro 2008 in cooperation with 
partner organizations.  The goal of the FIZ campaign 
will be to raise awareness among the general public of 
the different forms of human trafficking and forced 
prostitution as well as to call for the better 
protection of victims. 
 
------------ 
II. OVERVIEW 
------------ 
 
A. Switzerland is primarily a country of destination 
for persons being trafficked, almost exclusively women, 
but transit also occurs.  Trafficking occurs both 
across borders and within the country.  Swiss officials 
 
BERN 00000200  003 OF 025 
 
 
estimate the number of trafficking victims at a few 
hundred per year.  In 2006 Federal Police reported an 
increase in the total number of prostitutes and 
brothels in Switzerland; in Zurich, the police recorded 
an increase of 20 percent between 2003 and 2005. The 
federal police previously estimated that the total 
number of prostitutes in Switzerland was approximately 
14,000, roughly half of whom solicit illegally. 
Federal Police assume that some of the illegal 
prostitutes were brought in by traffickers, thus 
putting the total number of potential trafficking 
victims currently living in Switzerland at between 
1,500 and 3,000.  How many trafficking victims were 
lured into Switzerland under false pretenses and how 
many were brought in fully aware that they were going 
to engage in prostitution in Switzerland is unclear, 
but the distinction is of secondary importance because 
under Swiss law both are punishable as human 
trafficking. 
 
B. Federal Police statistics indicate that, as in 
previous years, TIP victims typically come from Eastern 
Europe and the former Soviet Union (Hungary, Poland, 
Bulgaria, Slovakia, Czech Republic, Slovenia, Romania, 
Ukraine, Moldova), Latin America (Brazil, Dominican 
Republic), Asia (Thailand, Cambodia), and to a lesser 
extent from Africa (Nigeria, Cameron).  The Zurich- 
based Information Center for Women from Africa, Latin 
America, and Eastern Europe (FIZ) reports that roughly 
35 percent of the 133 TIP victims counseled in 2006 
came from Latin America, another 35 percent from 
Eastern Europe, about 20 percent from Asia, and the 
remaining 10 percent from Africa.  Trafficking into the 
country is primarily performed by individuals and small 
groups related through ethnic, clan, or family ties, as 
well as, occasionally, organized criminals.  A study 
commissioned by the FOM and published in November 2005 
found that the overwhelming majority of illegal 
immigrants (i.e. not just TIP victims) were being 
expedited by family members or personal acquaintances, 
and that criminal organizations (with the exception of 
illegal immigration at Zurich airport)  played only a 
minor role.  The study "Migrant Smuggling and Illegal 
Immigration in Switzerland" was based on existing data 
and expert interviews. 
 
The great majority of trafficking victims are forced 
into nude dancing and prostitution.  Trafficking for 
the purpose of labor exploitation as domestic servants 
also occurred but was very limited.  Federal Police 
note that there are also isolated cases of labor 
exploitation in agriculture, the construction business, 
and the tourism industry.  In some cases, victims are 
subjected to physical and sexual violence, threats to 
themselves or their families or both, drugs, 
withholding of documents, and incarceration.  Police 
estimates suggest that up to 50 percent of illegal 
prostitutesQ gross income is paid to brothel owners and 
traffickers who organize the passage and entry to 
Switzerland.  Forced to pay-off the costs for travel 
and forged documents, and due to the local high cost of 
living, women find themselves in a state of dependency. 
 
C. In general, criminal cases against traffickers are 
not pursued (for lack of evidence) unless their victims 
are willing to testify.  Since 2004, federal and 
cantonal police and immigration authorities have 
formalized a process of granting potential TIP victims 
a stay of deportation proceedings to give them time to 
recover from their trauma and to let them freely decide 
whether to participate in judicial proceedings against 
their tormentors.  This protective measure is 
incorporated in the New Federal Law on Foreigners, 
which Parliament formally adopted in March 2006 and 
which passed a national referendum in September 2006 
(cf. section 4.D).  Federal authorities have been 
successfully raising awareness among cantonal 
immigration authorities of the special situation of TIP 
victims in order to avoid them being deported to their 
countries of origin at the risk of personal harm. 
Several major urban centers have established a referral 
process for TIP victims in the context of regular 
roundtable meetings between NGOs and cantonal justice, 
police and immigration authorities.  As a direct result 
of the regulation to stay deportation proceedings and 
the better cooperation between NGOs and law enforcement 
 
BERN 00000200  004 OF 025 
 
 
officials, the number of TIP victims willing to testify 
against their traffickers has risen considerably. 
Notwithstanding these protective measures, some TIP 
victims for personal reasons (including family or 
personal bonds to their erstwhile tormentors) are 
unwilling to cooperate with judicial authorities. 
 
D. The Federal Office of Police's Coordination Unit 
against the Trafficking in Persons and Smuggling of 
Migrants (KSMM) is the federal government's main 
coordinating and monitoring body of its anti- 
trafficking efforts.  Through its coordinating role, 
the KSMM keeps abreast of anti-trafficking efforts on 
all fronts (prevention, victim protection, and 
prosecution) both at the federal and cantonal level. 
In addition, its remit includes monitoring of 
parliamentary ratification of international conventions 
and offering expert advice on trafficking-relevant 
legislative reform. 
 
The KSMM seeks to implement the action plan that its 
interdepartmental steering committee adopted in 2005 
(cf. section 2.H.).  The steering committee monitors 
and regularly evaluates implementation progress and, if 
need be, amends the action plan.  In the context of 
surveys and assessments by regional bodies and 
international organizations, the KSMM previously made 
available its assessment of Swiss anti-trafficking 
efforts to the Council of Europe, the OSCE and the UN. 
The Federal Police's Service for Analysis and 
Prevention, the government's domestic intelligence 
service, does strategic analysis of human trafficking 
in and throughout Switzerland and publishes some of its 
findings in the Federal Police's annual report on 
homeland security. 
 
--------------- 
III. PREVENTION 
--------------- 
 
A. Government officials at the highest level 
acknowledge that trafficking is a problem. On the 
occasion of the International Women's Day, March 8, 
2006, Foreign Minister Micheline Calmy-Rey, together 
with several women Members of Parliament from the major 
parties, appealed to international organizations to 
combat trafficking in persons vigorously.  The appeal 
was open for the public to sign and over 2,000 
signatures from all corners of Switzerland was 
spontaneously sent in.  The text of the declaration 
plus the signatures were sent with a letter of the 
Foreign Minister to the Secretary General of the UN, 
the Director General of the ILO, the Director General 
of the IOM, the President of the OSCE, and the 
Secretary General of the Council of Europe. 
 
SIPDIS 
 
In 2000, the Federal Council (cabinet) ordered the 
establishment of an interdepartmental working group to 
assess the need for additional government action in the 
fight against human trafficking.  In its final report 
published in 2002, this Interdepartmental Working Group 
assessed both the current and legal situation regarding 
human trafficking in Switzerland.  The report made 
several recommendations and is the foundation of the 
determined and sustained efforts of federal and 
cantonal political and administrative authorities to 
combat human trafficking more effectively. 
 
B. The Federal Office of Police is the federal 
government's primary actor in anti-trafficking efforts. 
Two separate divisions are involved in anti-trafficking 
activities:  The Federal Criminal Police handles 
international cooperation and investigations of 
organized crime, and the Service for Analysis and 
Prevention, the federal government's domestic 
intelligence service, does strategic analysis of 
information.  Both divisions have set up a new sub- 
section dealing with human trafficking and human 
smuggling at the beginning of 2004.  The Federal Police 
also includes the KSMM, which is the federal 
governments main coordinating and monitoring body of 
its anti-trafficking efforts.  However, the KSMM has no 
direct authority to issue directives but develops anti- 
trafficking strategies in consultation with 
representatives of its constituting ministries that 
retain final responsibility for their implementation. 
 
BERN 00000200  005 OF 025 
 
 
 
The prosecution of illegal prostitution (i.e. 
prostitution without a valid work permit) and 
trafficking of persons normally falls under the 
jurisdiction of cantonal police and judicial 
authorities.  However, cases linked to organized crime 
fall under the authority of the federal authorities to 
investigate and prosecute.  The FOM is playing a more 
crucial role, particularly in easing the return of 
trafficking victims and assisting in their re- 
integration in their home societies (cf. section 4.D.). 
 
The following government agencies are represented on 
the Steering Committee of the KSMM and take active part 
in the fight against human trafficking ranging from 
prevention, to prosecution and victim protection: 
 
At the federal level, the Ministry for Justice and 
Police (Office of the Attorney General; Federal Office 
of Police; Federal Office of Justice; Federal Office 
for Migration), the Foreign Ministry, the Finance 
Ministry (Swiss Border Guards), the Ministry of the 
Interior (Federal Office for Equality of Women and 
Men), the Economics Ministry (Directorate of Labor), 
and the Federal Defense Department. 
 
Since 2004, a federal police unit dealing with 
pedophilia, slave trade, and people smuggling 
coordinates and supports cantonal police departments in 
cases involving human trafficking. 
 
Since 2004, the Army's chief of staff manages the 
training of the Swiss peacekeeping company in Kosovo 
and addresses the problem of slave trade and adequate 
behavior of Swiss troops abroad.  The Federal 
Department of Defense has been involved in the KSMM 
since January 2005.  There have been no reports of 
Swiss military malfeasance. 
 
At the cantonal level, representatives of the National 
Conference of the Chiefs of the Cantonal Police Forces, 
law enforcement agencies, equal opportunity offices, 
victims assistance centers, and immigration and 
naturalization authorities. 
 
Following is a list of the agencies of the federal 
government involved in anti-TIP efforts with a rough 
estimate of the available resources (The list is from 
2005 TIP report but information is still valid): 
 
- Federal Office of Police: 
 
The Federal Police budgets $800,000 (1 million Swiss 
francs) per year, divided among the following offices. 
 
  -   KSMM Office: Three full-time positions. 
  -   Federal Criminal Police: Two full-time positions 
in the police unit "Pedophilia, Human Trafficking and 
Smuggling of Migrants", and one Police liaison officer. 
  -   Service for Analysis and Prevention: Two full- 
time positions. 
 
In total, seven new positions were recently created; 
including regional federal police coordination centers 
in Zurich, Geneva, and Lausanne. 
 
- Federal Attorney General's Office: 
 
Given the extended authority of the Federal Attorney 
General in the fight against organized crime, its staff 
increased as a result.  The fight against organized 
human trafficking and smuggling is considered a top 
priority. 
 
- Federal Office for Equality of Women and Men: 
 
The office financed in 2004 a new edition of the 
information brochure for cabaret dancers ($19,000 or 
23,000 Swiss francs) and a film project on the problem 
of human trafficking ($7,250 or 9,000 Swiss francs). 
About 20 percent of the staff works closely with the 
KSMM and in other activities in the context of 
combating human trafficking. 
 
- Swiss Development and Cooperation Agency (SDC): 
 
 
BERN 00000200  006 OF 025 
 
 
The SDC spends about a half million dollars per year on 
projects addressing the problem of Human Trafficking, 
including a wide range of activities in different 
countries which can be valued as an indirect 
contribution to the fight against human trafficking. 
 
- Federal Department of Foreign Affairs (DFA): 
 
The DFA seconds two Swiss anti-trafficking experts to 
the OSCE (one to the mission in Macedonia, and one as 
the executive assistant to the OSCE Special 
Representative on Combating Trafficking in Human 
Beings). The MFA also supports anti-trafficking 
projects abroad with about $1 million each year. 
 
- Federal Department of Defense (DOD): 
 
The Swiss DOD is active in the prevention of human 
trafficking by organizing specific training modules for 
members of the SWISSCOY (Switzerland's KFOR contingent 
in Kosovo), LOT (Liaison and Observation Teams), and 
Military Observers traveling abroad.  These modules are 
coordinated by the Laws of Armed Conflict Section of 
the Staff of the Chief of the Armed Forces (LOAC), 
together with SWISSINT, the Swiss competence centre for 
peacekeeping missions abroad.  An LOAC representative 
will attend the 3-4 March 2005 PFP seminar in Helsinki 
aimed at implementing the new NATO directive on human 
trafficking. 
 
More generally, staffing was also reinforced in the 
Federal Office for Migration, the Federal Office of 
Justice and the Ministry of Foreign Affairs. 
 
C. Domestic campaigns 
 
The three official churches of the Canton of Basel- 
Landschaft - Roman Catholic, Old Catholic, and 
Protestant - in cooperation with FIZ, developed an 
exhibition "Without Glitz and Glamour - Trafficking in 
Women and Forced Prostitution," designed to raise 
awareness among the general public of the problem of 
trafficking in women and to stir public discussion. 
The exhibit opened in Liestal in Basel-Landschaft in 
September 2006 and throughout 2007 will be shown in a 
total of ten cantons.  The exhibit highlights the 
background and motives of all stakeholders - women, 
traffickers, clients - and shows the ways and means of 
modern-day slavery with a special focus on Switzerland. 
The KSMM took an active part in the opening ceremony of 
the exhibit. 
 
The Swiss Crime Prevention unit, a staff unit of the 
National Conference of the Cantonal Justice Ministers, 
in September 2005 launched a three-year information 
campaign against child pornography on the Internet. 
During the first year, the "Stop Child Pornography on 
the Internet" campaign is meant to raise the publicQs 
awareness of the criminal nature of child pornography. 
The campaign has an annual budget of 300,000 Swiss 
francs and conveys its message with brochures, flyers, 
stickers, and a website: http://www.stopp- 
kinderpornografie.ch/3/de/ 
 
The "stop child pornography on the internet" campaign 
is targeting the police, children and youth, their 
environment (parents, schools) as well as (potential) 
consumers and perpetrators. 
 
With a view toward the upcoming European Soccer Cup, 
which Switzerland is hosting together with Austria in 
2008, the federal government launched a public 
awareness campaigns against trafficking and forced 
prostitution.  The federal interagency process handling 
the Euro 2008 project organization for the government 
appropriated in January 2007 $80,000 (100,000 Swiss 
francs) to kick-start suitable awareness-raising and 
prevention projects spearheaded by the "soccer 
community" and NGOs.  The money was appropriated after 
a careful evaluation of the effectiveness of the 
preventive measures taken during the 2006 soccer World 
Cup in Germany.  At a first brainstorming session, the 
Euro 2008 project organization decided that such a 
broad-based campaign must focus on forced prostitution 
and target both potential "clients" of prostitutes and 
the public at large. 
 
BERN 00000200  007 OF 025 
 
 
 
At the cantonal level, legislators are calling on 
cantonal executives to take preventive measures against 
trafficking and forced prostitution before and during 
the Euro 2008.  In Zurich, the cantonal government 
formally recognized the pivotal role of the NGO Frauen 
Information Zentrum-Makasi (FIZ) as a consultation 
center for TIP victims and stated that an awareness- 
raising campaign could be run jointly.  Also in Basel 
and Bern, two other Swiss host cities, local 
politicians have formally called for anti-trafficking 
measures.  FIZ itself has already begun preparations 
for an awareness-raising campaign during the Euro 2008 
in cooperation with partner organizations.  The goal of 
the FIZ campaign will be to raise awareness among the 
general public of the different forms of human 
trafficking and forced prostitution as well as to call 
for the better protection of victims.  As a novelty, 
the FIZ campaign will also target the customers of 
commercial sexual services, calling on them to act 
responsibly and to help potential victims get access to 
aid organizations. 
 
International campaigns: 
 
During 2006, the Department of Foreign Affairs (DFA) 
and the DFAQs Development and Cooperation Agency (SDC) 
sponsored the following anti-TIP campaigns. (The list 
is not exhaustive but contains the major projects, many 
of which Switzerland co-sponsored in partnership with 
other countries or international organizations.)  In 
total DFA spends approximately 1 million Swiss francs 
on various projects/expert secondments (Comment: the 
exchange rate for 2006 averaged about 1.25 Swiss Francs 
to the U.S. dollar. End comment): 
 
-QColumbia, Fundacisn Esperanza: Prevention of human 
trafficking - awareness raising and training government 
employees, CHF 20,500; 
 
-QSerbia/ Montenegro: NGO AWIN/ASTRA Information 
office for women and girls, Pre-vention and Assistance, 
November 2005 through December 2007 CHF 320,000; 
 
-QMoldova, Terre des Hommes / Salvat Copii (NGO): 
Contribution to the Fight against Child Trafficking 
(FACT), CHF 500,000; 
 
-QRussian Federation, Prevention, information 
(Hotline) and reintegration for victims of human 
trafficking, March 2006 - June 2007, CHF 280,000; 
 
-QLebanon: Measures to prevent and combat 
trafficking in human beings, contribution to UNODC 
(October 2005 - September 2007) CHF 407,000; 
 
-QUNODC Teheran: Anti-Trafficking-Project, Swiss 
contribution: 250 000 CHF.  The Swiss have a seat on 
the Steering Committee of the Project; 
 
-QLebanon: Safe House Shelter Project: Urgent 
Funding to Caritas Lebanon Migration Center (CLMC): 200 
000 CHF (PA IV und SDC-HH); 
 
-QContribution to the journal Forced Migration 
Review, topical issue on human trafficking. 
Contribution to the journal Forced Migration Review, 
topical issue sexual violence and armed conflict; 
 
-QFunding of the translation into German of the IOM 
Resource Book on Law Enforcement in the area of child 
trafficking; 
 
-QUAE: Project Vivere: Swiss contribution 100 000 
CHF; 
 
-QSupport of an exchange project of the Swiss 
women's group Alliance F with Ukrainian organizations, 
including on the topic of human trafficking. 
 
Additionally, anti-trafficking messages are included in 
other information and awareness raising activities 
supported by Switzerland, e.g. in HIV-AIDS prevention 
programme of the Red Cross Youth in Nepal (through a 
street theatre project). 
 
 
BERN 00000200  008 OF 025 
 
 
D. The Foreign Ministry's Division on Human Security 
and Human Rights supports a majority of projects that 
seek to promote equal opportunity goals and to 
strengthen women's rights (de jure and de facto).  As 
part of the foreign policy promoting peace and human 
rights -- in accord with UNSCR 1325 on women, peace, 
and security -- these programs seek to reduce the 
vulnerability of women (in societies afflicted by armed 
conflicts). 
 
In 2006 the Swiss Development Agency reviewed its 
priority areas.  The upshot of this review has been to 
define migration, including the aspect of human 
trafficking, as one of the SDC's 10 priorities. In 
Eastern Europe and the CIS, the importance of migration 
and human trafficking projects is set to increase. The 
SDC is elaborating a policy paper setting the framework 
to expand its activities in the fight against human 
trafficking. 
 
In 2006 the Swiss government supported the following 
projects: 
 
-QBelarus, La Strada (Young Women Christian 
association: Counter Trafficking in Women, Prevention 
and Reintegration -(04 - 07), CHF 300,000; 
 
-QBelarus, IOM: Combating Trafficking in Human 
Beings: Protection and Reintegration assistance, 
Contribution to the establishment of a Rehabilitation 
Center in Minsk, CHF 183,000; 
 
-QUkraine, IOM: Migration management incl. human 
trafficking. Assistance, counseling, prevention, CHF 
500,000; 
 
-QMacedonia, IOM: Contribution to IOM Fight against 
trafficking in human Beings, CHF 165,000; 
 
-QGeorgia, "Protection and Assistance of trafficking 
victims in Georgia", CHF 400,000; 
 
-QSouth East Europe (Regional project), 
Strengthening law enforcement capacities for fighting 
human trafficking, EUR 167,000; 
 
-QSouth East Europe (Regional project), Contribution 
to the Organized Crime Training Network (OCTN) for 
operational managers in SEE, EUR 192,000; 
 
-QVietnam: Terre des Hommes: Integration of Street 
children; 
 
-QUnited Arabic Emirate, Vivere, Protection and 
assistance to victims of human trafficking, December 
2006 - June 2007, CHF 130,000; 
 
-QIran, UNODC, research and assessment; training for 
specialized personnel on trafficking in human beings in 
Iran; support to victims of human trafficking, December 
2006 - March 2008, CHF 100,000; 
 
-QSDC: Cambodia, NGO Hagar, 1998 - 2007: CHF 1.6 
million. 
 
Additionally, SDC spreads anti-trafficking messages in 
the context of other projects not explicitly focused on 
human trafficking (e.g. Burma/Myanmar). 
 
E. According to Embassy contacts, the relationship 
between government authorities and NGOs is generally a 
cooperative and symbiotic one.  An increasing number of 
cantons and cities have institutionalized regular 
roundtable meetings on human trafficking to improve 
cooperation between NGOs and cantonal justice and 
police authorities.  These roundtables have led in at 
least four cantons to formalized codes of referral and 
cooperation in TIP cases (cf. section 4.C.).  The head 
of the federal governmentQs KSMM participates in most 
of these cantonal roundtable efforts, but - in accord 
with Switzerland's federal structure Q only in the 
capacity of an observer and consultant. 
 
Cooperation among federal authorities and international 
and local NGOs has intensified.  The KSMM conducts 
consultations and invites many organizations to its 
 
BERN 00000200  009 OF 025 
 
 
roundtables, including Terre des Hommes Switzerland, 
Ecpat Switzerland, the International Organization for 
Migration (IOM), Women's Information Center for Women 
from Africa, Asia, Latin America and Eastern Europe 
(FIZ), the "Prostitution Collective Reflection" 
(ProKoRe), and ASPASIE in Geneva.  KSMM has regularized 
these roundtables. 
 
As part of a project to prevent trafficking and to help 
the reintegration of trafficking victims in the Russian 
Federation, the Swiss Development Agency "SDC" closely 
cooperated with FIZ.  This project of an information 
(telephone) hotline for trafficking victims in the 
Russian Federation was supported by SDC with 280,000 
Swiss francs (cf. section 2.D.). A part of the funds 
was used to invite the hotline's operators to 
Switzerland where they were trained by experts from 
FIZ, briefing them on the specific situation and the 
needs of Russian victims of trafficking in Switzerland. 
 
FIZ experts are also teaching an integral part of the 
first training class in combating human trafficking for 
police officers and law enforcement officials, which 
will be held at the Swiss Police Academy in Neuchatel 
in April 2007. (cf. section 3.I.) 
 
F. Switzerland's borders are adequately monitored and 
immigration regulations are stringent. Switzerland's 
visa sections in countries of origin inform applicants 
of "artistic visa" or L-permits about their rights when 
working in Switzerland (cf section 4.G.).  Information 
brochures are available in 16 languages.  Some 
embassies have also displayed respective information on 
their homepage.  Furthermore, Swiss Foreign Affairs 
Department officials have sensitized visa adjudicators 
to the problem and have invited NGOs to give training 
to embassy staff.  Furthermore, the leadership of the 
Swiss Border Guards, the Federal Office for Refugees, 
and the Federal Office for Migration are all 
represented on the KSMM to assure the flow of 
information and the analysis of immigration patterns 
for evidence of trafficking. 
 
The Swiss Border Guards, an administrative unit of the 
Federal Department of Finance, cooperate closely with 
the Federal Office for Migration on issues of asylum 
and migration.  Combating irregular migration and the 
smuggling of migrants is a priority for the Swiss 
Border Guards. Border Guard officials receive special 
training to heighten awareness of human trafficking as 
part of the normal training program.  Border guards 
report all suspicious activities to the cantonal police 
force of the area, which holds sole authority for 
further criminal investigations. However, in practice 
it has proven difficult for border guard officials to 
spot victims of human trafficking because the latter 
often give only limited information about themselves 
and commonly do not denounce their traffickers out of 
fear of reprisals. 
 
The Foreign Ministry (DFA) constantly adjusts measures 
to combat visa abuse, ensuring that procedures are 
tailored to local conditions. Since spring 2005 the DFA 
has taken the following measures: The DFA introduced 
systematic risk assessments and subjects Swiss missions 
to comprehensive inspections ever four years. Negative 
assessments or reports of suspicious activities trigger 
special inspections, as happened during 2006 at the 
Swiss mission in Islamabad. On allegations of 
wrongdoing, DFA closely cooperates with the Office of 
the Attorney General.  The DFA has also taken specific 
organizational measures to reduce the risk of 
corruption by working through call-centres (e.g. 
Skopje, Moscow, and Bangkok) or by collecting visa fees 
through bank transfers to avoid the use of cash in visa 
sections (Moscow). In some mission, the facilities have 
been redesigned to support visa processing and control 
systems (Tel Aviv, St. Petersburg, Pristina, Prague, 
and Kiev) or separate visa pavilions built (New Delhi 
and Colombo). The DFA also puts special importance on 
raising awareness among visa clerks and their line 
managers and on their careful screening and preparation 
for the task in high-risk missions. 
 
G. The key office coordinating the anti-trafficking 
efforts of the various government agencies is the KSMM, 
 
BERN 00000200  010 OF 025 
 
 
which started operations at the beginning of 2003. 
Formally a part of the Federal Office of Police, the 
KSMM processes and passes information and coordinates 
policy within the federal administration as well as 
between the federal agencies and the cantons.  It is 
also the primary point of contact for international 
inquiries on all issues linked to illegal migration and 
human trafficking, and watches over the ratification of 
the UN Palermo Convention on Organized Crime and its 
protocols. 
 
The KSMM regularly convenes representatives of the 
Ministry for Justice and Police (Office of the Attorney 
General; Federal Office for Refugees; Federal Office of 
Justice; Federal Office for Migration), the Foreign 
Ministry, the Finance Ministry (Swiss Border Guards), 
the Ministry of the Interior (Federal Office for 
Equality of Women and Men), the Economics Ministry 
(Directorate of Labor) as well as representatives of 
the National Conference of the Chiefs of the Cantonal 
Police Forces, law enforcement agencies, equal 
opportunity offices, victims assistance centers, and 
migration authorities.  If the need arises, the KSMM 
can also consult with external experts and NGOs. 
 
Internationally, Switzerland was one of the initiators 
of the OSCE Action Plan to Combat Trafficking in Human 
Beings which requests from OSCE participating states 
enhanced cooperation.  Switzerland has been supporting 
the OSCE Special Rapporteur since 2000, both 
financially and with expert secondments.  Switzerland 
was chairing the Stability Pact Task Force on 
Trafficking in Human Beings until 2004 and had to 
coordinate international and national efforts. 
Switzerland, furthermore, participates actively in the 
negotiations for the Council of Europe Convention 
against Trafficking in Human Beings, which also 
requests enhanced cooperation among stakeholders. 
 
Switzerland also substantially contributed to the NATO 
Policy on Combating Trafficking in Human Beings, which 
was adopted at the Istanbul summit.  Switzerland 
initiated the first seminar to develop a training 
curriculum for NATO-led forces in September 2004 at the 
Geneva Center for Security Policy in the framework of 
PfP.  On a bilateral basis, an information exchange was 
initiated in 2004 with Ukraine.  The Swiss government 
organized and financed the visit of an anti-trafficking 
delegation to Bern.  The delegation met with all main 
governmental and cantonal actors, including NGOs.  This 
visit provided an ideal opportunity to share 
information on victim protection and prosecution and 
identify possible areas of closer co-operation. 
 
At the operational level, Switzerland runs bilateral 
cooperation programs with various countries, and is 
member of Interpol.  Switzerland is active in 
Interpol's working group against human trafficking and 
cooperates with the European Police Office (EUROPOL) 
since September 2004.  Parliament approved the 
ratification of the Swiss-EUROPOL bilateral agreement 
on October 7, 2005.  The scope of bilateral cooperation 
with EUROPOL will cover eight criminal areas, including 
human trafficking. 
 
H. The KSMM seeks to implement the action plan that its 
interdepartmental steering committee adopted in 2003 
and revised in 2005.  Taking note of the Federal 
Cabinet and the cantons, the action plan prioritizes 
the final recommendations of the 2001 Interagency 
Working Group on Human Trafficking (following is a 
listed of achievements made in 2006): 
 
-   Revision of the Penal Code on Human Trafficking: 
Extension of the definition of TIP as part of the 
ratification of the Optional Protocol to the Convention 
on the Rights of the Child regarding the sale of 
children, child prostitution and child pornography: 
Parliament adopted the bill in March 2006, and the 
revised article on human trafficking in the Penal Code 
entered into force on December 1, 2006 (cf. Section 
3.A.). 
 
-   Revision of the Federal Law on Foreigners: The bill 
includes a temporary residence permit for TIP victims 
and witnesses as well as financial aid to facilitate 
 
BERN 00000200  011 OF 025 
 
 
the return of trafficked victims.  The final draft 
passed Parliament in December 2005 and the electorate 
approved the new law in a national referendum in 
September 2006. The law is scheduled to enter into 
force at the beginning of 2008 (cf. section 4.D). 
 
-   Cantonal cooperation projects ("roundtables"): 
Cantonal cooperation mechanisms have been formalized in 
written codes of cooperation and referral in Zurich, 
Luzern, St. Gallen, and Solothurn and roundtable 
initiatives continued or were started in, Bern, 
Fribourg, Basel-Landschaft, and Basel-Stadt (cf. 
section 4.C.). 
 
-   Specialized training for government officials: KSMM 
organized two workshops, finalized an anti-TIP training 
program for police officers and prosecutors, and 
conducted a survey to assess the need for specialized 
training for NGOs and Victims' Assistance Centers (cf. 
Section 3.I). 
 
-   Better protection of cabaret/night club dancers (L- 
visa) holders:  The Federal Department of Foreign 
Affairs extended its information and prevention program 
to all Swiss consulates worldwide  and the Federal 
Office for Migration issued new regulations on official 
monitoring of working conditions of cabaret dancers 
(cf. section 4.F.) 
 
-   Better statistics on investigations/prosecutions 
and victims assistance: In April 2006 the National 
Conference of the Cantonal Justice Ministers decided to 
implement the project to harmonize cantonal recording 
practices and gather national policing statistics 
regarding TIP investigations and prosecutions (cf. 
section 3.F.).  As part of the ongoing implementation 
of the new Federal Law on Foreigners, the FOM and 
Cantonal Migration Offices will make the necessary 
adjustments in the federal registry on foreigners for 
the central recording of all stays-of-deportation 
orders and temporary residency permits granted to TIP 
victims and witnesses. 
 
--------------------------------------------- --- 
IV. INVESTIGATION AND PROSECUTION OF TRAFFICKERS 
--------------------------------------------- --- 
 
A. The Swiss Penal Code has two articles specifically 
prohibiting trafficking in persons: Article 196 
stipulates that anyone trafficking in persons in order 
to promote acts of indecency by others shall be liable 
to a prison term of a minimum of six months and a 
maximum of twenty years.  Anyone making preparations to 
trade in persons shall be subject to up to five years 
imprisonment.  Either case shall include a fine. 
 
On December 1, 2006, the new article 182 of the Penal 
Code on Trafficking in Persons entered into force. 
Article 182 supplanted the older Penal Code article 
196, which penalized trafficking solely for the 
purposes of sexual exploitation.  The new definition of 
trafficking under article 182 is more comprehensive and 
explicitly penalizes trafficking in persons for the 
purposes of sexual exploitation, labor exploitation, or 
to remove a body organ.  Under article 182 anyone 
acting as the supplier, broker, or buyer in the 
trafficking of a human being is liable to imprisonment 
or a fine.  The act of recruiting an individual for the 
purposes aforementioned also qualifies as trafficking 
and is liable to the same punishment. 
 
If the trafficking victim is a minor under 18 years of 
age or if the perpetrator repeatedly engages in human 
trafficking, the minimum penalty is a prison sentence 
of one year.  In any case, the perpetrator is liable to 
a fine. 
 
Article 182 applies universally; traffickers are 
subject to prosecution in Switzerland even if the act 
of trafficking was committed abroad, and regardless of 
whether trafficking is a crime in the foreign country 
where the act took place. 
 
Article 195 covers the promotion of prostitution and 
states that anyone inducing a person into prostitution 
by abusing a situation of dependency or promising 
 
BERN 00000200  012 OF 025 
 
 
pecuniary advantage, anyone impairing a prostitute's 
freedom of movement by checking on the activities in 
question or fixing the place, time or extent or any 
other circumstances of the prostitution, or anyone 
secluding a person for prostitution shall be liable to 
imprisonment. 
 
Other forms of trafficking or exploitation of human 
beings are implicitly covered by the Penal Code's 
provisions against threat, coercion, deprivation of 
personal liberty, and kidnapping (Articles 180, 181, 
183).  The Immigration and Naturalization Law 
penalizes facilitating the illegal immigration of 
foreigners into Switzerland as well as the employment 
of foreigners without proper work permission.  The 
Constitution implicitly bans forced or compulsory 
labor.  Article 27 provides for economic freedom and 
explicitly guarantees the right to choose freely one's 
profession as well as unrestrained access to and 
unencumbered exercise of a gainful occupation.  Forced 
or bonded labor by children is explicitly forbidden 
under Article 30 of the 1964 Labor Act. 
 
New Developments: 
----------------- 
 
The Penal Code Article 182, which supplanted Article 
196 and extended the definition of human trafficking, 
was adopted by Parliament on March 24, 2006 and entered 
into force on December 1, 2006.  The re-definition of 
trafficking in the Penal Code was part of the 
ratification bill of the Optional Protocol to the 
Convention on the Rights of the Child regarding the 
sale of children, child prostitution and child 
pornography, to which Switzerland is a signatory. 
After Parliament adopted the ratification bill, 
Switzerland ratified the Optional Protocol on October 
27, 2006.  For Switzerland the Protocol entered into 
force on November 26, 2006. 
 
On January 1, 2007, a partial revision of the Penal 
Code entered into force.  Under Article 5 of the 
revised Penal Code certain criminal infractions, 
notably human trafficking (Article 182) and forced 
prostitution of minors under 18 years of age (Article 
195), are now subject to universal prosecution. 
Traffickers are thus liable to prosecution in 
Switzerland, even if the act of trafficking was 
committed abroad, and regardless of whether the 
trafficking act is a crime in the foreign country where 
it took place. 
 
The partial revision of the Penal Code also introduces 
a new system of fines based on a convict's relative 
income level.  Under the new system, fines can be 
levied instead of jail sentences of less than 6 months. 
Suspended sentences remain possible.  The maximum 
financial penalty is 10,800 Swiss Francs, but the court 
sets the amount due according to the gravity of the 
criminal act and sets the value of the daily rate in 
accord with the convict's economic situation at the 
time of the verdict.  The maximum daily rate is 3,000 
Swiss francs, up to 360 days. 
 
B. The maximum sentence for trafficking in persons is a 
prison term of twenty years; the maximum punishment has 
been the same for both the old Penal Code Article 196 
(valid until November 30, 2006) as well as the new 
Penal Code Article 182 (effective since December 1, 
2006).  Coercing someone into prostitution or 
restricting a prostitute's personal freedom (Penal Code 
Article 195) can carry a prison sentence of up to ten 
years. 
 
C. Under Penal Code Article 182, effective since 
December 1, 2006, the penalties prescribed for 
trafficking for labor exploitation are the same as for 
trafficking for sexual exploitation.  The minimum 
penalty is a fine; if the victim was a minor under 18 
years of age, the minimum penalty is a one-year prison 
sentence.  Maximum penalty is 20 years in prison. 
Article 182 explicitly prohibits all acts related to 
labor trafficking - recruitment, supply, transfer, or 
the receipt of persons being trafficked.  Thus, both 
the labor recruiters in labor source countries and the 
employers or labor agents in labor destination 
 
BERN 00000200  013 OF 025 
 
 
countries are subject to prosecution in Switzerland. 
Article 182 applies universally; labor recruiters are 
subject to prosecution in Switzerland, even if the act 
was committed in a foreign country where labor 
trafficking may not constitute a criminal offense.  As 
Penal Code Article 182 entered into force only on 
December 1, 2006, it is too soon to gauge the 
punishments actually imposed on persons convicted of 
labor trafficking offenses. 
 
D. Rape and forcible sexual assault, and other sex 
crimes are also penalized.  Articles 187 and 188 of the 
Penal Code address sexual activity with minors and 
sexual acts with dependent persons, punishable with up 
to five years imprisonment; Article 189 punishes 
coercion to sexual activity with a maximum ten year 
prison sentence; according to Articles 190 and 191, the 
crimes of rape and sexual violations each carry a 
sentence of up to ten years imprisonment; Article 193 
states that taking advantage of a person's distress or 
dependency due to employment or any other condition 
shall be liable to imprisonment for up to three years. 
 
E. Prostitution is legal for Swiss citizens and foreign 
residents with valid work permits if the practitioners 
are registered with police and comply with taxation and 
other cantonal requirements.  A 1992 amendment to the 
Federal Criminal Code decriminalized pimping, and 
brothel owners may legally sublet room and negotiate 
the terms with the prostitutes.  However, the Criminal 
Code penalizes abusing a state of dependency to induce 
someone into prostitution or restricting a prostitute's 
freedom with a prison term of up to ten years.  Clients 
are not liable before the law, unless they knowingly 
engage in sexual relations with a prostitute younger 
than the required minimum age of 18 years. 
 
Some cantons have adopted more stringent laws 
regulating the sex trade.  Effective September 1, 2004, 
the Canton of Vaud implemented a restrictive law on 
prostitution allowing police to close on-the-spot for a 
period of three months brothels that fail to register 
with police, make false declarations on the identity of 
those working on the premises, or do not meet minimum 
criteria regarding hygiene, security, or the respect of 
public order.  Police may permanently shut down a 
brothel in case of repeat violations of the types 
listed above, in case of gross violations against 
public order or hygiene, or in case of a felony. 
Threats, coercion, or violence against prostitutes, 
employment of minors, or the abuse of any situation of 
distress will be punished in the same fashion.  The law 
provides for police inspection of the brothel premises, 
the persons staying there as well as their private 
accommodations.  Other cantons, such as Geneva and 
Ticino, have adopted new legislation regulating the sex 
trade and Neuchatel is in the process of doing so. 
 
F. The investigation and prosecution of forced 
prostitution and human trafficking as well as the 
protection of victims in Switzerland normally fall 
under the jurisdiction of the cantons, and national 
statistics lag by 6-18 months. 
 
Investigations & Prosecutions: 
------------------------------ 
 
Under Switzerland's federal structure, the cantons hold 
jurisdiction over most criminal infractions, and 
statistical records of reported crime and police 
investigations, not to mention data processing 
software, vary greatly from canton to canton.  Thus, 
some cantons compile anti-trafficking statistics by 
numbers of criminals arrested, others (like Zurich) do 
so by the number of victims of those arrested.  At its 
spring meeting on April 6, 2006, the National 
Conference of the Cantonal Justice Ministers decided to 
implement the project to harmonize cantonal recording 
practices and gather national policing statistics in 
coordination with the Federal Government.  The project 
(which aims to produce detailed figures for the first 
time in 2009) aims to provide much more detailed and 
reliable data than are available today.  It has been 
ascertained that both human trafficking and the 
smuggling in human beings will be recorded in the 
nascent data base.  A project management body was 
 
BERN 00000200  014 OF 025 
 
 
formed during 2006. 
 
In 2002, federal police conducted a study on cantonal 
police investigations regarding various criminal 
infractions.  The 2002 study established that 
countrywide 20-40 cases of trafficking in persons and 
50-80 cases of forced prostitution are on average being 
reported to police.  According to Federal Police/KSMM, 
sample data from individual cantons shows that reports 
of trafficking and forced prostitution have risen 
recently. 
 
The following updated prosecution statistics were 
provided by KSMM in March 2006 for the cantons of 
Zurich and Ticino, which together comprise about one 
fifth of the Swiss population.  The statistics show a 
dramatic increase in the number of victims assisted 
through the arrest of their tormentors. 
 
Canton Zurich            2002   2003   2004   2005 
 
Art. 196                    3     13      8     47 
Art. 195                   10     12     17     50 
Total                      13     25     25     97 
 
Zurich statistics record the number of identified 
victims 
 
Canton Ticino            2002   2003   2004   2005 
       (Number of perpetrators arrested) 
Art. 196                    1      2      5      4 
Art. 195                    2      7      5      2 
Total                       3      9     10      6 
 
Ticino statistics record the number of prosecutions 
(one prosecution may include several perpetrators and 
several victims) 
 
The following statistics on police investigations & 
prosecutions were provided by KSMM in mid-February 2007 
for the cantons of Zurich, Ticino, Solothurn, Vaud, and 
Bern. 
 
Zurich: 
Police led nine investigations in 2006 (seven in Zurich 
City and two in the rest of the canton) on trafficking 
in persons and/or forced prostitution 
 
Ticino: 
Police led four investigations in 2006 on trafficking 
in persons and/or forced prostitution 
 
Solothurn: 
Police in 2006 led one investigation on trafficking and 
five investigations on forced prostitution. 
 
Vaud: 
Police in 2006 led one investigation on trafficking. 
 
Bern: 
Police in 2006 completed 5 investigation on trafficking 
and forced prostitution by handing the cases to the 
prosecuting authorities. 
 
Federal Government: 
The Federal Criminal Police during 2006 led one 
investigation for trafficking in person in cooperation 
with counterparts from Brazil. 
 
Adding up these numbers, police investigated at least 
38 trafficking cases in 2006 (i.e. 9 Zurich + 4 Ticino 
+ 5 Solothurn + 1 Vaud + 5 Bern + 1 Federal Criminal 
Police + 13 investigations spanning several countries, 
in which the Federal Criminal Police adopted a 
coordinating role). 
 
CONVICTIONS: 
 
---------------------------------- 
Year   Art. 196   Art. 195   Total 
---------------------------------- 
1999      7         14          21 
2000      5         17          22 
2001      2         17          19 
2002      2         11          13 
2003      7          6          13 
 
BERN 00000200  015 OF 025 
 
 
2004      2         12          14 
2005*    11         12          23 
2006**    2          9          11 
 
* Provisional statistics; final numbers likely to be 
higher after defendants exhaust possibilities of appeal 
 
** January-June only 
 
At least four additional first-instance convictions 
under article 196 occurred in 2006 but are not yet 
included in the official statistics as appeals are 
pending.  Two of these court trials in Zurich and Bern 
Canton during 2006 ended with lengthy prison sentences 
for the traffickers. 
 
In Zurich, a court ruled in spring 2006 in a 
trafficking case involving mainly victims from Brazil 
who were exploited in the Zurich area.  The court 
sentenced the two main culprits to 27 and 18 months in 
prison, respectively. Five additional convicts received 
prison sentences between one and 18 months.  The Zurich 
prosecutor appealed the first-instance verdict. 
 
In Bern, a court in spring 2006 heard a trafficking 
case involving victims from Eastern Europe who were 
sexually exploited in three establishments in Bern and 
Solothurn Canton.  The court sentenced the main culprit 
to six years behind bars and the two co-defendants to 
two-and-a-half year unsuspended prison terms each.  A 
fourth defendant received an 18 month suspended prison 
sentence.  The convicts have appealed the verdict; the 
appeals process is scheduled for April 2007. 
 
More up-to-date statistics on the number of 
prosecutions, convictions and related sentences will be 
provided as these figures will become available later 
in the year. 
 
Both Penal Code articles directly cover trafficking: 
Article 195 applies to the pimp or brothel owner 
exploiting a prostitute, and Article 196 the actual 
trafficking agent.  (Comment: Each conviction involves 
several instances of trafficking; in the biggest case 
so far from canton Ticino in 2000, prosecutors were 
able to prove that the same perpetrators were guilty of 
87 instances of trafficking.  End comment.)  Embassy 
contacts note that cantonal authorities prefer to 
initiate legal proceedings under Article 195 of the 
Penal Code (promotion of prostitution), because it is 
easier and less time consuming than the lengthy and 
intensive investigations required to establish a case 
of human trafficking, which often involve several 
disparate people operating both abroad, as well as 
domestically. 
 
On April 29, 2002, the Federal Tribunal decided that 
hiring women, even consenting women, from abroad to 
engage in prostitution qualified as human trafficking 
if her abusers exploited a situation of distress. 
 
SENTENCES: 
 
2003 
 
Art. 196 
 
Number of Sentences 
--------------------------------------------- ------ 
Unsuspended prison sentence                       4 
Suspended prison sentences                        3 
 
Length of sentence          Min   Max   Average 
--------------------------------------------- ------ 
Unsuspended                360   1650    990   days 
Suspended                                294   days 
 
Art. 195 
 
Number of Sentences 
--------------------------------------------- ------ 
Unsuspended prison sentence                       4 
Suspended prison sentences                        2 
 
Length of sentence                     Average 
--------------------------------------------- ------ 
 
BERN 00000200  016 OF 025 
 
 
Unsuspended                              913   days 
Suspended                                335   days 
 
2004 
 
Art. 196 
 
Number of Sentences 
--------------------------------------------- ------ 
Unsuspended prison sentence                       0 
Suspended prison sentences                        2 
 
Length of sentence                     Average 
--------------------------------------------- ------ 
Unsuspended                              n/a   days 
Suspended                                314   days 
 
Art. 195 
 
Number of Sentences 
--------------------------------------------- ------ 
Unsuspended prison sentence                       5 
Suspended prison sentences                        7 
 
Length of sentence                     Average 
--------------------------------------------- ------ 
Unsuspended                             1388   days 
Suspended                                134   days 
 
2005 
 
Art. 196 
 
Number of Sentences 
--------------------------------------------- ------ 
Unsuspended prison sentence                       3 
Suspended prison sentences                        8 
 
Length of sentence                     Average 
--------------------------------------------- ------ 
Unsuspended                              360   days 
Suspended                                254   days 
 
Art. 195 
 
Number of Sentences 
--------------------------------------------- ------ 
Unsuspended prison sentence                       1 
Suspended prison sentences                       11 
 
Length of sentence                     Average 
--------------------------------------------- ------ 
Unsuspended                              487   days 
Suspended                                146   days 
 
G. As best as police can determine, trafficking into 
Switzerland is primarily performed by individuals, or 
small groups related through ethnic, clan, or family 
ties, as well as, occasionally, organized criminals. 
Often, the perpetrators and victims are from the same 
cities and regions.  In addition to men, women also 
play a role in the recruitment, intermediary, or 
exploitation process.  In 2005, half of the convicted 
traffickers were women. 
 
Swiss officials believe the majority of profits from 
trafficking are retained by the individual 
perpetrators, though some funds may be diverted into 
other illegal activities. 
 
H. The Government investigates cases of human 
trafficking using active investigative techniques such 
as undercover operations.  Prosecutors are permitted to 
mitigate punishment or grant immunity when a criminal 
act was performed under real or perceived coercion. 
Remorse can also be weighed in the sentencing if the 
perpetrator assists in the investigation of a case. 
Undercover investigations are allowed for trafficking 
investigations; a new Federal statue was introduced in 
January 2005 to unify cantonal practices.  Witness 
identity may also be shielded under certain 
circumstances. 
 
Under the new Federal Law on Foreigners, scheduled to 
become effective January 1, 2008, a serious violation 
of the immigration regulations will qualify as a felony 
 
BERN 00000200  017 OF 025 
 
 
and no longer as a misdemeanor. Police may then 
investigate using undercover operations and 
wiretapping.  (A violation of the immigration 
regulations is considered serious if it either occurs 
repeatedly or is motivated by material gain.)  This is 
relevant for trafficking investigations because it 
effectively lowers the barrier for a court order 
permitting undercover operations, because according to 
police it is easier to build a case on suspicion of 
migrant smuggling than of trafficking.  Once undercover 
operations have been authorized, police investigations 
may lead to a prosecution for trafficking charges. 
Under current legislation (effective until December 31, 
2007) undercover and surveillance investigative 
techniques are permitted on suspicion of trafficking, 
but not of migrant smuggling. 
 
I. Investigators of the Federal Criminal Police receive 
specialized training in investigating incidences of 
organized crime, including human trafficking.  Under 
the Efficiency Bill, effective January 1, 2001, the 
Federal Criminal Police obtained from the cantons the 
jurisdiction to investigate and prosecute more complex 
cases of human trafficking that span several cantons or 
are linked to organized crime.  The Federal Criminal 
Police also handles international cooperation in the 
investigation of incidences of human trafficking. 
 
During 2006, the KSMM continued its specialized 
training programs for federal and cantonal officials. 
 
Workshops: 
---------- 
 
During 2006 the KSMM held two interdisciplinary 
workshops with representatives from federal and 
cantonal justice, police, and migration departments as 
well as private and public victims' assistance centers 
on the following topics: 
 
- May 10 Assisted return and reintegration for TIP 
victims: The International Office for Migration, the 
Swiss Red Cross, FIZ as well as the Federal Office for 
Migration presented projects for the assisted return 
and reintegration into the society of their countries 
of origin for TIP victims and other persons in need. 
 
- November 21 TIP for the purpose of removing body 
organs: Workshop to discuss Swiss organ transplantation 
policy as well as the international market in donor 
organs in view of the implementation of the Penal Code 
Article 182 that penalizes trafficking for the purposes 
of removing body organs. 
 
Training of police and prosecuting officers: 
-------------------------------------------- 
 
Preparations for the first training class in combating 
human trafficking for police officers and law 
enforcement officials have been completed. The five-day 
course will be held at the Swiss Police Academy in 
Neuchatel in April 2007. (As police officers are 
trained at the cantonal level, the Swiss police academy 
serves as a national institute for cantonal police 
officers to undergo periodic specialized training). 
The course is targeted to cantonal police forces, 
immigration officials, as well as interested person 
from justice ministries and prosecuting offices.  The 
course will be held in German; the same course will be 
held in French at the end of 2007 or the beginning of 
2008. 
 
To achieve maximum impact and acceptance among the 
Swiss Policing Community, the KSMM in consultation with 
the National Conference of the Chiefs of the Cantonal 
Police Forces chose the Head of the Investigative Unit 
of the Zurich City Police as the main instructor of the 
training course.  The KSMM finalized the program of the 
course evaluated all other instructors teaching classes 
of the training module.  Some classes of the training 
module will be taught by experts from the anti-TIP NGO 
FIZ. 
The topics of the training program include the 
following: 
 
- National and international analysis regarding TIP, 
 
BERN 00000200  018 OF 025 
 
 
including prostitution, modes of operation, countries 
of origin and transit, financing, criminal 
organizations and networks; 
- Identification of TIP victims; 
- Questioning of TIP victims; 
- Legal basis of prosecution; 
- Victims assistance, protection, and aid in returning; 
- Legal aspects of stays of TIP victims in Switzerland; 
- Multi-stakeholder approach and cooperation among 
justice, police, migration offices and victims 
assistance centers/NGOs; 
- Best police investigation practices; 
- Best law enforcement practices. 
 
Awareness raising seminar 
------------------------- 
 
In order to promote the upcoming training module among 
the Chiefs of the Criminal Division of the Cantonal 
Police Forces and Heads of Immigration Offices, the 
KSMM together with the Zurich City Police and the Bern 
Cantonal Police on December 7 hosted an awareness 
raising seminar on combating trafficking in persons. 
The purpose was to show participants the various 
aspects of trafficking in persons and to illustrate 
best policing practices. 
 
National Working Group on Trafficking in Persons and 
Migrant Smuggling 
--------------------------------------------- ------- 
 
The National Conference of the Chiefs of the Cantonal 
Police Forces in July 2006 decided to install an inter- 
cantonal Working Group on Trafficking in Persons and 
Migrant Smuggling. The Working Group comprises 
representatives from the regional police concordats, 
the airport police, the Zurich and Ticino police 
forces, and the Federal Office of Police.  Tasks of the 
Working Group include networking at the operational 
level, promoting expert knowledge, holding conferences 
for administrative officials, and to make 
recommendations on investigations and administrative 
processes.  The Working Group will hold its first 
session during 2007 and is expected to convene 1-2 
times per year. The Working Group goes back to a KSMM 
initiative and is headed by the Head of the 
Investigative Unit of the Zurich City Police. 
 
Survey to assess the need for training among NGOs 
and Victims' Assistance Centers 
--------------------------------------------- ---- 
 
The training course at the Swiss Police Academy in 
Neuchatel in April 2007 targets primarily police law 
enforcement and migration officials. In order to assess 
the need for specialized training among NGOs and 
Victims' Assistance Centers, the KSMM in January 2007 
conducted a written survey of some 500 institutions 
(including hospitals) dealing with victims of crime and 
vulnerable persons.  The results of this survey are 
expected for spring 2007. 
 
J. The Swiss government readily cooperates with other 
governments in the investigation and prosecution of 
trafficking cases.  Police contacts disclosed to 
Embassy that the Federal Criminal Police in 2006 
provided assistance in 647 instances in response to 
international inquiries relating to human trafficking, 
compared to 550 during 2005. According to Federal 
Police, the increased investigation and coordination 
activities in Switzerland and the intensified 
cooperation with domestic and foreign police 
authorities accounts for this increase. The Federal 
Criminal Police takes part in the expert working groups 
of both Europol and Interpol. During 2006, there were 
13 investigations spanning several countries, in which 
the Federal Criminal Police adopted a coordinating 
role. (Comment: The Federal Criminal Police asks for 
the latter figure not to be published because its lead 
role automatically implies the investigation of 
organized crime.) During 2006, the Federal Criminal 
Police led one major investigation of a trafficking 
operation, together with partners from Brazil. 
 
Since 2004 Switzerland has had a bilateral cooperation 
accord between Europol and the Swiss Police, allowing 
 
BERN 00000200  019 OF 025 
 
 
the latter to tap into Europol's intelligence files on 
organized crime, drug trafficking and terrorism. Under 
the terms of the agreement, Swiss Federal Police have 
assigned to The Hague a liaison officer whose role is 
to support and coordinate the cooperation between 
Switzerland and other EU countries. There is also a 
Swiss Police liaison at the headquarters of Interpol. 
 
In July 2002, the government signed a legal assistance 
treaty in criminal matters with the Philippines that 
allows Philippine victims of Swiss pedophiles to give 
anonymous tips to Swiss authorities.  The MLAT provides 
for the voluntary exchange of information short of a 
legal assistance request as well as the questioning of 
witnesses and experts by videoconference.  Parliament 
approved the legal assistance treaty on June 17, 2005. 
Since 2003, a Swiss police attache has been stationed 
in Bangkok to coordinate criminal investigations and to 
act as a liaison between Swiss and Thai police 
authorities.  Swiss police attaches are also present in 
Brazil, Italy, Germany, Czech Republic, and the United 
States.  Traveling to South Eastern Europe in September 
2005, Justice Minister Blocher signed bilateral police 
cooperation agreements with Albania, Macedonia, and 
Romania. Since 2006 there has also been a Swiss Police 
liaison present in Macedonia. 
 
K. Extradition is permitted if the act in question is 
punishable under Swiss law and the law of the 
requesting state, liable to a term of imprisonment of 
at least one year, and no Swiss court is competent in 
the matter.  No Swiss national shall be extradited to a 
foreign country for penal prosecution or execution of a 
verdict without his or her written consent.  The person 
in question may revoke consent until the order for the 
extradition is issued.  A request for extradition is 
complied with only if the requesting country accords 
reciprocity.  Foreigners may be extradited to another 
state for offenses punishable under its laws or for 
serving a term of imprisonment if this state applies 
for extradition or accepts, upon request of the Swiss 
authorities, to prosecute the person in question or to 
execute a verdict cast by Swiss authorities.  Swiss 
Police statistics record extraditions only by country 
so no extraditions statistics are available for 
specific criminal offenses. There have been no changes 
to extradition law. 
 
L. Trafficking is not tolerated in Switzerland, and 
there are no indications or reports that government 
officials are involved. 
 
M. N/A 
 
N. The 2002 partial revision of the Penal Code 
providing for the extraterritorial coverage of 
Switzerland's child sexual abuse laws entered into 
force on January 1, 2007.  Henceforth anybody who 
violated Swiss child sexual abuse laws is subject to 
prosecution in Switzerland under the extraterritorial 
provisions of the Penal Code regardless of the 
legislation of the foreign country where the abuse took 
place. 
 
O. The Federal Government ratified the ILO Convention 
182 concerning the Prohibition and Immediate Action for 
the Elimination of the Worst Forms of Child Labor on 
June 28, 2000.  The Convention entered into force in 
Switzerland on November 19, 2000.  Switzerland ratified 
the ILO Convention 29 on May 23, 1940, and it entered 
into force May 23, 1941.  Switzerland ratified the ILO 
Convention 105 on July 18, 1958, and it entered into 
force on July 18, 1959. 
 
The Swiss Government signed the Optional Protocol to 
the Convention on the Rights of the Child on the Sale 
of Children, Child Prostitution and Child Pornography 
on September 7, 2000.  Parliament adopted the 
ratification bill on March 24, 2006. Switzerland 
ratified the Optional Protocol on October 27, 2006, and 
it entered into force into force on November 26, 2006. 
(cf. section 3a).  On April 2, 2002, the Swiss 
Government signed the Protocol to Prevent, Suppress and 
Punish Trafficking in Persons, especially Women and 
Children as well as the Protocol against the Smuggling 
of Migrants by Land, Sea and Air, which both supplement 
 
BERN 00000200  020 OF 025 
 
 
the UN Convention against Transnational Organized 
Crime.  Parliament adopted the ratification bill on 
June 23, 2006. Switzerland ratified the two protocols 
on October 27, 2006. 
 
--------------------------------------- 
V. PROTECTION AND ASSISTANCE TO VICTIMS 
--------------------------------------- 
 
A. Under the Swiss Victims Assistance Law (OHG), which 
came into force in 1993, TIP victims, regardless of 
their immigration status, are entitled to free and 
immediate material and medical aid as well as 
psychological, social, and legal assistance.  Local 
victims assistance centers have to provide TIP victims 
with a minimum of 14 days of emergency lodging, 14 days 
of living allowance, 4 hours of consultation with a 
lawyer and 5 sessions of psychotherapy, with all other 
expenses for medical treatment, transportation, 
personal safety, or translation services being covered 
by the government.  If recovery requires more time, the 
government is obligated to assume the additional cost 
of longer-term care.  The victims' assistance center 
may lodge a TIP victim in a shelter for battered women. 
 
Federal government statistics show that in 2005 (most 
recent figures available) a total of 126 victims of 
human trafficking or forced prostitution received help 
from victims assistance centers, compared to 84 in 2004 
(aggregate statistical records that are not broken down 
for the two separate infractions).  Under the 
guidelines that the Federal Office for Migration sent 
to cantonal immigration authorities in August 2004, TIP 
victims who are staying in Switzerland illegally are 
automatically granted a 30-day minimum stay of 
deportation proceedings, and are permitted to stay in 
Switzerland if a return to their country of origin is 
not reasonable (cf. section 4.D). 
 
On November 9, 2005, the Federal Council submitted to 
Parliament the draft bill for a complete revision of 
the Victims Assistance Law (OHG).  The lower house of 
Parliament began the debate on the revision of the OHG 
on June 22, 2006.  Proposed amendments include 
entitling victims of crime with a legal right to 
emergency lodging as well as extending the period 
during which victims may seek financial compensation 
from their tormentors.  The draft bill also provides 
for more equitable burden-sharing of the cost of 
providing victims assistance among the cantons, which 
would allow the urban centers to offer more specialized 
services for victims, e.g. a victims assistance center 
supporting only TIP victims.  The Zurich-based FIZ in 
November 2004 launched such a center assisting only TIP 
victims, called FIZ Makasi.  During 2006, the Canton of 
Luzern made a financial contribution to FIZ Makasi. 
The cantons of Bern and Solothurn as well as the 
Federal Government paid FIZ Makasi consultation fees 
for the counseling services offered to TIP victims 
under their jurisdiction.  The Canton of Zurich 
supports the mother agency, FIZ.  In February 2007, the 
government of the Canton of Zurich opened negotiations 
on a possible contribution to FIZ Makasi. 
 
B. Federal and cantonal governments provide funding to 
NGOs and women shelters that provide services to TIP 
victims.  Under the OHG, all cantons are obligated to 
offer TIP victims the services listed above (cf. 
section 4.A.). Funding of the victims assistance 
centers is a matter of the cantons and no federal 
statistics are being reported.  In addition to the 
official victims assistance centers, other domestic 
NGOs receive public money.  For example, the Zurich- 
based WomenQs Information Center for Women from Africa, 
Latin America, and Eastern Europe (FIZ) receives 
roughly 30 percent of its $570,000 budget (710,000 
Swiss francs) from federal, cantonal, and city 
government (These public contributions are independent 
of the compensation of FIZ for counseling services 
offered to individual victims of TIP). Internationally, 
the Swiss Ministry of Foreign Affairs in 2006 channeled 
more than 1.5 million Swiss francs to International 
Organizations and NGOs providing services to TIP 
victims, two-thirds through its development aid arm SDC 
and the rest through its diplomatic division. 
 
 
BERN 00000200  021 OF 025 
 
 
C. Several major urban centers have established a 
referral process for TIP victims in the context of 
regular roundtable meetings between NGOs and cantonal 
justice, police and immigration authorities.  In 
Zurich, which under FIZ's leadership pioneered these 
efforts, city and cantonal representatives of the 
police, the immigration office, the prosecutor's 
office, the equal opportunity office, and FIZ have 
regularly met since 2001 to improve the protection and 
security of victims by regulating the procedures for 
identifying and referring TIP victims for assistance. 
The Zurich efforts culminated in November 2004 in a 
"letter of intent" by the local authorities underlining 
the importance of improved cooperation with FIZ and 
delineating areas of concerted action.  In November 
2006, participants of the Zurich anti-TIP roundtable 
met for an annual evaluation conference.  During the 
reporting period, round tables in the three cantons of 
Luzern, St. Gallen, and Solothurn have each adopted a 
formal a code of cooperation and referral process in 
TIP cases in written memoranda of understanding. 
Efforts to establish a formal referral process for TIP 
victims continued in Basel-Stadt, Basel-Landschaft, and 
Fribourg. Two cantons, Fribourg and Basel-Landschaft, 
have launched their cantonal roundtable initiatives as 
a result of the first national expert congress on human 
trafficking hosted by the KSMM in Bern on November 3, 
2005.  The southern Canton of Ticino bordering on Italy 
has a working group which comprises representatives of 
the police, the social security and immigration 
departments, and NGOs.  The working was established to 
watch the implementation of the cantonal law on 
prostitution and has been operating since 2002. 
 
The KSMM's expert working group on human trafficking 
has drafted a manual "Cooperation Mechanisms for 
Combating Trafficking in Human Beings" based on the 
experiences of the Zurich roundtable efforts, which the 
KSMM has been following closely.  The manual for the 
consumption of cantonal political and administrative 
authorities recommends best practices for cooperation 
and information exchange between justice, police, and 
immigration authorities and victims assistance 
organizations.  After the expert working group adopted 
a first draft in January 2005, the KSMM distributed the 
manual among federal and cantonal officials in its two 
workshops on cantonal cooperation mechanisms in early 
2005 and made the new guidelines public on the occasion 
of the first national expert congress on human 
trafficking on November 3, 2005. 
 
D. In August 2004, the Federal Office for Migration 
sent to cantonal immigration authorities a set of 
binding guidelines on offering temporary residency 
status to TIP victims.  Cantonal immigration 
authorities are to grant TIP victims a period of 
reflection and stay of deportation proceedings for a 
minimum of 30 days.  Cantonal immigration authorities 
may routinely admit TIP victims willing to cooperate 
with judicial authorities for up to three months or may 
issue short-term residency permits (with the consent of 
the federal authorities) if the criminal investigations 
are likely to take longer.  After the end of either the 
reflection period or the criminal investigation and 
court proceedings, TIP victims have to leave the 
country. However, cantonal authorities may grant a 
residency permit in cases of serious personal hardship. 
 
Upon request of the cantonal immigration authorities, 
the Federal Office for Migration will grant TIP victims 
temporary admission in Switzerland when they determine 
that a victim's cooperation as a witness in criminal 
proceedings would create the risk of personal harm or 
when a return to the country of origin is deemed 
unreasonable.  In 2006, cantonal immigration 
authorities offered 39 trafficking victims the 30-day 
stays of deportation proceedings designed to offer them 
a period of contemplation and recovery.  Three 
trafficking victims were offered short-term residency 
permits for the duration of legal/court proceedings 
against their traffickers, and three victims were 
granted long-term residency permits on grounds of 
personal hardship after the end of court proceedings. 
In a national referendum September 24, 2006, the Swiss 
electorate approved a new Federal Law on Foreigners 
that brings improvements in the legal protection of TIP 
 
BERN 00000200  022 OF 025 
 
 
victims. The Federal Parliament had adopted the law in 
December 2005 but -- objecting to various non-TIP- 
related provisions in the law -- a coalition of left- 
of-center parties and civil society groups had 
challenged it by means of a popular referendum.  In the 
referendum vote, the law passed with 68 percent of 
votes and carried every canton (state).  The provisions 
of the new law are expected to come into force on 
January 1, 2008. 
 
The Federal Law on Foreigners formalizes the process of 
granting TIP victims a stay of deportation proceedings 
to recover from their trauma and weigh participation in 
judicial proceedings (cantonal immigration authorities 
have been granting temporary stays of deportation to 
TIP victims since 2004, in accord with guidelines sent 
out by the FOM).  The new law further strengthens the 
legal status of TIP victims and witnesses, explicitly 
authorizing the government to waive normal immigration 
requirements and grant residency permits for victims of 
human trafficking as well as witnesses in human 
trafficking cases.  The law also allows the federal 
government logistically and financially to assist in 
the voluntary return to and re-integration of 
trafficking victims and witnesses in their countries of 
origin. 
 
The FOM is currently preparing a first draft of the 
implementation ordinance for the new Federal Law on 
Foreigners.  The FOM will bring the first draft up for 
public consultation in the spring of 2007 and, taking 
account of the public response, present a final draft 
in time for the entering into force of the law, 
scheduled for January 1, 2008.  During 2007, the FOM is 
running a pilot project to evaluate how the government 
is to meet the provision of the new law on the 
logistical and financial assistance in the voluntary 
return to and re-integration of trafficking victims and 
witnesses in their home societies.  As part of the 
implementation of the new Federal Law on Foreigners, 
the FOM and Cantonal Migration Offices will also make 
the necessary adjustments in the federal registry on 
foreigners for the central recording of all stays-of- 
deportation orders and temporary residency permits 
granted to TIP victims and witnesses. 
 
E. The Swiss Government encourages TIP victims to 
assist judicial authorities in trafficking 
investigations and prosecutions by granting them 
temporary residency and financial support, and 
admitting them to stay if a return to their country of 
origin posed a serious risk of personal harm.  The 
Swiss Victims Assistance Law (OHG) safeguards TIP 
victims' rights in criminal prosecutions with special 
rules for trial procedures and for compensation and 
redress.  The OHG covers all victims of crimes, 
including foreigners staying illegally in Switzerland. 
The OHG provides for the special protection of 
witnesses' identity in criminal court proceedings: 
victims/witnesses may request the trial to take place 
behind closed doors and avoid confrontation with the 
defendant.  The OHG is a federal law and thus binding 
on all cantonal codes of criminal trial proceedings. 
TIP victims may also file civil suits against their 
traffickers and seek financial compensation. 
 
Several major urban centers have established a referral 
process for TIP victims in the context of regular 
roundtable meetings between NGOs and cantonal justice, 
police and immigration authorities.  As a direct result 
of the regulation to stay deportation proceedings and 
the better cooperation between NGOs and law enforcement 
officials, the number of TIP victims willing to testify 
against their traffickers has risen considerably.  FIZ 
reports that of the 133 TIP victims being counseled 
during 2006, 65 were testifying to law enforcement 
officials against their trafficker.  In 2005, 37 out of 
a total of 116 TIP victims had cooperated with judicial 
authorities.  In other words, the percentage of TIP 
victims willing to testify against their traffickers 
rose from less than 10 percent to almost 50 percent in 
a matter of a few years. 
 
F. Under the OHG, all TIP victims are entitled to help 
from government-funded victims assistance centers for 
abuse victims or women shelters and enjoy special 
 
BERN 00000200  023 OF 025 
 
 
safeguards during criminal proceedings, and cantonal 
authorities do provide these protections in practice 
(cf. section 4.A).  Switzerland does not have a 
comprehensive witness protection program providing 
victims of crime with new identities. 
 
Foreign juvenile victims of crime under 18 years of age 
have to be placed under the protection of the Cantonal 
Guardianship Office (Vormundschaftsbehvrde) during 
their stay in Switzerland.  In criminal court 
proceedings, the OHG provides special protective 
measures for juvenile victims of crime: Questioning by 
police or the investigative magistrate must occur soon 
and the testimony is being recorded on videotape. 
Cross-examinations are not allowed.  The questioning 
has to be done by a recognized expert and no more than 
two sessions are allowed.  The law recognizes the 
special needs of juvenile victims of crime and they may 
only serve as witnesses of the prosecution if their 
testimony is indispensable for the conviction of a 
suspect. 
 
In case of the repatriation of a juvenile victim of 
crime (after the end of the stay-of-deportation 
proceedings or a criminal court procedure), the Federal 
Office for Migration and cantonal migration offices 
have to take into special account that the person in 
question is a minor under 18 years of age.  Under the 
law, a return to the country of origin is only 
permissible if the authorities have ascertained that 
the juvenile can be placed again in the care of the 
parents or a close relative, or if there is a 
satisfactory care structure in place in the country of 
origin. 
 
The government is working on a new federal code of 
criminal trial proceedings that will supplant the 
existing 26 cantonal codes.  The new federal code will 
strengthen the existing witness protection measures 
under the OHG in order to avoid a perpetrator in a TIP 
cases learning the identity of a prosecution witness. 
The Federal Council submitted the draft bill to 
Parliament on December 21, 2005. The upper house of 
Parliament approved the bill on December 11, 2006, 
including the proposed witness protective measures, 
namely the right of witnesses to call on an attorney 
and/or a confidante during court proceedings.  The bill 
is expected to be debated in the lower house during 
2007. Implementation of the final bill will take a few 
years. This is because, even under the new federal code 
of criminal trial proceedings, law enforcement remains 
the dominion of the cantons.  Cantons will need time to 
adjust cantonal operating modes to the future federal 
regulations regarding court proceedings. 
 
The government has further strengthened protective 
measures of cabaret/night club dancers on temporary 
artistic visas, so called L-permits, often thought of 
as being at special risk of being exploited by their 
employers.  In 2003, the Economics Ministry, the 
Federal Office for Migration, the Association of 
Concert Halls, Cabarets, Nightclubs, and Discotheques 
(ASCO), and FIZ Zurich adopted a standard labor 
contract for the employment of cabaret dancers, 
effective beginning of 2004.  The standard labor 
contract regulates the rights and responsibilities of 
both contracting parties, stipulates salary and the 
details of traveling costs, and contains labor law 
provisions on night shifts and rest periods.  According 
to the terms of the standard labor contract, cabaret 
dancers earn a gross income of 4,800 Swiss francs for 
23 working days per month.  After deduction of a source 
tax, rent, social security, and unemployment insurance 
contributions, the cabaret dancers earn a net income of 
2,200 Swiss francs per month.  The Economics Ministry 
and the Cantonal Labor Inspectorates monitor 
implementation.  L-permit applicants have to sign a 
copy of their labor contract with the Swiss cabaret or 
nightclub in the presence of a Swiss consular official 
in their country of origin (cf. section 4.G). 
 
In February 2006, the Federal Office for Migration 
issued a new set of regulations regarding L-visa 
holders.  The regulations explicitly stipulate that the 
contractual salary of the cabaret dancer be transferred 
to a bank account in that personQs name and that the 
 
BERN 00000200  024 OF 025 
 
 
nightclub employer bears responsibility for signing a 
health insurance contract on the cabaret dancer's 
behalf, which must be mentioned in the labor contract. 
Both requirements are designed to facilitate the 
monitoring of working conditions by cantonal labor 
Inspectorates. 
 
FIZ in 2006 contracted an academic study on the living 
and working conditions of cabaret dancers in 
Switzerland.  The study, which was based on a rather 
small and heterogeneous sample of cabaret dancers and 
experts, concluded that the legal norms protecting L- 
permit holders are at times not upheld completely, and 
that L-permit holders are not always fully aware of 
their rights under the law.  The Federal Office for 
Migration has welcomed the study as helpful and 
evaluated its recommendations for possible improvements 
of the living situation of cabaret dancers.  On 
briefing cabaret dancers on their rights and 
responsibilities, some cantons have introduced 
mandatory briefing session for all first-time visitors 
on L-permits.  The FOM recognizes the vulnerable 
situation of cabaret dancers and urges cantonal 
authorities both with circular letters and through the 
regional working groups to conduct regular controls. 
The FOM has received feedback from several cantons that 
night clubs and cabarets are inspected more frequently. 
 
Embassy contacts stress that statistics available 
indicate that on TIP L-permit do not figure prominently 
among TIP victims.  Of the 116 TIP victims counseled by 
the anti-TIP NGO FIZ in 2005, only 9 had entered the 
country on a L-permit (Embassy Bern is still awaiting 
the detailed analysis of the FIZ statistics for 2006). 
Roughly half of the TIP victims crossed the border into 
Switzerland either without proper documentation or as 
tourists.  This observation that the great majority of 
TIP victims enter the country without any proper 
documentation is also confirmed by police and judicial 
authorities. 
 
G. The Swiss Department of Foreign Affairs informs 
experts and diplomatic personnel about the problem of 
trafficking in human beings prior to their postings 
abroad, and draws their attention to a code of conduct 
drafted by a joint working group on human trafficking. 
According to these rules, diplomatic staff shall stay 
clear of any person who can reasonably be suspected of 
engaging in trafficking in human beings or those who 
are involved in other criminal activities under the 
laws of either the host country or of Swiss or 
international law.  The Department of Foreign Affairs 
also urges its embassies and consulates to develop 
ongoing relationships with NGOs serving trafficking 
victims. 
 
The Federal Department of Foreign Affairs anti-TIP 
information and prevention program for visa applicants 
has been extended to all Swiss consulates worldwide by 
a circular letter of March 2005.  The program (that 
started as a pilot project at Embassies Moscow and 
Kiev) consists of the following elements: a personal 
interview with every first-time L-visa applicant; the 
signing of a standardized labour contract with a Swiss 
night club in the presence of a Swiss consular 
official; a briefing of the L-visa applicant on her or 
his legal and contractual rights; and an information 
brochure with the phone numbers and addresses of victim 
assistance hotlines or drop-in centers in Switzerland 
for persons in need. 
 
A KSMM working group on child trafficking is drafting a 
policy paper on the prevention of trafficking in 
children, which is scheduled to be finalized during the 
first half of 2007.  The working group consulted its 
external contacts regarding measures to prevent child 
trafficking in the visa-issuance process.  On the 
domestic front, the working group consulted with 
NGO/IOs specializing in the area of children's rights, 
which recommended a careful evaluation of how 
Switzerland is being affected by trafficking in 
children.  The experts assumed that instances of child 
trafficking in Switzerland are isolated cases, a fact 
corroborated by victims' assistance statistics of the 
Zurich NGO FIZ.  For the year 2006, FIZ documented 
approximately 10 cases of trafficking of minors under 
 
BERN 00000200  025 OF 025 
 
 
18 years of age (FIZ statistics for 2006 are 
preliminary.)  A more general recommendation was to 
continue awareness-raising among police and migration 
officials. 
 
H. N/A 
 
I. The following is a list of IOs and NGOs operating in 
Switzerland that provide services to trafficking 
victims.  The organizations provide information and 
counseling, and in some cases emergency assistance. 
 
1.QTerre des Hommes, Switzerland; 
2.QEcpat Switzerland (end child prostitution, child 
pornography and trafficking of children for sexual 
purposes); 
3.QInternational Organization for Migration; 
4.QInternational Labor Organization; 
5.QWomen's Information Center for Women from Africa, 
Asia, Latin America and Eastern Europe (FIZ): 
counseling, publications/articles, 
symposiums/workshops, participation in round tables 
with aids-prevention and anti-violence groups, 
multi-lingual educational radio programs, and 
international contact building. 
 
In addition, a number of smaller NGOs counseling women 
in the sex trade as well as women shelters that exist 
in most urban centers, deal with the problem of human 
trafficking.  A great number of these organizations are 
linked in the national network "Prostitution Collective 
Reflection" (ProKoRe).  The major counseling centers 
and primary points of contact of ProKoRe are FIZ in 
Zurich, Xenia in Bern, and ASPASIE in Geneva. 
 
The national organizations and domestic NGOs typically 
deal with TIP victims, prostitutes, and victims of 
domestic violence and offer victim counseling, crisis 
intervention and emergency lodging, legal and medical 
assistance, and assisted returns to the country of 
origin.  Cooperation with local authorities is varied 
but typically includes regular meetings and 
institutionalized information exchange, cooperation in 
the context of working groups or roundtables, financial 
support by local communities and cantons, as well as 
public funding for specific projects. 
 
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End of draft TIP report for Switzerland. 
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Coneway