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Viewing cable 07SANJOSE524, COSTA RICA?S 7TH ANNUAL TIP REPORT SUBMISSION
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VZCZCXYZ0000
RR RUEHWEB
DE RUEHSJ #0524/01 0752232
ZNR UUUUU ZZH
R 162232Z MAR 07
FM AMEMBASSY SAN JOSE
TO RUEHC/SECSTATE WASHDC 7539
INFO RUEAWJA/DEPT OF JUSTICE WASHINGTON DC
RHEFHLC/HOMELAND SECURITY CENTER WASHINGTON DC
RUEHC/DEPT OF LABOR WASHINGTON DC
RUEATRS/DEPT OF TREASURY WASHINGTON DC
RUEHZA/WHA CENTRAL AMERICAN COLLECTIVE
UNCLAS SAN JOSE 000524
SIPDIS
SIPDIS
SENSITIVE
DEPARTMENT FOR G/TIP (BFLECK), WHA/PPC (MPUCCETTI), G, INL, DRL, PRM,
WHA/CEN (JMACK)
E.O. 12958: N/A
TAGS: KCRM PHUM KWMN SMIG KFRD ASEC PREF ELAB CS
SUBJECT: COSTA RICA?S 7TH ANNUAL TIP REPORT SUBMISSION
Ref: 06 State 202745
¶1. (SBU) The following is Embassy San Jose?s submission for the
2006-2007 annual trafficking in persons (TIP) report. Responses are
keyed to checklist questions outlined in reftel beginning at paragraph
¶27. Post?s POC for the report is Political Officer Robert E. Copley.
Telephone number: (506) 519-2253 or fax (506) 519-2435. Total number
of hours spent in preparing the TIP report: Poloff Copley 20,
Political Assistant Saenz 14, Political Assistant Sanou 10, Political
Counselor 1, A/DCM 1.
Overview
--------
¶A. Costa Rica is a country of mainly transit, destination, and to a
much lesser degree, origin for internationally trafficked men, women,
and children. Specific numbers for each population are unavailable.
The victims are trafficked primarily for sexual exploitation and, to a
lesser extent, for labor exploitation. According to the IOM, Costa
Rican victims are trafficked to El Salvador, Guatemala, Japan, and the
United States. Costa Rica is a transit country for victims being
trafficked to the United States and Canada. Women and girls from
Nicaragua, Colombia, the Dominican Republic, Panama, and less
frequently from Russia, the Philippines, Romania, and Bulgaria are
trafficked to the country for sexual exploitation. Costa Rican women
and children are occasionally trafficked within the country for the
same purpose.
Men, women, and children are also trafficked for forced labor as
domestic servants, agricultural workers, and workers in the fishing
industry. Chinese nationals are trafficked to the country for debt
bondage or forced labor. Indigenous Panamanian women and children were
brought into the country for forced labor and begging during the period
covered by this report. Reliable data on the potential scope of the
problem is not available. Authorities can only provide information on
existing cases, and data from NGO?s is usually anecdotal in nature, and
is not systematically collected at the national level. Governmental
and non-governmental sources agree, however, that women and children
constitute the majority of trafficking victims who pass through Costa
Rica.
¶B. Trafficking in Costa Rica has gone deeper underground in response to
successful anti-trafficking efforts by authorities. Many victims of
trafficking are now being exploited in private settings (or even
remotely using audiovisual systems) as opposed to public places such as
hotels or nightclubs.
Since the Arias Administration took office in May, 2006, political will
to fight trafficking has become increasingly evident. The following
six initiatives are good examples: 1) expansion of the National
Coalition Against Human Trafficking headed by the Vice Minister of
Government and comprised of key government institutions. The coalition
was created during the previous administration, but the Arias
Administration expanded it to include civil society organizations; 2)
proposed amendments to the August 2006 immigration law that would
expand the legal definition of trafficking and increase measures to
protect victims of trafficking; 3) launch of a training program for
other government institutions on treatment of victims by the Women?s
Institute (a government entity), in conjunction with IOM; 4) a
protocol, drafted by the government and IOM, for repatriating
trafficking victims; 5) a media campaign to alert potential victims of
trafficking and to provide a victims? hotline (titled ?Call and Live?),
sponsored by IOM, IDB, UNICEF, and the Ricky Martin Foundation in
conjunction with the Child Welfare Institute(PANI); and 6) the
government?s participating in drafting a document to promote
multilateral coordination against trafficking in Central America, the
U.S., Canada, Mexico, and the Dominican Republic.
IOM, which could not provide data specific to Costa Rica, estimates
that up to 80% of women and girls who are illegal aliens in Central
America are at risk of being trafficked. These victims are threatened
with physical harm if they fail to comply with the trafficker?s
demands, and the traffickers may also threaten to harm the victim?s
families. Travel documents are routinely seized. Some victims
reported being flown to Panama and then smuggled over Costa Rica?s
porous southern border. Others were brought to Costa Rica with false
travel documents.
NGOs continue to report that some trafficking activities are timed to
coincide with the harvest season. Women and children from neighboring
countries sometimes voluntarily travel to Costa Rica to engage in
commercial sex work with agricultural workers (banana and coffee
plantations, for example), and later fall into organized networks of
commercial sexual exploitation.
Methods used to approach the victims include false offers of lucrative
employment. Newspaper, magazine, and internet advertisements for
models or hotel staff target females and offer unusually high salaries
and benefits or foreign travel. Thanks in part to an awareness
campaign, immigration officials report a drop in cases of young Costa
Rican women from poorer areas traveling alone and for the first time to
Europe or Asia. Specific numbers are not available, but in the past
these women appeared to have been well briefed on what to say to
immigration officers.
Government sources of information for this report include the Chief
Prosecutor?s Office, Director of Immigration, Public Security Ministry,
the Women?s Institute (INAMU), the Children?s Welfare Institution
(PANI), the judicial police (OIJ), the Legislative Assembly and the
Ministry of Foreign Affairs. International and local NGO?s also
provided valuable information.
¶C. Severe resource constraints continue to limit the Government of
Costa Rica?s to comply with the minimum standards for the elimination
of trafficking. Funding for the police remains inadequate, although
the Arias Administration has hired 400 new police officers and
continues to make progress towards its campaign promise of adding 4,000
over the next four years. The mission of the police unit primarily
responsible for prevention of the sexual exploitation of minors was
shifted to focus on stolen cars and Intellectual Property Rights.
Within the judicial police (OIJ), the three-person anti-trafficking
unit was merged with the kidnapping and minor crimes unit making
fourteen investigators available for trafficking cases. However, lack
of funding sometimes limited the unit?s ability to conduct undercover
operations, pay informants, and acquire technology.
PANI lacks resources to provide specialized shelters for child
trafficking victims (victims are sent to general shelters) and there is
no government funding for the rehabilitation services that to date only
NGOs provide.
Isolated reports of official corruption have been investigated by
authorities. The Immigration Director rejected a $2.5 million bribe
and risked his physical safety to lead a successful sting operation
that resulted in the arrest of eight individuals involved in
trafficking Chinese nationals to Costa Rica (please see Heroes section
below). Despite funding limitations, the government worked with NGO?s
to promote a national awareness campaign. The Child Welfare Institute
improved the awareness of municipal councils so to better protect
children from trafficking in local communities.
¶D. The government did not systematically monitor its anti-trafficking
efforts during the reporting period. Individual entities such as the
police or prosecutors monitor their own activities but there is little
coordination or sharing of these internal assessments outside the
agency. Data are kept in different formats, sometimes even within the
same agency. (Note: This is true for all law enforcement-related
statistics in Costa Rica.) Trafficking information is shared at the
national level during regular meetings of the National Coalition
Against Human Trafficking.
Prevention
-------------
¶A. The government acknowledges that trafficking in persons is a serious
problem in the country, especially the sexual exploitation of minors.
President Oscar Arias recently reaffirmed the serious nature of the
problem in public comments at the launching of the ?Call and Live?
telephone hotline mentioned above. The government focuses its limited
resources on combating the commercial sexual exploitation of minors.
¶B. The Ministry of Public Security and Government is most directly
involved in anti-trafficking efforts through the office of the
Vice-Minister of Government who leads the National Coalition Against
Human Trafficking. Other government agencies involved in this task are
Immigration, the Child Welfare Institute (PANI), the Women?s Institute
(INAMU), judicial law enforcement agencies (the prosecutor?s office and
the judicial investigative police-OIJ), and the Ministry of Foreign
Affairs. The judicial police (investigators) and prosecutors are not
part of the executive branch of the Costa Rican government but instead
belong to the independent judicial branch.
¶C. The government continued existing educational campaigns to warn
young women of the dangers of commercial sexual exploitation, and its
efforts through billboards, radio and TV spots to warn tourists of the
penalties for sex with minors. In addition, the government worked
with, and relied heavily on, third parties to raise awareness and
provide anti-trafficking training, such as the ?Call and Live? program
sponsored by the Ricky Martin Foundation, IOM, IBD, and UNICEF. This
campaign, launched in February 2007, was designed to alert potential
victims of trafficking, protect children and youth from exploitation,
and provide information to the general public through television and
radio announcements and posters. IOM received some funding for this
campaign from the US Department of State Bureau of Population, Refugees
and Migration (PRM).
¶D. The government developed important programs to fight child labor and
sexual exploitation by keeping children in school. The ?Let's Get
Ahead? program is aimed at reducing the drop-out rate through school
vouchers and scholarships. Also, PANI announced the reactivation of a
project to provide daycare for the children of adolescent mothers
funded by a tax on liquor and cigarettes.
¶E. Collaboration among government officials, NGO?s, and other relevant
organizations of civil society on human trafficking issues is
improving. The collaboration effort is reflected in the improved
workings of the National Coalition Against Trafficking.
¶F. Immigration authorities do not systematically monitor all
immigration and emigration records for indications of human
trafficking. However, immigration does screen the exit permits
required of all minors leaving the country for patterns of trafficking
in minors. Also, police checkpoints near the borders screen for
potential trafficking victims, although the officers are primarily
focused on detaining illegal aliens. Porous land borders with
Nicaragua and Panama are impossible to monitor effectively. Trafficking
of all kinds occurs at ?informal? border crossings despite efforts by
all three governments to patrol the border areas.
¶G. Coordination and communication at the national level between various
government agencies, NGO?s, and other relevant organizations are
primarily channeled through the national coalition mentioned above.
Internationally, the Ministry of Public Security cooperates with
immigration officials from other countries, INTERPOL, and the FBI to
identify and detain suspected traffickers. The government also
participates in the Commission of Central American Migration Directors
(OCAM), which includes trafficking as part of its general work plan.
Officials from immigration, the judicial investigative police (OIJ) and
the chief prosecutor?s office received U.S. training on forming task
forces and routinely work together on successful investigations. An
excellent recent example is the inter-agency cooperation that resulted
in the disruption of the Chinese alien smuggling ring.
¶H. The National Coalition Against Human Trafficking, established in
November 2005, is still developing a national plan of action. All the
coalition?s members, including NGOs and representatives of civil
society, are involved in developing the plan. Among the objectives of
the plan are: 1) continuous training and awareness of government
officials on human rights and proper treatment of victims; 2)
introduction of electronic passport security measures; 3) continued
implementation of a regional mapping project (run by NGOs); 4)
continued demand reduction campaigns via raised awareness among
travelers at ports of entry; and 5) reforms to domestic laws in order
to more fully comply with international instruments ratified by Costa
Rica.
Investigation and Prosecution of Traffickers
--------------------------------------------- --------
¶A. Costa Rica has not enacted any new legislation against human
trafficking since the last TIP report. However, the new Arias
Administration has already proposed reforms to the immigration law
which took effect in August 2006. These reforms would make alien
smuggling a crime for the first time. The proposed reforms would also
expand the legal definition of trafficking and improve protections for
victims.
Costa Rican law does not address internal trafficking in persons.
However, international trafficking is proscribed in Title III and Title
XVII of the Criminal Code. Article 172 of Title III (enacted under Law
7899 on 3 August 1999) forbids human trafficking and defines it as:
?whoever promotes, facilitates or favors the entrance into or the exit
from the country of any persons regardless of gender, for the purpose
of engaging in prostitution, or to hold them in sexual or labor
servitude, shall be punished with the penalty of imprisonment from
three-to-six years.? The penalty is increased to four?to-ten years, if
this occurs under any aggravating circumstances (defined in Article 170
as the victim being under age eighteen, the use of deception, violence,
abuse of authority, exploitation of the victim?s economic situation,
intimidation or coercion, abuse of a parental, sibling, stepparent,
spousal, guardian or other custodial relationship, or abusing the trust
of the victim or the victim?s family, regardless of kinship). Under
Article 170, the victim?s willingness to engage in prostitution is
considered irrelevant to the offense.
Title XVII deals with human rights crimes of an international nature.
Article 374 states ?The penalty of imprisonment from ten-to-fifteen
years shall be imposed on those who lead or are members of
international organizations devoted to trafficking in slaves, women or
children, drugs and narcotics, acts of extorting kidnapping or
terrorism or infringement on provisions to protect human rights
established in treaties signed by Costa Rica.?
Article 376 refers to trafficking in minors, with imprisonment of
two-to-four years for individuals who sell, promote, or facilitate the
sale of a minor (for domestic service, commercial sex work, or
adoption) and receive any type of payment, gratuity, or economic reward
for their action. The same sanction is applied to the individual who
pay, reward, or otherwise remunerate with the purpose of receiving a
minor. If the perpetrator has a blood relationship with the minor, or
is the minor?s guardian or custodian, or ?represents? the minor, the
sanction is increased to four?to-six years. The four-to-six year
sentence is also imposed if the perpetrator is a professional or public
employee. The sanction against professional or public employees also
includes a two-to-six year suspension from working in the profession or
office held when the crime was committed.
Article 377 imposes a five-to-ten year prison term on individuals who
promote or facilitate the trafficking of children for adoption with the
purpose of selling the child?s organs.
¶B. As mentioned above, Article 172 is the primary law against
trafficking of persons for sexual exploitation (three to six years
imprisonment). Other articles in the criminal code relating to
trafficking in persons for sexual exploitation are as follows: Article
167, corruption of minors or a legally incapacitated person,
imprisonment for up to eight years; Article 168, aggravated corruption,
imprisonment from four-to-ten years, if the victim is under age twelve,
the act is committed for economic gain, the act is committed through
deception, violence, abuse of authority, intimidation or coercion, or
abuse of a familial or guardian relationship.
¶C. Article 172 of the criminal code imposes identical penalties
regardless of whether victims are trafficked for sexual or labor
exploitation. In addition and specific to labor, Article 237 of the
criminal code imposes a penalty of up to four years for labor
exploitation of minors or the legally incapacitated. Furthermore, the
Costa Rican Constitution and Labor Code prohibit forced labor and
require a minimum wage (Articles 33 and 56 of the Constitution,
implemented by Articles 8 and 14 of the Labor Code for forced labor and
Article 57 of the Constitution, implemented by Article 177 of the Labor
Code for minimum wages). Additionally, Costa Rica assumed obligations
against forced labor when in ratified ILO Convention 29 in 1960.
The Costa Rican Criminal Code (Article 359?Forgery and False Documents
and Article 360-General Fraud) can be used to imprison labor
recruiters, employers, or other labor agents who knowingly engage in
fraudulent or deceptive practices for up to six years (eight if the
perpetrator is a public employee). Article 193 of the criminal code
can add two years to these sentences if coercion is used.
¶D. Penalties for rape and sexual assault are higher than penalties for
trafficking. The maximum penalty for trafficking for the purpose of
commercial sexual exploitation established in Article 172 is
imprisonment for up to ten years; the penalty for rape is imprisonment
for up to sixteen years (Article 156 of the criminal code), or eighteen
years maximum for aggravated rape (Articles 157 and 158). Article 161
imposes a penalty of up to eight years for the sexual abuse of minors
or the legally incapacitated, or up to ten years when the victim is
under age twelve, incapable of resisting, or the perpetrator is a
relative or guardian. Actual penalties for rape range from
ten-to-eighteen years depending on the relation of the rapist to the
victim and the degree of harm done to the health of the victim.
¶E. Prostitution by individuals over age eighteen is legal in Costa
Rica; however, pimping is penalized by Article 169 of the criminal code
with two-to-five years imprisonment. Brothel owners and operators are
subject to the same sanctions as pimps. Article 170 of the same code
defines aggravated pimping and establishes a punishment of ten years
imprisonment. As mentioned above, Article 170 also establishes that
the will of the victim (i.e., the victim?s willing engagement in
prostitution) is irrelevant to the offense of rape or aggravated
pimping. If the prostitute is a minor, the client is in violation of
Article 160 which states: ?whoever pays, or promises to pay, or offers
economic or other gain to a minor for the performance of sexual acts
shall be punished with a penalty of four-to-ten years imprisonment if
the victim has not attained the age of twelve years, with a penalty of
three-to-eight years imprisonment if the victim has attained the age of
twelve years but has not attained the age of fifteen years, or with a
penalty of two-to-six years imprisonment if the victim has attained the
age of fifteen years, but has not attained the age of eighteen years.?
¶F. Official statistics on the number of investigations, prosecutions,
and convictions on charges related to the various laws against
trafficking in 2006 are compiled once a year by the Supreme Court and
should be published in June ? August, 2007. Until the statistics are
collected and published by the Court, the only other way to collect
complete official information is to physically visit individual courts
to review their records?a process that is too labor intensive even for
NGOs working this issue. The independent Attorney General?s Office is
extremely reluctant to provide statistics that are incomplete and will
not discuss current cases at all with anyone who is not a party to a
case. Judicial authorities reported that ten trafficking cases went to
trial in 2005, and that six convictions were handed down.
Due to the complexity of the Costa Rican judicial system, we cannot
establish how many of the six convictions were related to cases opened
in 2005. We know from our contacts in the judiciary that at least one
of the 2005 convictions was related to a trafficking case opened in
¶2003. Multi-year pre-trial discovery periods are common in Costa Rica,
especially if a case has international dimensions. The judicial police
have opened five investigations into international trafficking
organizations since the August 2006 immigration law providing new legal
tools went into effect. Individual prosecutor?s offices opened other
investigations on their own, but as explained above, we cannot obtain
the statistics until they are formally published.
Judicial investigators continued complex investigations of three major
trafficking organizations that were launched in 2005. Informally,
these investigators have indicated to Post that their evidence in these
investigations is nearly solid enough to completely dismantle rather
than merely disrupt the organization?s operations. In January 2007,
authorities arrested eight people in connection with a Chinese ring
that trafficked people to Costa Rica for labor exploitation. This was
the result of the sting operation involving the Immigration Director,
mentioned above and described in more detail below.
¶G. According to judicial police investigators, international groups are
behind the large trafficking operations they are investigating. The
heads of these groups are foreigners who are usually not located in
Costa Rica. Chinese, Americans, Colombians, Cubans, and Dominicans
have been identified as heads of distinct trafficking organizations.
Except for the Chinese trafficking case that broke in late 2006, Post
has no information on where profits from trafficking are being
channeled. In the Chinese case, at least some of the profits were
being channeled into bribes to expand the operation. The Chinese
traffickers offered a $2.5 million bribe to Costa Rica?s Immigration
Director in exchange for his assistance with 500 visas. When the
ringleader was arrested, authorities seized $140,000 in cash from her
home. The successful prosecutions Post is aware of to date in Costa
Rica tend to involve small regional groups where the traffickers often
work freelance and usually involve alien smuggling as well as
trafficking. The Chinese trafficking case breaks the mold but has not
yet gone to trial.
¶H. The government actively investigates cases of trafficking to the
extent resources permit. Undercover operations, electronic
surveillance, and mitigated punishment or immunity for cooperation
suspects are all legally available to Costa Rican authorities. During
2006, Post donated hidden cameras and other investigative equipment to
enhance anti-trafficking capabilities. Thanks to the courage and
honesty of Immigration Director Mario Zamora, undercover investigators
were able to conduct a very successful investigation and disruption of
the Chinese trafficking organization.
¶I. The government provided specialized training, particularly to
immigration officials, on how to recognize trafficking. Training was
also provided on trafficking-related issues such as human rights,
migration procedures, awareness of children?s rights and victim
protection. Several NGOs work closely with the Police Academy and
Judicial School to provide sensitivity training for officials on
special handling techniques for trafficking victims they may encounter.
Investigative and prosecutorial training is not specialized for
trafficking.
¶J. Costa Rican authorities cooperated with U.S. counterparts in
trafficking investigations during the reporting period. Post has no
numbers on the cooperative international investigations with other
governments specific to trafficking, but notes that the Costa Rican
government has worked closely with neighboring governments and with
Colombia on narcotics and extradition cases. Post is also aware of
close Costa Rican/Peruvian cooperation in two large alien smuggling
cases during the reporting period.
¶K. The government willingly extradites persons accused of trafficking
in other countries, especially those accused of sexual crimes (as
established in Article 6 of the Extradition Law). Costa Rica also
cooperates actively in returning U.S. fugitives to face justice. No
American traffickers were extradited to the U.S. since the last TIP
report (although individual pedophiles were extradited, see below).
Five Americans are currently serving jail sentences in Costa Rica for
sexual abuse involving minors. The Costa Rican Constitution and
Article 3 of the Extradition Law prohibit extradition of Costa Rican
nationals to any jurisdiction. There is no effort to modify this
restriction.
¶L. Post has no evidence of government involvement in or tolerance of
trafficking, on a local or institutional level.
¶M. During the reporting period, no government officials were
prosecuted for involvement in trafficking or trafficking-related
corruption. However, one immigration official is under preventative
detention for irregularities in stamping passports at the Penas Blancas
border checkpoint with Nicaragua. Further information is unavailable
as the investigation is ongoing and the case does not appear to be
related to trafficking in persons.
¶N. Costa Rican authorities have publicly identified child sex tourism
as a problem. However, Post does not have information on how many
non-U.S. foreign pedophiles have been deported to their country of
origin. During the reporting period, ten Americans were extradited and
two others are awaiting extradition. Costa Rican officials identified
the countries of origin for sex tourism as the U.S., Canada, and
Germany. Costa Rica?s sexual abuse laws do not have extraterritorial
coverage.
¶O. Costa Rica ratified the ILO Convention 182 on August 31, 2001 (Law
8122). ILO Convention 29 was ratified on May 26, 1960 (Law 2561). ILO
Convention 105 was ratified on April 17, 1959 (Law 2630). The Optional
Protocol to the Convention on the Rights of the Child on the Sale of
Children, Child Prostitution, and Child Pornography was ratified April
9, 2002 (Law 8172). The Protocol to Prevent, Suppress and Punish
Trafficking in Persons was ratified on November 4, 2002 (Law 8315).
Protection and Assistance to Victims
---------------------------------------------
¶A. The Costa Rican Government's efforts to protect trafficking victims
remained limited during the reporting period, due to the lack of
resources. However, the Chief Prosecutor?s Office has a section that
can assist trafficking victims if they wish to press charges. There
are no specialized shelters for trafficking victims. By law, underage
trafficking victims cannot be deported. The Children?s Welfare
Institute does have general shelters in which it can temporarily place
trafficking victims who are minors, but lacks the budget and personnel
to create a specialized center to attend to the needs of young victims.
The police formally coordinate with the Chief Prosecutor?s office on
sex crimes in order to assist trafficking victims with hospitalization
(when needed) and to provide legal representation. The police can
provide limited protection to key witnesses in trafficking cases, but
the government lacks a formal witness protection program. Identified
trafficking victims did not face jail, but officials treated some adult
victims as illegal migrants and deported them. Foreign nationals
identified as trafficking victims could seek repatriation;
alternatively, they could apply for work permits or refugee status.
Most protective services were severely lacking.
The government operated no shelters or health care facilities
designated for trafficking victims. In mid 2006, a migrants? shelter
was inaugurated in a San Jose suburb for people waiting to be deported.
Officials used no standard referral process to transfer trafficking
victims to NGOs and the government lacked the capacity to fund NGOs
that assisted trafficking victims. The government collaborated with a
project for victims of trafficking for sexual exploitation which is run
by two NGOs. The project (see paragraph I below) is located in the
Pacific coast town of Jaco, a known center of sexual tourism.
¶B. The government is unable to provide funding or other support to NGOs
for services to trafficking victims beyond the standard emergency
services available to anyone.
¶C. Immigration officials use a manual developed by the IOM and in use
throughout Central America to identify and properly respond to victims
of trafficking, particularly if the victim is a minor. The government
lacks a formal screening or referral process to transfer detained
victims to NGOs or other organizations that could provide short- or
long-term care. However, on an informal level many officials have good
contacts with NGOs.
¶D. The rights of trafficking victims are respected in general. They
are treated as victims, not criminals. Several NGOs work with victims
to help them overcome fears of cooperating with authorities, and to
that end prosecutors will take the victim?s statements at the NGO?s
offices. To the extent that adult trafficking victims can be confused
with illegal aliens, however, they can sometimes be summarily deported.
In no case are they prosecuted or fined.
¶E. The government encourages victims to assist in the investigation and
prosecution of trafficking cases. Victims can file civil suits against
their traffickers. Victims may remain in Costa Rica, but are also
allowed to leave. If they wish to remain, they may apply for work
permits. Some nationalities, such as Colombians and Cubans, can easily
receive refugee status.
¶F. As noted in paragraph A above, the government is only able to
provide standard emergency medical services and limited police
protection to key trafficking witnesses. It is unable to provide
shelters, services, or housing benefits to adult victims but can
provide legal assistance and work permits. Informally, officials help
victims to contact NGO?s who can offer more assistance. Child victims
are placed in general children?s shelters, not in foster care or
juvenile detention centers.
¶G. A training manual was produced and distributed to all Costa Rican
diplomatic missions to provide information on combating trafficking in
minors. According to the MFA, individual Costa Ricans in some source
countries have worked closely with NGOs in those countries to counter
document fraud associated with trafficking in persons. In response to
the August 2006 alien smuggling law, the ILO and Costa Rican
Immigration expanded a training program for border officials includes
instruction on how to help prevent trafficking. The training stresses
differences between alien smuggling and trafficking; the responsibility
of immigration officials to prevent, detect, and report cases of
smuggling and trafficking, and the official?s obligations to protect
victims of trafficking.
¶H. Post is not aware of any government support for repatriated Costa
Ricans who are victims of trafficking.
¶I. International organizations working with trafficking victims in
Costa Rica include the IOM and the ILO. International NGOs working
with trafficking victims include World Vision, Defense of Children
International, t