Keep Us Strong WikiLeaks logo

Currently released so far... 143912 / 251,287

Articles

Browse latest releases

Browse by creation date

Browse by origin

A B C D F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W Y Z

Browse by tag

A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z
AORC AS AF AM AJ ASEC AU AMGT APER ACOA ASEAN AG AFFAIRS AR AFIN ABUD AO AEMR ADANA AMED AADP AINF ARF ADB ACS AE AID AL AC AGR ABLD AMCHAMS AECL AINT AND ASIG AUC APECO AFGHANISTAN AY ARABL ACAO ANET AFSN AZ AFLU ALOW ASSK AFSI ACABQ AMB APEC AIDS AA ATRN AMTC AVIATION AESC ASSEMBLY ADPM ASECKFRDCVISKIRFPHUMSMIGEG AGOA ASUP AFPREL ARNOLD ADCO AN ACOTA AODE AROC AMCHAM AT ACKM ASCH AORCUNGA AVIANFLU AVIAN AIT ASECPHUM ATRA AGENDA AIN AFINM APCS AGENGA ABDALLAH ALOWAR AFL AMBASSADOR ARSO AGMT ASPA AOREC AGAO ARR AOMS ASC ALIREZA AORD AORG ASECVE ABER ARABBL ADM AMER ALVAREZ AORCO ARM APERTH AINR AGRI ALZUGUREN ANGEL ACDA AEMED ARC AMGMT AEMRASECCASCKFLOMARRPRELPINRAMGTJMXL ASECAFINGMGRIZOREPTU ABMC AIAG ALJAZEERA ASR ASECARP ALAMI APRM ASECM AMPR AEGR AUSTRALIAGROUP ASE AMGTHA ARNOLDFREDERICK AIDAC AOPC ANTITERRORISM ASEG AMIA ASEX AEMRBC AFOR ABT AMERICA AGENCIES AGS ADRC ASJA AEAID ANARCHISTS AME AEC ALNEA AMGE AMEDCASCKFLO AK ANTONIO ASO AFINIZ ASEDC AOWC ACCOUNT ACTION AMG AFPK AOCR AMEDI AGIT ASOC ACOAAMGT AMLB AZE AORCYM AORL AGRICULTURE ACEC AGUILAR ASCC AFSA ASES ADIP ASED ASCE ASFC ASECTH AFGHAN ANTXON APRC AFAF AFARI ASECEFINKCRMKPAOPTERKHLSAEMRNS AX ALAB ASECAF ASA ASECAFIN ASIC AFZAL AMGTATK ALBE AMT AORCEUNPREFPRELSMIGBN AGUIRRE AAA ABLG ARCH AGRIC AIHRC ADEL AMEX ALI AQ ATFN AORCD ARAS AINFCY AFDB ACBAQ AFDIN AOPR AREP ALEXANDER ALANAZI ABDULRAHMEN ABDULHADI ATRD AEIR AOIC ABLDG AFR ASEK AER ALOUNI AMCT AVERY ASECCASC ARG APR AMAT AEMRS AFU ATPDEA ALL ASECE ANDREW
EAIR ECON ETRD EAGR EAID EFIN ETTC ENRG EMIN ECPS EG EPET EINV ELAB EU ECONOMICS EC EZ EUN EN ECIN EWWT EXTERNAL ENIV ES ESA ELN EFIS EIND EPA ELTN EXIM ET EINT EI ER EAIDAF ETRO ETRDECONWTOCS ECTRD EUR ECOWAS ECUN EBRD ECONOMIC ENGR ECONOMY EFND ELECTIONS EPECO EUMEM ETMIN EXBS EAIRECONRP ERTD EAP ERGR EUREM EFI EIB ENGY ELNTECON EAIDXMXAXBXFFR ECOSOC EEB EINF ETRN ENGRD ESTH ENRC EXPORT EK ENRGMO ECO EGAD EXIMOPIC ETRDPGOV EURM ETRA ENERG ECLAC EINO ENVIRONMENT EFIC ECIP ETRDAORC ENRD EMED EIAR ECPN ELAP ETCC EAC ENEG ESCAP EWWC ELTD ELA EIVN ELF ETR EFTA EMAIL EL EMS EID ELNT ECPSN ERIN ETT EETC ELAN ECHEVARRIA EPWR EVIN ENVR ENRGJM ELBR EUC EARG EAPC EICN EEC EREL EAIS ELBA EPETUN EWWY ETRDGK EV EDU EFN EVN EAIDETRD ENRGTRGYETRDBEXPBTIOSZ ETEX ESCI EAIDHO EENV ETRC ESOC EINDQTRD EINVA EFLU EGEN ECE EAGRBN EON EFINECONCS EIAD ECPC ENV ETDR EAGER ETRDKIPR EWT EDEV ECCP ECCT EARI EINVECON ED ETRDEC EMINETRD EADM ENRGPARMOTRASENVKGHGPGOVECONTSPLEAID ETAD ECOM ECONETRDEAGRJA EMINECINECONSENVTBIONS ESSO ETRG ELAM ECA EENG EITC ENG ERA EPSC ECONEINVETRDEFINELABETRDKTDBPGOVOPIC EIPR ELABPGOVBN EURFOR ETRAD EUE EISNLN ECONETRDBESPAR ELAINE EGOVSY EAUD EAGRECONEINVPGOVBN EINVETRD EPIN ECONENRG EDRC ESENV EB ENER ELTNSNAR EURN ECONPGOVBN ETTF ENVT EPIT ESOCI EFINOECD ERD EDUC EUM ETEL EUEAID ENRGY ETD EAGRE EAR EAIDMG EE EET ETER ERICKSON EIAID EX EAG EBEXP ESTN EAIDAORC EING EGOV EEOC EAGRRP EVENTS ENRGKNNPMNUCPARMPRELNPTIAEAJMXL ETRDEMIN EPETEIND EAIDRW ENVI ETRDEINVECINPGOVCS EPEC EDUARDO EGAR EPCS EPRT EAIDPHUMPRELUG EPTED ETRB EPETPGOV ECONQH EAIDS EFINECONEAIDUNGAGM EAIDAR EAGRBTIOBEXPETRDBN ESF EINR ELABPHUMSMIGKCRMBN EIDN ETRK ESTRADA EXEC EAIO EGHG ECN EDA ECOS EPREL EINVKSCA ENNP ELABV ETA EWWTPRELPGOVMASSMARRBN EUCOM EAIDASEC ENR END EP ERNG ESPS EITI EINTECPS EAVI ECONEFINETRDPGOVEAGRPTERKTFNKCRMEAID ELTRN EADI ELDIN ELND ECRM EINVEFIN EAOD EFINTS EINDIR ENRGKNNP ETRDEIQ ETC EAIRASECCASCID EINN ETRP EAIDNI EFQ ECOQKPKO EGPHUM EBUD EAIT ECONEINVEFINPGOVIZ EWWI ENERGY ELB EINDETRD EMI ECONEAIR ECONEFIN EHUM EFNI EOXC EISNAR ETRDEINVTINTCS EIN EFIM EMW ETIO ETRDGR EMN EXO EATO EWTR ELIN EAGREAIDPGOVPRELBN EINVETC ETTD EIQ ECONCS EPPD ESS EUEAGR ENRGIZ EISL EUNJ EIDE ENRGSD ELAD ESPINOSA ELEC EAIG ESLCO ENTG ETRDECD EINVECONSENVCSJA EEPET EUNCH ECINECONCS
KPKO KIPR KWBG KPAL KDEM KTFN KNNP KGIC KTIA KCRM KDRG KWMN KJUS KIDE KSUM KTIP KFRD KMCA KMDR KCIP KTDB KPAO KPWR KOMC KU KIRF KCOR KHLS KISL KSCA KGHG KS KSTH KSEP KE KPAI KWAC KFRDKIRFCVISCMGTKOCIASECPHUMSMIGEG KPRP KVPR KAWC KUNR KZ KPLS KN KSTC KMFO KID KNAR KCFE KRIM KFLO KCSA KG KFSC KSCI KFLU KMIG KRVC KV KVRP KMPI KNEI KAPO KOLY KGIT KSAF KIRC KNSD KBIO KHIV KHDP KBTR KHUM KSAC KACT KRAD KPRV KTEX KPIR KDMR KMPF KPFO KICA KWMM KICC KR KCOM KAID KINR KBCT KOCI KCRS KTER KSPR KDP KFIN KCMR KMOC KUWAIT KIPRZ KSEO KLIG KWIR KISM KLEG KTBD KCUM KMSG KMWN KREL KPREL KAWK KIMT KCSY KESS KWPA KNPT KTBT KCROM KPOW KFTN KPKP KICR KGHA KOMS KJUST KREC KOC KFPC KGLB KMRS KTFIN KCRCM KWNM KHGH KRFD KY KGCC KFEM KVIR KRCM KEMR KIIP KPOA KREF KJRE KRKO KOGL KSCS KGOV KCRIM KEM KCUL KRIF KCEM KITA KCRN KCIS KSEAO KWMEN KEANE KNNC KNAP KEDEM KNEP KHPD KPSC KIRP KUNC KALM KCCP KDEN KSEC KAYLA KIMMITT KO KNUC KSIA KLFU KLAB KTDD KIRCOEXC KECF KIPRETRDKCRM KNDP KIRCHOFF KJAN KFRDSOCIRO KWMNSMIG KEAI KKPO KPOL KRD KWMNPREL KATRINA KBWG KW KPPD KTIAEUN KDHS KRV KBTS KWCI KICT KPALAOIS KPMI KWN KTDM KWM KLHS KLBO KDEMK KT KIDS KWWW KLIP KPRM KSKN KTTB KTRD KNPP KOR KGKG KNN KTIAIC KSRE KDRL KVCORR KDEMGT KOMO KSTCC KMAC KSOC KMCC KCHG KSEPCVIS KGIV KPO KSEI KSTCPL KSI KRMS KFLOA KIND KPPAO KCM KRFR KICCPUR KFRDCVISCMGTCASCKOCIASECPHUMSMIGEG KNNB KFAM KWWMN KENV KGH KPOP KFCE KNAO KTIAPARM KWMNKDEM KDRM KNNNP KEVIN KEMPI KWIM KGCN KUM KMGT KKOR KSMT KISLSCUL KNRV KPRO KOMCSG KLPM KDTB KFGM KCRP KAUST KNNPPARM KUNH KWAWC KSPA KTSC KUS KSOCI KCMA KTFR KPAOPREL KNNPCH KWGB KSTT KNUP KPGOV KUK KMNP KPAS KHMN KPAD KSTS KCORR KI KLSO KWNN KNP KPTD KESO KMPP KEMS KPAONZ KPOV KTLA KPAOKMDRKE KNMP KWMNCI KWUN KRDP KWKN KPAOY KEIM KGICKS KIPT KREISLER KTAO KJU KLTN KWMNPHUMPRELKPAOZW KEN KQ KWPR KSCT KGHGHIV KEDU KRCIM KFIU KWIC KNNO KILS KTIALG KNNA KMCAJO KINP KRM KLFLO KPA KOMCCO KKIV KHSA KDM KRCS KWBGSY KISLAO KNPPIS KNNPMNUC KCRI KX KWWT KPAM KVRC KERG KK KSUMPHUM KACP KSLG KIF KIVP KHOURY KNPR KUNRAORC KCOG KCFC KWMJN KFTFN KTFM KPDD KMPIO KCERS KDUM KDEMAF KMEPI KHSL KEPREL KAWX KIRL KNNR KOMH KMPT KISLPINR KADM KPER KTPN KSCAECON KA KJUSTH KPIN KDEV KCSI KNRG KAKA KFRP KTSD KINL KJUSKUNR KQM KQRDQ KWBC KMRD KVBL KOM KMPL KEDM KFLD KPRD KRGY KNNF KPROG KIFR KPOKO KM KWMNCS KAWS KLAP KPAK KHIB KOEM KDDG KCGC
PGOV PREL PK PTER PINR PO PHUM PARM PREF PINF PRL PM PINS PROP PALESTINIAN PE PBTS PNAT PHSA PL PA PSEPC POSTS POLITICS POLICY POL PU PAHO PHUMPGOV PGOG PARALYMPIC PGOC PNR PREFA PMIL POLITICAL PROV PRUM PBIO PAK POV POLG PAR POLM PHUMPREL PKO PUNE PROG PEL PROPERTY PKAO PRE PSOE PHAS PNUM PGOVE PY PIRF PRES POWELL PP PREM PCON PGOVPTER PGOVPREL PODC PTBS PTEL PGOVTI PHSAPREL PD PG PRC PVOV PLO PRELL PEPFAR PREK PEREZ PINT POLI PPOL PARTIES PT PRELUN PH PENA PIN PGPV PKST PROTESTS PHSAK PRM PROLIFERATION PGOVBL PAS PUM PMIG PGIC PTERPGOV PSHA PHM PHARM PRELHA PELOSI PGOVKCMABN PQM PETER PJUS PKK POUS PTE PGOVPRELPHUMPREFSMIGELABEAIDKCRMKWMN PERM PRELGOV PAO PNIR PARMP PRELPGOVEAIDECONEINVBEXPSCULOIIPBTIO PHYTRP PHUML PFOV PDEM PUOS PN PRESIDENT PERURENA PRIVATIZATION PHUH PIF POG PERL PKPA PREI PTERKU PSEC PRELKSUMXABN PETROL PRIL POLUN PPD PRELUNSC PREZ PCUL PREO PGOVZI POLMIL PERSONS PREFL PASS PV PETERS PING PQL PETR PARMS PNUC PS PARLIAMENT PINSCE PROTECTION PLAB PGV PBS PGOVENRGCVISMASSEAIDOPRCEWWTBN PKNP PSOCI PSI PTERM PLUM PF PVIP PARP PHUMQHA PRELNP PHIM PRELBR PUBLIC PHUMKPAL PHAM PUAS PBOV PRELTBIOBA PGOVU PHUMPINS PICES PGOVENRG PRELKPKO PHU PHUMKCRS POGV PATTY PSOC PRELSP PREC PSO PAIGH PKPO PARK PRELPLS PRELPK PHUS PPREL PTERPREL PROL PDA PRELPGOV PRELAF PAGE PGOVGM PGOVECON PHUMIZNL PMAR PGOVAF PMDL PKBL PARN PARMIR PGOVEAIDUKNOSWGMHUCANLLHFRSPITNZ PDD PRELKPAO PKMN PRELEZ PHUMPRELPGOV PARTM PGOVEAGRKMCAKNARBN PPEL PGOVPRELPINRBN PGOVSOCI PWBG PGOVEAID PGOVPM PBST PKEAID PRAM PRELEVU PHUMA PGOR PPA PINSO PROVE PRELKPAOIZ PPAO PHUMPRELBN PGVO PHUMPTER PAGR PMIN PBTSEWWT PHUMR PDOV PINO PARAGRAPH PACE PINL PKPAL PTERE PGOVAU PGOF PBTSRU PRGOV PRHUM PCI PGO PRELEUN PAC PRESL PORG PKFK PEPR PRELP PMR PRTER PNG PGOVPHUMKPAO PRELECON PRELNL PINOCHET PAARM PKPAO PFOR PGOVLO PHUMBA POPDC PRELC PHUME PER PHJM POLINT PGOVPZ PGOVKCRM PAUL PHALANAGE PARTY PPEF PECON PEACE PROCESS PPGOV PLN PRELSW PHUMS PRF PEDRO PHUMKDEM PUNR PVPR PATRICK PGOVKMCAPHUMBN PRELA PGGV PSA PGOVSMIGKCRMKWMNPHUMCVISKFRDCA PGIV PRFE POGOV PBT PAMQ

Browse by classification

Community resources

courage is contagious

Viewing cable 09ANTANANARIVO141, MADAGASCAR 2009 TRAFFICKING IN PERSONS REPORT

If you are new to these pages, please read an introduction on the structure of a cable as well as how to discuss them with others. See also the FAQs

Understanding cables
Every cable message consists of three parts:
  • The top box shows each cables unique reference number, when and by whom it originally was sent, and what its initial classification was.
  • The middle box contains the header information that is associated with the cable. It includes information about the receiver(s) as well as a general subject.
  • The bottom box presents the body of the cable. The opening can contain a more specific subject, references to other cables (browse by origin to find them) or additional comment. This is followed by the main contents of the cable: a summary, a collection of specific topics and a comment section.
To understand the justification used for the classification of each cable, please use this WikiSource article as reference.

Discussing cables
If you find meaningful or important information in a cable, please link directly to its unique reference number. Linking to a specific paragraph in the body of a cable is also possible by copying the appropriate link (to be found at theparagraph symbol). Please mark messages for social networking services like Twitter with the hash tags #cablegate and a hash containing the reference ID e.g. #09ANTANANARIVO141.
Reference ID Created Released Classification Origin
09ANTANANARIVO141 2009-03-02 13:54 2011-08-26 00:00 UNCLASSIFIED//FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY Embassy Antananarivo
VZCZCXRO6785
RR RUEHBZ RUEHDU RUEHGI RUEHJO RUEHMA RUEHMR RUEHPA RUEHRN RUEHTRO
DE RUEHAN #0141/01 0611354
ZNR UUUUU ZZH
R 021354Z MAR 09
FM AMEMBASSY ANTANANARIVO
TO RUEHC/SECSTATE WASHDC 2139
INFO RUEHZO/AFRICAN UNION COLLECTIVE
RUCNSAD/SOUTHERN AF DEVELOPMENT COMMUNITY COLLECTIVE
RUEAWJA/DEPT OF JUSTICE WASHDC
RUEHC/DEPT OF LABOR WASHDC
RUEATRS/DEPT OF TREASURY WASHDC
RUEAHLC/DEPT OF HOMELAND SECURITY WASHDC
UNCLAS SECTION 01 OF 18 ANTANANARIVO 000141 
 
SENSITIVE 
SIPDIS 
 
DEPT FOR G/TIP - RYOUSEY, 
DEPT FOR G - ACBlank 
DEPT FOR AF/E - BEYZEROV 
DEPT FOR INL, DRL, PRM 
DEPT PLEASE PASS TO USAID 
PARIS FOR RKANEDA 
LONDON FOR PLORD 
 
E.O. 12958: N/A 
TAGS: PHUM KCRM KWMN SMIG KFRD ASEC PREF ELAB EAID MA
SUBJECT: MADAGASCAR 2009 TRAFFICKING IN PERSONS REPORT 
 
REF:  A) 08 ANTANANARIVO 164 
B) 08 ANTANANARIVO 764 
C) 08 STATE 132759 
D) 07 ANTANANARIVO 0557 
 
1. (SBU) SUMMARY: While Madagascar is not a confirmed source or 
destination for internationally trafficked men and women, during the 
year there were reports of labor and sex trafficking in persons 
(TIP) within the country's borders. Cultural values, poverty, 
corruption, lack of funding and capacity, and weak law enforcement 
all hampered the Government of Madagascar's (GOM) efforts to combat 
trafficking.  A series of legislative achievements and hands-on 
efforts in 2007 and 2008 have pushed the GOM's fight against human 
trafficking into the field via training programs, victim assistance, 
and awareness campaigns.  This drive seems to have slowed in 2008, 
however, as the laws have not been implemented effectively across 
the country.  A lack of statistics hampers efforts to monitor 
results, but the evidence suggests that despite continued vocal 
support from the national leadership, extensive work from the 
international community, and engagement at the regional level, 
change on the ground has been slow to come. END SUMMARY. 
 
2. (SBU) The Embassy Point of Contact for TIP is Political Officer 
Jeffrey Hulse.  Mr. Hulse can be reached via email at HulseJA [at] 
state.gov, by telephone at +261 20.22.212.57, or by fax at +261 
20.22.251.71. EmbOffs spent approximately 80 hours speaking with 
contacts, researching, and writing this report; POL FSN spent 
approximately 8 hours supporting those efforts.  The POL/ECON Chief 
and Defense Attache spent approximately two hours during the 
clearance process. 
 
3. (U) As requested in Ref C, Embassy Antananarivo submits the 
following information, keyed to the questions in paragraphs 23-27 
that are applicable to Madagascar's situation. 
 
23: (U) THE COUNTRY'S TIP SITUATION 
----------------------------------- 
 
A. (U) The GOM and local NGOs are anxious to document the extent and 
nature of trafficking, but lack of funding and institutional 
capacity remain a significant impediment to these efforts. However, 
in 2008, the GOM began collecting national level data, and 
established several databases to facilitate the process.  The U.S. 
Department of Justice's International Crime Investigative Training 
Assistance Program (ICITAP) funded the creation of a Criminal 
Analysis Center, including a criminal network database, completed in 
September 2008. UNICEF plans to link a new database created at the 
Ministry of Justice with this police database. A database to track 
foster care and adoptions was also installed by the Ministry of 
Health and Family Planning in 2008. 
 
The government's statistical agency, INSTAT, in collaboration with 
the International Labor Organization's (ILO) International Program 
on the Elimination of Child Labor (IPEC), published the results of a 
nationwide household survey that gave the first reliable figures on 
child trafficking in at least a decade. Unfortunately, INSTAT does 
not have technicians capable of doing an in-depth interpretation and 
analysis of data. An international consultant, funded by UNICEF, is 
in the process of analyzing the data; results will be published by 
the end of March 2009. Data from a baseline study of child (5-18 
years) victims of trafficking in high risk sites will be published 
in September 2009 by PACT, a non-governmental organization (NGO) 
that just initiated anti-trafficking activities this year. 
 
In addition, each International Organization (IO) and NGO that works 
on anti-trafficking projects either collects data in their 
respective intervention zones or conducts studies to document the 
welfare and treatment of vulnerable persons. Catholic Relief 
Services (CRS) will compile statistics on knowledge, attitudes, and 
behaviors of parents, vulnerable persons, and school youth in three 
regions where they work; this will be available by June 2009. 
 
A UNICEF study on the Migration of Children and Women between South 
West Islands of the Indian Ocean (Madagascar, the Seychelles, 
Mauritius, and the Comoros archipelago, including Mayotte) is 
underway.  The study was undertaken to provide information on the 
possible linkages between child migration, trafficking, and sexual 
exploitation. Findings will be available and shared with the GOM 
 
ANTANANARI 00000141  002 OF 018 
 
 
during the first trimester of 2009. However, preliminary results do 
not indicate any cases of migrant labor from Madagascar to the other 
islands. 
 
B. (U) Madagascar may be a country of origin for internationally 
trafficked women for domestic servitude or sexual exploitation, 
outside of the Indian Ocean region. Though there is little concrete 
proof, news sources and anecdotal evidence suggest that Lebanon may 
be a destination country for trafficking of Malagasy persons. An 
August 2008 report from Human Rights Watch on migrant domestic 
workers in Lebanon showed that one Malagasy woman died at the age of 
22; such workers are perishing at a rate of nearly one per week, 
half from suicide. Forced confinement, excessive work demands, 
employer abuse (including food and water deprivation), and financial 
pressures were factors that contributed to these deaths. A news 
article mentioned that Malagasy workers were recruited to work in 
Lebanon in 1998, of which 55 were repatriated in 2002. Staff from an 
IO working in Lebanon observed that several Malagasy women seen in 
airplanes or at the airports in the country may have been 
trafficked.  Further investigation is warranted. 
 
Illegal adoption, a problem identified in 2004, is no longer 
considered a threat in Madagascar. With the revision of the 2007 law 
to regulate adoption procedures, there have only been several cases 
seen through the legal system this year, and no judgments have taken 
place to date. The punishment for committing an illegal adoption, 
which constitutes trafficking in persons, is forced labor for life. 
The adoption of Malagasy infants is thus fairly well-regulated, 
although the practices of adoption centers are sometimes not: UNICEF 
recently reported a new practice in which the centers benefit 
financially from pressuring families to put up their children for 
adoption. The suspension of international adoption and stricter laws 
for domestic adoption have also caused longer wait times, which is 
particularly hard on children who were needlessly taken from their 
families. 
 
Trafficking within the country's borders occurred in 2008. Local and 
national newspapers published many trafficking-related stories 
across the country, several of which are referenced here. The 
following anecdotes and national or project-level statistics 
concentrate on the trafficking of children; unfortunately, there is 
little information available on trafficking of persons over the age 
of 18. 
 
Child trafficking has been a longstanding problem that is currently 
exacerbated by the rapid development of the mining and tourism 
industries. The National Child Labor Survey in Madagascar, conducted 
by ILO-IPEC in 2007, represents Madagascar's first reliable baseline 
data on child labor. It states that 438,000 children (7% of all 
Malagasy children ages 5-17 years, and 23% of all economically 
active children) fall into the "worst forms of child labor" 
category, which includes sex or labor trafficking. Of these, 91,000 
were 5-9 years of age, 190,000 were 10-14 years of age, and 158,000 
were 15-17 years of age. 
 
Sex tourism is an increasing problem, particularly in coastal cities 
and Antananarivo, resulting in pervasive prostitution that is 
particularly visible in areas frequented by tourists. A 2007 study 
carried out by the Ministries of Tourism and Health and Family 
Planning, in collaboration with UNICEF, showed that commercial 
sexual exploitation of girls, as well as non-commercial 
exploitation, is significant in Nosy Be and Tamatave. Between 30 and 
50 percent of female sex workers were under 18 years of age. Also, 
in Nosy Be it was not unheard of for parents to "give" their 
children to foreign men, or for Malagasy men to "give" their wives 
to sexual tourists, in exchange for money. 
 
A significant number of children work as laborers, domestic 
servants, and prostitutes in and around Madagascar's various mines, 
although it is unclear how many of these cases are considered 
trafficking. The three largest locations of mine-related labor and 
sexual exploitation are the salt mines around Tulear, the gemstone 
mines surrounding the southern town of Ilakaka, and the granite 
mines near Antananarivo.  Many of these children work within the 
family unit, often sifting through miners' discarded piles of dirt 
in the hopes of finding stones; or in the case of adolescents, they 
flock to the sites and willingly work for extremely low wages in the 
mines, or become domestics or prostitutes by finding clients on 
 
ANTANANARI 00000141  003 OF 018 
 
 
their own. 
 
Some traditional practices contribute to the trafficking of 
children.  For example, in the Ihosy (south central) region, it is a 
traditional practice for parents to sell their daughters at age 12 
into marriage, typically in exchange for cattle, to the highest 
bidder. After one year of marriage, parents often force their 
daughters to divorce and remarry to receive additional goods. Forced 
marriage at an early age is considered a form of trafficking; 
parents reap the benefits, while the young girls are often victims 
of physical and mental abuse. This year over 120 young girls fled 
from cities in the south because of forced marriage, abandoning 
their families and homes and becoming involved in prostitution 
primarily in the towns of Tulear, Ilakaka, and Sakaraha. Another 
traditional practice, although now less common, is the disposal or 
selling of a child within a set of twins, usually put up for illegal 
adoption. 
 
C. (U) The conditions into which victims are trafficked vary. While 
some children working as domestics are well-treated and attend 
school, others are neglected, exploited, and physically or sexually 
abused. Children working in the mining and agricultural sectors, or 
even as prostitutes, may endure dismal working conditions and are 
poorly compensated. In cities throughout the country, young girls 
and boys assist traveling vendors ("marchands ambulants") with the 
loading and selling of their merchandise. In some cases, they stay 
on working for the vendor as almost free labor; in others, they 
hitch a ride to the final destination where they may be left behind 
and not always paid for their work (see reftel D). 
 
D. (U) There are two primary groups that are more at risk for being 
trafficked in Madagascar: women and young girls for sexual 
exploitation and domestic servitude, and young boys and girls for 
forced labor, mining, and street vending. No specific groups or 
categories of children are disproportionately represented in figures 
reported by the ILO. Gender, ethnicity, and religion do not play a 
role; the extent to which children in different regions are engaged 
in certain activities is a result of economics and geography rather 
than discrimination. For example, due to sex tourism, high numbers 
of children exploited as prostitutes are found in coastal cities, as 
well as Antananarivo. Child Protection Networks report that it is 
common for children to be trafficked from the countryside and placed 
as domestic servants in urban areas. In these circumstances, the 
conditions that put women and children at most risk are illiteracy, 
cultural traditions, and societal intimidation. 
 
E. (U) There is limited information on the modus operandi of 
traffickers. Post reporting relied heavily on anecdotal information 
as well as a small number of studies. In the high-risk trafficking 
zones outside of the capital Antananarivo, NGOs discovered that 
traffickers operate on an individual basis, though there are 
sometimes predetermined connections with foreigners who plan to 
travel to the area. In Antananarivo, there are much larger agencies, 
such as marriage or job recruitment establishments, and trafficking 
networks who may sell trafficked Malagasy to unknown destinations 
outside of the country. However, there are not any published 
statistics or studies that have analyzed this phenomenon. 
 
In the cases of sex and labor trafficking, victims are often lured 
by the promise of lucrative jobs. Principal traffickers include 
organized criminals, personal acquaintances, taxi drivers, and 
distant family members. There are cases where parents are complicit, 
tacitly endorsing the transaction, although some are unaware of the 
poor working conditions that await their children. 
 
Preliminary findings of a household-level child trafficking survey 
indicate that there may be a network of traffickers recruiting 
children from rural areas for employment as domestic workers or 
prostitutes in urban centers. Trafficking of children can be found 
particularly in places with rich mining, agricultural, fishing, or 
traveling vendor sectors. For example, in Antsirabe, an industrial 
and agricultural zone on the central plateau, many youth are 
trafficked for domestic labor. It has also become more commonplace 
for "businessmen" to lure young children with clothes or cell phones 
in exchange for work. Even worse, they may lure parents into 
entrusting their children to them; later, these children often 
disappear and are sold into the trafficking market. 
 
 
ANTANANARI 00000141  004 OF 018 
 
 
Another emerging phenomenon in conjunction with the rise of foreign 
companies is that young women are trafficked for the weekend. In 
Moramanga, women are marketed to international workers at the local 
Ambatovy mine as companions for the weekend. Though most government 
officials and NGO contacts believe such recruitment is conducted by 
individuals, there are growing observations of complicity within an 
organized network, particularly among taxi/bus drivers. 
 
A 2001 study carried out by the Ministries of Tourism and Health and 
Family Planning with UNICEF showed that traffickers in Nosy Be and 
Tamatave were mainly indigenous Malagasy persons, but could also be 
foreign tourists and laborers. UNICEF reported that this remained 
unchanged though there had been some positive behavioral change 
observed among hotel operators, who have become more likely to 
refuse room access to clients who sexually exploit children. UNICEF 
plans to expand this study to other mining and tourist sites in the 
country. 
 
24. (U) SETTING THE SCENE FOR THE GOVERNMENT'S ANTI-TIP EFFORTS 
 
A. (U) The President has expressed his commitment to eliminate 
trafficking in Madagascar. Not only has he publicly assured the 
legal protection of vulnerable persons (particularly in the fight 
against trafficking) as a priority in the Madagascar Action Plan 
(MAP), but in December 2008, the President conducted a field visit 
to the high-risk trafficking city of Nosy Be and made strong 
statements about the importance of protecting children against sex 
tourism. Through its commitment to organizing prevention campaigns, 
continue developing a database of cases, convene the 
Anti-Trafficking Committee on a regular basis, and develop a 
National Action Plan, the GOM acknowledges trafficking is a problem 
and aims to retain its Tier 1 status. 
 
B. (U) The government systematically monitored its anti-trafficking 
efforts through the President's Inter-Ministerial Anti-Trafficking 
Committee. At the regional level, Local Anti-Trafficking Boards 
(LABs) are made up of 18-20 ministerial members, much like those in 
the President's committee. The Committee and LABs are composed of 
the following Ministries: 
 
The Ministry of Justice: As the lead ministry in the 
recently-adopted National Action Plan in the Fight Against All Forms 
of Violence Against Children, the Ministry held meetings clarifying 
the roles of each of the 30 responsible government actors. The 
Ministry of Justice has started to rotate magistrates to different 
jurisdictions around the country. The Ministry has also elaborated 
standards of conduct, organized joint meetings between magistrates, 
police and other key child protection stakeholders, and created a 
number of new offices in the Ministry to tackle these critical 
issues such as the Office of Integrity Promotion, Office of 
Jurisdictions Control, Office of Communication and Office of Human 
Rights and International Relations. 
 
The Ministry of Labor: During the reporting period, the Ministry of 
Labor continued implementing its 15-year National Plan to Combat the 
Worst Forms of Child Labor, which often overlapped with anti-TIP 
efforts. Regional Committees to Combat Child Labor (CRLTE) in the 
north, southwest, and the east coast contributed to these efforts. 
 
The Ministry of Youth and Sports: The Ministry of Youth and Sports 
designed an internal three-year anti-TIP action plan for 2007 to 
2009.  Its activities contributed to end-of-project goals: to reduce 
the number of TIP victims by 20 percent; to ensure 50 victims 
receive social services; and to raise awareness among 500,000 youth 
through social mobilization, radio and television, and other means. 
 
The Ministry of Internal Security:  The Ministry of Internal 
Security continued the use of its "Morals and Minors" police 
brigades to conduct both prevention and prosecution activities. At 
present, such brigades are operational in Tulear, Ile Sainte Marie, 
Nosy Be, Fort Dauphin, Morondava, Tamatave, Majunga, Diego Suarez, 
Fianarantsoa, Ambositra, and Antsirabe. The eventual goal is to set 
up such brigades in each of the 22 regions. 
 
The Ministry of Interior: The Ministry of Interior continued the 
UNICEF-financed birth registration campaign launched in 2005. Before 
that time, Madagascar had no uniform birth registration system, a 
weakness traffickers have exploited to traffic undocumented 
 
ANTANANARI 00000141  005 OF 018 
 
 
children.  According to a 2003-04 study by INSTAT, 25 percent of 
children in the country under the age of five were not registered. 
Since March 2007, 80 percent of the population in 119 districts has 
benefited from ministry-run awareness campaigns about the importance 
and procedures of birth registration. Ministry technicians started 
computerizing birth certificates in each of the 5,000-plus communes. 
The Ministry issued retroactive birth certificates in over 119 
districts. 
 
The Ministries of Health, Education, and Culture and Tourism also 
continued their TIP awareness-raising campaigns targeting children 
and tourism industry workers. 
 
C. (U) Though the GOM has improved the domestic legal framework, its 
efforts to combat trafficking are hampered by limited capacity to 
prosecute under the new law, the hesitation of the GOM to share 
trafficking-related issues with the public, a disconnect between 
central and regional level work, and cultural values and traditional 
practices. 
 
The prosecution of perpetrators of labor and sex exploitation 
remains problematic, mainly due to deficient law enforcement, 
weaknesses in the legal system, and weak penalties to deter 
trafficking crimes. The Morals and Minors Brigade led the monitoring 
of the application of the anti-trafficking law, but weaknesses 
persist, including magistrates' difficulty using the law, delays and 
deficient information on court decisions, absence of information for 
victims and their families, the lack of a systematic transfer of 
data to the central level; confusion in regional case reporting from 
gendarmeries and police; and difficulties in handling child victim 
cases in general, often due to the lack of birth certificates or 
difficulty of obtaining medical-legal certificates for abuse. 
 
According to Ministry of Justice (MOJ) officials, the law has been 
actively disseminated to the 22 regions, and magistrates all over 
the country have been trained in its use. However, lack of 
precedent, lack of coordination among the ministries, and the lack 
of a presidential decree mandating and codifying its use may be 
hindering implementation of the law in practice. Without fully 
implementing a system for tracking such cases, MOJ officials leave 
open the possibility that individual jurisdictions may be using the 
law, but the evidence suggests this is unlikely. 
 
One NGO cited a lack of coordination between central and regional 
level anti-trafficking planning and project/systems implementation. 
Deficiencies in validation and leadership from the central level act 
as a hindrance to the progress of the LABs. Also, without additional 
funding, LABs can only commit to achieving ongoing objectives, but 
will not be able to implement new measures that address gaps in 
services. 
 
There is societal and cultural acceptance of early sexual activity, 
early childbearing outside of marriage, and prostitution as an 
economic activity. The 2004 ILO contribution to the National Action 
Plan to Combat Child Labor in Madagascar stated that "material 
rewards and sexuality have always been strongly associated in 
Malagasy society. A man's generosity towards a woman increases both 
his standing as well as [that of] the woman receiving gifts. In some 
parts of the country, girls from adolescence onward are expected to 
take care of their own material needs beyond food and lodging. It 
has traditionally been acceptable for girls to entertain male 
friends in separate living quarters to obtain clothing or other 
items. The step from this custom to overt sale of sex is small." 
 
D. (SBU) In September 2008, the U.S. DOJ's ICITAP program concluded 
a project to develop a central database for documenting and tracking 
trafficking cases nationwide. Training on the program was conducted 
both in the capital and in several high-risk regions, and it remains 
a positive example of increased cooperation between the Gendarmerie 
and the Police in this field.  However, financial and legal issues 
threaten to derail the project: although operational for several 
months now, the center still lacks a presidential decree giving its 
work legal standing, and the financial backing for its future 
operations remains uncertain. The GOM can potentially use this 
database to report its anti-trafficking activities or statistics, 
though this has not yet occurred. 
 
 
 
ANTANANARI 00000141  006 OF 018 
 
 
25. (U) INVESTIGATION AND PROSECUTION OF TRAFFICKERS 
--------------------------------------------- ------- 
 
A. (U) In January 2008, the Malagasy Parliament adopted a law making 
trafficking in persons, sexual tourism, and sexual exploitation 
illegal.  This comprehensive law stipulates sanctions for the 
authors of such crimes, particularly when committed against 
children, and prohibits both internal and transnational forms of 
trafficking in persons including sexual and labor exploitation (see 
appendix for full text). A full inventory of trafficking laws 
includes the following: 
 
- Anti-Trafficking Law no. 2007-038 (December 2007, adopted January 
2008) 
 
- Law prohibiting all forms of violence against children (August 
2008) 
 
- Decree 2007-563 on child labor, including the worst forms of child 
labor, particularly articles 12 - 15 related to labor or sex 
trafficking 
 
- Law no. 2007-023 on Child Rights and Protection details protective 
measures connected with abuse and exploitation 
 
- Penal Code provision prohibiting pedophilia, statutory rape, and 
procurement of minors for prostitution 
 
- Penal Code [Decree 1111, (1966)] barring young adults under the 
age of eighteen from nightclubs and discotheques 
 
- Law no. 2007-022 stipulating the legal age for marriage is 18 
years for both sexes 
 
- Law no. 2003-044 of the Labor Code (July 2004) 
 
- Convention 182 on the Worst Forms of Child Labor (2003) 
 
- Optional Protocol on the Sale of Children, Child Prostitution, and 
Child Pornography (2001) 
 
- Convention 138 on the minimum working age - set to 15 years 
(2000) 
 
The ILO and UNICEF believe certain penalties related to the 
trafficking of children are considered to be inadequate to deter 
such crimes. The ILO is working with the Malagasy government to 
draft a new law with tougher sanctions. 
 
B. (U) The prescribed and imposed penalties for trafficking people 
for sexual exploitation are as follows: 
 
SEXUAL EXPLOITATION - According to Article 334 of the Penal Code, 
"Art. 334 quarter: Sexual exploitation, as defined by article 333 
ter, is punishable by five (5) to ten (10) years of imprisonment and 
a fine of four to 20 million Ariary (USD 2,000 to 10,000). Any 
perpetrator committing sexual exploitation is sentenced to forced 
labor for life if committed on a child aged below fifteen years of 
age, regardless of gender. 
 
PIMPING - According to Article 334-35 of the Penal Code, pimping 
cases involving minors and/or the use of force carry a sentence of 
five to ten years imprisonment and fines of four to 20 million 
Ariary (USD 2,000 to 10,000). Pimping of adults carries two to five 
years imprisonment with a fine of one to 10 million Ariary (USD 500 
to 5,000). If pimping is conducted by an organized group, the 
punishment is forced labor and four to 40 million Ariary (USD 2,000 
to 20,000). If torture or barbaric acts are involved, the punishment 
ranges from "forced labor" to life in prison. "Art. 334 ter: Anyone 
who hires, involves in or abducts for prostitution, an individual 
even if (s)he consents, is sentenced to two (2) to five (5) years of 
imprisonment and a fine of one to 10 million Ariary (USD 500 to 
5,000). If the violation has been committed on a child under fifteen 
years of age, regardless of gender, the perpetrator is sentenced to 
forced labor for life." 
 
PIMPING PUSH from FAMILY - Article 335.2 states that the father or 
mother or other ascendant, who encourages directly or indirectly 
 
ANTANANARI 00000141  007 OF 018 
 
 
child prostitution by letting a child live a liberal and independent 
life, thus enhancing sexual exploitation and/or tourism on the 
child, in a national or international setting, is sentenced to five 
(5) to ten (10) years of imprisonment and/or a fine of four to 20 
million Ariary (USD 2,000 to 10,000). The same sentences apply if 
the perpetrator is either the brother or the sister of the underage 
victim or any individual holding a similar position in the family, 
i.e. any individual usually or occasionally living with the child 
and having authority over the child." 
 
PORNOGRAPHY - According to Article 346-47 of the Penal Code, use of 
children in pornography carries a sentence of two to five years 
imprisonment and a fine of one to 10 million Ariary (USD 500 to 
5,000). If the child is under 15 years of age, this punishment 
increases to three to ten years of imprisonment and a fine of four 
to 20 million Ariary (USD 2,000 to 10,000). 
 
CHILD LABOR - Penalties for trafficking provisions of the Child 
Labor Law (Decree No. 2007-563) included in the Worst Forms of Child 
Labor are mostly addressed through the Penal Code including up to 
two years of imprisonment and fines up to MGA 2 million (USD 
1,000). 
 
C. (U) The law stipulates penalties for trafficking for labor 
exploitation, labor recruiters who engage in recruitment of laborers 
using knowingly fraudulent or deceptive offers, and employers who 
switch contracts without the worker's consent as a means to keep the 
worker in a state of service. Article 262 of the Labor Code 
specifies that the penalties for trafficking for labor exploitation 
and "contractual fraud" are one to three years of imprisonment and 
one to four million Ariary (USD 500 to 5,000).  While it is the 
responsibility of labor inspectors to note the infraction, open the 
investigation, and send the case to court, this rarely happens, as 
it is difficult to catch an employer in the act. 
 
D. (U) The prescribed penalties for rape or forcible sexual assault 
are as follows: 
 
RAPE - Under the Malagasy Penal Code, the minimum penalty for rape 
is five years detention.  If the rape involves a person less than 
fifteen years of age, the penalty is five years forced labor. 
 
STATUTORY RAPE - Article 331 of the Penal Code states anyone 
attempting to have non-violent sex with a child under the age of 14 
will be punished with five to ten years of imprisonment and a fine 
of two to ten million Ariary (USD 1,000 to 5,000). 
 
INCEST - Article 335.3 states that any sexual intercourse among 
close parents or siblings up to the 3rd degree, in a direct or 
collateral line, whose marriage is prohibited by the law; or any 
sexual abuse committed by the father, the mother or any other 
ascendant or any individual having authority over a child is 
considered incest.  Anyone who commits incest is sentenced to forced 
labor for life if the act is committed on a child.  In other cases 
of incest, the perpetrator is sentenced to five (5) to ten (10) 
years of imprisonment and a fine of USD 2,170 to 10,800 (4,000,000 
to 20,000,000 Ariary). 
 
E. (U) Though the new anti-trafficking law has been used in court on 
several occasions, it has not yet resulted in a prosecution.  Also, 
there were no reports during the year of arrests specifically for 
trafficking. However, traffickers may be prosecuted under provisions 
prohibiting procurement of minors for prostitution, pedophilia, 
pimping, and deceptive labor practices. 
 
A centralized database in the Criminal Analysis Center (see 23A) was 
established in September 2008 under the authority of the Secretary 
of State (now Minister) for Internal Security; it is now 
operational, but currently lacks the required legal standing for use 
in court, and is generally limited to cases in Antananarivo. 
Nevertheless, the GOM had difficulty providing information on 
specific trafficking cases.  Officials at the Ministry of Justice 
must currently call each of the 36 jurisdictions to obtain 
statistics on such cases. 
 
There were several known cases of trafficking-related prosecutions 
during the reporting period, although they did not use the specific 
anti-trafficking law. According to UNICEF, in Fort Dauphin, six 
 
ANTANANARI 00000141  008 OF 018 
 
 
child abusers were in the process of being prosecuted in 2008. In 
January 2008, a 60-year old man from Reunion was arrested for sexual 
exploitation of a minor in Nosy Be. Four other people from Reunion 
were considered accomplices and deported from the country. The 
offense took place at a French-owned establishment in Nosy Be. A 
foreign national was also imprisoned in Tamatave for sex tourism in 
September 2008. Also, three French citizens' cases for indecent 
assault or statutory rape were either dismissed or punished with 
suspended sentences, while the case of a French-Vietnamese couple 
being tried for pandering in January 2008 was dismissed for 
inability to overcome reasonable doubt. The verdict is under appeal, 
but has not yet been reexamined; the couple reportedly still 
operates a hotel in Nosy Be. 
 
Techniques such as electronic surveillance and undercover operations 
are far too costly to be used by the GOM. The Ministry of Internal 
Security established a Morals and Minors Brigade in six major cities 
(see 24B).  These specialized units respond to reports or complaints 
concerning children.  The Brigade of Morals and Minors' prosecution 
activities included conducting traditional investigations of a 
number of issues such as pimping, trafficking, and statutory rape. 
 
F. (U) The National School of Magistrates and Clerks (ENMG) recently 
included approved legislation on child protection in its curriculum 
and the training of Magistrates, and conducted various Magistrate 
trainings at the central and field levels. These efforts complement 
trainings already conducted by the Ministry of Justice. In 
collaboration with the ENMG and UNICEF, the French NGO Groupe 
Developpement conducted trafficking legislation and child protection 
trainings that benefited 216 stakeholders in four high-risk sites 
and 1,500 people nationwide. 
 
The Ministry of Justice, National Police, and Gendarmerie worked 
with UNICEF to develop training modules on child rights and 
safeguards for officials working in child protection networks. In 
June 2008, the GOM completed a one-year program to train and assist 
security forces in the protection of children, including how to 
recognize, investigate, and prosecute instances of trafficking. 
 
G. (U) The GOM is beginning to actively cooperate with other 
governments in the investigation and prosecution of trafficking 
cases. The GOM has judicial cooperative agreements with France 
(Reunion) and Mauritius that are already being used as a basis for 
multilateral TIP efforts. Also, the Police cooperated with 
neighboring countries and Interpol in the investigation and 
prosecution of trafficking cases. 
 
H. (U) The 2008 anti-trafficking law (see appendix) allows the GOM 
to extradite persons charged with trafficking in other countries and 
permits the extradition of Malagasy nationals. To date, however, the 
government has not extradited persons charged with trafficking in 
other countries, nor has it permitted extradition of Malagasy 
nationals. 
 
I. (U) There are few examples as to how the government at any level 
tolerates or is involved in trafficking.  In one specific case, 
officials in Tulear were issuing counterfeit identification cards to 
young girls.  As many as two out of three young girls in Mangil and 
Ifaty (a beach destination 30km north of Tulear) are reported to 
have fake IDs.  With increased access to night clubs, this practice 
perpetuates sexual exploitation of young girls by the foreigners or 
other wealthy locals that frequent these locations. 
 
In areas of high sex tourism, some local officials feel frustrated 
by their institution's chronic lack of funding and resources for the 
investigation and prosecution of foreign pedophiles, and therefore 
develop a certain level of tolerance. Anecdotal evidence suggests 
that local police and magistrates in tourist areas often hesitate to 
prosecute foreign pedophiles due to corruption, pressure from the 
local community, or fear of an international incident. Additionally, 
numerous unregistered and unregulated small businesses create an 
environment in which trafficking-related activities can go unnoticed 
among other economic activities. 
 
J. (U) Although some officials were punished in 2007 for colluding 
with traffickers or accepting bribes to overlook trafficking crimes, 
the Ministry of Justice was unable to report any such cases in 2008. 
 Several of the cases reported in last year's TIP report did result 
 
ANTANANARI 00000141  009 OF 018 
 
 
in suspensions being served (the district chief and the president of 
the tribunal in Nosy Be, and the president of the tribunal in Fort 
Dauphin) or officials being relocated (as in the case of a 
prosecutor in Fort Dauphin), but no more severe punishments or new 
cases have been reported. 
 
K. (U) Prostitution is not a crime, though the legal minimum age is 
15 years. However, related activities, such as pimping, are illegal 
with greater punishment if conducted by an organized group or if 
torture or barbaric acts are involved. Only clients of underage 
prostitutes can be prosecuted. Perpetrators who commit sexual 
tourism can be prosecuted with more harsh sentences if committed on 
a child less than fifteen years of age. There is a regulation 
(Decree 1111, (1966), of the Malagasy Penal Code) barring those 
under the age of eighteen from nightclubs and discotheques and 
subjecting offending owners to fines and jail terms. The regulation 
is not enforced uniformly due to lack of capacity and resources. 
 
L. (U) The government provided pre-deployment anti-trafficking 
training to the 16 Malagasy soldiers deployed as part of a 
peacekeeping mission in Sudan.  There were no reports of Malagasy 
soldiers engaging in severe forms of trafficking while on mission. 
 
M. (U) Madagascar has confirmed a child sex tourism problem.  The 
GOM was unable to provide statistics as to the total number of 
foreign pedophiles prosecuted during the year, though the 
traditional countries of origin for sex tourists include: Mauritius, 
Reunion, France, Italy, Spain, Germany, and Switzerland.  The 
Embassy is aware of at least one major case in Nosy Be of a foreign 
pedophile (from Reunion) prosecuted in 2008, with others kicked out 
of the country. 
 
26. (U) PROTECTION AND ASSISTANCE TO VICTIMS 
-------------------------------------------- 
 
A. (U) A July 2004 UNICEF project proposal states that "the 
government social welfare system is extremely limited due to a lack 
of human resources with relevant background and experience, the lack 
of government budget for activities, and low government salaries. 
Most welfare services are provided by international and local NGOs 
(like UNICEF)."  While much of this still holds true, the GOM has 
made steady progress since 2004 to rescue victims and assist their 
reintegration. 
 
A Child Rights Protection Network, which operates at the commune 
level, was created by the Ministry of Health and Family Planning, 
with support from UNICEF.  In 2008, the network grew to include 65 
communes (up from 14 in 2007), and UNICEF hopes to include the 
participation of over 200 communes by the end of 2009.  The Network 
supports the coordination of several local level children's rights 
and protection entities, including the police, the gendarmerie, the 
Ministries of Education and Justice, and local authorities. The 
Network works to identify abuse cases and assures that victims have 
access to the appropriate social services available in each area. In 
addition, all stakeholders play a role in monitoring and reporting 
child rights violations and responding to the needs of the child. In 
Antananarivo, the "fiansos", or child protection networks, and the 
"celles de veille" (monitoring networks) are made up of neighborhood 
representatives that identify and follow child abuse cases 
(including potential trafficking victims) and inform the village 
chiefs. 
 
B. (U) USG assistance to Catholic Relief Services (CRS) and PACT 
have resulted in the development of four Welcome Centers in 
Antananarivo, Tamatave, Tulear and Nosy Be, which provide shelter, 
counseling, and reintegration assistance to victims of child abuse 
and trafficking. Children are sometimes placed with foster families 
as an emergency shelter and short-term housing arrangement. In 
addition, civil society, NGOs, and churches made their premises 
available for Child Protection Network activities - to be used as 
listening and emergency centers for victims of trafficking. PACT 
plans to establish emergency shelters for child trafficking victims. 
Personnel at these centers will help place children back in schools, 
provide professional training, and support vulnerable families by 
coordinating microfinance opportunities or income-generating 
activities. The GOM does not fund or operate any of these centers. 
 
 
 
ANTANANARI 00000141  010 OF 018 
 
 
The Ministries of Justice and Health and Family Planning 
collaborated to establish counseling centers in Antananarivo and 
Fianarantsoa for adult and child victims of a range of abuses, 
including sexual and commercial exploitation. The GOM has also 
established two Provincial Child Labor Monitoring Units in Diego 
Suarez and Antananarivo; it is seeking resources to staff a third 
unit in Tulear. 
 
C. (U) The GOM does not provide funding at the central or regional 
levels to support social, medical, or legal services for victims of 
trafficking.  However, assistance provided by the GOM was in kind - 
technical assistance, office space, etc. to NGOs and IOs. The ILO, 
one of the biggest donors to the Ministry of Labor, directly funded 
NGOs to provide protection services for child labor and trafficking 
victims. The USG (via USAID and DOL) and UNICEF provided a large 
proportion of the funding for trafficking victim services. 
 
Welcome Center physicians provided medical and psychological 
counseling services, while Ministry of Labor inspectors taught 
job-finding skills to rescued victims. The GOM provides shelter, 
counseling, and reintegration assistance for victims through 
counseling and Welcome Centers, funded by donors through the GOM's 
Public Investors Program (PIP). While the GOM provides legal 
protection for victims, it does not provide physical protection 
outside of the Welcome Centers. Post was unable to access 
information regarding the number of victims who benefited from 
Welcome Center services. 
 
The four UNICEF sites in Ambanja, Diego, Nosy Be, and Fort Dauphin 
offer trafficking victims counseling, emergency housing/fostering, 
police protection, legal services through specialized judges, and 
referral doctors who can identify cases of abuse. 
 
D. (U) The MOJ reported no foreign trafficking victims in 2008. 
 
E. (U) The GOM does not provide long-term shelter or other resources 
to victims of trafficking.  However, centers funded or run by 
UNICEF, CRS, PACT, and the GOM (through PIP) offer assistance and 
often companionship throughout the entire process from 
identification of a victim to court cases to transport home.  At 
these centers, rescued children under the age of 15 are reintroduced 
to the educational system; children over 15 receive vocational 
training and are placed with companies.  In addition, certain 
welcome centers provide reinsertion activities such as cooking and 
embroidery classes, donation of materials such as sewing machines or 
rickshaws, and school registration to help reintegrate victims of 
trafficking. 
 
In 2008, the GOM facilitated the reintegration of two young 
trafficked girls who were recovered from a protection network in 
Diego and returned to their families in Ambanja and Nosy Be. 
Services included transport back to their home towns and the means 
to enroll them in school. 
 
F. (U) The GOM does not have a formal referral process.  However, 
NGOs or IOs managing welcome centers work within a network of 
individuals committed to taking care of trafficking victims. 
Concerned citizens refer victims to centers and then the centers' 
social service personnel will determine what type of support is 
needed (counseling, medical, police, legal) and provide 
transportation and accompaniment. An established governmental 
protection network, called the Child Rights Protection Network, 
created by the Ministry of Health and Family Planning with support 
from UNICEF, operates at the commune level with a three-pronged 
approach: 1) prevention, 2) identification and 
reinsertion/rehabilitation of child victims, and 3) prosecution of 
perpetrators through law enforcement.  The coordinated effort of 
local level authorities from the police, gendarmerie, and Ministries 
of Education and Justice, act as an informal referral system. The 
need for such networks is illustrated by the increasing demand for 
services from 2007 to 2008 in all UNICEF-funded sites: child victims 
increased from 5 to 91 in Ambanja, 11 to 46 in Nosy Be, 0 to 18 in 
Fort Dauphin, and an unrecorded amount to more than 200 cases in 
Tamatave. 
 
G. (U) The new central database to track criminal cases will be 
helpful in the future in identifying trafficking victims (see 23A). 
However, as in previous years, this report relied on NGO and IO 
 
ANTANANARI 00000141  011 OF 018 
 
 
studies and reports to estimate and extrapolate the total number of 
trafficking victims. All of the identified victims were referred to 
care facilities, though there is no method of tracking who gave the 
referral, short of looking at individual records at each drop-in or 
emergency care shelter/center. The GOM did not have functioning 
government-funded assistance programs; 100% of the trafficking 
victims were assisted through NGO or IO funded centers. 
 
In 2007 and 2008, CRS project Aina ("Life" in Malagasy) identified 
24 total trafficking victims seen over the last two years and 
project Fitia ("Love") provided services to 203 trafficking victims. 
UNICEF reported the reintegration of two female trafficking victims 
in 2008.  The 2007 National Child Labor Survey conducted by ILO 
registered over 400,000 children that are involved in the "worst 
forms of child labor", of which an unknown percentage would be 
considered trafficking.  A national level estimate of the total 
number of trafficking victims in Madagascar will be available at the 
end of March 2009 from the ILO. 
 
H. (U) The GOM does not have a formal system to screen for potential 
trafficking victims among high-risk persons or those involved in the 
commercial sex trade. This is a gap that has been identified by NGOs 
and regional LABs; unfortunately, without funding it is difficult to 
move forward. Nevertheless, young girls who do not know that they 
are trafficked do not consider it trafficking. Therefore, any 
measures to screen for victims would have to involve the 
characteristics of trafficking, not the term itself. 
 
I. (U) Victims' rights are generally respected; they are not 
detained, arrested, jailed, fined, or prosecuted for violations of 
other laws. NGOs strive to respect the rights of trafficking 
victims, especially the right to confidentiality. However, despite 
NGOs' efforts to explain legal protection to women and girls, few 
lodged official complaints or sought redress when their legal rights 
were compromised due to illiteracy, cultural traditions, and 
societal intimidation. 
 
J. (U) The GOM encourages victims to assist in the investigation and 
prosecution of trafficking.  Victims may file civil suits or seek 
legal action against the traffickers, and their right to seek legal 
redress is not impeded. 
 
K. (U) UNICEF developed a "Prosecution of Perpetrators" program in 
order to train police, gendarmes, magistrates, and social workers in 
the protection of children including how to recognize incidences of 
trafficking, investigate cases, and prosecute offenders.  Training 
of the police and gendarmeries in the area of child protection was 
also linked with a US Embassy project on investigation procedures 
related to child sexual exploitation.  Individuals involved in these 
training programs received a training guide on identifying abuse, a 
module on how to listen and support child survivors of abuse and 
exploitation, and a booklet on legislation and procedures to support 
the police and judges' work. 
 
L. (U) There have been no cases of repatriated nationals who were 
victims of trafficking in 2008. 
 
M. (U) IOs and NGOs such as UNICEF, Catholic Relief Services (CRS), 
PACT, Belle Avenir (a Malagasy NGO), Groupe Developpement (a French 
NGO), and Enfants du Monde (a French NGO) have the GOM's endorsement 
to provide basic services to trafficking victims. 
 
UNICEF works in four high-risk locations: Ambanja, Diego, and Nosy 
Be in the north, and Fort Dauphin in the south to provide youths and 
their families with adequate information, education, and life skills 
to prevent them from becoming victims of abuse, exploitation, and 
trafficking. They have trained over 3,000 children, over half from 
vulnerable families. Working in coordination with the Ministry of 
Health, UNICEF expanded its financial support and technical 
assistance to child rights and protection networks from 14 to 65 
locations. These multi-sector networks bring together government 
institutions, NGOs and law enforcement officials. Their main 
activities include: monitoring cases of child abuse and reporting 
them to the authorities, raising awareness of child rights and 
protection, strengthening local coordination, assisting children and 
their families with the legal process, and providing psycho-social 
care, rehabilitation, and reintegration. 
 
 
ANTANANARI 00000141  012 OF 018 
 
 
Through Department and USAID funding, CRS worked with the Ministry 
of Justice and civil society organizations from late 2006 to 
November 2008. The two programs, Fitia and Aina (see 26G), assisted 
victims and at-risk populations in Nosy Be, Tamatave and Tulear. In 
addition, some support services were situated specifically around 
mining companies Ambatovy, QMM, and Tirinomandites. Fitia provided 
counseling and other social services to 203 trafficking victims who 
visited one of four social service centers in Tulear, Tamatave, and 
Nosy Be. Through the Fitia program, trafficking victims received 
medical, psychosocial, and/or judicial support. Project Aina was a 
two-year project that provided psychotherapy to 24 trafficking 
victims in Nosy Be and Tamatave (18 female, 6 male, 14 for sexual 
exploitation, 10 for labor exploitation). In addition, Aina's 
implementing partners were safety net centers that take in and care 
for trafficking victims. 
 
PACT Madagascar, an international non-profit funded by the USDOL, 
developed Kilonga ("Child" in Malagasy), a program started in 2008 
to fight against child labor, aiming to reach 9,000 children who 
already have been or may be at risk of being trafficked. Project 
intervention zones include the regions with the highest prevalence 
of the worst forms of child labor including Ft. Dauphin, 
Fianarantsoa, and Antsirabe in the southern half of Madagascar; 
Antananarivo, Moramanga, and Tamatave in the central highlands and 
the east; and Diego in the north. 
 
Groupe Developpement works throughout the country to provide the 
following services for young female victims of commercial sexual 
exploitation: psychosocial services, welcome center and night 
shelters, remedial education, recreational alternatives, and 
vocational training. 
 
In addition to networks of local NGOs, there are several French NGOs 
working specifically on issues affecting vulnerable children. 
Enfants du Monde implements activities focusing on child 
maltreatment and abuse, which includes trafficking. Belle Avenir 
educates youth, reintegrates vulnerable children into schools, 
coordinates a weekly trafficking film and debate, and provides 
income-generating activities for victims (i.e. sewing for females 
who were trafficked into prostitution). 
 
27. (U) PREVENTION 
------------------ 
 
(U) TIP awareness continues to increase in Madagascar through 
aggressive information campaigns reaching thousands.  In light of 
the fact that many of the young people who fall into trafficking and 
forced labor leave school prematurely and lack awareness of their 
rights and economic alternatives, the government's prevention 
campaigns took a holistic, empowering approach by addressing a 
number of related issues that play a role in the overall problem. 
Given the absence of educational or economic alternatives in most 
areas where trafficking is prevalent, awareness programs sometimes 
fall on deaf ears, though community members have started 
acknowledging that trafficking exists and can identify cases. 
 
A. (U) The Ministries of Justice, Education, Labor, Social 
Protection, and Health and Family Planning (MOHFP), were involved 
with a variety of major national TIP campaigns. 
 
World Day Against Child Labor, including trafficking and sexual 
exploitation of children, on June 12, 2008 was supplemental to 
ongoing efforts. The day presented an opportunity to reinforce 
social mobilization and deliver the message to the Malagasy public. 
In addition, starting in May 2008, a national campaign against child 
sexual exploitation and child maltreatment included key messages on 
sex tourism in its communication materials such as posters, a short 
film, and TV and radio spots. 
 
The Ministry of Health and Family Planning: The MOHFP initiated 
Local Anti-Trafficking Boards or LAB Committees that began operation 
in 2007. Because of LABS' efforts to sensitize people on TIP-related 
issues, many care centers received an increasing number of cases. In 
partnership with the NGO Groupe Developpment, the GOM established a 
national campaign against child sex tourism by printing thousands of 
copies of posters posted in hotels in the main tourist sites in the 
country.  Information was disseminated to over 40,000 tourists 
during major national events, and establishing messages in the 
 
ANTANANARI 00000141  013 OF 018 
 
 
"Passport to Madagascar" welcome booklet given to all incoming 
travelers as part of the visa process include anti-trafficking 
messages. Efforts at the local level continued to raise awareness, 
sensitize, and mobilize individuals resulting in a more proactive 
attitude by local leaders in the detection and follow-up of child 
abuse cases. 
 
The Ministry of Justice:  The Ministry of Justice, with UNDP 
support, launched a film as part of their TIP information and 
prevention campaign. The film was widely distributed to sensitize 
government, religious, and civic authorities. The Ministry of 
Justice also started to permanently provide information through the 
media and public gatherings. In collaboration with the Ministry of 
Justice, CRS televised debates on TIP-related issues; organized a 
competition with nationally and regionally famous singers; developed 
a radio soap opera competition among youths mobilizing Ministry of 
Education regional representatives, school directors, and teachers; 
created and distributed 200 copies of a TIP bulletin; and developed 
publications of 29 TIP articles in the press. In addition, peer 
education mobilized youth associations, centers, and schools. 
 
The Ministry of Labor: In May 2007, as part of the ongoing "red card 
campaign" to raise awareness about the fight against child labor, 
the government worked with the Malagasy Soccer Federation (FMF) to 
conduct awareness campaigns around the country; this campaign 
continued into 2008 with ongoing support from the FMF and ILO-IPEC. 
 
The Ministry of Youth and Sports: The Ministry of Youth and Sports 
designed an internal three-year anti-TIP action plan for 2007 to 
2009.  Its activities in 22 target zones included raising awareness 
among youth through social mobilization, radio, television, and 
training of youth educators. 
 
The Ministry of Internal Security: Working closely with parent and 
religious organizations, the Ministry of Internal Security has 
continued its educational and awareness raising campaigns on child 
exploitation, statutory rape, prostitution, and legislation 
concerning the protection of minors, with a particular focus on 
speaking to students in schools. As a result of these 
awareness-raising initiatives, officials have noticed the number of 
people stepping forward to file child-related complaints has 
significantly increased. 
 
B. (U) The GOM adequately monitors immigration and emigration 
patterns from Ivato International Airport in Antananarivo, but does 
not focus on trafficking. Madagascar is an island nation with 5,000 
kilometers of porous and unprotected coastline. However, the 
Ministry of Justice is not aware of any allegation of international 
trafficking involving Malagasy victims. 
 
Currently, border law enforcement agencies are not trained to screen 
for potential trafficking victims. However, UNICEF plans to include 
a specialized training for Air Madagascar (the national airline), 
personnel working at ports, and bus and taxi associations (the best 
opportunity for identifying victims of trafficking). 
 
C. (U) Since 2004, the President-led inter-ministerial 
anti-trafficking committee has been the principal coordination and 
communication mechanism on anti-trafficking activities at the 
central level.  The committee includes representatives from the 
Ministries of Labor, Education, Culture, Tourism, Youth and Sports, 
Defense, Justice, Health/Family Planning, Foreign Affairs, Interior, 
and Public Security. The government Committee for the Safeguard of 
Integrity (CSI) that designs anti-corruption policy and BIANCO, the 
independent anti-corruption bureau that was launched in 2004 to 
conduct investigations and implement CSI directives, are members of 
the anti-trafficking committee. 
 
In practice, however, the Ministry of Justice leads the national, 
regional, and local coordination and the follow-up of the 
implementation of the National Action Plan to Fight Violence against 
Children, including elements linked to anti-trafficking. Trafficking 
issues are also addressed by the National Committee to Combat Child 
Labor (CNLTE is the French acronym). The CNLTE features 
representatives from the GOM, NGOs, and civil society. Additionally, 
the National Social Protection and Risk Management Program is being 
finalized and includes adequate measures for the reinforcement or 
creation of systems and structures to provide early prevention, 
 
ANTANANARI 00000141  014 OF 018 
 
 
reinsertion, and rehabilitation services for children. 
 
At the regional level in high-risk trafficking zones, local 
interministerial anti-trafficking boards (LABs) coordinate 
activities and develop action plans in order to combat trafficking. 
These boards of about 20 members mirror the ministerial participants 
of the President's committee. The regional level LABs have been 
successful in improving anti-trafficking networking and social 
services. 
 
D. (U) The GOM adopted the National Action Plan to Fight Against All 
Forms of Violence against Children in December 2007, covering for 
the period from 2008 to 2011; this includes anti-trafficking 
initiatives.  The Ministry of Justice is leading the implementation 
of this action plan.  The National Action Plan to Fight Child Labor 
is a comprehensive policy, including TIP, covering the 15-year 
period from 2004 to 2019.  The GOM created the National Committee to 
Fight Child Labor (CNLTE) and its regional counterparts in October 
2004 to coordinate and implement this plan. 
 
E. (U) The GOM has taken a number of measures to reduce the demand 
for commercial sex acts.  The government continued with its national 
awareness campaign by hanging posters throughout airports and hotels 
and including a full-page warning in the customs booklet given to 
arriving international passengers warning sex tourists of the 
consequences. The government publicized the trials and convictions 
of several sexual exploiters and pedophiles to dissuade future 
would-be sex tourists. 
 
F. (U) At time of reporting, there have been no confirmed cases of 
Malagasy nationals being accused of participating in international 
child sex tourism. 
 
G. (U) Madagascar provided fewer than 100 troops to international 
peacekeeping efforts. 
 
TIP Hero 
-------- 
 
Post nominates Commissaire Mandimbin'ny Aina Mbolanoro RANDRIAMBELO, 
head of the Morals and Minors Brigade within the National Police, 
for her dedicated work in building capacity, advocating for change, 
and working with both Malagasy and international contacts to advance 
the fight against Trafficking in Persons. Ms. Randriambelo is 
extremely committed to her duties, and has the ability to motivate 
teams of people both in Antananarivo and the outer regions who make 
a difference in the country's ability to combat trafficking. She is 
the lead person within the Ministry of Internal Security working on 
this issue, and is recognized across the GOM and the international 
community for her high-profile work at the national level, and 
tireless public advocacy for this important cause. 
 
Ms. Randriambelo has been vetted through CLASS, and has no visa 
ineligibilities or otherwise derogatory information. 
 
APPENDIX: TIP LAW 
----------------- 
 
The text of the law adopted in December 2007 making trafficking 
illegal is as follows: 
 
"The National Assembly and the Senate have adopted the Law during 
their respective session on December 7, 2007, and 
December 17, 2007, with the following content: 
 
Article One.-  The present draft law is designed to: 
- implement prevention measures against trafficking in persons, 
sexual exploitation and sexual tourism 
- modify and complete some provisions of the Criminal Code so as 
to: 
 
rule over any form of trafficking in, sale of, abduction and 
exploitation of persons; prevent and fight against trafficking 
in persons; sanction traffickers; protect and assist trafficking in 
persons victims by fully respecting their basic rights, specifically 
to prevent women and children from becoming new victims. 
 
CHAPTER ONE 
 
ANTANANARI 00000141  015.2 OF 018 
 
 
ON PREVENTION 
 
Article 2.- So as to fight against trafficking in, sale of, 
abduction and exploitation of persons, including children, the 
programs, social initiatives and other measures of information, 
education and communication to be broadcasted through the media 
throughout the national territory by all authorized structures, as 
well as the measures of coverage by the Government, are determined 
by a decree issued by the Cabinet. 
 
Article 3.- The cooperation of Non-Governmental Organizations, multi 
and bilateral agencies, foreign Governments, and civil society with 
the Government must be effective for the implementation of the 
established programs and measures. 
 
Article 4.- An office, to be established within the conditions 
determined by a decree issued by the Cabinet will be in charge of 
determining the types of valid and necessary transportation 
documents, detecting the necessary means and methods used by any 
individual or group to organize the trafficking of persons. 
 
CHAPTER II 
MODIFICATIONS OF THE CRIMINAL CODE 
 
Article 5.- After article 331, an article numbered 331 bis is 
included and worded as follow: 
 
"Art. 331 bis: Anyone violating morals by exciting, enhancing or 
facilitating, in order to satisfy anyone's passions, debauchery, 
corruption or child prostitution regardless of gender, is sentenced 
to forced labor for life." 
 
Article 6.- After article 333 bis, three articles numbered 333 ter, 
333 quarter and 333 quinto are included and worded as follows: 
 
"Art. 333 ter: 
 
1. A child is defined as a human being aged below eighteen years 
old. 
 
2. The phrase "trafficking in persons" refers to the hiring, 
transportation, transfer, accommodation or welcoming of persons 
through threats or use of force or other forms of constraint, 
abduction, fraud, deceit, oppression or abuse of a situation of 
vulnerability, or by offering or accepting payments of benefits in 
order to have the consent of a person having authority over another 
person for the purpose of exploitation or illegal adoption of a 
child by an individual called trafficker. 
 
3. Exploitation includes the exploitation of the prostitution of any 
individual or other forms of sexual exploitation, non-compensated 
work, forced labor or services, domestic work by children, slavery 
or any practices similar to slavery, servitude or organ retrieval. 
 
4. Sexual exploitation of a child, regardless of gender, for 
commercial purposes refers to the action through which an adult 
obtains services from a child to have sexual intercourse in exchange 
for a compensation or a benefit in kind or in cash given to the 
child or to one or several third parties as provided in articles 334 
to 335 bis of the Criminal Code, with or without the child's 
consent. 
 
5. Sexual tourism refers to the fact that a native or a foreigner is 
on travel, regardless of the purpose, and has sexual intercourse in 
exchange for a financial compensation or any other benefits with 
children or prostitutes, these latter themselves looking for sexual 
intercourse in order to obtain any benefit. 
 
6. Pornography featuring children refers to any representation, 
regardless of the means, of a child performing explicit sexual 
activities, genuine or simulated, or any representation of a child's 
sexual organs, for mainly sexual purposes. 
 
7. The phrase "sale of children" refers to any action or transaction 
requiring the transfer of a child from a person or a group of 
persons to another person or another group of persons in exchange 
for compensation or any benefit. 
 
 
ANTANANARI 00000141  016 OF 018 
 
 
The displacement or non-return of a child is considered as illegal 
when there has been a violation of custody rights allocated to an 
individual, an institution or any other organization, alone or 
jointly, according to the law applicable in the State where the 
child had his/her usual residence immediately before his/her 
displacement or non-return." 
 
"Art. 333 quarter: Trafficking in persons, including children, as 
well as sexual tourism and incest, constitute violations. 
 
Is considered as a child trafficker: 
 
1. Anyone who hires a child, transports him/her, transfers him/her, 
or accommodates him/her in exchange for compensation or any other 
benefit of promise of compensation or benefit, so as to make him/her 
available to a third party -- even unidentified, in order to allow 
the said child to suffer the violations provided for and sentenced 
by articles 334 and following on sexual aggressions and attacks, 
exploitation of mendacity, working or accommodation conditions 
against his/her dignity, even if they use none of the means 
stipulated in article 333 ter; 
 
2. Anyone who proceeds to the illegal transportation and sale of 
children, regardless of the form and the purpose, namely sexual 
exploitation, forced labor, slavery, practices similar to slavery 
and servitude, with or without the victim's consent; 
 
3. Anyone who, knowing for a fact the existence of pimping, sexual 
exploitation or sexual tourism, fails to disclose or notify the 
facts to the relevant authorities, in compliance with the provisions 
of article 69 and 70 of the law No. 2007-023 of August 20, 2007, on 
children's rights and protection, is considered as an accomplice. 
 
Acts of participation are considered as separate violations." 
 
"Art. 333 quinto: The consent of victims of trafficking in persons 
for exploitation is considered null and void, when any of the means 
listed in article 333 quarter in used." 
 
Article 7.- After article 334 bis, three articles numbered 334 ter, 
334 quarter and 334 quinto are inserted and are worded as follows: 
 
"Art. 334 ter: Anyone who hires, involves in or abducts for 
prostitution, an individual even if (s)he consents, is sentenced to 
two (2) to five (5) years of imprisonment and a fine of USD 540 to 
5,400 (1,000,000 to 10,000,000 Ariary). 
 
If the violation has been committed on a child under fifteen years 
of age, regardless of gender, the perpetrator is sentenced to forced 
labor for life." 
 
"Art. 334 quarter: Sexual exploitation, as defined by article 333 
ter, is punishable by five (5) to ten (10) years of imprisonment and 
a fine of USD 2,170 to 10,800 (4,000,000 to 20,000,000 Ariary). 
 
Any perpetrator committing sexual exploitation is sentenced to 
forced labor for life if committed on a child aged below fifteen 
years of age, regardless of gender. 
 
If the sexual exploitation is committed for commercial purposes on a 
child aged below eighteen years of age, the perpetrator is sentenced 
to forced labor for life." 
 
"Art. 334 quinto: Anyone who has sexual intercourse with a child in 
exchange for any form of compensation or benefit is sentenced to two 
(2) to five (5) years of imprisonment and a fine of USD 540 to 5,400 
(1,000,000 to 10,000,000 Ariary). 
 
Any attempt to commit this crime is subject to the same sentences." 
 
Article 8.- After article 335, nine (9) articles numbered 335.1, 
335.2, 335.3, 335.4, 335.5, 335.6, 335.7, 335.8, 335.9 are included 
and are worded as follow: 
 
"Art. 335.1: Any perpetrator who commits sexual tourism, as defined 
by article 2, 4' of the present law, is sentenced to five (5) to ten 
(10) year of imprisonment and a fine of USD 2,170 to 10,800 
(4,000,000 to 20,000,000 Ariary). 
 
ANTANANARI 00000141  017 OF 018 
 
 
 
Any perpetrator who commits sexual tourism is sentenced to forced 
labor for life if committed on a child below fifteen tears of age, 
regardless of gender. 
 
Pornography featuring children, regardless of representation and 
means, or the detention of pornographic materials involving children 
is subject to the sentences provided for by article 334 of the 
Criminal Code." 
 
"Art. 335.2: The father or mother or other ascendant, who encourages 
directly or indirectly child prostitution by letting a child live a 
liberal and independent life, thus enhancing sexual exploitation 
and/or tourism on the child, in a national or international setting, 
is sentenced to five (5) to ten (10) year of imprisonment and/or a 
fine of USD 2,170 to 10,800 (4,000,000 to 20,000,000 Ariary). 
 
The same sentences apply if the perpetrator is either the brother or 
the sister of the underage victim or any individual holding a 
similar position in the family, i.e. any individual usually or 
occasionally living with the child and having authority over the 
child." 
 
"Art. 335.3: Any sexual intercourse among close parents or siblings 
up to 3rd degrees, in a direct or collateral line, whose marriage is 
prohibited by the law; or any sexual abuse committed by the father, 
the mother or any other ascendant or any individual having authority 
over a child is considered incest. 
 
Anyone who commits incest is sentenced to forced labor for life if 
the act is committed on a child. 
 
In other cases of incest, the perpetrator is sentenced to five (5) 
to ten (10) year of imprisonment and a fine of USD 2,170 to 10,800 
(4,000,000 to 20,000,000 Ariary). 
 
"Art. 335.4: Anyone who has violated the rules set forth by the 
provisions of adoption law in order to commit an illegal adoption, a 
fact that constitutes trafficking in persons, shall be sentenced to 
forced labor for life." 
 
"Art. 335.5: Any attempt of trafficking in persons, sexual 
exploitation in any form, sexual tourism and incest that has been 
manifested by the beginning of a completion, even if it has not been 
suspended or if it only missed its effects because of circumstances 
independent from the perpetrator's willingness, is considered as an 
action in itself and shall be subject to the same sentences." 
 
"Art. 335.6: The child victim of violations related to trafficking 
in persons, sexual exploitation, sexual tourism and incest can, at 
any time, notify or apply to the public prosecution or any other 
competent authority, on the facts committed to him/her and claim 
damages for the prejudice suffered." 
 
"Art. 335.7: Concerning violations related to trafficking in 
persons, sexual exploitation, sexual tourism and incest committed on 
a child, the prescription period of the legal proceedings starts 
only after the date on which the child reaches eighteen years of 
age. 
 
In case the perpetrator is detained prior to the trial, the deposit 
of guaranty bond as provided by articles 346 and following of the 
Criminal procedure code may not be used." 
 
"Art. 335. 8: The sentences provided for the violations of 
trafficking, sexual exploitation, sexual tourism and incest 
committed on a child are pronounced immediately, regardless of the 
means used to exploit or abuse the victim." 
 
"Art. 335. 9.- The sentences pronounced for the crimes related to 
the violations on trafficking in persons, sexual exploitation, 
sexual tourism and incest committed on a child may not be 
deferred." 
 
Article. 9.- After article 335 bis, three articles numbered 335 ter, 
335 quarter and 335 quinto, are included and are worded as follows: 
 
"Art. 335 ter: Nationals and individuals having residence in 
 
ANTANANARI 00000141  018 OF 018 
 
 
Madagascar and who are involved in trafficking in persons, sexual 
exploitation and sexual tourism in other countries are persecuted 
and sentenced according to the provisions of the Criminal Code." 
 
"Art. 335 quarter: The requests for extradition for individuals 
searched for a legal procedure in a foreign State are completed for 
violations provided for in the present law or so as to help execute 
a sentence related to such violation. 
 
The procedures and principles provided by the extradition treaty in 
effect between the requesting State and Madagascar are applied. 
 
In the absence of extradition treaty or legislative provisions, the 
extradition is completed according to the procedure and in 
compliance with the principles determined by the typical extradition 
treaty adopted by the General Assembly of the United Nations in its 
resolution 45/116." 
 
CHAPTER III 
FINAL PROVISIONS 
 
Article 10.- Regulatory texts will be drafted to implement the 
present law. 
 
Article 11.- The present Law shall be published in the Official 
Journal of the Republic of Madagascar. 
 
It shall be executed as a State law." 
 
MARQUARD