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Viewing cable 09BERN93, TIP - SWITZERLAND: ANNUAL ANTI-TRAFFICKING IN PERSONS

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Reference ID Created Released Classification Origin
09BERN93 2009-03-02 16:35 2011-08-26 00:00 UNCLASSIFIED//FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY Embassy Bern
VZCZCXRO7006
PP RUEHAG RUEHAST RUEHDA RUEHDBU RUEHDF RUEHFL RUEHIK RUEHKW RUEHLA
RUEHLN RUEHLZ RUEHNP RUEHPOD RUEHROV RUEHSK RUEHSR RUEHVK RUEHYG
DE RUEHSW #0093/01 0611635
ZNR UUUUU ZZH
P 021635Z MAR 09
FM AMEMBASSY BERN
TO RUEHC/SECSTATE WASHDC PRIORITY 5675
INFO RUEHZL/EUROPEAN POLITICAL COLLECTIVE
RHMFIUU/DEPT OF JUSTICE WASHINGTON DC
RUEHC/DEPT OF LABOR WASHINGTON DC
RUEATRS/DEPT OF TREASURY WASHINGTON DC
RHMCSUU/DEPT OF HOMELAND SECURITY WASHINGTON DC
RUEHZL/EUROPEAN POLITICAL COLLECTIVE
UNCLAS SECTION 01 OF 13 BERN 000093 
 
SENSITIVE, SIPDIS 
 
DEPT FOR G/TIP (J.DONNELLY/A.ROFMAN), INL, DRL, PRM, IWI, 
EUR/PGI (J.BUCKNEBERG), EUR/CE (J.LUNA) 
 
DEPT PLEASE PASS USAID 
 
E.O. 12958: N/A 
TAGS: PHUM KTIP KCRM KWMN SMIG KFRD PREF ELAB SZ
SUBJECT: TIP - SWITZERLAND: ANNUAL ANTI-TRAFFICKING IN PERSONS 
REPORT 
 
REF:  STATE 132759 
 
I. SUMMARY OF NEW DEVELOPMENTS 
------------------------------ 
 
(U) Switzerland continued to make substantial progress in its 
anti-trafficking-in-persons practices and achievements, 
investigating and prosecuting TIP cases vigorously.  In 2008, 
federal and cantonal (state) police led at least 26 
investigations on trafficking or trafficking-related offenses. 
With regard to prosecutions, data for 2007 show that Swiss 
courts convicted at least 25 individuals for trafficking or 
trafficking-related offenses. (Note:  The official data for 2008 
convictions will be available from the federal statistics office 
in August.  End Note)   Punishments for convicted TIP offenders 
in 2007 ranged from fines to unsuspended prison sentences of up 
to four years.  To further improve the process for gathering 
statistics on investigations and prosecutions, the 26 cantons 
decided to harmonize cantonal recording and reporting practices 
by 2010.  The government cooperated with other governments in 
the investigation and prosecution of trafficking and 
trafficking-related offenses. 
 
(U) On the legal front, the Penal Code defines human trafficking 
more comprehensively since 2007.    Human trafficking, forced 
prostitution of minors, and child sexual abuse can also be 
prosecuted in Switzerland regardless of where the crime was 
committed. 
 
(U) Protection: The government enacted new protective measures 
for TIP victims.  The number of TIP victims referred by Swiss 
authorities to assistance centers for victims of crime rose from 
90 in 2006 to 128 in 2007. 
 
(U) Efforts to improve the legal protections of TIP victims 
continued.  In 2008, the government amended the Federal Law on 
Foreigners, thereby reinforcing the legal framework in which 
cantons can provide TIP victims stays of deportation proceedings 
to recover from their trauma and weigh participation in judicial 
proceedings.  The law further allows the federal government to 
logistically and financially assist trafficking victims and 
witnesses, for whom a return is acceptable, in the re- 
integration in their countries of origin.  The government also 
revised the Federal Victims Assistance Law.  The revision, which 
entered into force on January 1, 2009, enhances crime victims' 
right to emergency protections and allows cantons to pool 
resources to establish regional victim assistance centers 
specializing in certain types of crime (e.g. TIP). 
 
(U) On September 8, 2008, the Swiss government signed the 
Council of Europe's Convention on Human Trafficking.  The 
government is expected to submit a bill for the ratification of 
the Convention to the Parliament in 2009.  Experts assess that 
current Swiss law largely meets the requirements of the 
Convention, with some adjustments still required in the area of 
witness protection. 
 
(U) Prevention: Swiss government agencies continued to fund 
several prevention and protection programs abroad.  In 
conjunction with the 2008 European Soccer Cup co-hosted by 
Switzerland in June, the government provided $96,000 to an NGO- 
led advertising campaign to raise awareness among the visitors 
to the tournament and the public of the extent and the 
consequences of trafficking in persons.  The campaign targeted 
male customers of commercial sexual services, calling on them to 
help potential victims of trafficking get access to aid 
organizations. 
 
(U) The Federal Criminal Police established in September 2008 a 
mechanism to allow travel agencies and individual persons to tip 
off law enforcement bodies about child sex tourists. 
Switzerland pursued a zero-tolerance policy regarding sexual 
exploitation by personnel serving in international peace-keeping 
missions.  All civil and military persons serving in peace- 
keeping missions are subject to the Code of Conduct of the UN 
(and/or NATO-PfP respectively) and undergo specific awareness 
raising training before deployment. 
 
II. THE COUNTRYQS TIP SITUATION 
------------------------------- 
 
 
BERN 00000093  002 OF 013 
 
 
(U) A. The Swiss Federal Office of Statistics and the Swiss 
Federal Office of Police collect data on TIP and TIP-related 
crimes.  Useful NGO information also is available, particularly 
with regard to assistance provided to victims of TIP crimes. 
Because Switzerland has a federalized system in which 26 cantons 
have primary and largely independent authority for law 
enforcement, national data collection is a more cumbersome 
process than in centralized states.  Moreover, data on 
convictions and sentences often changes until judicial appeals 
processes have run their course, which can take 18 months or 
more.   To further improve the process for gathering statistics 
on investigations and prosecutions, the 26 cantons decided to 
harmonize cantonal recording and reporting practices 
by 2010. 
 
(SBU) The Federal Office of Police Coordination Unit against the 
Trafficking of Persons and Smuggling of Migrants (KSMM) remains 
the best source for authoritative TIP data.  While the KSMM 
routinely draws on its relationships with cantonal authorities 
to obtain TIP-related data, KSMM contacts have spearheaded 
efforts to harmonize the reporting of TIP data from the cantons 
to the Federal Office for Statistics, with a view to generating 
TIP data that is as comprehensive and authoritative as possible. 
In the context of this effort, the KSMM actively has solicited 
post's input, and even invited post's TIP POC to attend a KSMM 
meeting with representatives of the Federal Office of 
Statistics. 
 
(U) B. Switzerland is primarily a country of destination for 
persons being trafficked, almost exclusively women, but transit 
also occurs.  Trafficking occurs both across borders and within 
the country.  Swiss officials estimate the number of trafficking 
victims at a few hundred per year. Several cantons (states), 
including Zurich, Geneva, Basel, Bern, Vaud, and Ticino, 
recorded an increase in the number of registered prostitutes and 
commercial sex establishments.  Federal Police assess that the 
total number of potential trafficking victims currently living 
in Switzerland is between 1,500 and 3,000.  The great majority 
of trafficking victims are forced into nude dancing and 
prostitution.  Trafficking for the purpose of labor exploitation 
as domestic servants also occurs but is very limited. 
 
(U) C. In some cases, victims are subjected to physical and 
sexual violence, threats to themselves or their families or 
both, drugs, withholding of documents, and incarceration. 
Police estimates suggest that up to 50 percent of illegal 
prostitutes' gross income is paid to brothel owners and 
traffickers who organize the passage and entry to Switzerland. 
While the majority of TIP victims still are found in Swiss urban 
areas, in recent years police and NGOs increasingly have 
encountered TIP victims working in contact bars in more rural 
areas. 
 
(U) D. Both Federal Police and NGO sources noted an increase in 
2007/2008 in the number of young women being trafficked into 
Switzerland for sexual exploitation from Eastern Europe, 
particularly Romania.  TIP victims in Switzerland typically come 
from Eastern Europe and the former Soviet Union (Hungary, 
Poland, Bulgaria, Slovakia, Czech Republic, Slovenia, Romania, 
Ukraine, Moldova), Latin America (Brazil, Dominican Republic), 
Asia (Thailand, Cambodia), and to a lesser extent from Africa 
(Nigeria, Cameroon).  The Zurich-based Information Center for 
Women from Africa, Latin America, and Eastern Europe (FIZ) 
reported that roughly 50 percent of the 167 TIP victims 
counseled in 2008 came from Eastern Europe, another 27 percent 
from Latin America, about 14 percent from Asia, and the 
remaining 9 percent from Africa. 
 
(U) E. Trafficking into the country is primarily performed by 
individuals and small groups related through ethnic, clan, or 
family ties, as well as, occasionally, organized criminals. 
Federal Police have reported that traffickers are increasingly 
well organized with far-reaching international networks.  Often, 
the perpetrators and victims are from the same cities and 
regions.  In addition to men, women also play a role in the 
recruitment, intermediary, or exploitation process.  How many 
trafficking victims were lured into Switzerland under false 
pretenses and how many were brought in fully aware that they 
were going to engage in prostitution in Switzerland is unclear, 
but under Swiss law both are punishable as human trafficking. 
 
 
BERN 00000093  003 OF 013 
 
 
III. SETTING THE SCENE FOR THE GOVERNMENTQS 
ANTI-TIP EFFORTS 
------------------------------------------- 
 
(U) A. Government officials at the highest level acknowledge 
that trafficking is a problem.  On September 8, 2008, the Swiss 
government signed the Council of Europe's Convention on Human 
Trafficking.  The government is expected to submit a bill for 
the ratification of the Convention to the Parliament in 2009. 
Experts assess that current Swiss law largely meets the 
requirements of the Convention, with some adjustments still 
required in the area of witness protection.  The cantons were 
consulted in advance on the matter, supported the signing 
of the Convention, and reported to the federal government that 
they were ready to perform the tasks required by its 
implementation. 
 
(U) B. The Federal Office of Police (BAP) is the federal 
government's primary actor in anti-trafficking efforts.  The 
BAP's Federal Criminal Police handles international cooperation 
and investigations of organized crime; the Service for Analysis 
and Prevention, i.e. the domestic intelligence service, does 
strategic analysis of information.  The Federal Office of Police 
also hosts the Coordination Unit against the Trafficking of 
Persons and Smuggling of Migrants (KSMM), which is the federal 
government's interdepartmental body to coordinate and monitor 
anti-trafficking efforts.  The KSMM develops anti-TIP strategies 
and policies in consultation with its constituting ministries 
that retain final responsibility for their implementation. 
 
(U) The prosecution of illegal prostitution (i.e. prostitution 
without a valid work permit) and trafficking of persons normally 
falls under the jurisdiction of cantonal police and judicial 
authorities.  However, cases linked to organized crime fall 
under the authority of the federal authorities to investigate 
and prosecute.  The Federal Office of Migration has the lead in 
easing the return of trafficking victims and assisting in their 
re-integration in their home societies. 
 
(U) The following government agencies are represented on the 
Steering Committee of the KSMM, taking active part in the fight 
against human trafficking: 
Federal Level: 
-- Ministry of Foreign Affairs 
   - Political Division IV (Human Security) 
   - Directorate for International Law 
   - International Development Cooperation 
-- Finance Ministry 
   - Swiss Border Guards 
-- Ministry for Justice and Police 
   - Office of the Prosecutor General 
   - Federal Office for Migration 
   - Federal Office of Justice 
   - Federal Office of Police 
-- Economics Ministry 
   - Directorate of Labor 
Cantonal (i.e. state) Level: 
-- National Conference of Cantonal Chiefs of Police 
-- National Conference of Prosecuting Offices 
-- National Conference of Equal Opportunity Offices 
-- National Conference of Victims Assistance Centers 
-- National Conference of Cantonal Migration Offices 
NGOs/IOs: 
-- Information Center for Women from Africa, Latin America, and 
Eastern Europe (FIZ), Zurich 
-- International Organization for Migration, Bern 
-- Foundation Terre des Hommes, Lausanne 
 
(U) C. In general, criminal cases against traffickers are not 
pursued (for lack of evidence) unless their victims are willing 
to testify.  Federal and cantonal police and immigration 
authorities follow a policy of granting potential TIP victims a 
stay of deportation proceedings to give them time to recover 
from their trauma and to let them freely decide whether to 
participate in judicial proceedings against their tormentors. 
On January 1, 2008, the New Federal Law on Foreigners became 
effective, which gives special protection to TIP victims or 
witnesses who testify against their traffickers and regulates 
their stay during and after judicial proceedings. 
 
(U) A number of major urban centers and suburban cantons have 
 
BERN 00000093  004 OF 013 
 
 
established written agreements on a referral process for TIP 
victims in the context of regular roundtable meetings between 
NGOs and cantonal justice, police, and immigration authorities. 
As a direct result of the federal regulations to stay 
deportation proceedings and the better local cooperation between 
NGOs and law enforcement officials, the number of TIP victims 
willing to testify against their traffickers has risen 
considerably. 
 
(U) D. The Federal Office of Police's Coordination Unit against 
the Trafficking in Persons and Smuggling of Migrants (KSMM) is 
the federal government's main coordinating and monitoring body 
of its anti-trafficking efforts.  Through its coordinating role, 
the KSMM keeps abreast of anti-trafficking efforts on all fronts 
(prevention, victim protection, and prosecution) both at the 
federal and cantonal level.  In addition, its remit includes 
monitoring of parliamentary ratification of international 
conventions and offering expert advice on trafficking-relevant 
legislative reform. 
 
(U) The KSMM has made available its assessment of Swiss anti- 
trafficking efforts to the Council of Europe, the OSCE, and the 
UN.  The Federal Police's Service for Analysis and Prevention, 
i.e. the government's domestic intelligence service, does 
strategic analysis of human trafficking in and throughout 
Switzerland and publishes its findings in the Federal Office of 
Police's annual report on homeland security. 
 
IV. INVESTIGATION AND PROSECUTION OF TRAFFICKERS 
--------------------------------------------- ---- 
 
(U) A. The Swiss Penal Code has two articles specifically 
prohibiting trafficking in persons: Article 182, effective since 
December 1, 2006, stipulates that anyone acting as the supplier, 
broker, or buyer in the trafficking of a human being for the 
purposes of sexual exploitation, labor exploitation, or to 
remove a body organ shall be liable to imprisonment or a fine, 
or both.  The act of recruiting an individual for the purposes 
aforementioned also qualifies as trafficking and is liable to 
the same punishment.  If the trafficking victim is a minor under 
18 years of age or if the perpetrator repeatedly engages in 
human trafficking, the minimum penalty is a prison sentence of 
one year.  Article 182 applies universally; traffickers are 
subject to prosecution in Switzerland even if the act of 
trafficking was committed abroad, and regardless of whether 
trafficking is a crime in the foreign country where the act took 
place. 
 
(U) Article 195 prohibits the promotion of prostitution and 
states that anyone inducing a person into prostitution by 
abusing a situation of dependency or promising pecuniary 
advantage, anyone impairing a prostitute's freedom of movement 
by checking on the activities in question or fixing the place, 
time or extent or any other circumstances of the prostitution, 
or anyone secluding a person for prostitution shall be liable to 
imprisonment. 
 
(U) Other forms of trafficking or exploitation of human beings 
are implicitly covered by the Penal Code's provisions against 
threat, coercion, deprivation of personal liberty, and 
kidnapping (Articles 180, 181, 183).  The Immigration and 
Naturalization Law penalizes facilitating the illegal 
immigration of foreigners into Switzerland as well as the 
employment of foreigners without proper work permission.  The 
Constitution implicitly bans forced or compulsory labor. 
Article 27 provides for economic freedom and explicitly 
guarantees the right to choose freely one's profession as well 
as unrestrained access to and unencumbered exercise of a gainful 
occupation.  Forced or bonded labor by children is explicitly 
forbidden under Article 30 of the 1964 Labor Act. 
 
(U) B. The maximum sentence for trafficking in persons for 
sexual exploitation is a prison term of twenty years (Penal Code 
Article 182).  Coercing someone into prostitution or restricting 
a prostitute's personal freedom (Penal Code Article 195) can 
carry a prison sentence of up to ten years. 
 
(U) C. Under Penal Code Article 182 the penalties prescribed for 
trafficking for labor exploitation are the same as for 
trafficking for sexual exploitation.  The minimum penalty is a 
fine; if the victim was a minor under 18 years of age, the 
 
BERN 00000093  005 OF 013 
 
 
minimum penalty is a one-year prison sentence.  Maximum penalty 
is 20 years in prison.  Article 182 explicitly prohibits all 
acts related to labor trafficking - recruitment, supply, 
transfer, or the receipt of persons being trafficked.  Thus, 
both the labor recruiters in labor source countries and the 
employers or labor agents in labor destination countries are 
subject to prosecution in Switzerland.  Article 182 applies 
universally; labor recruiters are subject to prosecution in 
Switzerland, even if the act was committed in a foreign country 
where labor trafficking may not constitute a criminal offense. 
 
(U) D. The Penal Code also punishes rape, forcible sexual 
assault, and other sex crimes.  Sexual activity with minors 
(Article 187) and sexual acts with dependent persons (Article 
188) are punishable with up to five years imprisonment; sexual 
coercion (Article 189), rape (Article 190), and sexual 
violations of mentally or physically incapacitated persons 
(Article 191) are liable to a maximum ten year prison sentence; 
sexual acts with detainees (Article 192) and taking advantage of 
a person's distress or dependency due to employment or any other 
condition to induce a sexual act or acceptance thereof (Article 
193) carry a maximum penalty of imprisonment for up to three 
years. 
 
(U) E. The investigation and prosecution of forced prostitution 
and human trafficking as well as the protection of victims in 
Switzerland normally fall under the jurisdiction of the cantons, 
and national statistics lag by 6-18 months. 
 
Investigations & Prosecutions 
----------------------------- 
 
(U) Under Switzerland's federal structure, the cantons hold 
jurisdiction over most criminal infractions, and statistical 
records of reported crime and police investigations vary greatly 
from canton to canton.  In 2007, the inter-cantonal Working 
Group on Human Trafficking and Migrant Smuggling established a 
database on the ongoing investigations and prosecutions on 
suspicion of human trafficking or forced prostitution in the 
cantons. Cantonal authorities report ongoing 
investigations/prosecutions on a voluntary basis.  The data base 
is maintained by the Human Trafficking/Migrant Smuggling 
Investigative Unit of the Federal Criminal Police, which also 
coordinates inter-cantonal and international trafficking 
investigations.  According to this developing database, there 
were at least 26 police investigations or prosecutions during 
2008 for human trafficking for the purposes of sexual or labor 
exploitation. 
 
CONVICTIONS 
------------------------------------ 
Year Art. 196/182 Art. 195   Total 
------------------------------------ 
 
1999       7          14          21 
2000       5          17          22 
2001       2          17          19 
2002       2          11          13 
2003       7           6          13 
2004       2          12          14 
2005      12          15          27 
2006       5          14          19 
2007      18          17          35 
 
(U) (Note:  Swiss Federal Police contacts inform us that 
statistics for 2008 will be available in August.  End Note) 
 
(U) In 2007, 25 individuals were convicted in charges brought 
for a total of 35 TIP offenses.  Penalties for 2007 convictions 
ranged between 5 months suspended prison sentences to 4 years 
prison sentences; in addition the traffickers received fines 
ranging from $86(100 Swiss francs) to $18,292 (21,250 Swiss 
francs).  The courts also convicted traffickers to pay a maximum 
of $ 12,912 (15,000 Swiss francs) in moral damages. 
 
(U) F. Investigators of the Federal Criminal Police receive 
specialized training in investigating incidences of organized 
crime, including human trafficking.  Under the 2001 Efficiency 
Bill, the Federal Criminal Police obtained from the cantons the 
jurisdiction to investigate and prosecute more complex cases of 
human trafficking that span several cantons or are linked to 
 
BERN 00000093  006 OF 013 
 
 
organized crime.  The Federal Criminal Police also handles 
international cooperation in the investigation of incidences of 
human trafficking. 
 
(U) G. The Swiss government readily cooperates with other 
governments in the investigation and prosecution of trafficking 
cases.  The Federal Criminal Police takes part in the expert 
working groups of both Europol and Interpol. 
 
(U) Switzerland has a bilateral cooperation accord between 
Europol and the Swiss Police, allowing the latter to obtain 
information from Europol's intelligence files on organized 
crime, drug trafficking and terrorism.  Under the terms of the 
agreement, Swiss Federal Police have assigned to The Hague a 
liaison officer whose role is to support and coordinate the 
cooperation between Switzerland and other EU countries.  There 
is also a Swiss Police liaison at the headquarters of Interpol. 
 
(U) On October 15, 2008, Switzerland and Eurojust, an EU agency 
based in the Hague dealing with judicial co-operation, agreed to 
strengthen cooperation beyond the existing 2006 bilateral 
cooperation agreement in the fight against international crime. 
The agreement is intended to institutionalize the exchange of 
information between Switzerland and Eurojust, to ensure a high 
degree of data protection, and to allow for a Swiss liaison 
officer to Eurojust. Later on December 12, 2008, Switzerland 
also joined the EU-Schengen Area, which therefore enables Swiss 
judicial authorities to have access to the EU criminal database 
and fight more effectively against criminal networks. 
 
(U) H. Extradition is permitted if the act in question is 
punishable under Swiss law and the law of the requesting state, 
liable to a term of imprisonment of at least one year, and no 
Swiss court is competent in the matter.  No Swiss national shall 
be extradited to a foreign country for penal prosecution or 
execution of a verdict without his or her written consent.  The 
person in question may revoke consent until the order for the 
extradition is issued.  A request for extradition is complied 
with only if the requesting country accords reciprocity. 
Foreigners may be extradited to another state for offenses 
punishable under its laws or for serving a term of imprisonment 
if this state applies for extradition or accepts, upon request 
of the Swiss authorities, to prosecute the person in question or 
to execute a verdict cast by Swiss authorities.  Swiss Police 
statistics record extraditions only by country so no 
extraditions statistics are available for specific criminal 
offenses. There have been no changes to extradition law. 
 
(U) I. Trafficking is not tolerated in Switzerland, and there 
are no indications or reports that government officials are 
involved. 
 
(U) J. N/A 
 
(U) K. Prostitution is legal for Swiss citizens and foreign 
residents with valid work permits if the practitioners are 
registered with police and comply with taxation and other 
cantonal requirements.  Pimping has been decriminalized since 
1992, and brothel owners may legally sublet room and negotiate 
the terms with the prostitutes.  However, Article 195 of the 
Penal Code penalizes abusing a state of dependency to induce 
someone into prostitution or restricting a prostitute's freedom 
with a prison term of up to ten years.  Clients are not liable 
before the law, unless they knowingly engage in sexual relations 
with a prostitute younger than the required minimum age of 18 
years. 
 
(U) Some cantons (states) have adopted more stringent laws 
regulating the sex trade.   A hotline for victims of human 
trafficking was launched in Geneva in June by the NGOs "Friends 
of Humanity" and "End Human Trafficking Now!" The hotline allows 
victims of human trafficking who are afraid to call the police 
to obtain support. By calling the hotline, victims can get 
social, psychological and medical assistance.  They are also 
assisted in finding temporary shelter and legal advice. 
 
(U) In May 2008, the Jura cantonal government announced a 
prostitution bill which would require persons engaged in 
prostitution or sex salons to register.  The bill contains 
provisions adopted in the cantons of Vaud and Neuchtel in 2004 
and 2005. 
 
BERN 00000093  007 OF 013 
 
 
 
(U) In the canton of Fribourg, prostitution reportedly has 
increased significantly in recent years. Many prostitutes are 
believed to be working illegally and it is suspected that many 
sex salons are not registered. According to cantonal police 
estimates, the canton of Fribourg officially has 250 registered 
prostitutes.  In addition, there are 40 to 50 sex salons, and 
eight cabarets employing many dancers from foreign countries. It 
is believed that many dancers, mainly from eastern European 
countries, also engage in prostitution. 
 
(U) L. There have been no indications or reports that Swiss 
military or civilian personnel deployed on international peace- 
keeping missions have engaged in or facilitated severe forms of 
trafficking or exploited victims of such trafficking. 
Switzerland pursues a zero-tolerance policy regarding sexual 
exploitation by personnel participating in international peace- 
keeping missions. 
 
(U) M. The 2002 partial revision of the Penal Code providing for 
the extraterritorial coverage of Switzerland's child sexual 
abuse laws entered into force on January 1, 2007.  Anybody 
violating Swiss child sexual abuse laws is subject to 
prosecution in Switzerland under the extraterritorial provisions 
of the Penal Code regardless of the legislation of the foreign 
country where the abuse took place. 
 
V. PROTECTION AND ASSISTANCE TO VICTIMS 
--------------------------------------- 
 
(U) A. Under the Swiss Victims Assistance LAW (OHG), all TIP 
victims are entitled to help from government-funded victims 
assistance centers for abuse victims or women shelters and enjoy 
special safeguards during criminal proceedings, and cantonal 
authorities do provide these protections in practice. 
Switzerland does not yet have a comprehensive witness protection 
program providing victims of crime with new identities. 
 
(U) On January 1, 2009, a revision entered into force, which 
requires the cantonal victim assistance centers to take into 
account the special needs of different groups of victims of 
crime.  Under the revised OHG, a canton can pay financial 
compensation to another canton for counseling services provided 
to a victim of crime within the latter cantonQs jurisdiction. 
This is meant to provide urban centers additional incentives and 
resources to establish specialized regional victim counseling 
centers, such as a victims' assistance centers tailored to 
supporting TIP victims. 
 
(U) In 2007, Parliament adopted a new federal code of criminal 
trial proceedings that will supplant the existing 26 cantonal 
codes.  The new federal code strengthens the existing witness 
protection measures under the OHG in order to avoid a 
perpetrator in a TIP case learning the identity of a prosecution 
witness and it gives witnesses the right to call on an attorney 
and/or a confidante during court proceedings.  The government 
plans to put the new federal code into effect at the beginning 
of 2010.  Implementation requires several years because, even 
under the new federal code of criminal trial proceedings, law 
enforcement remains the dominion of the cantons.  Cantons need 
time to amend their legislation and adjust cantonal operating 
modes to the new federal regulations on court proceedings. 
 
(U) Since 2003, the government has strengthened protective 
measures of cabaret/night club dancers on temporary artistic 
visas, so called L-permits, often thought of as being at special 
risk of being exploited by their employers.  In 2003, the 
Economics Ministry, the Federal Office for Migration, the 
Association of Concert Halls, Cabarets, Nightclubs, and 
Discotheques (ASCO), and FIZ Zurich adopted a standard labor 
contract for the employment of cabaret dancers, effective 
beginning of 2004.  The standard labor contract regulates the 
rights and responsibilities of both contracting parties, 
stipulates salary and the details of traveling costs, and 
contains labor law provisions on night shifts and rest periods. 
According to the terms of the standard labor contract, cabaret 
dancers earn a gross income of 4,800 Swiss francs for 23 working 
days per month.  After deduction of a source tax, rent, social 
security, and unemployment insurance contributions, the cabaret 
dancers earn a net income of 2,200 Swiss francs per month.  The 
Economics Ministry and the Cantonal Labor Inspectorates monitor 
 
BERN 00000093  008 OF 013 
 
 
implementation.  L-permit applicants have to sign a copy of 
their labor contract with the Swiss cabaret or nightclub in the 
presence of a Swiss consular official in their country of 
origin. 
 
(U) In 2006, the Federal Office for Migration issued a new set 
of regulations regarding L-visa holders.  The regulations 
explicitly stipulate that the contractual salary of the cabaret 
dancer be transferred to a bank account in that person's name 
and that the nightclub employer bears responsibility for signing 
a health insurance contract on the cabaret dancer's behalf, 
which must be mentioned in the labor contract.  Both 
requirements are designed to facilitate the monitoring of 
working conditions by cantonal labor Inspectorates. 
 
(U) B. Under the OHG, TIP victims, are entitled to free and 
immediate material and medical aid as well as psychological, 
social, and legal assistance.  Local victims assistance centers 
have to provide TIP victims with a minimum of 14 days of 
emergency lodging, 14 days of living allowance, 4 hours of 
consultation with a lawyer and 5 sessions of psychotherapy, with 
all other expenses for medical treatment, transportation, 
personal safety, or translation services being covered by the 
government.  If recovery requires more time, the government is 
obligated to assume the additional cost of longer-term care. 
The victims' assistance center may lodge a TIP victim in a 
shelter for battered women. 
 
(U) According to Swiss federal government statistics, in 
2007 (Note:  the KSMM informs post that 2008 statistics will be 
available in August.  End Note.) a total of 128 victims of human 
trafficking or forced prostitution received help from government 
victims assistance centers, compared to 90 in 2006.  The NGO FIZ 
Makasi, an assistance center counseling TIP victims, assisted 
167 trafficking victims in 2007, compared to 133 in 2006, 116 in 
2005 and 85 in 2004.  FIZ Makasi, which was launched in 2004 by 
the Zurich-based NGO FIZ, has received some financial 
contributions from the federal government and several cantons 
for counseling services offered to TIP victims under their 
jurisdiction.  The Canton of Zurich in 2007 contracted out the 
counseling of TIP victims to FIZ Makasi and continues to support 
 the umbrella agency FIZ. 
 
(U) Foreign juvenile victims of crime under 18 years of age have 
to be placed under the protection of the Cantonal Guardianship 
Office (Vormundschaftsbehoerde) during their stay in 
Switzerland.  In criminal court proceedings, the OHG provides 
special protective measures for juvenile victims of crime: 
Questioning by police or the investigative magistrate must occur 
soon and the testimony is recorded on videotape.  Cross- 
examinations are not allowed.  The questioning has to be done by 
a recognized expert and no more than two sessions are allowed. 
The law recognizes the special needs of juvenile victims of 
crime and they may only serve as witnesses of the prosecution if 
their testimony is indispensable for the conviction of a 
suspect. 
 
(U) In case of the repatriation of a juvenile victim of crime 
(after the end of the stay-of-deportation proceedings or a 
criminal court procedure), the Federal Office for Migration and 
cantonal migration offices have to take into account that the 
person in question is a minor under 18 years of age.  Under the 
law, a return to the country of origin is only permissible if 
the authorities have ascertained that the juvenile can be placed 
again in the care of the parents or a close relative, or if 
there is a satisfactory care structure in place in the country 
of origin. 
 
(U) Post has requested information from Swiss authorities 
regarding whether specialized care for male victims of TIP is 
available in Switzerland, and will convey the result of that 
query in a supplemental report. 
 
(U) C. Federal and cantonal governments provide some funding to 
NGOs and women shelters that provide services to TIP victims, 
primarily on the basis of agreed per capita payments for 
services rendered to victims.  Under the 1993 OHG, all cantons 
are obligated to offer TIP victims the services listed above. 
Internationally, the Swiss Ministry of Foreign Affairs provides 
funding to International Organizations and NGOs providing 
services to TIP victims, primarily through its development aid 
 
BERN 00000093  009 OF 013 
 
 
arm SDC and the rest through its human rights and human security 
division.  Post has requested the MFAQs TIP-related funding 
statistics for 2008, and will provide that information in a 
supplemental report. 
 
(U) D. The government does assist foreign victims of trafficking 
by granting relief from deportation and providing temporary to 
permanent residency status in cases of serious hardship.  Under 
the Federal Law on Foreigners, effective January 1, 2008, 
cantonal immigration authorities are expected to grant TIP 
victims a minimum 30-day stay of deportation proceedings to let 
them recover from their trauma and weigh participation in 
judicial proceedings against their traffickers (cantonal 
immigration authorities have been granting temporary stays of 
deportation to TIP victims since 2004, in accord with federal 
guidelines).  Cantonal immigration authorities may admit TIP 
victims willing to cooperate with judicial authorities for up to 
three months or may issue short-term residency permits (with the 
consent of the federal authorities) if the criminal 
investigation takes longer.  In 2007, cantonal immigration 
offices granted the 30-day stays of deportation proceedings to 
33 trafficking victims (39 in 2006) and issued 6 short-term 
residency permits for the duration of legal/court proceedings 
against their traffickers (three in 2006).  Post will provide 
2008 statistics on stays of deportation proceedings for TIP 
victims in a supplemental report, when that information is 
available from Swiss federal authorities. 
 
(U) E/F. The new Federal Law on Foreigners further strengthens 
the legal status of TIP victims and witnesses, explicitly 
authorizing the government to waive normal immigration 
requirements and grant residency permits for victims of human 
trafficking as well as witnesses in human trafficking cases. 
The Federal Office for Migration grants trafficking victims 
temporary admission in Switzerland if they are at risk of 
personal harm as witnesses in criminal proceedings or if a 
return to the country of origin is deemed unreasonable.  In 
2007, four victims were granted such long-term residency permits 
on grounds of personal hardship after the end of court 
proceedings (three in 2006).  The law also allows the federal 
government to logistically and financially assist trafficking 
victims and witnesses for whom a return is acceptable in their 
re-integration in their countries of origin.  In April 2008, the 
Federal Office for Migration started a two-year pilot project to 
assist trafficking victims and witnesses in their return to and 
re-integration in their home societies.  Post will provide 2008 
statistics on any residency permits provided to TIP victims in a 
supplemental report, when that information is available from 
Swiss federal authorities. 
 
G. The government enacted new protective measures for TIP 
victims.  The number of TIP victims receiving counseling 
services from professional assistance centers for victims of 
crime rose from 90 in 2006 to 128 in 2007. 
 
(U) Embassy contacts stress that statistics available indicate 
that persons on L-permits do not figure prominently among TIP 
victims.  For example, of the 167 TIP victims counseled by the 
anti-TIP NGO FIZ in 2007, 30 had entered the country on a L- 
permit.  Roughly half of the TIP victims counseled by FIZ 
crossed the border into Switzerland either without proper 
documentation or as tourists.  Police authorities share the 
assessment that the great majority of TIP victims enter the 
country without any proper documentation. 
 
(U) H. Ten cantons have established a formal referral process 
for TIP victims to improve their protection and security by 
regulating the procedures for identifying and referring TIP 
victims for assistance.  As noted above, the government has 
strengthened protective measures of cabaret/night club dancers 
on temporary artistic visas, so called L-permits, often thought 
of as being vulnerable to exploitation by their employers. 
 
(U) I. Under the new Federal Law on Foreigners, effective 
January 1, 2008, cantonal migration authorities are expected to 
grant TIP victims a stay of deportation proceedings to recover 
from their trauma and weigh participation in judicial 
proceedings (cantonal immigration authorities have been granting 
temporary stays of deportation to TIP victims since 2004, in 
accord with guidelines sent out by the FOM).  The new law 
further strengthens the legal status of TIP victims and 
 
BERN 00000093  010 OF 013 
 
 
witnesses, explicitly authorizing the government to waive normal 
immigration requirements and, in cases of serious hardship, 
grant residency permits for victims of human trafficking as well 
as witnesses in human trafficking cases. 
 
(U) The new Federal Law on Foreigners also allows the federal 
government logistically and financially to assist in the 
voluntary return to and re-integration of trafficking victims 
and witnesses in their countries of origin.  The Federal Office 
for Migration in April 2008 started a two-year pilot project to 
assist primarily victims and witnesses of human trafficking and 
secondarily cabaret dancers in Switzerland who are in an 
exploitative situation.  The pilot project is being implemented 
in co-operation with cantonal bodies assisting returning 
migrants and the International Organization for Migration. 
Under the new Federal Law on Foreigners, the beneficiaries of 
the pilot program receive the same assistance and have access to 
the same counseling services as are offered to asylum seekers 
returning voluntarily.  This includes financial, material, and 
medical assistance in the return to the country of origin.  The 
pilot project takes into account the special needs of TIP 
victims (i.e. risk assessment, rehabilitation programs, etc.). 
After the pilot phase, the project will be evaluated and 
potentially modified.  It is expected to be turned into an 
indefinite TIP victim return assistance program. 
 
(U) J. The Swiss Government encourages TIP victims to assist 
judicial authorities in trafficking investigations and 
prosecutions by granting them temporary residency and financial 
support, and admitting them to stay if a return to their country 
of origin posed a serious risk of personal harm.  The Swiss 
Victims Assistance Law (OHG) safeguards TIP victims' rights in 
criminal prosecutions with special rules for trial procedures 
and for compensation and redress.  The OHG covers all victims of 
crimes, including foreigners staying illegally in Switzerland. 
The OHG provides for the special protection of witnesses' 
identity in criminal court proceedings: victims/witnesses may 
request the trial to take place behind closed doors and avoid 
confrontation with the defendant.  The OHG is a federal law and 
thus binding on all cantonal codes of criminal trial 
proceedings.  TIP victims may also file civil suits against 
their traffickers and seek financial compensation.  Under the 
new Federal Law on Foreigners, effective January 1, 2008, TIP 
victims temporarily admitted for the duration of court 
proceedings against their traffickers may be issued a work 
permit during their stay. 
 
(U) Several major urban centers have established a referral 
process for TIP victims in the context of regular roundtable 
meetings between NGOs and cantonal justice, police and 
immigration authorities. As a direct result of the regulation to 
stay deportation proceedings and the better cooperation between 
NGOs and law enforcement officials, the number of TIP victims 
willing to testify against their traffickers has risen 
considerably.  FIZ reports that of the 167 TIP victims being 
counseled during 2007, 83 were testifying to law enforcement 
officials against their trafficker.  In 2005, 37 out of a total 
of 116 TIP victims had cooperated with judicial authorities.  In 
other words, the percentage of TIP victims willing to testify 
against their traffickers rose from less than 10 percent to over 
50 percent in a matter of a few years. 
 
(U) K. The GOS provides extensive training for government 
officials in identifying trafficking victims and providing 
assistance.  The Swiss Police Institute in 2007 held specialized 
five-day anti-TIP workshops for migration and law enforcement 
officials and border guards. 
 
(U) The Swiss Department of Foreign Affairs briefs experts and 
diplomatic personnel about the problem of trafficking in human 
beings prior to their postings abroad, and draws their attention 
to a code of conduct drafted by a joint working group on human 
trafficking.  According to these rules, diplomatic staff shall 
stay clear of any person who can reasonably be suspected of 
engaging in trafficking in human beings or those who are 
involved in other criminal activities under the laws of either 
the host country or of Swiss or international law.  The 
Department of Foreign Affairs also urges its embassies and 
consulates to develop ongoing relationships with NGOs assisting 
trafficking victims. 
 
 
BERN 00000093  011 OF 013 
 
 
(U) The Federal Department of Foreign Affairs anti-TIP 
information and prevention program for visa applicants is 
conducted by all Swiss consulates worldwide.  The program (that 
started as a pilot project at Embassies Moscow and Kiev) 
consists of the following elements: a personal interview with 
every first-time L-visa applicant; the signing of a standardized 
labor contract with a Swiss night club in the presence of a 
Swiss consular official; a briefing of the L-visa applicant on 
her or his legal and contractual rights; and an information 
brochure with the phone numbers and addresses of victim 
assistance hotlines or drop-in centers in Switzerland for 
persons in need. 
 
(U) L. N/A 
 
(U) M. The following is a list of IOs and NGOs operating in 
Switzerland that provide services to trafficking victims: 
Terre des Hommes, Switzerland; 
Ecpat Switzerland (end child prostitution, child pornography and 
trafficking of children for sexual purposes); 
International Organization for Migration; 
International Labor Organization; 
Women's Information Center for Women from Africa, Asia, Latin 
America and Eastern Europe (FIZ): counseling, 
publications/articles, symposiums/workshops, participation in 
round tables with aids-prevention and anti-violence groups, 
multi-lingual educational radio programs, and international 
contact building. 
 
(U) In addition, a number of smaller NGOs counseling women in 
the sex trade as well as women shelters that exist in most urban 
centers, deal with the problem of human trafficking.  A great 
number of these organizations are linked in the national network 
"Prostitution Collective Reflection" (ProKoRe).  The major 
counseling centers and primary points of contact of ProKoRe are 
FIZ in Zurich, Xenia in Bern, and ASPASIE in Geneva. 
 
(U) The national organizations and domestic NGOs typically deal 
with TIP victims, prostitutes, and victims of domestic violence 
and offer victim counseling, crisis intervention and emergency 
lodging, legal and medical assistance, and assisted returns to 
the country of origin.  Cooperation with local authorities is 
varied but typically includes regular meetings and 
institutionalized information exchange, cooperation in the 
context of working groups or roundtables, financial support by 
local communities and cantons, as well as public funding for 
specific projects. 
 
VI. PREVENTION 
------------- 
 
(U) A. In conjunction with the European Soccer Cup (Euro 08), 
which Switzerland hosted jointly with Austria in June 2008, the 
federal government provided $96,000 (100,000 Swiss francs) to 
NGOs to kick-start suitable public awareness campaigns against 
trafficking and forced prostitution.  The campaign primarily 
targeted potential QclientsQ of prostitutes. 
 
(U) The Swiss Ministry of Foreign Affairs hosted a conference on 
November 12 dedicated to the topic of QThe Overlaps of 
Prostitution, Migration, and Human Trafficking.Q  The conference 
was held in Bern and attended by experts from governments, NGOs, 
and multi-lateral organizations (please see also BERN 32). 
 
(U) B. Switzerland's borders are adequately monitored and 
immigration regulations are stringent.  Switzerland's visa 
sections in countries of origin inform applicants of "artistic 
visa" or L-permits about their rights when working in 
Switzerland. Information brochures are available in 16 
languages.  Some embassies have also displayed respective 
information on their homepage. 
 
(U) Swiss Foreign Affairs Department officials have sensitized 
visa adjudicators to the problem and have invited NGOs to give 
training to embassy staff. 
 
(U) The Swiss Border Guards, an administrative unit of the 
Federal Department of Finance, cooperate closely with the 
Federal Office for Migration on issues of asylum and migration. 
Combating irregular migration and the smuggling of migrants is a 
priority for the Swiss Border Guards.  Border Guard officials 
 
BERN 00000093  012 OF 013 
 
 
receive special training to heighten awareness of human 
trafficking as part of the normal training program.  Members of 
the Swiss Border Guards took part in the training classes in 
combating human trafficking held at the Swiss Police Academy in 
Neuchatel in April and October 2007.  Border guards report all 
suspicious activities to the cantonal police force of the area, 
which holds sole authority for further criminal investigations. 
However, in practice it has proven difficult for border guard 
officials to spot victims of human trafficking because the 
latter often give only limited information about themselves and 
commonly do not denounce their traffickers out of fear of 
reprisals.  The leadership of the Swiss Border Guards, the 
Federal Office for Refugees, and the Federal Office for 
Migration are all represented on the KSMM to assure the flow of 
information and the analysis of immigration patterns for 
evidence of trafficking. 
 
(U) The Ministry of Foreign Affairs constantly adjusts measures 
to combat visa abuse, ensuring that procedures are tailored to 
local conditions.  In 2005 the MFA introduced systematic risk 
assessments and began subjecting Swiss missions to comprehensive 
inspections every four years.    The MFA puts special importance 
on raising awareness among visa clerks and their line managers 
and on their careful screening and preparation for the task in 
high-risk missions. 
 
(U) C. The key office coordinating the anti-trafficking efforts 
of the various government agencies is the Coordination Unit 
against the Trafficking of Persons and Smuggling of Migrants 
(KSMM), which started operations at the beginning of 2003. 
Formally a part of the Federal Office of Police, the KSMM 
processes and passes information and coordinates policy within 
the federal administration as well as between the federal 
agencies and the cantons (states).  It is also the primary point 
of contact for international inquiries on all issues linked to 
illegal migration and human trafficking. 
 
(SBU) In May 2008, the Swiss federal government organized a 
visit of 15 Swiss police, judicial, and NGO officials to Romania 
for a dialogue on TIP prevention and to coordinate on some 
concrete TIP cases.  MFA officials have informed post that the 
Swiss federal government plans to use this exchange as a model 
for dialogue and coordination with other countries. 
 
(U) Internationally, Switzerland was one of the initiators of 
the OSCE Action Plan to Combat Trafficking in Human Beings and 
has been supporting the OSCE Special Rapporteur since 2000, both 
financially and with expert secondments. 
 
(U) D. The KSMM seeks to implement the national action plan that 
its interdepartmental steering committee first adopted in 2003. 
In keeping with its decentralized structure, the steering 
committee is the KSMM's highest organ.  The steering committee 
consists of directorate-level representatives of the federal 
departments involved in combating human trafficking, delegates 
from cantonal conferences and associations, as well as 
representatives from three NGOs and international organizations 
with a consultative status.  The Steering Committee sets targets 
and the guidelines for the KSMM's activities and controls the 
drafting and implementation of measures.  The Steering Committee 
is chaired by the Federal Office of Police.  Specific measures 
are developed and implemented either by working groups set up 
for that purpose or by individuals with special support from 
the KSMM Secretariat. 
 
(U) E. In conjunction with the European Soccer Cup (Euro 08), 
which Switzerland hosted jointly with Austria in June 2008, the 
federal government provided $96,000 (100,000 Swiss francs) to 
NGOs to kick-start suitable public awareness campaigns against 
trafficking and forced prostitution.  The campaign primarily 
targeted potential QclientsQ of prostitutes. 
 
F. (U) In summer 2008, the Association of Travel Offices in 
Switzerland signed an International Code of Conduct related to 
preventing child abuse abroad.  In coordination with this 
effort, the Swiss federal police added a form to its internet 
site where suspected incidents of child sex tourism can be 
reported to appropriate law enforcement authorities. 
 
(U) G. Switzerland pursues a zero-tolerance policy regarding 
sexual exploitation by personnel serving in international peace- 
 
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keeping missions.  It lobbied multilateral bodies to adopt a 
zero-tolerance policy and has itself adopted this policy in its 
National Action Plan to implement UN Security Council Resolution 
1325 (which the GOS adopted on January 31, 2007)  All civil and 
military persons serving in peace-keeping missions are subject 
to the Code of Conduct of the UN (and/or NATO-PfP respectively). 
Specific Swiss government training modules discuss the problem 
of human trafficking and the vulnerability of women to sexual 
abuse in armed conflicts - including also by international 
peacekeepers.  At the duty station, establishments associated 
with commercial sex are designated off-limits to staff deployed 
on peace-keeping missions.  Compliance with this regulation is 
monitored by Swiss military policing units on the ground and 
violations are punished.  There have been no reports of serious 
misconduct of Swiss civilian or military staff deployed on 
international peace-keeping missions. 
 
Post POC 
-------- 
 
(U) Chris Buck, Deputy POL/E Counselor 
Tel. [41] (31) 357-7213 
Fax. [41] (31) 357-7344 
[Note:  Post will provide an estimate of the number of hours 
spent in preparation of this report (and the ranks of the 
various personnel contributing those hours), when the report has 
been finalized.  End Note] 
 
CARTER