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Viewing cable 10LILONGWE130, MALAWI: 2010 TRAFFICKING IN PERSONS REPORT

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Reference ID Created Released Classification Origin
10LILONGWE130 2010-02-16 17:33 2011-08-30 01:44 UNCLASSIFIED Embassy Lilongwe
VZCZCXRO4863
RR RUEHBZ RUEHDU RUEHJO RUEHMR RUEHRN
DE RUEHLG #0130/01 0471734
ZNR UUUUU ZZH
R 161733Z FEB 10
FM AMEMBASSY LILONGWE
TO RUEHC/SECSTATE WASHDC 0080
INFO SOUTHERN AF DEVELOPMENT COMMUNITY COLLECTIVE
RHMFIUU/DEPT OF HOMELAND SECURITY WASHINGTON DC
RHMFIUU/DEPT OF JUSTICE WASHINGTON DC
RUEATRS/DEPT OF TREASURY WASHINGTON DC
RUEHC/DEPT OF LABOR WASHINGTON DC
UNCLAS SECTION 01 OF 10 LILONGWE 000130 
 
SIPDIS 
DEPARTMENT FOR G/TIP- RACHEL YOUSEY 
DEPARTMENT ALSO FOR G-LAURA PENA, INL, DRL, PRM, AF/RSA 
PASS TO USAID 
 
E.O. 12958: N/A 
TAGS: PHUM KTIP KCRM KWMN SMIG ASEC PREF ELAB EAID KMCA
KFRD 
SUBJECT: MALAWI: 2010 TRAFFICKING IN PERSONS REPORT 
 
REF: 10 STATE 2094 AND PREVIOUS 
 
1.  SUMMARY. The government of Malawi remains engaged in the fight 
against trafficking but continues to suffer from a lack of 
resources.  Malawi is a source, transit, and destination country 
for trafficking and the GOM acknowledges that trafficking is a 
problem. The Ministry of Women and Child Development is the lead 
agency in the fight to combat trafficking, but the GOM employs an 
inter-ministerial approach to the problem.  Additionally, the GOM 
has good working relationships with International Organizations 
(IO) and NGOs. 
 
 
 
2. In 2009, there were no significant changes in the laws affecting 
human trafficking in Malawi, but at least one trafficking-related 
case resulted in a prison sentence.  However reporting systems 
remain weak, making data collection and assessment of trafficking 
difficult. The high profile GOM-UNIFCEF "Lekani" awareness campaign 
against harmful practices including trafficking, child labor, and 
sexual exploitation ended in early 2009.  The government of Malawi 
continued to operate a rehabilitation center as well work in 
partnership with numerous NGOs to provide social, counseling, and 
rehabilitation services to victims as resources allowed.   END 
SUMMARY. 
 
 
 
Post provides the following information in response to reftel 
request.  Answers are keyed to reftel paragraphs. 
 
 
 
3.  Paragraph 25. THE COUNTRY'S TIP SITUATION: 
 
 
 
A.  Sources of information include various ministries, government 
officials, NGOs, and church groups.  Much of the information is 
anecdotal but is generally considered reliable. Few groups have 
statistics and those that do are usually limited to a single 
district or smaller area for a limited timeframe.  The Ministry of 
Women and Child Development continues to work to establish a 
national child protection database to facilitate better information 
sharing and data collection, but the database remained in 
development at the end of the reporting period.  In 2008, Norwegian 
Church Aid (NCA) funded a study entitled "Prevention of Trafficking 
in Women and Children for the Purpose of Sexual Exploitation: 
Malawi" and the ILO and UNICEF funded a government study on child 
trafficking in Malawi. 
 
 
 
B.  Malawi is a country of origin, transit, and destination for 
internationally trafficked men, women, and children.  Women and 
children are the most vulnerable group for trafficking 
exploitation.  Numbers for each group are unknown.  Most are 
trafficked from Malawi to South Africa, Zambia, Mozambique, and 
Tanzania for both labor and sexual exploitation.  Additionally, 
children and women from Zambia, Mozambique, Tanzania, and Zimbabwe 
are trafficked to Malawi for labor and sexual exploitation.  A 2005 
IOM study also identified Europe as a destination of victims 
trafficked for sexual exploitation. 
 
 
 
Incidences of trafficking within the country's borders are higher 
than international trafficking.  The 2008 NCA study estimated 70% 
of trafficking cases in Malawi are internal.  The same report 
estimated that between 500 and 1500 victims were trafficked 
internally per year in Malawi and over 400 victims were trafficked 
across borders. 
 
 
 
C.  Children are most commonly trafficked internally to work as 
domestics, cattle herders, agricultural laborers, and to do menial 
work in various small businesses.  The Ministry of Women and Child 
Development and several NGOs also report incidences of young girls 
moving from rural areas to urban or other rural areas to work as 
commercial sex workers.  Women and girls continue to be forced to 
become "bar girls" who work at local bars and rest houses where 
 
LILONGWE 00000130  002 OF 010 
 
 
they are required to have sex with customers in exchange for room 
and board. 
 
 
 
D.  Impoverished rural populations are the primary targets for 
traffickers, and this includes children, women, and some men. 
Orphans, particularly those cared for by extended family members 
with their own children, are extremely vulnerable to trafficking. 
Poverty and lack of education are common factors among all forms of 
trafficking. 
 
 
 
E.  Traffickers for domestic and agricultural labor are often 
former villagers who have moved to urban areas.  The returnees 
offer lucrative jobs to children or their guardians and promise to 
send the salaries to the guardians while providing clothing, food, 
shelter, and education to the child. Often the trafficker is 
heralded as a hero by villagers who believe the child will be 
better off leaving the village.  Village headmen and other 
traditional authorities are also used by traffickers who convince 
the traditional leader to help recruit children using similar false 
stories about providing amenities to the children that they often 
lack in the village. Adult victims are offered lucrative jobs 
either in other regions of Malawi, neighboring countries, or South 
Africa. 
 
 
 
Adults who run brothels or otherwise act as facilitators for 
commercial sex lure new underage recruits into prostitution with 
promises of nice clothing and lodging.  Once the young woman or 
girl arrives at the new location she is charged high rental fees 
for these items and instructed how to work as a prostitute to pay 
off the debt.  Anecdotal evidence indicates there may be some 
prostitutes from Zambia and Tanzania working in border areas; 
however these cannot be confirmed as victims of trafficking. 
Persons have been trafficked internally for labor and reportedly 
also to South Africa, Mozambique, Tanzania, and Zambia. 
 
 
 
Traffickers involved in land border trafficking to South Africa and 
Tanzania were typically long-distance truck drivers and mini-bus 
operators.  Local businesswomen, who also travel regularly to 
Tanzania, South Africa, and other neighboring countries in order to 
buy clothing for import, were identified as traffickers as well. In 
Mchinji, near the Zambian border, one individual was caught 
trafficking 59 children to Zambia for labor.  He was sentenced to 
five years in jail. 
 
 
 
There continues to be anecdotal evidence that Malawi is also a 
destination for international trafficking. 
 
 
 
Victims are generally moved using legitimate travel documents when 
necessary or moved across porous borders without passing through 
immigration checkpoints. The easily forged Malawi passport was used 
to facilitate trafficking.  Often, international victims are just 
hidden in vehicles while the driver passes immigration checkpoints. 
In other cases, foot and bicycle trails without formal checkpoints 
are used to facilitate cross-border trafficking. While there is 
some evidence of organization among traffickers, especially in the 
transport of people to South Africa, no employment, travel, or 
marriage agencies have been openly implicated in trafficking. 
 
 
 
4. Paragraph 26. SETTING THE SCENE FOR THE GOVERNMENT'S ANTI-TIP 
EFFORTS: 
 
 
 
A.  The Malawi Government acknowledges that trafficking is a 
problem in the country. 
 
LILONGWE 00000130  003 OF 010 
 
 
B. A wide variety of GOM agencies are involved in anti-trafficking 
efforts.  The Ministry of Women and Child Development, the Ministry 
of Home Affairs and Internal Security (which includes police and 
immigration services) and the Ministry of Labor, along with the 
Malawi Law Commission, The Malawi Human Rights Commission, and the 
Director of Public Prosecution have the most significant roles. 
The Ministry of Women and Child Development is the lead agency in 
combating trafficking in persons. 
 
 
 
There are two committees that primarily monitor human trafficking 
in Malawi:  the National Steering Committee on Orphans and 
Vulnerable Children, and the National Steering Committee on Child 
Labor.  These committees are of overlapping composition, and 
trafficking issues are included in both.  These committees also 
oversee the work of four "networks" of NGO's and IO's that 
collaborate on working on the issues of individuals with 
disabilities, street children, child labor and TIP. 
 
 
 
Most districts have a district child labor committee, a district 
orphan and vulnerable child (OVC) committee, and a district 
committee on child rights, all of which could deal with trafficking 
issues.  As with the national steering committees, there is a lot 
of overlap yet also limited data sharing.  There is no guarantee a 
case reported to a district labor inspector would also be brought 
to the attention of the district social worker or the police victim 
support unit.  The amount of initiative district committees take 
varies widely and is often dependent on the individuals working in 
the district or access to NGO or IO-sponsored projects in the 
district.  In some districts, there is now a combined district 
child protection committee to facilitate better reporting of cases 
and collection of data. 
 
 
 
C. The practical limitations on the GOM's ability to address TIP 
are many.  Malawi is one of the world's poorest countries and 
suffers severely from the HIV/AIDS pandemic.  Thirty years of 
dictatorship gave way in 1994 to democratic rule, albeit plagued by 
corruption. Funding for nearly all public institutions -- police, 
hospitals, and basic infrastructure -- is inadequate.  The 
Anti-Corruption Bureau (ACB) is responsible for investigating and 
prosecuting corruption. The ACB continued investigations of 
immigration, police, and other government officials in 2009, 
although none were directly related to trafficking. 
 
 
 
Malawi depends heavily on foreign aid, international organizations, 
and multi-national NGOs for funding of most anti-trafficking 
programs, which sometimes limits the government's discretion on 
which projects to support and in which districts to place 
resources.  Some projects are delegated to local NGOs due to lack 
of capacity in government; unclear reporting structures limits data 
collection and sharing of results.  The government's resources to 
aid victims are extremely limited, though some assistance is 
provided through various social programs.   Most assistance 
programs are funded by international or faith-based organizations 
working through domestic NGOs. 
 
 
 
D. There is little systematic monitoring of human trafficking.  Due 
to the broad range of agencies involved at the central and local 
government levels, there is a not single point of contact for 
trafficking-related issues in a community or at the national level. 
While some data is collected at the district level, there are 
inadequate reporting structures to compile data at the national 
level. 
 
 
 
In 2008, GOM-ILO-UNICEF released a study on child trafficking.  A 
review on Community Child Protection Workers in Malawi by the 
Ministry of Women and Child Development and UNICEF was also 
released.  There were no comparable studies completed in 2009. 
 
LILONGWE 00000130  004 OF 010 
 
 
E.  In 2009, Malawi's Parliament passed a National Registration Act 
which lays the groundwork for a national birth registration system. 
The act does not, however, make birth registrations compulsory. 
The registration system itself was still in the development stage 
at the end of the reporting period. 
 
 
 
F.  The GOM currently lacks the capacity to gather the data 
required for an in depth assessment of law enforcement efforts. 
Scarce resources, coupled with the lack of standardized system 
across Malawi for reporting crime and crime related statistics, 
hampers the ability to gather reliable, up to date information. 
 
 
 
5.  Paragraph 27. Investigation and Prosecution of Traffickers: 
 
 
 
A.  There were no significant changes to the laws regarding 
trafficking in persons in Malawi since the last TIP report.  Malawi 
does not have a law specifically forbidding trafficking in persons. 
The constitution prohibits slavery and servitude, and forbids any 
form of forced, tied, or bonded labor.  According to the Malawi Law 
Commission, in spite of the fact that the Constitution cannot 
directly be used to prosecute offenders, reference to the 
constitution has in the past been essential in prosecuting certain 
cases related to trafficking. 
 
 
 
The penal code contains specific offenses which may be used to 
prosecute traffickers: Section 140 prohibits the "procuration (or 
attempts to procure) any woman or girl to become, either in Malawi 
or elsewhere, a common prostitute or to leave Malawi with the 
intent that she may become an inmate of or frequent a brothel in 
Malawi or elsewhere."  Section 141 prohibits the procurement and 
defilement of a woman or girl by threats, fraud, or administering 
of drugs. Section 143 criminalizes any person who detains any woman 
or girl against her will "that she may be unlawfully and carnally 
known by any man."  Living off of the proceeds of prostitution and 
operating a brothel are illegal according to Sections 145-147. 
 
 
 
Sections 257-269 concern offenses against liberty including 
kidnapping, abduction, and abduction in order to subject a person 
to grievous harm or slavery.  Section 267 prohibits the buying or 
selling of any person as a slave and section 268 specifically 
identifies trafficking in slaves as a felony.  Section 268 is most 
often used to prosecute a person involved in trafficking. 
 
 
 
In 2009, child labor and kidnapping laws were successfully used to 
convict at least one trafficker. 
 
 
 
Existing laws can be used for the prosecution of TIP, but the lack 
of specific legislation criminalizing TIP makes prosecution more 
challenging.  In the absence of actual trafficking laws and broad 
knowledge of how to manage trafficking cases, cases are liable to 
be handled differently according to the prosecutors and judges 
involved.  Those who have participated in TIP training -- and 
therefore have some understanding of how to investigate and try TIP 
cases -- tend to mete out stiffer sentences. 
 
 
 
The Child Care, Protection and Justice Bill, which defines child 
trafficking and sets life imprisonment penalties for convicted 
traffickers, remains in cabinet and was not passed by Parliament 
during the reporting period.  At the end of the reporting period, 
the Malawi Law Commission continued work on drafting additional 
legislation to specifically criminalize trafficking of all types. 
 
 
 
B.  Penalties for trafficking for sexual exploitation as delineated 
under the existing penal code vary according to the different 
 
LILONGWE 00000130  005 OF 010 
 
 
articles, but are largely unspecified.  Abduction of a woman with 
intent to have sexual intercourse or with the intention to marry 
her off is punishable by up to seven years in prison.  Child sexual 
exploitation can be charged under indecent assault of young girls 
and boys, which carries up to a 15 year prison sentence.  There was 
no data available about the number of arrests, convictions, or 
penalties for trafficking people for sexual exploitation during the 
reporting period. 
 
 
 
C.  Historically, most of the trafficking cases that have been 
prosecuted in Malawi involve forced child labor.  Penalties for 
child labor violations vary according to the specific charges. 
During the year, at least one child labor case resulted in a prison 
sentence. Minimum wage laws can be used to punish employers who use 
deceptive offers or switch contracts, but penalties usually amount 
only to payment of salary in arrears.  There was little data 
available about the number of arrests, convictions, or penalties 
for trafficking people for labor. 
 
 
 
D.  Penalties for rape include life imprisonment and possible 
death. (Note: No death sentences have been carried out in Malawi's 
democratic history.)  Rape is a felony.  In practice, the maximum 
sentence for rape is 14 years in prison. 
 
 
 
E.  The government prosecuted cases against human trafficking 
offenders but could not provide the number of investigations, 
prosecutions, convictions, and sentences given to convicted 
offenders. 
 
 
 
The penal code is used to investigate arrest, prosecute, convict 
and sentence traffickers.  Most are investigated under Section 268, 
prohibiting the trafficking of slaves, or sections covering 
abduction or sexual assault.  The Employment Act and the minimum 
wage law can also be used in forced labor and child labor cases. 
 
 
 
Labor recruiters who use knowingly fraudulent or deceptive offers 
or impose inappropriately high fees creating a debt bondage 
condition can be prosecuted.  Employers who confiscate workers' 
passports or switch contracts can also be prosecuted using the 
penal code. 
 
 
 
There was at least one report of a trafficker being sentenced to 
jail during the reporting period.  In Mchinji district, along the 
Zambia border, a court sentenced a trafficker of children for labor 
to five years in prison. 
 
 
 
The government has difficulty providing information on 
investigations, arrests, convictions, and sentences due to the 
decentralization of magistrates and courts, police, and social 
welfare officers, the lack of uniform reporting structures, and the 
lack of reporting systems able to consolidate data at a regional or 
national level without an extensive manual collection effort. 
 
 
 
F.  The GOM provides specialized training for police, child 
protection officers, social welfare officers, and other officials 
in how to recognize, investigate, and prosecute instances of 
trafficking.  During the reporting period, UNICEF, ILO, Norwegian 
Church Aid, along various local NGOs provided or assisted the GOM 
with training.  The Ministry of Labor incorporated a child 
protection curriculum into labor inspector training. 
 
 
 
G.  The government has expressed a willingness to cooperate with 
other governments in the investigation and prosecution of 
trafficking cases, but requests are handled on an ad hoc basis. 
 
LILONGWE 00000130  006 OF 010 
 
 
Informal cooperation between district officials in Mchinji and 
their counterparts across the Zambian border routinely occurs. 
Child labor and trafficking victims in Zambia are brought by 
Zambian authorities to the border, where GOM district officials 
take over investigation of the cases and repatriation of the 
victims.  The GOM, through the Ministry of Home Affairs and 
Internal Security, is a member of INTERPOL and SADC's Defense and 
Security Organization which deals with trafficking. 
 
 
 
H.  GOM officials and the Police indicate that persons charged with 
trafficking in other countries could be extradited in cases where 
such action would be appropriate but would be evaluated on a case 
by case basis.  Malawian nationals would likely only be extradited 
in situations where the national could not be tried for the crime 
in Malawi. The GOM was not presented with such a case during the 
reporting period. 
 
 
 
I.  There is no evidence of government involvement in or tolerance 
of trafficking, on a local or institutional level. 
 
 
 
J.  There is no evidence that GOM officials are involved in human 
trafficking. 
 
 
 
K.  The Malawi Defense Force had no reports of Malawians 
participating in peacekeeping or similar missions who engaged in or 
facilitated severe forms of trafficking or who exploited victims of 
trafficking. 
 
 
 
L.  There continue to be anecdotal reports that there may be sex 
tourism occurring in Malawi.  These reports are unsubstantiated, 
and do not indicate the presence of an actual "industry." 
Unconfirmed reports indicate that teenage boys and girls have, in 
the past, provided sexual services for visiting European tourists. 
Additionally, a 2007 report by ECPAT International claimed that 
child prostitution is abundant in urban areas at hotels and outside 
night clubs and that more than 40% of sex workers were girls below 
the age of 18. 
 
 
 
During the reporting year, the GOM was not presented with the 
opportunity to prosecute any cases related to foreign pedophiles, 
though officials consistently prosecute pedophiles under a variety 
of laws.  Since homosexuality is illegal and remains generally 
socially unacceptable in Malawi, prosecutions for this type of 
prostitution and solicitation could include charges of homosexual 
acts. 
 
 
 
The country's child sexual abuse laws still reside in the Malawi 
penal code and do not likely have extraterritorial coverage. 
 
 
 
6.  Paragraph 28. PROTECTION AND ASSISTANCE TO VICTIMS: 
 
 
 
A.  There is limited protection under existing laws for victims and 
witnesses.  In the case of child victims, some efforts are made to 
make trials less threatening, but in practice under current law, 
all victims and witnesses would likely have to confront the accused 
in a court of law. 
 
 
 
B.  Malawi has two rehabilitation centers for children in conflict 
with the law (Blantyre, Zomba) and one social rehabilitation 
drop-in center (Lilongwe) for TIP and gender-based violence 
victims.  All offer counseling and rehabilitation services and some 
legal assistance through the NGO, Legal Aid. Medical cases are 
 
LILONGWE 00000130  007 OF 010 
 
 
referred to government hospitals.  The Police operate 101 victim 
support units which specialize in handling trafficking and 
gender-based violence crimes and provide limited forms of 
counseling and temporary safety. In general, foreign victims have 
the same access to care as domestic victims, although some foreign 
victims avoid government centers believing they will be deported. 
 
 
 
In addition, the government works with and refers victims to 
various NGO-run shelters as well.  The Salvation Army operates a 
child labor victim shelter in Mchinji which offers rehabilitation 
and training.  The NGO Youth Net and Counseling (YONECO) operates a 
rehabilitation center in Zomba and the NGO Active Youth Initiative 
for Social Enhancement (AYISE) operates a center in Blantyre.  The 
Chisomo Children's Centers in Lilongwe, Blantyre, and Limbe and 
Tikondane Street Children's Shelter in Lilongwe provide 
rehabilitation services and temporary shelter to street and other 
at-risk children, many of whom were trafficked previously. 
Children victims are usually referred to one of these facilities or 
reunited with their families. Some of the above centers also 
provide specialized care for adult women victims.  Specialized care 
for male victims is limited. 
 
 
 
C.  The GOM attempts to provide trafficking victims with access to 
basic legal (through NGO Legal Aid), medical (through government 
hospitals), and psychological services, but is limited in its 
ability to do so.  The government provides support to international 
and domestic NGOs providing services to trafficking victims. 
Nearly all funding comes from international organizations such as 
UNICEF and ILO but the GOM provides technical and coordination 
assistance and helps set project guidelines.  The GOM works with 
NGOs to connect their local programs with labor inspectors, child 
protection officers, district social welfare officers, the police, 
and district child protection committees to help facilitate 
projects.  Funding comes from both national and district budgets. 
 
 
 
D.  Assistance to foreign victims is limited.  In practice, many 
victims can face deportation unless they challenge their 
immigration status in court.  In extenuating circumstances, the 
Immigration Department can provide relief from deportation for a 
short time. 
 
 
 
E.  The government has provided shelter, but cannot typically 
provide for longer-term housing.  In many child cases, victims are 
provided with school supplies and other costs to assist their 
reintegration into the community. Trafficking victims' families are 
sometimes trained in income-generating activities to reduce the 
chances that a victim falls back into trafficking situations. 
 
 
 
F.  The government does have a referral process to transfer victims 
detained by law-enforcement authorities through its victim support 
units and district child protection committees.  In some areas such 
as Mchinji, NGO shelters work closely with the government to 
identify and transfer victims. 
 
 
 
G. The total number of trafficking victims identified during the 
reporting period was unavailable.  Of those identified by law 
enforcement, government said most were referred to care facilities 
or reunited with their families, but there are no statistics 
available.  The number of victims assisted by government-funded 
assistance programs was also not known. 
 
 
 
H. Law enforcement, immigration, and social services personnel 
receive basic training to identify victims of trafficking but there 
is no formal system to proactively identify victims of trafficking 
among high-risk persons they come into contact with.  The 
government does not have a mechanism for screening for trafficking 
victims among persons involved in the commercial sex trade. 
 
LILONGWE 00000130  008 OF 010 
 
 
I.  The rights of victims are generally respected.  There are no 
reports of victims treated as criminals.  Trafficking victims may 
be initially detained for short durations during initial 
investigation. 
 
 
 
J.  The GOM uses evidence gained from victims to investigate and 
prosecute TIP-related cases.  Victims are permitted to file civil 
suits against perpetrators, and civil society and NGOs offer 
pro-bono legal services to victims involved in civil and criminal 
cases.  Labor inspectors and child protection officers are trained 
to advocate for fair remuneration to employees, especially 
children, in labor disputes and court cases.  Victims may obtain 
restitution although in practice sums have typically been set at 
the minimum rural wage in the case of forced and child labor. 
There were no reported statistics for the number of victims who 
assisted in investigations or prosecutions during the reporting 
period. 
 
 
 
K.  The GOM trains community child protection workers (CCPW) and 
places them in each of the 28 districts of the country. These 
workers are specially trained to recognize child victims of all 
forms of exploitation, including trafficking, but currently work on 
a voluntary basis.  The government is continuing the process of 
converting all CCPW from volunteers to Child Development employees. 
The positions were graded and the first group became employees in 
2009.  The Ministry of Labor employs approximately 120 district 
labor inspectors trained in Malawi labor law who can identify 
trafficked children. 
 
 
 
Malawian Embassies abroad actively encourage Malawian expatriates 
to register with the consular section but do not receive formal 
training on protections and assistance.  Malawian embassies do work 
with IOs and NGOs that bring trafficking cases to their attention. 
There were no reports of trafficking victims assisted by the 
embassies abroad during the reporting period.  Cross-border victims 
from Zambia are usually brought to the border by Zambian officials 
where the GOM then repatriates the victim. 
 
 
 
L. The GOM provides some assistance, commensurate with resources, 
to victims.  In most cases, the GOM does not have finances to 
provide adequate assistance and pay for repatriation, depending on 
cooperation from IOs like IOM and NGOs for repatriation. 
 
 
 
M. UNICEF, Norwegian Church Aid, ILO, the Salvation Army, PLAN 
International, and World Vision are among the international 
organizations and NGOs that work on trafficking in Malawi.  Many 
international organizations provide funding, training, and 
technical assistance to the GOM and local NGOs and do not receive 
funding from the GOM.  Funding, personnel, and training constraints 
render the GOM incapable of providing all assistance to victims of 
trafficking. As such, the GOM works with IOs and NGOs to assist 
identified TIP victims in areas with projects. 
 
 
 
7.  Paragraph 29. PREVENTION: 
 
 
 
A.  In 2008, the GOM and UNICEF wrapped up an extensive child 
rights information campaign called "Lekani" ("Stop" in the local 
language of Chichewa) that included anti-trafficking information. 
Residual campaign billboards, bumper stickers, and sign with a 
distinctive handprint on a red background that provide messages 
against trafficking, early marriage, child labor, trafficking, and 
sexual exploitation can still be seen in many areas. 
 
 
 
During the reporting period, the GOM and local NGOs also conducted 
 
LILONGWE 00000130  009 OF 010 
 
 
awareness campaigns to address a variety of TIP's root causes, 
including child abuse, inadequate orphan care and life-skills, 
child labor, female illiteracy and low education rates, and 
gender-based violence and discrimination.  NGO programs also raise 
awareness among village headmen, traditional authorities, and other 
local leaders about trafficking in persons. 
 
 
 
B.  The exit-entry system is entirely paper based with limited 
storage and retention.  There is no active analysis done to 
determine immigration or emigration patterns. All immigration 
officers receive basic training which includes identification of 
trafficking situations.  Along borders with known trafficking 
problems, such as Mchinji along the Malawian-Zambian border, law 
enforcement officers perform basic ad-hoc screening of potential 
trafficking victims. 
 
 
 
C. There are two national steering committees which include 
representatives from all major government ministries that combat 
trafficking.  The GOM works with NGOs and civil society through the 
National Technical Working Group on Child Protection and the 
National Technical Working Group on Orphans and Vulnerable Children 
both deal in trafficking related issues. 
 
 
 
At the district level, there are child protection committees that 
incorporate district social welfare officers and child protection 
workers, labor inspectors, police, immigration, and NGO 
representatives to facilitate communication about trafficking and 
coordinate action on specific cases. 
 
 
 
D. The GOM does not currently have a national plan of action to 
address trafficking in persons.  A task force comprised of 
representatives from the Ministry of Women and Child Development, 
Ministry of Labor, Ministry of Education, Ministry of Justice, and 
Ministry of Internal Affairs and Home Security are drafting a 
national plan but did not complete it before the end of the 
reporting period.  IOs and NGOs have been consulted in the plan 
development process. 
 
 
 
E. The GOM-UNICEF "Lekani" campaign included messages against 
sexual exploitation and commercial sex, and materials (billboards, 
posters and bumper stickers) from this campaign can still be found 
along roadsides and in public buildings. The National AIDS 
Commission's (NAC) National Action Framework on HIV/AIDS prevention 
includes community sensitization on the dangers of transactional 
sex and attempts to denormalize these behaviors.  Additionally, 
programs implemented under the NAC provide economic activities for 
at risk women in an attempt to reduce both the supply and demand 
through economic empowerment.  Information campaigns including 
Abstinence, Be Faithful, and Use Condoms (ABC) messages continue to 
be part of a national response that targets high risk populations 
including commercial sex workers and their clients. 
 
 
 
F. The GOM is unaware of participation by any of its nationals in 
child sex tourism abroad. 
 
 
 
G. The Malawi Defense Force has a zero tolerance policy on human 
trafficking. Troops are trained during pre-deployment training on 
modes of engagement that include prohibition of human trafficking 
consistent with the AU and UN charter. Additionally, the U.S. 
government's African Contingency Operations and Training Assistance 
(ACOTA) trained over 50 officers selected to go on peacekeeping 
missions that included instruction in human rights, gender respect, 
elimination of sexual exploitation, and child protection. 
 
 
 
8. Paragraph 30.  PARTNERSHIPS: 
 
LILONGWE 00000130  010 OF 010 
 
 
A. The GOM recognizes the value of partnerships with civil society 
and multilateral organizations in the fight against trafficking in 
persons, and has done much to develop these relations.  UNICEF, the 
ILO, etc., along with local Malawian NGOs, are fully engaged with 
the GOM and rightly see themselves as respected allies.  These 
partnerships remain underfunded and need further development to be 
effective. 
 
 
 
B.  The GOM did not provide assistance to other countries to 
address TIP in 2009. 
 
 
 
9. Paragraphs 31-33.  NEW REQUIREMENTS FOR THE CHILD SOLDIERS 
PREVENTION ACT: 
 
 
 
A. Malawi has not been the subject of allegations of unlawful child 
soldiering.  Post has no information, anecdotal or otherwise, that 
unlawful child soldiering has taken place in the reporting period. 
 
 
 
10. Post POC for TIP issues is Political Officer John T. Ice, phone 
265-1-773-166 x. 3463, IVG 835-3463, fax 265-1-772-316.  Time spent 
on TIP report: principal drafting, Pol Officer, 20 hours; LES 
Political Assistant, 20 hours; Clearance: DCM, 1 hour; AMB, 1 hour. 
BODDE