PORTUGAL (Tier 2) - European Commission

PORTUGAL (Tier 2)
Portugal is a destination, transit, and source country for women, men, and children subjected to sex trafficking and
forced labor. Trafficking victims found in Portugal originate in Brazil, Eastern Europe, and Africa. According to the
government, an increasing number of underage Portuguese girls are subjected to forced prostitution within the
country. Men from Eastern European countries and Brazil are subjected to forced labor in agriculture, construction,
hotels, and restaurants. Portuguese men and women are subjected to forced labor or forced prostitution after
migrating to other destinations in Europe. Children from Eastern Europe, including Roma, are subjected to forced
begging, sometimes by their families. Over half of the trafficking victims certified by the government in 2011 were
male.
The Government of Portugal does not fully comply with the minimum standards for the elimination of trafficking;
however, it is making significant efforts to do so. During the year, the government took important steps to improve its
capacity to proactively identify trafficking victims and conducted multiple anti-trafficking awareness programs.
However it did not provide evidence that the majority of convicted trafficking offenders received prison sentences or
were held accountable during the reporting period. In 2010, the government reported at least three convictions under
its anti-trafficking law for the trafficking offense of pimping children. Preliminary reports indicate that the government
achieved at least seven convictions for sex trafficking. The government includes data on non-coercive activities in
statistics on its anti-trafficking prosecution efforts. As a result, the number of convictions reported by the government
significantly outnumbers the number of identified victims, making law enforcement data collection efforts difficult to
assess. Relative to other countries in the region, the Portuguese government reported a low number of certified
trafficking victims.
Recommendations for Portugal: Improve the integrity of law enforcement data to reflect clearly those offenses that
constitute human trafficking as defined by the 2000 UN TIP Protocol; provide data that proves Portugal vigorously
prosecutes and convicts trafficking offenders, sentencing them to punishment that reflects the gravity of their crimes;
consider the use of a case-based approach to document forced prostitution and forced labor cases and other
trafficking- specific law enforcement efforts; consider raising the mandatory minimum sentence under Article 160 to
ensure that convicted traffickers are held accountable and do not receive suspended sentences; continue to improve
outreach to locate more potential trafficking victims in Portugal and explore more holistic, victim-centered methods of
identification; develop specialized assistance and shelter for trafficked children and men; expand shelter capacity to
provide comprehensive assistance to victims throughout Portugal; involve NGOs in efforts to stabilize potential
victims in a post-raid environment and ensure trafficking victims are referred for care and assistance that allows them
sufficient time to recover from their trafficking experiences; ensure adequate funding for NGOs providing critical
assistance to victims; and undertake a comprehensive national awareness program to educate government officials,
front-line responders, and the public about all forms of trafficking in Portugal.
Prosecution
Because the law defines “trafficking in persons” in an overly-broad fashion to include lesser crimes and the courts
suspend sentences of five years or less, it is difficult to assess the extent to which the Government of Portugal
prosecuted, convicted, and sentenced trafficking offenders during the reporting period. Portugal prohibits both forced
labor and forced prostitution through Article 160 of its penal code, which prescribes penalties of three to 12 years’
imprisonment – penalties sufficiently stringent and commensurate with those for other serious crimes, such as rape.
However, Article 160 includes an overly broad definition of trafficking that encompasses exploitative, non-coerced
activity, resulting in government trafficking data that likely includes charges under pimping and pandering statutes as
well as low-level labor violations. In 2010, the most recent year for which compiled data was available, the
government reportedly initiated 28 new investigations and prosecuted 138 new cases under Article 160 which may
have included human trafficking. The government reported that 97 of these cases resulted in convictions, but could
only confirm that three of these were human trafficking cases under the “pimping children” provision (of Article 160)
and that all three convictions resulted in a prison sentence. Although the government did not provide specific
sentencing data for these convictions, under Portugal’s penal code, courts are not allowed to impose physical
incarceration as punishment when a sentence involves less than five years’ imprisonment. Accordingly, the three
persons convicted of pimping children likely were sentenced to more than five years’ imprisonment. Reports indicate
that the government may have also convicted at least seven sex trafficking offenders, but this could not be confirmed.
By comparison, in 2009, the Portuguese government reported that it prosecuted 179 defendants who had been
indicated under Article 160 and confirmed that eight of those 179 suspects were convicted of crimes that involved
coerced prostitution of adults and sex trafficking of children, seven of whom were sentenced to an average of 12
years’ imprisonment.
Because of the paucity of data provided for the reporting period, it is presumed that the government did not vigorously
prosecute, convict, or sentence trafficking-specific offenders during the year. The government advised that the closed
nature of the judicial system and strict privacy laws made it difficult to provide accurate and reliable statistics about
government efforts to prosecute crimes that explicitly involve coerced prostitution and forced labor.
Pursuant to a memorandum of understanding signed in January 2012 between the government’s Observatory on
Trafficking in Human Beings (OSTH) and Portugal’s justice sector, the OSTH is attempting to improve the quality of
the data it receives on traffickers arrested by law enforcement officials and to better monitor the progress of accused
traffickers through the criminal justice system.
The government reported it continued its investigation of 12 suspected traffickers stemming from the February 2011
Operation Roadblock, through which 30 sex trafficking victims were discovered. Because of the closed nature of its
judicial system, the government could not confirm whether the 12 suspects were undergoing prosecution. Consistent
with Portuguese legal practice, the government did not provide evidence that it had provided the victims in the case
with care in conjunction with the government’s continuing investigation. During the reporting year, the parliament
passed a law criminalizing the use of the labor of trafficking and smuggling victims. The new law makes it easier to
prosecute employers who cooperate with labor traffickers and provides criminal penalties of up to 10 years in prison
for such offenses. During the reporting period, Portugal established additional specialized training programs to
improve law enforcement efforts in the field of anti-trafficking. For example, in October 2011, during the European
Day against Trafficking in Human Beings, government officials, including the secretary of state for parliamentary
affairs and equality, held a special anti-trafficking training event in the city of Coimbra. The government also
convened an anti-trafficking colloquium for law enforcement agencies responsible for anti-trafficking efforts. The
government reported that there were no prosecutions or convictions of officials for trafficking-related complicity in
2011.
Protection
The Government of Portugal took some steps to improve its capacity to identify trafficking victims during the reporting
period. In July 2011, the government began disseminating a “trafficking indicator card” to assist law enforcement
officials in detecting trafficking victims. The government reported that it continued to employ standardized procedures
for identifying trafficking victims. It certified 23 official trafficking victims in 2011 out of 71 potential victims flagged by
its database, compared to 22 officially certified victims out of 86 potential victims in 2010, an increase of one.
However, half of these victims were identified through referrals from Spanish counterparts rather than by Portuguese
authorities. Under the government’s identification system, law enforcement agencies and NGOs are required to
submit form reports of suspected victims to a central government observatory; this form is then reviewed by the
judicial police or the national coordinator to verify a victim’s status. The government does not officially finalize victim
status. A victim’s status may change if, during the course of an investigation, it is established that the status was
determined incorrectly. In an effort to be transparent, the government adjusted the number of certified victims in 2010
from 21 to 16, but did not specify the reasons for the reduction. Nevertheless, the government offered all potential
and identified victims assistance early in the process, regardless of an ultimate determination of certification of the
victim’s status.
The government continued to subsidize an NGO shelter and provided the equivalent of $136,560 towards the
operation of the shelter. Authorities referred four victims to the shelter for care in 2011, the same number they
referred in 2010. The government did not provide information on the level of assistance provided to the other
nineteen certified victims in 2011 or the other 48 potential trafficking victims identified by the government’s database.
A total of 11 trafficking victims stayed at the shelter during the reporting period. Victims were permitted to leave the
shelter after undergoing a security assessment by shelter staff. Local experts noted that the shelter was the only
designated shelter for trafficking victims. The government did not provide evidence that it provided any financial
assistance to other NGOs assisting victims in Portugal or information on whether other NGOs assisted any trafficking
victims in 2011. The government reportedly encouraged victims to participate in the investigation and prosecution of
trafficking offenders, but did not provide further details on the extent of their cooperation. The government reported
that all identified victims are permitted a 30- to 60-day reflection period to decide whether they wished to participate in
a criminal investigation. The government provided foreign victims of trafficking with short-term legal alternatives to
their removal from the country. Victims who cooperate with law enforcement authorities are eligible for a one-year
residency permit, which can be renewed. Trafficking victims can be eligible to obtain permanent residency in Portugal
under Article 109 of Immigration Law No. 23 of July 4, 2007 and Decree-Law 368 of November 5, 2007. The number
of residence permits granted by the government declined in 2011; three such permits were granted to trafficking
victims in 2011, compared to 10 permits in 2010. The government reported that police made proactive efforts to
identify sex trafficking victims within the legal prostitution sector. However, it is not known what happened to those
victims who were not so identified.
Prevention
The Government of Portugal made appreciable efforts to improve its prevention of trafficking during the year. It
produced and sponsored public service announcements raising awareness about human trafficking on a major
television network. The government also provided pamphlets and posters about human trafficking to its embassies
around the world. Portugal’s Commission for Citizenship and Gender Equality was charged with coordinating the
government’s anti-trafficking efforts. During the reporting period, the OSTH launched a Facebook page to promote
public awareness of human trafficking and sponsored an exhibition on human trafficking that is currently making its
way through major Portuguese municipalities in conjunction with conferences aimed at the local population and
students. Portugal has an action plan to combat trafficking that is valid through 2013. During the reporting period, the
government maintained a website about its anti-trafficking efforts. The government produced a monitoring report of its
anti-trafficking efforts in September. The government’s existing hotline for immigrants is not specifically designed for
trafficking victims. Local experts believed the cost of using the hotline and various numbers associated with it
contributed to lack of use by potential trafficking victims. The government did not report any efforts to reduce the
demand for commercial sex acts. The government did not report any efforts to reduce participation in international
child sex tourism by Portuguese nationals. During the reporting year, the minister of interior announced a proposal to
develop a pilot project to establish a system for tracking trafficking cases in the European Union in cooperation with
other EU countries. The government provided anti-trafficking awareness training to troops before their deployment
abroad on international peacekeeping missions. Portugal continued its bilateral cooperation with Brazil by developing
an anti-trafficking campaign for potential trafficking victims in Brazil. The government continued to take a leading role
in assisting other Lusophone countries, including Cape Verde, Sao Tome and Principe, Guinea-Bissau, and Brazil, in
implementing the UN-promoted anti-trafficking campaign “You’re not for sale.”