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- Q5938781 subject Q15246325.
- Q5938781 subject Q8527231.
- Q5938781 subject Q8527444.
- Q5938781 abstract "Gabon is primarily a transit country for children from Benin, Nigeria, Togo, Mali, Guinea, and other West African countries who are subjected to human trafficking, specifically forced labor and forced prostitution. Some victims transit through Gabon en route to exploitation in Equatorial Guinea. According to UNICEF, the majority of victims are boys who are forced to work as street hawkers or mechanics. Girls generally are subjected to conditions of involuntary domestic servitude, or forced labor in markets or roadside restaurants. Stepped-up coastal surveillance over the past year – especially following the October 2009 arrival in Gabonese waters of a sea vessel that was carrying 34 child trafficking victims, some of whom were destined for Equatorial Guinea – caused traffickers to change their routes, which included utilizing estuaries and rivers to transport children. The majority of victims were young girls, a departure from previous patterns of trafficking in the region. Trafficking offenders appear to operate in loose ethnic-based crime networks. Most child traffickers are women, who serve as intermediaries in their countries of origin. In some cases, child victims report that their parents had turned them over to intermediaries promising employment opportunities in Gabon. The government has no reports of international organized crime syndicates, employment agencies, marriage brokers, or travel services facilitating trafficking in Gabon. In 2009, the government began tracking a new trend of young adults between ages 18 and 25 being forced into domestic servitude or prostitution in Gabon.The Government of Gabon does not fully comply with what the U.S. government considers to be minimum standards for the elimination of trafficking; however, it is making significant efforts to do so. Despite these efforts – most notably the arrests of seven suspected traffickers and the expansion of protection services for child victims of trafficking – the government did not show evidence of increasing efforts to address trafficking. Specifically, the government, for another consecutive year, did not provide information on prosecutions or convictions of traffickers, despite the arrest of over 30 suspected offenders between 2003 and 2008. Because of this, Gabon has been placed on the Tier 2 Watch List for the third consecutive year.".
- Q5938781 wikiPageWikiLink Q1000.
- Q5938781 wikiPageWikiLink Q1006.
- Q5938781 wikiPageWikiLink Q1015100.
- Q5938781 wikiPageWikiLink Q1033.
- Q5938781 wikiPageWikiLink Q1154508.
- Q5938781 wikiPageWikiLink Q15246325.
- Q5938781 wikiPageWikiLink Q181784.
- Q5938781 wikiPageWikiLink Q3410145.
- Q5938781 wikiPageWikiLink Q3825.
- Q5938781 wikiPageWikiLink Q4412.
- Q5938781 wikiPageWikiLink Q459369.
- Q5938781 wikiPageWikiLink Q501715.
- Q5938781 wikiPageWikiLink Q690421.
- Q5938781 wikiPageWikiLink Q740308.
- Q5938781 wikiPageWikiLink Q79913.
- Q5938781 wikiPageWikiLink Q8527231.
- Q5938781 wikiPageWikiLink Q8527444.
- Q5938781 wikiPageWikiLink Q912.
- Q5938781 wikiPageWikiLink Q945.
- Q5938781 wikiPageWikiLink Q962.
- Q5938781 wikiPageWikiLink Q965.
- Q5938781 comment "Gabon is primarily a transit country for children from Benin, Nigeria, Togo, Mali, Guinea, and other West African countries who are subjected to human trafficking, specifically forced labor and forced prostitution. Some victims transit through Gabon en route to exploitation in Equatorial Guinea. According to UNICEF, the majority of victims are boys who are forced to work as street hawkers or mechanics.".
- Q5938781 label "Human trafficking in Gabon".