Dyler added that the majority of the cases the organization has tracked involve human organ trafficking, female sex trafficking and child slavery. These acts are committed by gangs that organize begging and exploit foreign workers, through enslaving the majority of them and depriving them of their basic labor rights such as full wages and regular vacations. Moreover, Dyler clarified that the easiest cases to track are those involving exploitation of women for prostitution. Most victims of such forms of trafficking are originally from provinces in south and central Iraq.
According to Dyler, despite the fact that human trafficking in Iraq has clearly become a widespread phenomenon, the Iraqi government waited until 2012 to pass a law to combat this phenomenon.
The Iraqi courts have so far not issued any rulings in human trafficking cases, according to the organization’s records.
Dyler noted that human trafficking cases pose a danger to Iraq, and there is no public awareness in this regard in the country. Moreover, she pointed out that the victims of human trafficking also become victims of other laws applied against them, and that the law treats them as criminals, not victims.
The organization found that many human trafficking victims are being pursued by security institutions and have faced judicial sentences in Iraq. This is despite the fact that they might have been abducted, sold or forced into doing what they were doing, especially in the cases of prostitution and begging, Dyler said.
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