{"title":"Human Trafficking Drug Trafficking, And The Death Penalty","authors":"Felicity Gerry, Narelle Sherwill","doi":"10.15742/ILREV.V6N3.263","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Both Australia and Indonesia have made commitments to combatting human trafficking. Through the experience of Mary Jane Veloso it can be seen that it is most often the vulnerable ‘mule’ that is apprehended by law enforcement and not the powerful leaders of crime syndicates. It is unacceptable that those vulnerable individuals may face execution for acts committed under threat of force, coercion, fraud, deception or abuse of power. For this reason it is vital that a system of victim identification is developed, including better training for law enforcement, legal representatives and members of the judiciary. This paper builds on submissions by authors for Australian Parliamentary Inquiry into Human Trafficking, and focusses on issues arising in the complex cross section of human trafficking, drug trafficking, and the death penalty with particular attention on identifying victims and effective reporting mechanisms in both Australia and Indonesia. It concludes that, in the context of human trafficking both countries could make three main improvements to law and policy, among others, 1) enactment of laws that create clear mandatory protection for human trafficking victims; 2) enactment of criminal laws that provides complete defence for victim of human trafficking; 3) enactment of corporate reporting mechanisms. Systemic protection and support is not sufficiently available without clear legislative protection as this paper suggests together with standardised referral mechanisms and effective financial reporting mechanisms. The implementation can be achieved through collaborative responses and inter-agency coordination with data collection and properly trained specialists.","PeriodicalId":13484,"journal":{"name":"Indonesia Law Review","volume":null,"pages":null},"PeriodicalIF":0.1000,"publicationDate":"2016-12-31","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"6","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Indonesia Law Review","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.15742/ILREV.V6N3.263","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q4","JCRName":"LAW","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 6
Abstract
Both Australia and Indonesia have made commitments to combatting human trafficking. Through the experience of Mary Jane Veloso it can be seen that it is most often the vulnerable ‘mule’ that is apprehended by law enforcement and not the powerful leaders of crime syndicates. It is unacceptable that those vulnerable individuals may face execution for acts committed under threat of force, coercion, fraud, deception or abuse of power. For this reason it is vital that a system of victim identification is developed, including better training for law enforcement, legal representatives and members of the judiciary. This paper builds on submissions by authors for Australian Parliamentary Inquiry into Human Trafficking, and focusses on issues arising in the complex cross section of human trafficking, drug trafficking, and the death penalty with particular attention on identifying victims and effective reporting mechanisms in both Australia and Indonesia. It concludes that, in the context of human trafficking both countries could make three main improvements to law and policy, among others, 1) enactment of laws that create clear mandatory protection for human trafficking victims; 2) enactment of criminal laws that provides complete defence for victim of human trafficking; 3) enactment of corporate reporting mechanisms. Systemic protection and support is not sufficiently available without clear legislative protection as this paper suggests together with standardised referral mechanisms and effective financial reporting mechanisms. The implementation can be achieved through collaborative responses and inter-agency coordination with data collection and properly trained specialists.
澳大利亚和印度尼西亚都承诺打击人口贩运。通过Mary Jane Veloso的经历可以看出,被执法部门逮捕的往往是脆弱的“骡子”,而不是犯罪集团的强大领导人。这些易受伤害的个人可能因在武力、胁迫、欺诈、欺骗或滥用权力的威胁下犯下的行为而面临处决,这是不能接受的。因此,至关重要的是,必须建立一个受害者身份识别系统,包括对执法人员、法律代表和司法人员进行更好的培训。本文以提交人提交给澳大利亚议会人口贩运调查报告的材料为基础,重点讨论人口贩运、贩毒和死刑等复杂交叉领域出现的问题,特别关注澳大利亚和印度尼西亚的受害者识别和有效报告机制。报告的结论是,在人口贩运的背景下,两国可以对法律和政策做出三个主要改进,其中包括:1)制定法律,为人口贩运受害者提供明确的强制性保护;2)制定刑法,为人口贩运受害者提供充分的辩护;3)制定公司报告机制。如果没有明确的立法保护,以及规范的转诊机制和有效的财务报告机制,就无法充分提供系统的保护和支持。可以通过协作反应和与数据收集和经过适当训练的专家的机构间协调来实现执行。