The Assembly further recommends that the Committee of Ministers urges
member states to :
6.1 introduce special measures
to increase awareness of this problem among the general public, and,
particularly target groups of traffickers’ potential victims, through, for
example, information provided by the staff of consulates and embassies dealing
with requests for visas and work permits;
6.2 introduce
training of immigration staff, in particular in consulates delivering visas and
at border points, in order to ensure that such staff are fully aware of the
problem, are provided with up to date information on trafficking methods and
trends, and are trained to recognise potential victims;
6.3 create specific police structures on the national level to combat
traffic in women and forced prostitution, and improve international
communication, co-ordination and co-operation of police bodies via Interpol and
Europol, but also on the basis of both bilateral and multilateral
contacts;
6.4 make provisions to enable the seizure and
confiscation of profits from offences related to traffic in women and forced
prostitution, as well as the closure of establishments in which victims of
traffic are sexually exploited;
6.5 grant residence permits to
victims of traffic and forced prostitution who are willing to testify in court,
and include them in witness protection programmes if necessary;
6.6 organise legal, medical and psychological assistance for victims of
traffic and forced prostitution, especially those willing to testify in
court;
6.7 consider introducing special rules in criminal
proceedings on the use of force for victims of traffic and forced prostitution,
imposing heavier sentences for trafficking in women and forcing them into
prostitution, as well as making it a crime to knowingly use the services of a
woman forced into prostitution or marriage;
6.8 for states
which do not extradite their nationals for offences committed abroad, consider
making it possible to prosecute nationals in their home country for acts of
trafficking committed abroad, whether or not there has been a complaint from
the country in which the crime was committed;
6.9 help the
women who are victims of traffic to reintegrate into the society of their
country of origin upon their return;
6.10 grant the various NGOs
and associations for victims of prostitution access to courts in order to
increase the effectiveness of action against trafficking and enforced
prostitution;
6.11 make free telephone help-lines for women
victims widely available;
6.12 support the setting up of
reception centres and increased temporary accommodation for victims, and grant
victims the minimum rate of social assistance and access to health care during
their stay.