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Repetition Articles 1(1) and 2(1) of the Convention. Freedom of career members of the armed forces to leave their service. The Committee previously noted the Government’s indication that army officials are considered public servants, their rights are governed by the Mongolian Public Service Law and the Law on the Rights and Duties of Civil Soldiers. It requested the Government to provide information on the conditions under which career members of the armed forces may leave the service, in time of peace, at their own request, and to indicate the number of applications to resign that have been accepted or refused. The Committee notes the Government’s statement that statistical information is not available in this respect. It recalls that career members of the armed forces, who have voluntarily engaged in the armed forces, should not be deprived of their right to leave the service in peacetime within a reasonable period, either at specific intervals, or with previous notice.The Committee requests the Government to indicate whether members of the armed forces are free to leave the service in peacetime within a reasonable period, and to clearly indicate the provisions applicable in this regard.Article 2(2)(a). Use of services exacted under compulsory military service laws. The Committee previously noted that the Law on Civil Military Services Duties and Legal Status of the Military Servicemen provides a legal framework for military service, which is compulsory for men aged between 18 and 25. Section 3 of the Law stipulates the scope of work and duties of an army official that military service is a special form of public service and consists of real military service and training. The Committee however noted that by virtue of resolution No. 107 of 22 March 2013, the Government has established the “Mongolian conscripts for reconstruction” project, pursuant to which it is possible to engage a number of army staff to work in mining, construction and infrastructure development. It requested the Government to provide information on the application in practice of this resolution. The Committee notes that the Government does not provide any information on this matter. It notes that the revised Law on the Armed Forces, adopted in 2016, provides that the participation in reconstruction work is one of the duties of the armed forces (section 6.2.4). It also notes that construction-engineering units are included among the institutions that constitute the Mongolian military forces (section 7.3). The Committee notes that, according to the 2016 Report “Compulsory military service and conscript labour in Mongolia” of the National Human Rights Commission of Mongolia and the ILO, conscripts are involved in non-military work for the benefit of both public and private institutions. This Report indicates that non-military nature work performed by conscripts is often voluntary. However, the Committee notes that the choice is made within the context and on the basis of compulsory national service, as envisaged by the law. The existence of such a choice is not sufficient to obscure the fact that the persons concerned are mobilized in the framework of a statutory national service obligation, without necessarily performing work related to the need to ensure national defence, whose objective is at the basis of the exception allowed by Article 2(2)(a)of the Convention.The Committee requests the Government to take the necessary measures to amend its legislation in order to ensure that any work or service exacted by virtue of compulsory military service laws are of purely military nature, so as to be in conformity with the Convention. Pending the revision, the Committee requests the Government to provide information on the number of conscripts assigned to participate in non-military work.Article 2(2)(c). 1. Work of prisoners for the benefit of private individuals. The Committee previously noted that under the Law on Enforcement of Court Decisions (2002), prison labour is compulsory for convicts, and prisoners may perform labour under the supervision of the inspector through establishing a labour contract with an entity, agency or individual. It noted that the Law on Court Decision Enforcement requires working conditions of the prisoners to be close to those in the normal labour market pursuant to section 120. Section 121 of the same Law provides that prisoners shall be paid a salary which is appropriate to the amount and quality of work done. The Committee requested the Government to continue to provide information on the work of prisoners for private companies and to provide copies of contracts concluded between a private enterprise and a penitentiary institution concerning the work of convicted prisoners. The Committee notes the absence of information on this subject in the Government’s report. It notes the adoption of a revised Law on Enforcement of Court Decisions, on 9 June 2017. The Law provides for the detention facility internal regulations to organize compulsory labour by administrative procedure (section 145). Section 215 provides for the transfer of the prisoners’ wages to the account of the prison, and to the detainee’s account following wage deductions. Section 217 provides for labour work outside of the prison. The Committee notes that the 2016 Study “Prison labour and employment conditions of convicts in Mongolia” of the National Human Rights Commission of Mongolia and the ILO indicates that the three prisons surveyed had contracts with private enterprises. Some inmates stated that they have been ordered to perform compulsory work for private employers. The Study further indicates that the majority of the respondents had not signed employment contracts for any work they were carrying out, and that there was evidence of unpaid labour and wage deductions that brought prisoners’ net wages close to zero. The Committee also notes that, in its observations and recommendations of December 2018, the UN Subcommittee on Prevention of Torture and Other Cruel, Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or Punishment expressed concern that in both closed and open prison regimes, work opportunities are not always remunerated (CAT/OP/MNG/1, paragraph 72). The Committee wishes to recall that prisoners’ work for private entities is permissible under Article 2(2)(c) of the Convention only if prisoners voluntarily enter into a normal employment relationship with private employers and perform work in conditions approximating a free employment relationship. This arrangement necessarily requires the formal, free and informed consent of the person concerned, as well as further guarantees and safeguards covering the essential elements of a labour relationship, such as wages, social security and occupational safety and health.The Committee therefore requests the Government to take the necessary measures to ensure that any work or service performed by prisoners for private entities is carried out voluntarily, with their formal, freely given and informed consent, and with conditions of work approximating those of a free labour relationship, including the signing of employment contracts and the payment of wages. The Committee requests the Government to provide information in this respect.2. Compulsory labour imposed as an alternative to imprisonment (sentence of community work). In its earlier comments, the Committee noted that an obligation to perform work may be imposed on a convicted person for 100–500 hours for the benefit of society, without deprivation of the person’s freedom and without remuneration under section 50 of the Criminal Law. The Committee requested the Government to indicate the provisions governing compulsory labour as an alternative to imprisonment and to provide information on the institutions entitled to take on persons sentenced to community work and on the type of work carried out for these institutions.The Committee notes the Government’s information that the revised Criminal Code of 2015 sets the conditions of a sentence of socially useful labour under section 5.4. It notes that socially useful labour is unpaid work of benefit to society, pursuant to a court decision, for 240–720 hours. The Government indicates that the offices of the heads of provinces and urban districts determine the conditions under which convicted persons are assigned to carry out socially useful labour. It states that in Songinokhairkhan district of Ulaanbaatar, 15 individuals were sentenced to and carried out socially useful work, in a furniture service organization. The Committee recalls that pursuant to Article 2(2)(c) of the Convention, labour exacted as community work as a consequence of a conviction in a court is not regarded as a form of forced labour only if the service is carried out under the supervision and control of a public authority and that the said person is not hired to or placed at the disposal of private individuals, companies or associations.The Committee requests the Government to indicate the nature of institutions for which offenders may perform socially useful labour, to provide a list of the institutions authorized to take on offenders performing such sentences, and to give examples of the types of work that may be required under this penalty.
Repetition Articles 1(1), 2(1) and 25 of the Convention. 1. Trafficking in persons. The Committee previously noted the establishment of the National Sub-Council on Combating Trafficking in persons to regulate the activities on combating and preventing trafficking and provide professional guidance, following the adoption of the Law on Combating Human Trafficking (2012). It noted that a National Programme on Combating Human Trafficking had been drafted to provide a plan of action in implementing anti-trafficking activities. It also noted that the Parliament passed the Law on Witness and Victim Protection in 2013, providing for protection measures for victims of trafficking. The Committee encouraged the Government to pursue its efforts to prevent, suppress and combat trafficking in persons and to provide protection and assistance, including legal assistance, to victims of trafficking. The Government indicates in its report that the updated National Programme on Combating Human Trafficking was adopted by resolution No. 148 of 24 May 2017. This programme aims, inter alia, at: (i) organizing work to prevent and combat trafficking in persons through the study of the root causes and the conditions of this phenomena; (ii) taking and implementing measures for the protection of victims, including medical and psychological assistance; and (iii) expanding cooperation with other Governments, international organizations and non-state organizations. The Government further states that the Minister of Justice and Home Affairs and the Chairman of the Coordinating Council for the Prevention of Crimes of Human Trafficking have approved in 2018 the Implementation Schedule for the National Programme on combating Human Trafficking. In this framework, the Ministry of Justice and Home Affairs and other organizations have implemented in 2018 a joint plan and set up training courses on the provision of assistance to victims of human rights and the identification of the victims for staff of the Ministry of External Relations, the Border Protection Agency, the Office for Foreign Nationals and the border Offices in Dornogov’ Province. The Government also indicates that resolution No. A/173 regulates the composition and functions of the Sub-Council on Combating Trafficking in persons. The Committee notes that the Criminal Code of 2015, which entered into force in July 2017, provides for a sentence of imprisonment of two to eight years for trafficking in persons for the purposes of labour and sexual exploitation, and of five to 12 years for cross-border trafficking. It also notes that, according to the 17th Status Report on human rights and freedoms issued in 2018 by the National Human Rights Commission of Mongolia, the National Programme on Combating Human Trafficking is a four year programme (2017–21), section 5.2 of which provides for comprehensive legal, psychological, medical and rehabilitative services for victims of trafficking and the establishment of shelters. This Report also indicates that in November 2017, ten criminal cases of trafficking in persons were registered at the national level, according to information received from the Ministry of Justice and Home Affairs. A common database was created in 2016 to improve inter-sectorial coordination among the Government and non-governmental organizations in combating trafficking in persons and in registering victims and suspects. The Committee also notes that a two-year project “Improving victim-centred investigation and prosecution monitoring on human trafficking in Mongolia”, aimed at developing training manuals and at training law enforcement officials, prosecutors, judges and officers of the Immigration Department, is being implemented by the Ministry of Justice and Home Affairs and the Asia Foundation. The Committee further notes that, in its concluding observations of August 2017, the Human Rights Committee expressed concern at the lack of identification of victims and reports of arrest and detention of victims for acts committed as a direct result of being trafficked (CCPR/C/MNG/CO/6, paragraph 27). It also notes that, according to the European Commission’s document of January 2018 on the assessment of Mongolia covering the period 2016–17, there are only two trafficking-specific shelters in the country (page 10).The Committee requests the Government to provide information on the impact of the measures taken by the Government, particularly the National Programme on Combating Human Trafficking and its Implementation Schedule, in preventing trafficking in persons and in identifying and assisting victims of trafficking in persons. It also requests the Government to take the necessary measures to ensure that victims of trafficking are treated as victims rather than offenders and have access to protection and assistance, and to provide information in this respect. Lastly, the Committee requests the Government to provide information on the application in practice of the provisions criminalizing trafficking in persons.2. Vulnerable situation of migrant workers with regard to the exaction of forced labour. The Committee notes that according to the ILO’s Mongolia Policy Brief on Forced Labour of June 2016, reports indicated that tens of thousands of Chinese construction and mining workers entered Mongolia with tourist visas through a Chinese labour agency and were sold to Mongolian employers, their passports being confiscated upon arrival. In addition, according to this Policy Brief and the concluding observations of the Human Rights Committee of August 2017 (CCPR/C/MNG/CO/6, paragraph 29), migrants from the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea (DPRK) worked in Mongolia, in conditions tantamount to forced labour, and were prohibited from leaving work with their wages paid directly to a North Korean Government agency. The Committee recalls the importance of taking effective measures to ensure that the system of the employment of migrant workers does not place the workers concerned in a situation of increased vulnerability, particularly when they are subjected to abusive employer practices such as retention of passports, deprivation of liberty, non-payment of wages, and physical abuse, as such practice might cause their employment to be transformed into situations that could amount to forced labour.The Committee requests the Government to take the necessary measures to ensure that migrant workers are fully protected from abusive practices and conditions amounting to the exaction of forced labour and to provide information on the measures taken in this regard. It requests the Government to supply information on the number of identified victims of forced labour among migrant workers, and on the number of investigations, prosecutions and sanctions imposed on the perpetrators.
Repetition Communication of texts. The Committee again requests the Government to supply, with its next report, copies of the Law on Forced Medical Treatment and Labour of Individuals Addicted to Alcohol and Narcotic Substances (2000), the Law on Forced Labour as Administrative Sanction (2000), the Law on Legal Status of Military Personnel and Persons Liable to Military Service (1992), and the Law on Emergency, 1995.Articles 1(1) and 2(1) of the Convention. Freedom of Government employees to leave their service. The Committee previously noted that under section 24, paragraph 1(3), of the Law on Government Service (1995), government employees may be relieved of their post if they submit a request to resign from the government service. The Government indicated in its last report that the competent authority of the relevant government body shall make a decision on such requests. It also stated that the Law does not provide for grounds to refuse the submitted request to resign from government service. While noting that the Law contains no provisions concerning the refusal of the resignation, the Committee requests the Government to indicate whether requests for resignation have been refused in practice and, if so, what were the grounds for refusal.Freedom of career members of the armed forces to leave their service. The Committee previously asked the Government to indicate provisions applicable to military officers and other career members of the armed forces, as regards their right to leave the service at their own request. In its last report, the Government referred in this connection to section 24, paragraph 1(3), of the Law on Government Service referred to above. However, section 3(3) of the Law does not seem to include military service into the scope of this Law. The Committee requests the Government to clarify this issue and to indicate clearly the provisions applicable to military officers and other career members of the armed forces, as regards their right to leave the service, in time of peace, at their own request, either at certain reasonable intervals or by means of notice of reasonable length.Article 2(2)(a). Use of services exacted under compulsory military service laws. The Committee previously noted the Government’s explanations concerning the use of internal troops under the Law on Internal Military, 1995. It requests the Government to indicate what guarantees are provided to ensure that services exacted under compulsory military service provisions of the Law on the Legal Status of Military Personnel and Persons Liable to Military Service, 1992, are used for purely military ends.Article 2(2)(c). Prison labour. The Committee previously noted the Government’s indication that, under the Law on Enforcement of Court Decisions, 2002, prisoners may perform labour under the supervision of the inspector through establishing a labour contract with an entity, agency or individual. Under section 120 of the Law, prison labour is compulsory for convicts. The Government further indicated that, in 2002, a women’s prison contracted with three private companies for prisoners to sew shirts, harvest crop and work in a cashmere factory. According to the Government’s last report, some labour contracts present the following conflicts: payment for prison labour is less than that paid to other workers for the same services; some companies hire prisoners as a source of cheap labour; uniforms, necessary tools, equipment and occupational safety measures are not reflected in the labour contracts; and the duration of working hours is specified unequally. Moreover, the Government indicated that some entities employ prisoners without a labour contract.While noting these indications, the Committee recalls that Article 2(2)(c) of the Convention expressly prohibits that convicted prisoners are hired to, or placed at, the disposal of private individuals, companies or associations, in a sense that the exception from the scope of the Convention provided for in this Article for compulsory prison labour does not extend to work of prisoners for private companies, even under public supervision and control. In fact, under this provision of the Convention, work or service exacted from any person as a consequence of a conviction in a court of law is excluded from the scope of the Convention only if two conditions are met, namely: (i) that the said work or service is carried out under the supervision and control of a public authority; and (ii) that the said person is not hired to, or placed at, the disposal of private individuals, companies or associations. The Committee has always made it clear that the two conditions are applied cumulatively, i.e. the fact that the prisoner remains at all times under the supervision and control of a public authority does not in itself dispense the Government from fulfilling the second condition, namely that the person is not hired to, or placed at, the disposal of private individuals, companies or associations.Referring to the explanations in paragraphs 59–60 and 114–120 of its General Survey of 2007 on the eradication of forced labour, the Committee points out that work by prisoners for private companies can be held compatible with the explicit prohibition of the Convention only where the necessary safeguards exist to ensure that the prisoners concerned offer themselves voluntarily, without being subjected to pressure or the menace of any penalty, as required by Article 2(1) of the Convention. In such a situation, work of prisoners for private companies does not come under the scope of the Convention, since no compulsion is involved. The Committee has considered that, taking into account their captive circumstances, it is necessary to obtain the prisoners’ formal, informed consent to work for private enterprises, both inside and outside prisons. Further, since such consent is given in a context of lack of freedom with limited options, there should be indicators which authenticate this free and informed consent. The Committee recalls that the most reliable indicator of the voluntariness of labour is the work performed under conditions approximating a free labour relationship, which include wage levels (leaving room for deductions and attachments), social security and occupational safety and health.The Committee therefore hopes that the necessary measures will be taken to ensure that free and informed consent is required for the work of prisoners for private companies both inside and outside prison premises, so that such consent is free from the menace of any penalty and authenticated by the conditions of work approximating a free labour relationship, as explained above. The Committee requests the Government to provide, in its next report, information on the progress made in this regard. Pending the adoption of such measures, the Committee asks the Government to continue to supply information on the work of prisoners for private companies, including sample copies of the labour contracts concluded with convicts, as well as contracts concluded between penitentiary institutions and private users of prison labour.Compulsory labour imposed as an alternative to imprisonment. The Committee previously noted that, under section 50 of the Criminal Law, an obligation to perform labour may be imposed on a convicted person for 100 to 500 hours for the benefit of society, without deprivation of the person’s freedom and without remuneration. It may be replaced by confinement in prison, if the convicted person fails to fulfil his or her labour obligations. Referring to the above considerations concerning the prohibition contained in Article 2(2)(c), as well as to the explanations in paragraphs 123–128 in its General Survey of 2007 on the eradication of forced labour, the Committee requests the Government to indicate, in its next report, whether such labour can be performed for any private institutions, such as, e.g. charitable bodies, and to provide a list of authorized associations and institutions, giving also examples of the types of work to be performed by convicted persons. Please also communicate a copy of Decree No. 276 (2002) of the Minister of Justice and Home Affairs concerning this issue.Article 2(2)(d). Cases of emergency. The Committee noted the Government’s indication that, under the Law on Emergency (1995), once a state of emergency is declared, the citizens’ rights can be limited regarding, inter alia, termination of employment and transfer; working hours, days and shifts; and the call up of labour among the public “in order to cease occurred danger and circumstances”. The Committee also noted that, under section 20.2 of the Law on Disaster Protection, 2003, the citizens have a duty to participate in disaster prevention and take part in disaster protection resource units. The Committee requests the Government to indicate, in its next report, what guarantees are provided to ensure that the power to call up labour during a state of emergency is limited to what is strictly required by the exigencies of the situation and that work exacted in case of emergency shall cease as soon as the circumstances that endanger the population or its normal living conditions no longer exist.Article 25. Penal sanctions regarding trafficking in persons. The Committee previously noted the Government’s indication that, in 2006–08, there were 29 cases of human trafficking. The Committee requests the Government to provide information on the judicial decisions regarding human trafficking, particularly those applying section 113 of the Criminal Code punishing trafficking in persons. Please also continue to provide information on various measures to combat trafficking taken under the National Anti-Trafficking Action Plan, indicating, in particular, the measures taken with a view to strengthening the legal framework regarding human trafficking and protecting the victims. Please also provide information on any other legal proceedings which might have been instituted as a consequence of the illegal exaction of forced or compulsory labour and on the penalties imposed.
The Committee notes the Government’s report as well as the comments made by the Mongolian Employers’ Federation (MONEF), communicated with the report.
Communication of texts. The Committee again requests the Government to supply, with its next report, copies of the Law on Forced Medical Treatment and Labour of Individuals Addicted to Alcohol and Narcotic Substances (2000), the Law on Forced Labour as Administrative Sanction (2000), the Law on Legal Status of Military Personnel and Persons Liable to Military Service (1992), and the Law on Emergency, 1995.
Articles 1(1) and 2(1) of the Convention. Freedom of Government employees to leave their service. The Committee previously noted that under section 24, paragraph 1(3), of the Law on Government Service (1995), government employees may be relieved of their post if they submit a request to resign from the government service. The Government indicates in its report that the competent authority of the relevant government body shall make a decision on such requests. It also states that the Law does not provide for grounds to refuse the submitted request to resign from government service. While noting that the Law contains no provisions concerning the refusal of the resignation, the Committee requests the Government to indicate whether requests for resignation have been refused in practice and, if so, what were the grounds for refusal.
Freedom of career members of the armed forces to leave their service. The Committee previously asked the Government to indicate provisions applicable to military officers and other career members of the armed forces, as regards their right to leave the service at their own request. In its report, the Government refers in this connection to section 24, paragraph 1(3), of the Law on Government Service referred to above. However, section 3(3) of the Law does not seem to include military service into the scope of this Law. The Committee requests the Government to clarify this issue and to indicate clearly the provisions applicable to military officers and other career members of the armed forces, as regards their right to leave the service, in time of peace, at their own request, either at certain reasonable intervals or by means of notice of reasonable length.
Article 2(2)(a). Use of services exacted under compulsory military service laws. The Committee notes the Government’s explanations in the report concerning the use of internal troops under the Law on Internal Military, 1995. It requests the Government to indicate what guarantees are provided to ensure that services exacted under compulsory military service provisions of the Law on the Legal Status of Military Personnel and Persons Liable to Military Service, 1992, are used for purely military ends.
Article 2(2)(c). Prison labour. The Committee notes the Government’s indication in the report that, under the Law on Enforcement of Court Decisions, 2002, prisoners may perform labour under the supervision of the inspector through establishing a labour contract with an entity, agency or individual. Under section 120 of the Law, prison labour is compulsory for convicts. The Government further indicates, in particular, that, in 2002, a women’s prison contracted with three private companies for prisoners to sew shirts, harvest crop and work in a cashmere factory. According to the report, some labour contracts present the following conflicts: payment for prison labour is less than that paid to other workers for the same services; some companies hire prisoners as a source of cheap labour; uniforms, necessary tools, equipment and occupational safety measures are not reflected in the labour contracts; and the duration of working hours is specified unequally. Moreover, the Government indicates that some entities employ prisoners without a labour contract.
While noting these indications, the Committee recalls that Article 2(2)(c) of the Convention expressly prohibits that convicted prisoners are hired to, or placed at, the disposal of private individuals, companies or associations, in a sense that the exception from the scope of the Convention provided for in this Article for compulsory prison labour does not extend to work of prisoners for private companies, even under public supervision and control. In fact, under this provision of the Convention, work or service exacted from any person as a consequence of a conviction in a court of law is excluded from the scope of the Convention only if two conditions are met, namely: (i) that the said work or service is carried out under the supervision and control of a public authority; and (ii) that the said person is not hired to, or placed at, the disposal of private individuals, companies or associations. The Committee has always made it clear that the two conditions are applied cumulatively, i.e. the fact that the prisoner remains at all times under the supervision and control of a public authority does not in itself dispense the Government from fulfilling the second condition, namely that the person is not hired to, or placed at, the disposal of private individuals, companies or associations.
Referring to the explanations in paragraphs 59–60 and 114–120 of its General Survey of 2007 on the eradication of forced labour, the Committee points out that work by prisoners for private companies can be held compatible with the explicit prohibition of the Convention only where the necessary safeguards exist to ensure that the prisoners concerned offer themselves voluntarily, without being subjected to pressure or the menace of any penalty, as required by Article 2(1) of the Convention. In such a situation, work of prisoners for private companies does not come under the scope of the Convention, since no compulsion is involved. The Committee has considered that, taking into account their captive circumstances, it is necessary to obtain the prisoners’ formal, informed consent to work for private enterprises, both inside and outside prisons. Further, since such consent is given in a context of lack of freedom with limited options, there should be indicators which authenticate this free and informed consent. The Committee recalls that the most reliable indicator of the voluntariness of labour is the work performed under conditions approximating a free labour relationship, which include wage levels (leaving room for deductions and attachments), social security and occupational safety and health.
The Committee therefore hopes that the necessary measures will be taken to ensure that free and informed consent is required for the work of prisoners for private companies both inside and outside prison premises, so that such consent is free from the menace of any penalty and authenticated by the conditions of work approximating a free labour relationship, as explained above. The Committee requests the Government to provide, in its next report, information on the progress made in this regard. Pending the adoption of such measures, the Committee asks the Government to continue to supply information on the work of prisoners for private companies, including sample copies of the labour contracts concluded with convicts, as well as contracts concluded between penitentiary institutions and private users of prison labour.
Compulsory labour imposed as an alternative to imprisonment. The Committee notes that, under section 50 of the Criminal Law, an obligation to perform labour may be imposed on a convicted person for 100 to 500 hours for the benefit of society, without deprivation of the person’s freedom and without remuneration. It may be replaced by confinement in prison, if the convicted person fails to fulfil his or her labour obligations. Referring to the above considerations concerning the prohibition contained in Article 2(2)(c), as well as to the explanations in paragraphs 123–128 in its General Survey of 2007 on the eradication of forced labour, the Committee requests the Government to indicate, in its next report, whether such labour can be performed for any private institutions, such as, e.g. charitable bodies, and to provide a list of authorized associations and institutions, giving also examples of the types of work to be performed by convicted persons. Please also communicate a copy of Decree No. 276 (2002) of the Minister of Justice and Home Affairs concerning this issue.
Article 2(2)(d). Cases of emergency. The Committee notes the Government’s indication in the report that, under the Law on Emergency (1995), once a state of emergency is declared, the citizens’ rights can be limited regarding, inter alia, termination of employment and transfer; working hours, days and shifts; and the call up of labour among the public “in order to cease occurred danger and circumstances”. The Committee also notes that, under section 20.2 of the Law on Disaster Protection, 2003, the citizens have a duty to participate in disaster prevention and take part in disaster protection resource units. The Committee requests the Government to indicate, in its next report, what guarantees are provided to ensure that the power to call up labour during a state of emergency is limited to what is strictly required by the exigencies of the situation and that work exacted in case of emergency shall cease as soon as the circumstances that endanger the population or its normal living conditions no longer exist.
Article 25. Penal sanctions regarding trafficking in persons. The Committee notes the Government’s indication in the report that, in 2006–08, there were 29 cases of human trafficking. The Committee requests the Government to provide information on the judicial decisions regarding human trafficking, particularly those applying section 113 of the Criminal Code punishing trafficking in persons. Please also continue to provide information on various measures to combat trafficking taken under the National Anti-Trafficking Action Plan, indicating, in particular, the measures taken with a view to strengthening the legal framework regarding human trafficking and protecting the victims.
Please also provide information on any other legal proceedings which might have been instituted as a consequence of the illegal exaction of forced or compulsory labour and on the penalties imposed.
The Committee notes with interest the information provided by the Government in its first report on the application of the Convention. It requests the Government to provide, in its next report, additional information on the following points.
Communication of texts. The Committee requests the Government to supply, with its next report, a copy of an updated and consolidated text of the Criminal Code, as well as copies of laws and regulations governing the execution of penal sentences (e.g. the Law on enforcement of court order, 2002, referred to by the Government in its report). Please also communicate copies of the Law on compulsory labour of alcoholics and narcotic addicted persons (2000), the Law on procedure for compulsory labour under administrative regulations (2000), the Law on legal status of military personnel and persons liable to military service (1992) and the Law on internal military service (1995), to which reference has been made in the Government’s report.
Articles 1(1) and 2(1) of the Convention. 1. Freedom of government employees to leave their service. The Committee notes that under section 24, paragraph 1(3) of the Law on government service (1995), government employees may be relieved of their post if they submit a request to resign from the government service. However, under paragraphs 3 and 4 of the same section, a request to resign shall be submitted only upon reaching the age ceiling for discharge from government service and upon reaching retirement age, in which cases the competent authority of the relevant government body shall make a decision on this request. The Committee requests the Government to clarify whether government employees can leave their service at their own request in other situations, before reaching the age ceiling or retirement age, and what is the procedure for their resignation on this ground (e.g. whether their request can be refused by the competent authority and what could be the grounds for refusal).
2. Freedom of career members of the armed forces to leave their service. Please indicate any provisions applicable to military officers and other career members of the armed forces, as regards their right to leave the service, in time of peace, at their own request, either at certain reasonable intervals or by means of notice of reasonable length.
Article 2(2)(a). Use of services exacted under compulsory military service laws. Please indicate what guarantees are provided to ensure that services exacted under compulsory military service laws are used for purely military ends.
Article 2(2)(c). Prison labour. Please supply copies of provisions governing the work of persons serving a sentence of imprisonment (such as e.g. Order No. A/14 of the Director of the General Department of the Execution of Court Sentences (2002)). Please indicate whether such work shall be in all cases performed in enterprises belonging to the executive penal system or in other state-owned enterprises, and what guarantees are provided to ensure that convicted prisoners are not hired to or placed at the disposal of private individuals, companies and associations.
Article 2(2)(d). Cases of emergency. The Committee notes that, under article 19(2) of the Constitution of Mongolia, in case of a state of emergency or martial law, the human rights and freedoms defined in the Constitution and other laws shall be subject to limitation by a law. The Committee requests the Government to indicate whether any special legislation on the state of emergency has been adopted and, if so, to supply a copy. Please also state what guarantees are provided to ensure that the power to call up labour during a state of emergency is limited to what is strictly required by the exigencies of the situation and that work exacted in case of emergency shall cease as soon as the circumstances that endanger the population or its normal living conditions no longer exist.
Article 25. Penalties for the illegal exaction of forced or compulsory labour. Trafficking in persons. The Committee notes the Government’s statement in the report concerning the existence of forced labour practices related to human trafficking, as well as the Government’s indications that the Criminal Code contains provisions (sections 111, 113, 115, 121 and 124) punishing trafficking in persons, commercial sexual exploitation and related crimes. The Committee requests the Government to provide information on the penalties imposed under these penal provisions, supplying sample copies of the relevant court decisions. Please also provide information on measures taken or envisaged to prevent, suppress and punish trafficking in persons for the purpose of exploitation, supplying copies of the relevant documents (such as e.g. a national anti-trafficking action plan) and available statistics. Please indicate whether there are any other penal provisions under which proceedings concerning the illegal exaction of forced or compulsory labour might have been instituted and supply information on the penalties imposed.