@gwerurunnersclub:

Gweru Runners Club
Gweru Runners Club
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Region: ZW
Wednesday 28 May 2025 07:55:21 GMT
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gracioust_99
Gigie ||Creator :
problem ndeyekuti ndikamhanya 10 meters ndendakuda kufa😂😂😂😂 asi type ye noise iyi ndoyangu manje
2025-05-28 20:03:05
352
alicehangazha
Alice Hangazha :
Gono ndiye anotofayisa zvinhu apa
2025-07-24 19:34:54
1
tallyy704
Tally❣️ :
unoswera uchituimba tumasong utwu
2025-05-28 19:07:22
205
mai3sce
greatchiruka :
This is so therapeutic,I can tell
2025-07-24 10:48:38
3
99yoyoesther
YoyoEsther :
Twuma songs twangu
2025-07-23 13:25:55
1
mjaymaps2
mjaymaps2 :
tumasong tunozoti wamudeep worship wonzwa tamba Mai Munyaradzi haaaaa zvakangooma hazvo
2025-05-29 10:42:10
134
wendee217
wendishadaya :
how do I join 🤣
2025-05-28 16:44:08
32
user487402562451
user487402562451 :
intrested hiiiiiii ndafunga gwengwerere
2025-05-28 11:33:15
40
helen.n.dube
Helen N Dube :
Camera man muChina akanyarara zvake 😂
2025-07-15 22:04:11
8
bettietembo123
bettytembo325 :
varume imi ndokudai panhamo yangu vanhu havarare😂
2025-05-29 05:00:35
24
zuxyboy55
user4195424254973 :
mfess akabata camera kungovhura muromo chete....anotifira🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
2025-05-30 13:10:04
34
mamahanelle
Hanelle :
ndikuda murume from this group ndikanhobhohwekana ndoti bbe imba song iye😂
2025-06-15 09:35:24
20
sir_jachie
tinashejachie8 :
Mai Munyaradzi yandifungidza Samora 🤣🤣🤣
2025-05-29 06:24:19
26
victoriafallsguide
Dream Vacations Zimbabwe :
Murikuuya here ku Vic Falls Marathon,tizoita sing shuwa Mai Munyaradzi😅
2025-06-07 19:39:40
2
mk446926
mk :
kkkkk it's mabars for me hanzikushata kunoyamur 😅😅😅
2025-07-31 07:08:06
1
carolygt
Carolygt :
ndidzo nziyo dzangu manje pashota ngoma chete apo
2025-07-27 07:38:35
2
riskaz.101
Riskaz 101 :
ndanga ndichida kuisa pastatus BT mhamha vangu vanonzi mai Munya
2025-07-27 00:22:15
2
chinavapee1
Nester bae 🥰 :
🤣🤣🤣🤣 majekiseni e covid akushanda
2025-05-28 17:59:37
19
yalllovechengeh
🌺Chenge.tai🌬❤️ :
akomana kushata kunoyamura😭🤣🤣🤣🤣
2025-06-27 09:54:42
2
fsffccbbxdv
user00000000000 :
am from Iran I don't understand the language but I gues from the way they are doing i can realize stress is a choice 🍂🍂
2025-07-05 07:03:58
3
babethehunter
babethehunter :
but camera man mukasaimba muchafenda
2025-06-06 11:11:02
2
elbertoofficial
elberto :
ko Shorti aripi ko apo😂
2025-06-07 19:03:48
2
brianmaisiri655
Bserires :
tatenda Gandiwa
2025-07-28 06:50:56
1
romanemperor1
romanemperor1 :
That's G1 for you ,sing Mai Munyaah
2025-05-28 17:24:09
4
madhuvemanjenjenj7
madhuvemanjenjenj7 :
uyo ane tshirt yeeconet ari kuremegwa hake asi ndofunga phome ikurecorder ndeyake saka akungoshingirira kkkkkkk
2025-06-19 17:19:41
4
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Other Videos

PROSECUTION The government increased anti-trafficking law enforcement efforts. Proclamation 1178/2020, Proclamation to Provide for the Prevention and Suppression of Trafficking in Persons and the Smuggling of Persons, as amended by Corrigendum 11/2013, effective as of December 2020, criminalized sex trafficking and labor trafficking. The law prescribed penalties of seven to 15 years’ imprisonment and a fine of 20,000 to 100,000 Ethiopian birr (Br) ($375 to $1,875) for labor trafficking and adult sex trafficking and 10 to 20 years’ imprisonment and a fine of 30,000 to 100,000 Br ($560 to $1,875) for child sex trafficking. These penalties were sufficiently stringent and, with regards to sex trafficking, commensurate with those prescribed for other serious crimes, such as rape. The government did not maintain a centralized law enforcement data collection system on trafficking crimes, hindering its ability to disaggregate national human trafficking statistics, and likely resulted in underreported anti-trafficking prosecution statistics. In 2022, the government provided data from the federal level and 10 regions, compared with providing data from the federal level and six regions in 2021. The government reported investigating 498 trafficking cases – two for sex trafficking, 69 for labor trafficking, and 427 for unspecified forms of trafficking – in 2022, compared with 495 investigations in 2021. Of these 498 investigations, officials investigated 38 at the federal level and 460 at the regional level, compared with 127 at the federal level and 368 at the regional level in 2021. The government reported prosecuting at least 608 individuals in 497 cases – one for sex trafficking, 16 for labor trafficking, and 591 for unspecified forms of trafficking – under the anti-trafficking proclamation; however, some data likely fell outside of the reporting period. This compared with 267 prosecutions under the anti-trafficking proclamation and 120 under immigration provisions of the criminal code in 2021. Of the at least 608 individuals prosecuted, 41 occurred at the federal level and 567 occurred at the regional level, compared with 98 prosecutions at the federal level and 289 at the regional level in 2021. Courts convicted at least 225 traffickers – at least one for sex trafficking, at least two for labor trafficking, and 222 for unspecified forms of trafficking – under the anti-trafficking proclamation in 2022, compared with 190 convictions under the anti-trafficking proclamation and 105 under immigration provisions of the criminal code in 2021. Courts did not provide sentencing data for all convictions but reported issuing sentences ranging from three to 18 years’ imprisonment in addition to fines; the government did not report sentencing data in 2021. Courts acquitted at least 36 suspected traffickers for unspecified reasons. As reported in prior years, officials’ propensity to conflate human trafficking and migrant smuggling, particularly at the regional and local levels, made it probable some reported cases involved individuals seeking to cross international borders via irregular migration and other crimes not involving exploitation through labor trafficking or sex trafficking. Additionally, observers reported the government continued to disproportionately focus law enforcement efforts on transnational trafficking crimes and did not allocate adequate resources or attention to trafficking crimes within the country’s borders, including domestic servitude and child sex trafficking. Corruption and official complicity in trafficking crimes remained significant concerns, inhibiting law enforcement action. Corruption among police and judicial officials, especially the solicitation of bribes, remained a significant concern. In 2022, the government investigated two officials – one police officer in Southern Nations, Nationalities, and Peoples’ Region and one immigration official employed at Bole International Airport – for potential trafficking and migrant smuggling crimes. Between the beginning of the conflict in northern Ethiopia in November 2020 and the signing of the Cessation of Hostilities Agreement (COHA) between the government and the Tigray People’s Liberation Front (TPLF) in November 2022, reports indicated armed actors – including Eritrean forces, regional forces, the Ethiopian National Defense Force (ENDF), and the TPLF – were reportedly responsible for committing human rights abuses and gender-based violence (GBV) in Tigray and other northern regions, including potential trafficking crimes. Observers reported unspecified military personnel and other officials exploited women in sex trafficking through coercion for basic commodities and humanitarian assistance. Monitors reported a dramatic decrease in human rights abuses following the signing of the COHA. The Federal Police Commission (FPC) maintained responsibility to investigate and prosecute human trafficking crimes. In practice, FPC investigated cases in Addis Ababa and Dire Dawa, cases of transnational trafficking, and cases involving cross-regional exploitation in Ethiopia; the federal government continued to delegate regional law enforcement units to investigate internal trafficking cases in local jurisdictions. The FPC maintained a Migration and Human Trafficking Crime Team with nine police officers dedicated to investigating human trafficking crimes. The Ministry of Justice established a specialized prosecution unit focused on human trafficking and migrant smuggling crimes, which included six prosecutors with training on the 2020 anti-trafficking law. The specialized investigators and prosecutors regularly coordinated on trafficking cases and training efforts, including on victim-centered investigations, child-friendly interviewing techniques, and strong evidence gathering. The government, in partnership with civil society organizations, also provided regular trainings to federal and regional government officials, police, prosecutors, judges, and immigration officers, on the distinction between human trafficking and migrant smuggling, anti-trafficking laws, trafficking investigation SOPs, digital investigation techniques, victim identification, and international cooperation on investigations. The government, in partnership with an international organization, drafted SOPs for the prosecution of human trafficking and migrant smuggling cases to complement the 2020 anti-trafficking proclamation and SOPs on trafficking investigations established in the previous reporting period. The government reported cooperating with INTERPOL and foreign governments, including Djibouti, Italy, Kenya, the Netherlands, and the United Arab Emirates (UAE) on potential trafficking investigations.#fighthumantrafficking #ethiopian_tik_tok🇪🇹🇪🇹🇪🇹🇪🇹  @Immigrants&Refugees Voice
PROSECUTION The government increased anti-trafficking law enforcement efforts. Proclamation 1178/2020, Proclamation to Provide for the Prevention and Suppression of Trafficking in Persons and the Smuggling of Persons, as amended by Corrigendum 11/2013, effective as of December 2020, criminalized sex trafficking and labor trafficking. The law prescribed penalties of seven to 15 years’ imprisonment and a fine of 20,000 to 100,000 Ethiopian birr (Br) ($375 to $1,875) for labor trafficking and adult sex trafficking and 10 to 20 years’ imprisonment and a fine of 30,000 to 100,000 Br ($560 to $1,875) for child sex trafficking. These penalties were sufficiently stringent and, with regards to sex trafficking, commensurate with those prescribed for other serious crimes, such as rape. The government did not maintain a centralized law enforcement data collection system on trafficking crimes, hindering its ability to disaggregate national human trafficking statistics, and likely resulted in underreported anti-trafficking prosecution statistics. In 2022, the government provided data from the federal level and 10 regions, compared with providing data from the federal level and six regions in 2021. The government reported investigating 498 trafficking cases – two for sex trafficking, 69 for labor trafficking, and 427 for unspecified forms of trafficking – in 2022, compared with 495 investigations in 2021. Of these 498 investigations, officials investigated 38 at the federal level and 460 at the regional level, compared with 127 at the federal level and 368 at the regional level in 2021. The government reported prosecuting at least 608 individuals in 497 cases – one for sex trafficking, 16 for labor trafficking, and 591 for unspecified forms of trafficking – under the anti-trafficking proclamation; however, some data likely fell outside of the reporting period. This compared with 267 prosecutions under the anti-trafficking proclamation and 120 under immigration provisions of the criminal code in 2021. Of the at least 608 individuals prosecuted, 41 occurred at the federal level and 567 occurred at the regional level, compared with 98 prosecutions at the federal level and 289 at the regional level in 2021. Courts convicted at least 225 traffickers – at least one for sex trafficking, at least two for labor trafficking, and 222 for unspecified forms of trafficking – under the anti-trafficking proclamation in 2022, compared with 190 convictions under the anti-trafficking proclamation and 105 under immigration provisions of the criminal code in 2021. Courts did not provide sentencing data for all convictions but reported issuing sentences ranging from three to 18 years’ imprisonment in addition to fines; the government did not report sentencing data in 2021. Courts acquitted at least 36 suspected traffickers for unspecified reasons. As reported in prior years, officials’ propensity to conflate human trafficking and migrant smuggling, particularly at the regional and local levels, made it probable some reported cases involved individuals seeking to cross international borders via irregular migration and other crimes not involving exploitation through labor trafficking or sex trafficking. Additionally, observers reported the government continued to disproportionately focus law enforcement efforts on transnational trafficking crimes and did not allocate adequate resources or attention to trafficking crimes within the country’s borders, including domestic servitude and child sex trafficking. Corruption and official complicity in trafficking crimes remained significant concerns, inhibiting law enforcement action. Corruption among police and judicial officials, especially the solicitation of bribes, remained a significant concern. In 2022, the government investigated two officials – one police officer in Southern Nations, Nationalities, and Peoples’ Region and one immigration official employed at Bole International Airport – for potential trafficking and migrant smuggling crimes. Between the beginning of the conflict in northern Ethiopia in November 2020 and the signing of the Cessation of Hostilities Agreement (COHA) between the government and the Tigray People’s Liberation Front (TPLF) in November 2022, reports indicated armed actors – including Eritrean forces, regional forces, the Ethiopian National Defense Force (ENDF), and the TPLF – were reportedly responsible for committing human rights abuses and gender-based violence (GBV) in Tigray and other northern regions, including potential trafficking crimes. Observers reported unspecified military personnel and other officials exploited women in sex trafficking through coercion for basic commodities and humanitarian assistance. Monitors reported a dramatic decrease in human rights abuses following the signing of the COHA. The Federal Police Commission (FPC) maintained responsibility to investigate and prosecute human trafficking crimes. In practice, FPC investigated cases in Addis Ababa and Dire Dawa, cases of transnational trafficking, and cases involving cross-regional exploitation in Ethiopia; the federal government continued to delegate regional law enforcement units to investigate internal trafficking cases in local jurisdictions. The FPC maintained a Migration and Human Trafficking Crime Team with nine police officers dedicated to investigating human trafficking crimes. The Ministry of Justice established a specialized prosecution unit focused on human trafficking and migrant smuggling crimes, which included six prosecutors with training on the 2020 anti-trafficking law. The specialized investigators and prosecutors regularly coordinated on trafficking cases and training efforts, including on victim-centered investigations, child-friendly interviewing techniques, and strong evidence gathering. The government, in partnership with civil society organizations, also provided regular trainings to federal and regional government officials, police, prosecutors, judges, and immigration officers, on the distinction between human trafficking and migrant smuggling, anti-trafficking laws, trafficking investigation SOPs, digital investigation techniques, victim identification, and international cooperation on investigations. The government, in partnership with an international organization, drafted SOPs for the prosecution of human trafficking and migrant smuggling cases to complement the 2020 anti-trafficking proclamation and SOPs on trafficking investigations established in the previous reporting period. The government reported cooperating with INTERPOL and foreign governments, including Djibouti, Italy, Kenya, the Netherlands, and the United Arab Emirates (UAE) on potential trafficking investigations.#fighthumantrafficking #ethiopian_tik_tok🇪🇹🇪🇹🇪🇹🇪🇹 @Immigrants&Refugees Voice

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