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This crime robs its victims of their most basic human rights and is occurring in Canada and worldwide. The victims are deprived of their normal lives and compelled to provide their labour or sexual services through a variety of coercive practices, all for the direct profit of their perpetrators.
Globally, it is estimated that human trafficking is amongst the most lucrative of criminal activities, rivaled only by drug and firearms trafficking. At any given time, it is believed that worldwide at least 2.45 million people are forced to perform degrading, dehumanizing and dangerous work. In Canada, while women and girls are vastly overrepresented amongst those being trafficked for sexual exploitation, men and women migrant workers have been identified as a vulnerable group for forced labour. Investigations into claims of labour exploitation have centred on the treatment of migrant workers, and in some cases, the fraudulent use of the Temporary Foreign Worker Program by third parties.
Traffickers control their victims in various ways such as taking away their identity documents and passports, sexual abuse, threats, intimidation, force, physical violence, and isolation.Victims suffer physical or emotional abuse and often live and work in horrific conditions. They may also face fatal consequences if they attempt to escape.
The extent of human trafficking, either in Canada or internationally, is difficult to assess due to the hidden nature of these offences, the reluctance of victims and witnesses to come forward to law enforcement and the difficulty of identifying victims in practice. Moreover, these cases often go unnoticed and unreported due to manipulation, fear, threats from traffickers, shame, language barriers or mistrust of authorities.
AnnaLise Trudell, Project Coordinator & Co-Chair for the Coalition Assisting Trafficked Individuals (CATI) in London Ontario, presents a comprehensive picture of the nature of human trafficking in Canada today. Through her video presentation, AnnaLise describes the vulnerabilities that traffickers prey on and the difficulties experienced by victims of human trafficking. Distress centre call responders are asked to examine the signs that may be projected by a caller that could be an indication of human trafficking, and Ms. Trudell outlines strategies for supporting callers in this area of concern.
Questions for Further Consideration:
Human smuggling always involves a person illegally crossing over an international border.
It is voluntary-the person involved chooses to be smuggled and has made an agreement to pay another person or group of people to commit a crime. Smuggling ends when the smuggler gets the smuggled person over the border.
Human trafficking is often discussed as being either international or domestic in nature. This means that trafficking may involve the movement of a person or people across an international border, from one country to another, or movement inside the person's own country, which is considered domestic trafficking. In either case, the person has not chosen to be exploited.
In addition, the situation does not end when the person experiencing trafficking arrives at a destination, but rather continues while the person is exploited for labour or services.
These red flags are indicators that can alert a person to what a human trafficking situation might look like; they are not a checklist for determining a human trafficking case. The presence of one or more of these indicators suggests it is worth looking further into the situation.
Must work against his/her will
Individuals are often lured into trafficking by people known to them. They can be peers of the youth or family members who want to exploit them for monetary gain. They are often members of well-established criminal networks who have a system for luring, often vulnerable, unsuspecting people, male and female.
Why do victims not come forward?
Victims may:
Fear for their own lives;
Your role is NOT to identify—without a doubt—whether a person has been trafficked. Instead, determine that a person may have been trafficked so that you can provide the most effective support and most appropriate referrals.
Try to determine the need for safety
‘Are you scared your boss will tell your family/friends about what you’re doing?’
‘Where have you been staying?’
‘If you want to buy a cup of coffee, do you have the money or does someone else hold your money?’
‘Do you have to have a fix just to do your job? Is the person you are working for willing to give you alcohol and drugs?’
When making referrals---- Be aware of YOUR LOCAL HT COALITION OR SUPPORT NETWORK.
Glossary:
This crime robs its victims of their most basic human rights and is occurring in Canada and worldwide. The victims are deprived of their normal lives and compelled to provide their labour or sexual services through a variety of coercive practices, all for the direct profit of their perpetrators.
Globally, it is estimated that human trafficking is amongst the most lucrative of criminal activities, rivaled only by drug and firearms trafficking. At any given time, it is believed that worldwide at least 2.45 million people are forced to perform degrading, dehumanizing and dangerous work. In Canada, while women and girls are vastly overrepresented amongst those being trafficked for sexual exploitation, men and women migrant workers have been identified as a vulnerable group for forced labour. Investigations into claims of labour exploitation have centred on the treatment of migrant workers, and in some cases, the fraudulent use of the Temporary Foreign Worker Program by third parties.
Traffickers control their victims in various ways such as taking away their identity documents and passports, sexual abuse, threats, intimidation, force, physical violence, and isolation.Victims suffer physical or emotional abuse and often live and work in horrific conditions. They may also face fatal consequences if they attempt to escape.
The extent of human trafficking, either in Canada or internationally, is difficult to assess due to the hidden nature of these offences, the reluctance of victims and witnesses to come forward to law enforcement and the difficulty of identifying victims in practice. Moreover, these cases often go unnoticed and unreported due to manipulation, fear, threats from traffickers, shame, language barriers or mistrust of authorities.
AnnaLise Trudell, Project Coordinator & Co-Chair for the Coalition Assisting Trafficked Individuals (CATI) in London Ontario, presents a comprehensive picture of the nature of human trafficking in Canada today. Through her video presentation, AnnaLise describes the vulnerabilities that traffickers prey on and the difficulties experienced by victims of human trafficking. Distress centre call responders are asked to examine the signs that may be projected by a caller that could be an indication of human trafficking, and Ms. Trudell outlines strategies for supporting callers in this area of concern.
Questions for Further Consideration:
Human smuggling always involves a person illegally crossing over an international border.
It is voluntary-the person involved chooses to be smuggled and has made an agreement to pay another person or group of people to commit a crime. Smuggling ends when the smuggler gets the smuggled person over the border.
Human trafficking is often discussed as being either international or domestic in nature. This means that trafficking may involve the movement of a person or people across an international border, from one country to another, or movement inside the person's own country, which is considered domestic trafficking. In either case, the person has not chosen to be exploited.
In addition, the situation does not end when the person experiencing trafficking arrives at a destination, but rather continues while the person is exploited for labour or services.
These red flags are indicators that can alert a person to what a human trafficking situation might look like; they are not a checklist for determining a human trafficking case. The presence of one or more of these indicators suggests it is worth looking further into the situation.
Must work against his/her will
Individuals are often lured into trafficking by people known to them. They can be peers of the youth or family members who want to exploit them for monetary gain. They are often members of well-established criminal networks who have a system for luring, often vulnerable, unsuspecting people, male and female.
Why do victims not come forward?
Victims may:
Fear for their own lives;
Your role is NOT to identify—without a doubt—whether a person has been trafficked. Instead, determine that a person may have been trafficked so that you can provide the most effective support and most appropriate referrals.
Try to determine the need for safety
‘Are you scared your boss will tell your family/friends about what you’re doing?’
‘Where have you been staying?’
‘If you want to buy a cup of coffee, do you have the money or does someone else hold your money?’
‘Do you have to have a fix just to do your job? Is the person you are working for willing to give you alcohol and drugs?’
When making referrals---- Be aware of YOUR LOCAL HT COALITION OR SUPPORT NETWORK.
Glossary: