Medicine Hat News

HUMAN TRAFFICKIN­G

Scheer promises criminal crackdown

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OTTAWA Conservati­ve Leader Andrew Scheer is promising funding for police, survivor services and public awareness to fight human traffickin­g as he continues laying planks in his campaign platform.

The previous Conservati­ve government created a four-year strategy to combat human traffickin­g in 2012. It expired in 2016, shortly after the Liberals took office.

Scheer promised Wednesday to revive it and made other promises to make up a four-point plan that is already facing criticism from the Liberals.

At a stop in Aylmer, Ont., Scheer promised to make changes to the Criminal Code to make it easier to convict people accused of human traffickin­g. The plan also calls for changes to end “automatic bail” for those charged with traffickin­g even though there is no “automatic bail” in Canadian law - and would make those convicted serve a consecutiv­e sentence for each victim, rather than concurrent terms.

“Human traffickin­g exploits the most vulnerable population­s in Canada,” Scheer said in a statement. “Every victim deserves justice and our support and protection.”

The Public Safety Department says human traffickin­g is a modern form of slavery, typically involving the use of physical or psychologi­cal control over people to exploit them sexually or for labour. It can be difficult to police and prosecute because victims are often moved away from their homes and social networks and kept isolated and fearful, and sometimes have drug addictions or illnesses from long-term trauma.

Public Safety Minister Ralph Goodale’s office released a statement shortly after Scheer’s announceme­nt, noting the 2019 federal budget included a promise to develop a whole-of-government strategy to combat human traffickin­g.

Goodale’s statement says the previous Conservati­ve government didn’t provide any money for the Harper-era version though the 2019 budget also doesn’t have any funding tied to the promised Liberal strategy.

The Liberals are spending $14.5 million over five years on a hotline to let people report tips to law enforcemen­t, refer victims and survivors to services, and collect more data about the scope of human traffickin­g in Canada.

As for Scheer’s pledge to strengthen Criminal Code wording to ease the path to conviction­s, similar wording exists in a Liberal bill that is being reviewed by a Senate committee, leaving third reading in the upper chamber as the last major legislativ­e step before it can become law.

The RCMP’s human traffickin­g co-ordination centre says that between 2005 and 2018, the Mounties identified 531 cases where human traffickin­g charges were laid. Of those cases, 143 resulted in conviction­s and 316 remain before the courts.

 ?? CP PHOTO SEAN KILPATRICK ?? Conservati­ve Leader Andrew Scheer stands during question period in the House of Commons on Parliament Hill in Ottawa on May 8.
CP PHOTO SEAN KILPATRICK Conservati­ve Leader Andrew Scheer stands during question period in the House of Commons on Parliament Hill in Ottawa on May 8.

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