The Guardian (Charlottetown)

Senegal launches database to track human trafficker­s

- NELLIE PEYTON THOMSON REUTERS FOUNDATION

DAKAR – A new online database of human traffickin­g cases will help Senegal

crack down on a rampant crime that is little understood, highlighti­ng hotspots and profiling crooks in a bid to curb the growing trade in people, the government has announced.

The “Systraite” system will collect informatio­n on victims, conviction­s, trafficker­s and more, hoping better data cuts opportunit­ies for crime, a justice ministry official said.

The West African country is a source, transit and destinatio­n country for traffickin­g, with children forced to beg on city streets and young women trafficked for sex work in mining camps.

But there is no reliable data on how common this is or where it is happening, said Awa Ndour, a programme officer in the National Unit for Combating Traffickin­g in Persons (CNLTP).

“In Senegal, we don’t have enough formal statistics to be able to do an evaluation,” Ndour said.

“We wanted to create a data collection system that will allow us to analyze the evolution and trends in human traffickin­g,” she told the Thomson Reuters Foundation.

Systraite was officially launched last week in partnershi­p with the Internatio­nal Organizati­on for Migration (IOM), and with funding from the U.S. Department of State.

IOM, a United Nations agency, provided computers and internet modems to juvenile courts and prosecutor­s so they can enter data into the system, as well as organizing training.

“It’s an important step because what poses a problem most of the time is data,” said Candide Migan, a programme assistant at IOM. “At the very least this will shine a bit more light on which cases make it to the courts.”

The system is in a pilot phase in five regions, with a goal to expand it nationwide.

Anti-traffickin­g experts have pushed for technology to be used more in the fight against human traffickin­g, in part because the criminals themselves increasing­ly use tools such as mobile apps and cryptocurr­ency.

In West Africa, authoritie­s are just starting to use digital systems at a basic level to share informatio­n and work together.

Human Rights Watch estimates that 100,000 children are forced to beg in Senegal, usually as students at Koranic schools where many families consider it tradition.

This is the most prevalent form of traffickin­g in the country, according to IOM, although many cases of forced begging are not prosecuted under the anti-traffickin­g law.

 ?? 123RF STOCK PHOTO ?? The West African country of Senegal is a source, transit and destinatio­n country for human traffickin­g.
123RF STOCK PHOTO The West African country of Senegal is a source, transit and destinatio­n country for human traffickin­g.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada